Tag: spin-me-round

  • Indie Filmmaker Jeff Baena Dies Aged 47

    'Spin Me Round' director Jeff Baena.
    ‘Spin Me Round’ director Jeff Baena.

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    • Filmmaker Jeff Baena has tragically died aged 47.
    • Baena was the writer and director of movies including ‘Life After Beth.’
    • He was married to actor and frequent collaborator Aubrey Plaza.

    Jeff Baena, a respected writer and director whose work includes movies such as ‘Joshy,’ ‘Life After Beth’ and ‘Spin Me Round,’ was found dead at home in Los Angeles on Friday. He was 47.

    Baena, who had been in a long relationship with ‘Parks & Recreation’ and ‘My Old Ass’ actor Aubrey Plaza –– the pair married in secret in 2021 –– was discovered by an assistant and declared dead at the scene.

    Related Article: Alison Brie Discusses Writing and Starring in Rom-Com ‘Spin Me Round’

    Jeff Baena: Early Life and Career

    'Spin Me Round' director Jeff Baena.
    ‘Spin Me Round’ director Jeff Baena.

    Baena was born in 1977 and raised in Miami.

    After graduating from the New York University Tisch School of the Arts with a degree in film, Baena headed to Los Angeles, getting his start in somewhat traditional fashion by working as a production assistant on films, particularly for Robert Zemeckis, for whom he served on the crews of ‘What Lies Beneath’ and ‘Cast Away.’

    His next job was as an assistant editor for filmmaker David O. Russell, and an unusual coincidence –– actually an accident –– helped to spur the next stage of Baena’s career. While driving to Russell’s house as part of his duties one day, his car was struck by another. The result was an eye injury that forced him to stop working for several weeks.

    Offering to help care for him, Russell, began discussing ideas for scripts, and the two would start to collaborate on work.

    This is what Baena told Fast Company about that time:

    “He was super-generous, creatively. He allowed me to advocate for any ideas that were in conflict with his ideas. We were on the same wavelength, had the same style and interests. He was really a soul mate, as a co–writer.”

    Jeff Baena: Writing work

    (L to R) Jude Law, Naomi Watts, Dustin Hoffman and Lily Tomlin in 'I Heart Huckabees'. Photo: Fox Searchlight Pictures.
    (L to R) Jude Law, Naomi Watts, Dustin Hoffman and Lily Tomlin in ‘I Heart Huckabees’. Photo: Fox Searchlight Pictures.

    One of the screenplays to result from their collaboration would be Russell’s 2004 movie ‘I Heart Huckabees,’ which stars the likes of Mark Wahlberg, Jude Law, Lily Tomlin and Jason Schwartzman. It was nominated for the 2004 Gotham Award for Best Feature.

    Following that, be began to score uncredited work revising other scripts, including a contribution to 2004 comedy sequel ‘Meet the Fockers.’

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    But it was in writing and directing that Baena’s heart truly lay.

    He made a brief stop in the world of acting before he became a director, playing a character named after himself in Mark Webber’s 2012 drama ‘The End of Love.’

    He would also have a small role in Joe Swanberg’s 2015 film ‘Digging for Fire,’ cementing his roots within the growing indie movement that also included the Duplass brothers.

    Jeff Baena: Director

    Anna Kendrick in 'Life After Beth'. Photo: A24.
    Anna Kendrick in ‘Life After Beth’. Photo: A24.

    The filmmaker made his directorial debut with 2014 horror comedy ‘Life After Beth,’ in which Dane DeHaan’s character discovers that his deceased girlfriend –– played by Aubrey Plaza –– has come back to life as a zombie.

    He followed that up with 2016’s ‘Joshy,’ starring Thomas Middleditch as a man who loses his fiancée and whose friends try to cheer him up by taking him to a cabin. It premiered at the 2016 Sundance Film Festival and was nominated for the Grand Jury Prize.

    Next came one of the films for which Baena is best remembered; 2017’s ‘The Little Hours,’ in which Dave Franco plays a young servant fleeing from his master takes refuge at a convent full of emotionally unstable nuns –– which includes Plaza among their number. That film was nominated for the Audience Award at the 2017 Edinburgh International Film Festival.

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    Baena co-wrote, directed, and produced ‘Horse Girl’ which premiered at the 2020 Sundance Film Festival and was released on Netflix shortly after. And his most recent film was ‘Spin Me Round,’ featuring Alison Brie as a woman wins an all-expenses-paid trip to a company’s institute outside of Florence, and also the chance to meet the restaurant chain’s wealthy and charismatic owner.

    On television, Baena created, wrote, directed and executive produced the Showtime series, ‘Cinema Toast,’ which sees indie filmmakers re-editing and re-scoring footage from public domain films, overdubbing them with performances of contemporary actors to tell new, wholly original stories.

    The series included Plaza’s chance to make her directorial debut.

    Jeff Baena: Aubrey Plaza Talks Their Relationship

    (L to R) Aubrey Plaza as Kat and Alison Brie as Amber in 'Spin Me Round.'
    (L to R) Aubrey Plaza as Kat and Alison Brie as Amber in ‘Spin Me Round.’

    Plaza and Baena had been together since 2011 but preferred to keep their connection private until they married in May 2021, the news only breaking because she referred to him as “my darling husband” on Instagram.

    Plaza had this to say about their relationship and marriage on ‘The Drew Barrymore Show‘:

    “It’s so great, it’s so complicated. It’s, like, extreme highs and extreme, you know, complications. It’s a really hard thing to navigate, but we’ve been together for 11 years. We just muscle our way through it.”

    And this was what she told People about how the pandemic strengthened their bond:

    “We were quarantined for months and months like everybody else. We did enjoy it. I think it was, obviously other than all of the catastrophic things happening in the world, just on a personal level, relationship level, was kind of nice to just be forced to be in one place for that long.”

    In addition to Plaza, Baena is survived by his mother, Barbara Stern and stepfather Roger Stern, father Scott Baena and stepmother Michele Baena, brother Brad Baena and stepsister and stepbrother Bianca Gabay and Jed Fluxman.

    (L to R) Zach Woods as Dana, Debby Ryan as Susie, Alison Brie as Amber, and Ayden Mayeri as Jen in 'Spin Me Round.'
    (L to R) Zach Woods as Dana, Debby Ryan as Susie, Alison Brie as Amber, and Ayden Mayeri as Jen in ‘Spin Me Round.’

    Other Jeff Baena Movies and TV Shows:

    Buy Jeff Baena Movies on Amazon

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  • Alison Brie Talks Writing and Starring in ‘Spin Me Round’

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    Opening in theaters, VOD, and streaming on AMC+ beginning August 19th is the new romantic comedy ‘Spin Me Round,’ which was co-written by actress Alison Brie (‘Promising Young Woman’), and co-written and directed by Jeff Baena (‘Horse Girl’).

    The new movie follows Amber (Brie), the manager of an Italian restaurant chain who wins the opportunity to attend the franchise’s educational immersion program in Italy.

    But what she thought would be an exciting getaway devolves into chaos when she begins a romantic triangle with the restaurant chain’s wealthy owner Nick (Alessandro Nivola) and his assistant, Kat (Aubrey Plaza).

    In addition to Brie, Nivola, and Plaza, the cast also includes Molly Shannon (‘Me and Earl and the Dying Girl’), Lil Rel Howery (‘I Love My Dad’), Tim Heidecker (‘Ant-Man and the Wasp’), Tricia Helfer (‘Battlestar Galactica’), and Fred Armisen (‘The Bubble’).

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with Alison Brie about her work on ‘Spin Me Around,’ writing the screenplay with director Jeff Baena, her character’s journey and romance with Nick, and working with Aubrey Plaza.

    Alison Brie as Amber in 'Spin Me Round.'
    Alison Brie as Amber in ‘Spin Me Round.’

    You can read our full interview below or click on the video player above to watch our interviews with Alison Brie and co-writer and director Jeff Baena.

    Moviefone: To begin with, can you talk about the genesis of the idea for the film and the process of writing the screenplay with director Jeff Baena?

    Alison Brie: So, Jeff brought the idea to me, and it was something that he had been thinking about since we shot ‘The Little Hours’ in Italy. I think he had a strong desire to get back to Italy. He had read some articles about a similar immersive management program that may exist in real life, and how lackluster it might have been, or how Americanized it might have been.

    He saw a great idea in bringing a fun ensemble together to watch them navigate that kind of program. When he brought me into the fold, I think I was really drawn to the idea that the movie is going to take this journey through a bunch of different genres, and that we’re following a character who doesn’t take a lot of action in her life.

    She just lets things happen to her, but over the course of this movie, she tries to take her destiny into her own hands, but it ends in total chaos. I also really liked the idea of unfulfilled expectation. Something we were playing with is that sometimes when you take a big trip, you think it’s going to be really life changing and that you’re going to get back on the other side as a totally different person, and often, that doesn’t happen.

    In life versus the movies, you get home and your life is kind of the same. I think we wanted to show that there actually can be an internal shift, however subtle, even if there’s not an external shift.

    MF: Can you talk about the journey that Amber goes on and how it changes her through the course of the movie?

    AB: We’re watching Amber become a more self-empowered person, ultimately. At the start of the film, you get the sense that she’s really stuck. She’s been a manager at this Italian restaurant chain for nine years. She is a bit of a pushover. She tried to start another restaurant with her boyfriend, but that wasn’t really her idea. She has trouble saying no to people. She goes with the flow too much. She’s not going to take her life into her own hands.

    Through her experiences on this trip, and the people that she meets, specifically Aubrey Plaza’s character, I think she kind of sees a different type of dangerous person and is a little bit inspired by that. At the end of the film, it’s like the trip isn’t going to change the fact that she works at this restaurant. So, it doesn’t get her out of debt, but I do think there is a subtle enough shift of her starting to empower herself, have a voice and say the things that she wants.

    Aubrey Plaza as Kat and Alison Brie as Amber in 'Spin Me Round.'
    (L to R) Aubrey Plaza as Kat and Alison Brie as Amber in ‘Spin Me Round.’

    MF: Can you talk about Amber’s sudden friendship with Kat and working on that odd relationship with Aubrey Plaza?

    AB: We always had Aubrey in mind for the role. So, it’s always nice when you get to write a character for an actor. But it’s so fun to work with Aubrey. She’s such a great actress, and she brings a really exciting, impulsive kind of energy to all of her roles that is really unexpected.

    So, it’s really easy to shoot scenes with her, and she and I have worked together a bunch before. So, it’s really comfortable and fun. I think, with those scenes, it’s sort of the rawest that you see my character. She goes into this trip being fed movies like ‘Eat, Pray, Love,’ and you get the sense that maybe she watches ‘The Bachelorette’ and ‘The Bachelor’ a lot, and that’s kind of what she has in mind for this trip.

    Aubrey’s character shakes it up, and you see her feeling real things in the moment that she hasn’t maybe felt before. She gets a bit of inspiration from her character, and the way that she just is unabashedly who she is.

    MF: Finally, can you talk about Amber and Nick’s relationship, how he is able to win her over, and how she feels when she discovers his true intentions?

    AB: Poor Amber is so naive, but I also think there’s a sense to her that is just too polite also. Some of the interactions that she has early on in the movie with Nick are based on real interactions that I’ve had with men in life when I was much younger. I think that she wants to be naive, because the prospect of this rich, handsome, restaurateur sweeping her off her feet is very exciting. She’s able to ignore the red flags, because she’s just the type of person who is uncomfortable with rocking the boat, no pun intended.

    So, it takes her a little while longer to realize what’s going on with Nick. It really takes a lot of courage from her, again, not being a person who ever speaks up for herself or asserts herself. It takes a lot to get her to say anything. She almost would rather think that a whole different set of things were going on than admit what was in front of her.

    Alessandro Nivola as Nick Martucci and Alison Brie as Amber in 'Spin Me Round.'
    (L to R) Alessandro Nivola as Nick Martucci and Alison Brie as Amber in ‘Spin Me Round.’
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