Montreal Gazette

‘DO NOT BORE’

Thriller Velvet Buzzsaw keeps audience’s attention

- LINDSEY BAHR

Velvet Buzzsaw Now streaming on Netflix

Dan Gilroy’s satirical contempora­ry art world thriller Velvet Buzzsaw reunites the director with Jake Gyllenhaal, who starred in his debut Nightcrawl­er.

That dark thriller about an ambulance chasing journalist went on to become a box office hit and, so, when Gilroy landed on the idea for Velvet Buzzsaw, which stars Gyllenhaal as a snobby critic and Rene Russo as a savvy gallery owner, there was plenty of interest.

“Dan is crazy,” Russo, who is married to Gilroy, said in Park City, Utah. “He’s got this crazy imaginatio­n and he’s just kind of outside the box.”

As a result of the previous success, film studios lined up put their names behind his latest project and Netflix was one of them.

Gilroy was unsure at first about Netflix, though, so he started reading a little more about the company. He came across a quote where someone said that Netflix was going to destroy the theatrical experience, but following it were 50 comments about how that person must live in New York or Los Angeles or Chicago where, “You can see everything.”

“I suddenly thought, ‘wow, democratiz­ation,’” Gilroy said. “It is an elitist point of view to think that everybody in the world has access to the things that New York, L.A. and Chicago have. That really was the deciding factor. If you really want to reach the widest possible audience, here’s this technology that can do this ... And what is the theatrical experience? Five hundred people in a theatre? One hundred? Does 50 count? Does four people on a Friday night on my 50-inch widescreen count? It does to me.”

Producer Jennifer Fox, who has been behind films such as Michael Clayton, said Netflix made it, “At a level that it should have been made at. They got it. And it’s really out there.”

Out there is right, an apt descriptio­n for the ensemble film that co-stars John Malkovich, Toni Collette, Daveed Diggs, Billy Magnussen and Zawe Ashton, in which a dead artist’s works ends up taking its own body count.

But that’s Gilroy’s operating mode for his own films, which aren’t bound by traditiona­l genre or constraint­s. It’s why Velvet Buzzsaw is about everything — the pretentiou­sness of the contempora­ry art world, the fluidity of criticism and even sexuality, and, you know, a demon art spirit out for blood.

“If I follow one rule in any form of entertainm­ent it is, Do Not Bore. You cannot bore,” Gilroy said. “My (playwright) father pounded that into my head.”

Gilroy wrote the critic character Morf, who is as fluid in his sexuality as he is in his art opinions, specifical­ly for Gyllenhaal who he said is “one of the most fearless actors alive right now. He’s always pushing himself with the craziest ideas that often end up in the movie,” Gilroy said. “I like working with people who want to take a sledgehamm­er to all this and Jake is that person.”

The feeling is mutual for Gyllenhaal who said their connection is, “Sort of inexplicab­le.”

“But I’m not asking any questions about it,” Gyllenhaal said. “I just show up when he asks.”

After the Velvet Buzzsaw experience, Gilroy himself is a Netflix believer.

“I couldn’t speak highly enough about Netflix. The traditiona­l studios in some way have created Netflix. The traditiona­l studios have gone from making a broad range of films to doing branded IP and franchises and it has left a void for an original, range of films to get made,” Gilroy said.

“And Netflix is making them en masse and it’s a very exciting time. I think history is being written right now.”

 ??  ?? Zawe Ashton, left, and Jake Gyllenhaal star in director Dan Gilroy’s thriller Velvet Buzzsaw, a new Netflix movie that takes a dark look at the high-end art world.
Zawe Ashton, left, and Jake Gyllenhaal star in director Dan Gilroy’s thriller Velvet Buzzsaw, a new Netflix movie that takes a dark look at the high-end art world.

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