This So-Called Disaster
See Larger Image
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
List Price: $14.98Your Price: $12.99
You Save: $1.99 (13%)Prices subject to change.
Average Rating:
Sales Rank: 75577
Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1
Audience Rating: R (Restricted)
Binding: DVD
EAN: 9780792864004
Format: Closed-captioned, Color, DVD-Video, Full Screen, Subtitled, NTSC
ISBN: 079286400X
Label: MGM (Video & DVD)
Manufacturer: MGM (Video & DVD)
Number Of Items: 1
Publisher: MGM (Video & DVD)
Region Code: 1
Release Date: December 14, 2004
Running Time: 89 minutes
Sales Rank: 75577
Studio: MGM (Video & DVD)
Theatrical Release Date: 2003
Editorial Review:Description:A 'high-voltage Hollywood cast' (The Village Voice) featuring Academy Award(r) winner* Sean Penn and Oscar(r) nominees** Nick Nolte and Woody Harrelson offers up an exclusivelook into the rehearsal process in this 'nakedly personal work' (LA Weekly) filmed during the mounting of a Sam Shepard play. It's three weeks until Shepard's The Late Henry Moss opens at the Magic Theatre in San Francisco and tensions are rising between Penn, Nolte and Harrelson. As sparks begin to fly between their characters, they set off a powder keg of emotions so explosive that the actors themselves are drawn into the fray. *2003: Actor, Mystic River **Nolte: Actor, Affliction (1998); Actor, The Prince of Tides (1991); Harrelson: Actor, The People vs. Larry Flynt (1996)
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Related Items:
see more
Related Items:
Customer Reviews
Average Rating:

Rating: 
-
This So-Called Disaster
"Moss" is a dark, demanding piece, so the rehearsals director Michael Almereyda respectfully captures in "Disaster" are draining for all concerned. What transfixed this fly on the wall was how directors and actors adopt their own language in rehearsing a play--one virtually unintelligible to the layman, but to trained professionals, a pure dialect pinpointing emotion and motivation. "Disaster" is an absolute must for anyone interested in the inner workings of acting and the theatre.
Rating: 
-
This So-Called Disaster
You get to see the process of making a play using all the top stars and how they actually get into their roles.
Makes you want to see that play.
Rating: 
-
intriguing documentary
The documentary "This So-Called Disaster" is a behind-the-scenes look at the making of Sam Sheppard's semi-autobiographical play "The Late Henry Moss," which debuted in San Francisco in 2000. Being himself the son of an alcoholic father, Sheppard drew upon his own personal experience for this cathartic tale of two brothers' coming to terms with the death of their own alcoholic father. The actors in this production include Sean Penn, Nick Nolte, Cheech Marin and Woody Harrelson. As Penn says at one point, Sheppard's plays often deal with the theme of men trying to forge their identities in a world with no clear-cut definition of what a man is supposed to be. This theme filters through in both the snippets of the play we see being worked on in the rehearsals and in the on-camera interviews with Sheppard and many of the principal performers in the production.
It's a tribute to both the power of Sheppard's writing and the talent of the actors playing the roles that we find ourselves wanting to see this play merely from the glimpses we get of it in rough-cut form. Anyone interested in playwriting and fine acting will be mesmerized by the nuts-and-bolts aspects of this film, as it shows us just how a theatrical work, involving some of the greatest talents in modern drama, ultimately comes to fruition.
It's no "Looking for Richard," but "This So-Called Disaster" has much to offer the serious theaterphile.
Rating: 
-
excellent ... especially if you've seen the play!
i could understand how this film might be a let-down for anyone not completed fascinated with the work of sam shepard, sean penn, and/or nick nolte. i respect the work of all three of them. and i am especially grateful for this film because i was lucky enough to see the play (and with the entire cast/no understudies) and the film lended a great deal to the experience. yay!
Rating: 
-
Riveting theater treat
Contrary to the review published above, I saw this film at its premiere showing at the Film Forum in New York, and found it fascinating and exciting. The film was a riveting documentation of the organic artistic process in the theater. The film is far from a commercial for Sam Shepard - on the contrary, it demonstrates in part, the difficulty he had managing his volatile but brilliant cast for the production of his strange, fascinating play, The Late Henry Moss. Good for anyone in the theater or any of the arts.