Regina Leader-Post

Louis C.K.’s secret out

Comedy focuses on Allen-esque figure, dynamics

- VICTORIA AHEARN

TORONTO Comedy star Louis C.K. says the seed for his controvers­ial new film, I Love You, Daddy, began with a Woody Allen-type character and the fascinatio­n with “people that have these scandalous things.”

C.K. directs and stars as Glen, a hit TV creator in New York struggling to develop a new show and control his spoiled 17-year-old daughter (Chloe Grace Moretz), who gets uncomforta­bly close to a 68-year-old film director he idolizes, played by John Malkovich.

Malkovich’s eccentric character has a reputation for dating young women and is marred by a rumour that he once molested a girl. Initially Glen suggests it’s not up to him and others to judge the director, but as his daughter begins a relationsh­ip with him, he waffles on that point.

“In a conversati­on with my buddy Vernon (Chatman) that wrote the story with me, it was the thrill of the nightmare of, ‘What if he dated my daughter?’” C.K. said Sunday in an interview, a day after the audacious comedy made its world première at the Toronto Internatio­nal Film Festival.

“It was a thing I said to make Vernon laugh and I felt a chill when I said it and I was like, ‘I don’t know what ... I would do. I don’t know what I would do,’” he continued, using an unprintabl­e expletive for emphasis.

“In my experience, every time I think of a story where the answer is ‘I don’t know how I would handle it,’ I know there’s a story, I know that that’s fodder for a movie, I know that other people probably feel that way.”

The black-and-white story features an old-Hollywood style score and is reminiscen­t of Allen’s 1979 film Manhattan, in which the director plays a 42-year-old who dates a 17-year-old girl (Mariel Hemingway).

The cast of I Love You, Daddy also includes Helen Hunt, Edie Falco, Rose Byrne and Charlie Day.

“To me, if there’s anything the movie says to me clearly is that you don’t know — you don’t know anybody. You don’t know people that you admire ... You don’t know them. You don’t know your own kid, your kid doesn’t know you. You think you’re falling in love with somebody? You have no ... idea who you’re talking to,” said C.K. with pops of salty language.

C.K. self-funded the movie and shot it under the radar in June. He kept its storyline a secret until Saturday’s première.

Asked whether the film is a response to C.K.’s own controvers­ies surroundin­g allegation­s of questionab­le sexual behaviour, he said “those are rumours.”

“To me, rumours is a different thing. Rumours is just rumours,” added C.K.

“But yeah, being a public person and having a bunch of different things said about you, it does give you a perspectiv­e on that side of it. But the movie is not from that guy’s point of view ... more about Malkovich and more about his life. This is about the guy on the other side.”

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