Nine (2009 live-action film)

Nine
Theatrical release poster
Directed by Rob Marshall
Produced by
Written by
Based on Nine
by Arthur Kopit
Starring
Music by
Cinematography Dion Beebe
Edited by
Production
companies
Distributed by The Weinstein Company
Release date
  • December 18, 2009 (2009-12-18) (United States)
  • January 15, 2010 (2010-01-15) (Italy)
Running time
118 minutes[1]
Country
  • United States
  • Italy
Language
  • English
  • Italian
Budget $80 million[2]
Box office $53.9 million[2]

Nine is a 2009 romantic musical drama film directed and produced by Rob Marshall and written by Michael Tolkin and Anthony Minghella. The film is an adaptation of the 1982 musical of the same name, which in turn is based on Federico Fellini's semi-autobiographical 1963 film . In addition to songs from the stage musical, all written by Maury Yeston, the film has three original songs, also written by Yeston. The ensemble principal cast consists of Daniel Day-Lewis, Marion Cotillard, Penélope Cruz, Judi Dench, Fergie, Kate Hudson, Nicole Kidman, and Sophia Loren. The film premiered in London, opened the 6th annual Dubai International Film Festival on December 9, 2009[3] and was released in the United States on December 18, 2009, in New York City and Los Angeles, with a wide release on December 25, 2009.[4] Though a critical and commercial failure, Nine was nominated for four Academy Awards: Best Supporting Actress (Penélope Cruz), Best Art Direction (John Myhre (AD), Gordon Sim (SD)), Best Costume Design (Colleen Atwood) and Best Original Song ("Take It All", music and lyrics by Maury Yeston).

Plot

Guido Contini is a gifted Italian filmmaker in 1965 at the famous Cinecittà movie studios in Rome. At the age of fifty he has developed writer's block and surrealistically summons all of the women in his life, alive and dead, to help him recapture inspiration, as dozens of female dancers and the film’s leading ladies appear in his mind: Claudia Jenssen, his star actress; his wife Luisa; his mistress Carla; his costume designer and confidant Lilli; his beloved Mamma; Stephanie, an American fashion journalist from Vogue; and Saraghina, a prostitute from his childhood; ("Overture Delle Donne"). He avoids any clear answers when questioned by reporters about his new movie, because he doesn't have an idea for one.

Guido creates an elaborate fantasy ("Guido's Song"), where he explains that he wishes to have the naiveté of youth yet the wisdom of age. Escaping to a Spa Hotel on the Italian coast, he receives a phone call from Carla, his mistress ("A Call from the Vatican") seducing him as he listens on the other end. Later, she arrives at the spa, expecting to share his suite, but is upset to learn that she’s staying in a shabby pensione by the train station. Meanwhile, Guido meets with Lilli, his costume designer, and begs for inspiration, confessing he has no script. Lilli urges him to use his film to entertain, inspired by the Folies Bergère, where she 'learnt her art' ("Folies Bergères"). Then Guido remembers Saraghina, a prostitute who danced for him and his boyhood schoolmates on a beach, teaching them the joy of life's sensual and sexual pleasures ("Be Italian"). Young Guido is caught by his school teachers/priests and punished by his principal while his ashamed mother reluctantly watches.

Back at the Spa, at dinner, he’s happily surprised to see his wife Luisa. He embraces her and wishes her a happy birthday. Luisa, deeply unhappy, sings of the life of compromise she's made, abandoning her acting career to be at Guido's side in supporting his art ("My Husband Makes Movies"). She then notices Carla entering the restaurant and storms out immediately, Guido following. Luisa ignores him and leaves and, when he returns to the restaurant and sees Carla, he is furious. Guido demands Carla to leave, which leaves her heartbroken. Later, unable to pacify Luisa in their hotel room, Guido seeks out Stephanie in the hotel's bar, who describes her love for his movies though clearly from the point of view of an ignorant fashion editor ("Cinema Italiano"). She takes him to her room but, watching her undress, Guido realizes how much he cares for and needs his wife and seems to come to his senses.

Returning to Luisa he promises that he’s finished with cheating. As she embraces him, the phone rings and he’s called away to help Carla, who has overdosed on pills in a suicide attempt. It becomes impossible for Guido to juggle all the women and contradictions in his life. He stays with Carla until her husband Luigi arrives, then returns to the hotel to find that Luisa has abandoned him, and the crew has returned to Rome to begin filming. Distraught, he has a vision of his mother singing him a lullaby when he was young ("Guarda La Luna"). Later, in Rome, he phones Luisa from the studio and begs her to come to view screen tests the next evening. When his leading lady, Claudia, arrives and senses there is no written script, she and Guido go for a drive. Guido confesses that there is indeed no script, but he needs her to inspire one. She asks him what he wants the film to be about and his description closely resembles his own ordeal: a man lost and in love with so many women. Claudia explains that she loves him but he seems to be a man who does not know how to love ("Unusual Way").

When Guido returns to review the screen tests, Luisa also arrives and is devastated to see a clip of an actress in a scene drawn from a private memory she and Guido shared years ago. It is the last straw for her, to see him exploiting her private life so publicly before the world. In an angry and imaginary public striptease she leaves Guido for good ("Take It All"). Utterly abandoned by all those whom he has selfishly exploited, Guido finally comes to terms with the truth ("I Can’t Make This Movie"), realizing that he’s lost everything and everyone and has nothing with which to make a movie. Admitting that there never was a movie, he has the set destroyed before leaving Rome. Two years later, Guido is in a café in Anguillara with Lilli and sees an advertisement for a play starring Luisa. He asks about Luisa and Lilli tells him that she’s not going be to be the middle-man for them. When she asks if he will ever make a movie again, Guido answers that the only thing he would want to make would be a movie about a man trying to win back his wife.

As he speaks, he is suddenly on a film set, making that very film. Surrounded now by his actors and his boyhood nine-year-old self, Guido takes his place in the director’s chair, with the cast of his entire life assembled on the scaffolding behind him, including (as in the film's opening) the living and the dead. We see the arrival of his mother and the imagined nine-year-old Guido running to sit on the mature Guido’s lap ("Finale") as his fantasy meets his reality. Luisa quietly arrives without being seen and watches in the background, as a chastened Guido who has learned something about the need to grow up, quietly directs a scene with a young actress and actor who are sympathetically playing the younger Guido and Luisa deeply in love. Luisa watches from afar as Guido is slowly raised high on a crane and calls, “Action!”

Cast

Production

Development

On April 12, 2007, Variety announced Rob Marshall would direct a feature film adaptation of Nine for The Weinstein Company. Marshall had previously directed Chicago for the Weinsteins while they were still at Miramax. The film was co-produced by Marshall's own production company, Lucamar Productions. In 2008, a short "teaser" for the film was featured in an episode of the Food Network show, Barefoot Contessa, with the host, Ina Garten, making breakfast and lunch for her friends, producers John DeLuca and Rob Marshall, as they edited their new film, at the end being a "preview" of their film for the host to see in appreciation. In December 2009, the film contracted the soap operas One Life to Live and General Hospital for advertising purposes. The former featured two of the characters watching one of the film's trailers on the Internet on a YouTube-esque website, and there were subtle setting alterations performed for the latter, including movie posters on the walls of various public places.

Casting

On April 4, 2008, it was reported that Nicole Kidman had replaced Catherine Zeta-Jones in the role of Claudia Jenssen, who turned down the role when director Marshall refused to expand the role for the film. The film was Kidman's first big-screen musical since Moulin Rouge! After Catherine Zeta-Jones's departure, Anne Hathaway was auditioned for the role, but was turned down.[6] On May 14, 2008, Variety reported Daniel Day-Lewis was in talks to star in the film as Guido Contini, the film's lead character,[7] after Javier Bardem dropped out due to exhaustion. Later, it was reported Day-Lewis sent producers a video of him singing and shocked them with his voice. On May 19, 2008, People reported the actor had landed the role.[8] Antonio Banderas, who had starred in the Broadway revival, said he was "disappointed" at not being cast, but that he thought the trailer to the film looked great and only wished the "best" for everyone involved.[9] Variety also reported that Penélope Cruz auditioned for the role of Claudia, but was cast as Carla, and that Marion Cotillard auditioned for Lili, but was cast as Luisa, and that Kate Hudson had also been cast in a role created specifically for her which had not been featured in the Broadway show.[10] On July 18, 2008, People reported Fergie had been cast as Saraghina.[11] Katie Holmes auditioned for the role of Carla Albanese and Demi Moore auditioned for the role of Luisa Contini, but both failed to win those roles. Barbra Streisand was considered for the role of Lilli, but the role went to Judi Dench.[12]

Filming

Day-Lewis studied Italian for his role and frequently spoke the language in and out of character. According to music supervisor Matt Sullivan, "One day during shooting at London's Shepperton Studios, "Rob and I got called into Daniel's dressing room, which was designed as a 1960s film director's office," says Sullivan. 'He's smoking a cigarette, in full outfit and in character, and he's telling us how he would like to see this number that he's performing. And he's talking to us as Guido Contini. It was a really surreal experience.' "[10] Rehearsals for the film began in August 2008, the songs were then subsequently recorded in late September and filming commenced in October at Shepperton Studios, London. The film had been set to shoot in Toronto, though once Day-Lewis signed on, the production then moved to London.[13] Further filming took place in Italy (in the villages of Anzio and Sutri), and at Cinecittà Film Studios.[14] Nine's schedule required Kidman to begin rehearsals just four weeks after giving birth to her daughter. The teaser trailer for the film was released on May 14, 2009.

Music

Soundtrack

Nine Original Motion Picture Soundtrack
Soundtrack album by Various Artists
Released December 22, 2009[15]
Recorded 2009
Genre Film soundtrack
Length 57:37
Label Geffen Records
Producer

Track list

No.TitlePerformer(s)Length
1."Overture Delle Donne"Female Ensemble4:07
2."Guido's Song"Daniel Day-Lewis (Guido Contini)3:41
3."A Call from the Vatican"Penélope Cruz (Carla Albanese)3:40
4."Folies Bergères"Judi Dench (Lilli La Fleur)4:42
5."Be Italian"Fergie (Saraghina)4:12
6."My Husband Makes Movies"Marion Cotillard (Luisa Contini)4:48
7."Cinema Italiano"Kate Hudson (Stephanie)3:13
8."Guarda La Luna"Sophia Loren (Mamma Contini)3:10
9."Unusual Way"Nicole Kidman (Claudia Jenssen)3:26
10."Take It All"Marion Cotillard (Luisa Contini)3:03
11."I Can't Make This Movie"Daniel Day-Lewis (Guido Contini)2:11
12."Finale"Orchestra3:35
13."Quando Quando Quando" (*)Fergie feat. will.i.am3:15
14."Io Bacio... Tu Baci" (*)The Noisettes3:24
15."Cinema Italiano" (the Ron Fair remix) (*)Kate Hudson3:25
16."Unusual Way" (*)Griffith Frank3:42
Total length:57:37

(*) Songs not featured in the film, bonus tracks.

Original songs

Variety confirmed that three new songs had been created for the film by original Broadway composer Maury Yeston and were not included in the original stage score. They were:

  1. Guarda La Luna (Look at the Moon), a lullaby sung by Sophia Loren as Mamma. Yeston tailored this song specifically for Loren's voice, though he based the melody on the song Waltz from Nine from the Broadway score.
  2. Cinema Italiano, a number which Kate Hudson performs as Stephanie. This has "a retro feel" with "elements of '60s pop" that demonstrate how important Italian cinema was in that era and to illustrate the shallowness and vanity of Stephanie.
  3. Take It All, originally written as a trio for Claudia, Carla, and Luisa, but, just before shooting, rearranged as a solo for Luisa, according to music supervisor Matt Sullivan.[10]

Removed songs

These are songs that appeared in the musical, but were not included in the film or in the soundtrack.

  1. "Not Since Chaplin", by Company
  2. "The Germans at the Spa", by Company
  3. "Not Since Chaplin - Reprise", by Company
  4. "Movie Themes", by Guido
  5. "Only with You", by Guido
  6. "The Script", by Guido
  7. "Nine", by Mamma
  8. "Ti Voglio Bene", by Saraghina
  9. "The Bells of St. Sebastian", by Guido, Little Guido and Company
  10. "A Man Like You", by Guido and Claudia
  11. "Unusual Way - Duet", by Guido and Claudia
  12. "Contini Submits", by Guido
  13. "The Grand Canal" (Every Girl in Venice/Amor/Only You/Finale), by Guido, Claudia, Lilli, Luisa, Stephanie, Carla, Mamma, Company
  14. "Simple", by Carla
  15. "Be on Your Own", by Luisa
  16. "Not SInce Chaplin - Reprise", by Company
  17. "Getting Tall", by Little Guido
  18. "Long Ago - Reprise/Nine - Reprise", by Guido, Little Guido and Luisa

Chart performance

The film soundtrack peaked at number twenty-six on the Billboard 200. It also peaked at number three on the Polish Albums Chart[16] and at number nine on the Greek Albums Chart.[17]

Reception

The film received generally unfavorable reviews, although Day-Lewis, Cotillard, Cruz, and Fergie's performances were praised by critics. Review aggregate Rotten Tomatoes reports that 37% of critics have given the film a positive review based on 194 reviews, with an average score of 5.1/10. The critical consensus is: "It has a game, great-looking cast, led by the always worthwhile Daniel Day-Lewis, but Rob Marshall's Nine is chaotic and curiously distant."[18] On Metacritic, the film has a rating of 49/100, indicating "mixed or average reviews". The film was also a box office bomb, as it grossed just $19 million domestically and just below $54 million worldwide, against an $80 million budget. Despite less than favorable reception, it received four nominations for the 82nd Academy Awards and received other notable awards and nominations.

Awards

AwardCategoryNomineeResult
82nd Academy Awards Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress Penélope Cruz Nominated
Academy Award for Best Art Direction John Myhre and Gordon Sim Nominated
Academy Award for Best Costume Design Colleen Atwood Nominated
Academy Award for Best Original Song ("Take It All") Maury Yeston Nominated
63rd British Academy Film Awards
BAFTA Award for Best Makeup and Hair Peter King Nominated
15th Critics' Choice Movie Awards
Best Film Nominated
Best Supporting Actress Marion Cotillard Nominated
Best Cast Daniel Day-Lewis, Marion Cotillard, Sophia Loren, Judi Dench, Nicole Kidman, Penélope Cruz, Fergie and Kate Hudson Nominated
Best Cinematography Dion Beebe Nominated
Best Art Direction John Myhre and Gordon Sim Nominated
Best Editing Claire Simpson and Wyatt Smith Nominated
Best Costume Design Coleen Atwood Nominated
Best Makeup Peter King Nominated
Best Sound Nominated
Best Song ("Cinema Italiano") Maury Yeston Nominated
Detroit Film Critics Society Awards 2009 Best Supporting Actress Marion Cotillard Nominated
67th Golden Globe Awards Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy Nominated
Best Original Song ("Cinema Italiano") Maury Yeston Nominated
Best Actor – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy Daniel Day-Lewis Nominated
Best Actress – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy Marion Cotillard Nominated
Best Supporting Actress – Motion Picture Penélope Cruz Nominated
Satellite Awards 2009
Best Motion Picture – Comedy or Musical Won
Best Director Rob Marshall Nominated
Best Actress – Comedy or Musical Marion Cotillard Nominated
Best Actor – Comedy or Musical Daniel Day-Lewis Nominated
Best Supporting Actress – Motion Picture Penélope Cruz Nominated
Best Cinematography Dion Beebe Won
Best Costume Design Colleen Atwood Nominated
Best Film Editing Claire Simpson and Wyatt Smith Nominated
Best Original Song ("Cinema Italiano") Maury Yeston Nominated
Best Sound (Mixing and Editing) Nominated
Best Cast – Motion Picture Daniel Day-Lewis, Marion Cotillard, Sophia Loren, Judi Dench, Nicole Kidman, Penélope Cruz, Fergie and Kate Hudson Won
Ten Best Films of 2009 Won
16th Screen Actors Guild Awards
Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture Daniel Day-Lewis, Marion Cotillard, Sophia Loren, Judi Dench, Nicole Kidman, Penélope Cruz, Fergie and Kate Hudson Nominated
Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Supporting Role Penélope Cruz Nominated
St. Louis Gateway Film Critics Association Awards 2009 Best Supporting Actress Marion Cotillard Nominated
Best Cinematography Dion Beebe Won
Best Music Won
Washington D.C. Area Film Critics Association Awards 2009 Best Art Direction John Myhre and Gordon Sim Won

Home media

Nine was released on DVD and Blu-ray May 4, 2010. The DVD featured an audio commentary by director Rob Marshall and producer John DeLuca, 8 featurettes, and 3 music videos. The Blu-ray Disc included all the DVD extras including another featurette and a Screen Actors Guild Q&A.[19]

References

  1. "Nine (12A)". British Board of Film Classification. December 11, 2009. Retrieved December 23, 2016.
  2. 1 2 "Nine (2009) Box Office". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 2010-02-14.
  3. "Dubai International Film Festival". Dubai International Film Festival.
  4. Hernandez, Ernio (2008-01-23). "Work Resumes on Script for Rob Marshall's Nine Film". Playbill News. Playbill. Retrieved 2008-08-07.
  5. Intimate Only with Himself accessed 11/17/2016
  6. "Kidman and Dench Rumored To Star In 'Nine'". broadwayworld.com. Wisdom Digital Media. 2008-04-04. Retrieved 2008-08-07.
  7. Fleming, Michael (2008-05-14). "Daniel Day-Lewis eyes 'Nine' role". Variety Los Angeles. Variety. Retrieved 2008-08-07.
  8. Silverman, Stephen M (2008-05-19). "Daniel Day-Lewis Lands Nine Role". People. Time Inc. Retrieved 2008-08-07.
  9. "Antonio Banderas and Laura Linney; Interview for 'The Other Man'". Youtube.com. 2009-09-03. Retrieved 2010-06-04.
  10. 1 2 3 "Oscar winners abound in 'Nine' – Entertainment News, Music for Screens: Summer '09, Media". Variety. 2009-08-24. Retrieved 2010-01-12.
  11. Tapper, Christina (2008-07-30). "Fergie to Play a Prostitute in the Movie Musical Nine". People. Time Inc. Retrieved 2008-08-07.
  12. "Katie Holmes and Demi Moore Audition for 'Nine' Film 2007/07/01". Broadwayworld.com. 2007-07-01. Retrieved 2010-01-12.
  13. Bamigboye, Baz (2008-06-26). "BAZ BAMIGBOYE on Gillian Anderson, Nicole Kidman, Roman Polanski and much more... | Mail Online". London: Dailymail.co.uk. Retrieved 2010-01-12.
  14. "Nicole Kidman and Daniel Day-Lewis take a spin in the Eternal City, dodging the Sixties-style paparazzi | Mail Online". London: Dailymail.co.uk. 2009-01-29. Retrieved 2010-01-12.
  15. ""Nine" Soundtrack Will Hit Stores in December". Playbill.com. October 26, 2009. Archived from the original on April 7, 2012. Retrieved January 12, 2010.
  16. "OLiS – Official Retail Sales Chart". ZPAV. Retrieved February 22, 2010.
  17. "Top 50 Ξένων Aλμπουμ" (in Greek). IFPI Greece. Retrieved January 29, 2010.
  18. "Nine". Rotten Tomatoes. Flixter. Retrieved 2010-06-11.
  19. "Nine (US – DVD R1 / BD RA) in News > Releases at DVDActive". DVDActive. Retrieved 2010-03-13.
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