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A long ensemble star parade rests atop co-star Toby Jones' pleased face on this poster for Douglas McGrath's Infamous |
Truman Capote is New York's little, wonderful author par excellence, when his curiosity zones in on a gruesome quadruple homicide case in Kansas. He decides to travel there to write his new masterpiece on this topic.
Infamous is written and directed by Douglas McGrath (Emma (1996)), based on George Plimpton's (Out of My League (1961)) nonfiction biography Truman Capote (1997).
Toby Jones (Tetris (2023)) is good and deeply identified with his subject Capote here, whom he also resembles, - a good deal better than Philip Seymour Hoffman who scored his career's only Oscar for portraying the same author in Capote (2005). Others in the starry cast are also good, especially Daniel Craig (The Golden Compass (2007)) as one of the two murderers, Perry, who in this version of events falls in love with Capote.
This is a strange story, and it is not obvious what we are supposed to take from it. What ultimately sinks Infamous is the peculiar choice of having actors like Sandra Bullock (The Heat (2013)) as Harper Lee, appear as talking heads as central people in Capote's life, enlightening us about it. This dimension is thoroughly artificial and breaks the illusion of reality otherwise found in Infamous.
Watch a trailer for the film here
Cost: 13 mil. $
Box office: 2.6 mil. $
= Box office disaster (returned 0.2 times its cost)
[Infamous premiered 31 August (Venice Film Festival) and runs 118 minutes. Gwyneth Paltrow (Shakespeare in Love (1998)), who plays a minor part in the film, was reportedly paid a whopping 3.6 mil. $ for it. Shooting took place around February 2005 in Kansas, New York and Texas. The film opened #21 to a 452k $ first weekend in 179 theaters in North America, its peak position there, where it grossed 1.1 mil. $ (42.3 % of the total gross). The 2nd and 3rd biggest markets were Spain with 606k $ (23.3 %) and France with 237k $ (9.1 %). The film was nominated for an Independent Spirit award, among other honors. Roger Ebert gave it a 2.5/4 star review, translating to a notch over this one. McGrath returned with His Way (2011, TV movie) and theatrically with I Don't Know How She Does It (2011). Jones returned in Amazing Grace (2006); Craig in Casino Royale (2006). Infamous is certified fresh at 75 % with a 6.8/10 critical average at Rotten Tomatoes.]
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