Tesla Execs Are Freaking Out

You might not believe what you're about to see is real, but I assure you the video has been left unedited. It's so revolutionary that tech giants like Microsoft, Amazon, and NVIDIA are all lining up to get their hands on it. And Elon Musk has completely restructured Tesla to chase this opportunity.

Sean Baker's improvised road to 'Anora'

JAKE COYLE
October 15, 2024

NEW YORK (AP) -- Sean Baker's interest in the lives of sex workers began with his 2012 drama "Starlet." For that film, set around the adult film world of San Fernando Valley, Baker spent time listening to the stories of sex workers. Some co-starred in the movie. Many became friends.

"I remember being on set and Radium Cheung, my DP, was like, 'There's a whole other movie. And there's a whole other movie,'" Baker recalls. "I was like, 'There's a million stories to be told in this world.'"

Since then, Baker has traversed a wide swath of America in films set everywhere from West Hollywood donut shops to industrial rural Texas. But he has kept the lives of sex workers in focus. The iPhone-shot "Tangerine" (2015) is about a pair of Los Angeles trans sex workers out to avenge a cheating boyfriend. In "The Florida Project" (2017), a single mother turns to sex work to support herself and her daughter in an Orlando motel. "Red Rocket" (2021) comically captures a washed-up porn star.

When his latest film "Anora," starring Mikey Madison as a Brooklyn exotic dancer who spontaneously marries the son of a Russian oligarch, won the Palme d'Or at the Cannes Film Festival earlier this year, Baker dedicated the award to "all sex workers, past, present and future."

It was a crowning moment for the 53-year-old who has long considered the French festival the pinnacle.

"It was the dream. You're sort of in an existential crisis after that. I'm still figuring it out, quite honestly," Baker said in a recent interview. "It's not about opening doors. It's certainly not about trying to get into the studio. To tell you the truth, it does the exact opposite. It says: OK, good. Now we can continue to do this."

Baker, a resolutely independent filmmaker, is less comfortable at center stage than he is behind the camera. His movies, likewise, relish the communities of seldom-chronicled American subcultures. Samantha Quan, a producer of "Anora" and Baker's wife, says he has always been interested in "people and situations that are always there but people choose not to see them."

But "Anora," one of the year's most acclaimed movies, has brought Baker perilously close to the mainstream. "Anora" is widely considered a contender for best picture at the Academy Awards, alongside other categories including best actress for its lauded young star.

Baker has arrived at this moment despite charting what, nowadays, is an unconventional path for a filmmaker. He has no interest in television or franchise movies, remaining devoted to the big screen. He makes scrappy indie movies built from real-life experience and research that balance both screwball comedy and social realism. "Anora" is the unusual film to draw comparisons to both British social realists like Mike Leigh, a favorite of Baker's, and masters of farce like Ernst Lubitsch.

In a Hollywood that churns out big-budget fantasies, Baker has ascended by crafting what you might call anti-fairy tales. His movies suggest there's something bankrupt in what and who we collectively value. In "Anora," Madison's Ani isn't the only one selling herself. The Russian oligarch's henchmen are doing a job they'd rather not. The transactional nature of everything is both absurd and tragic.

It's a sentiment Baker has come by through experience as well as research.

"I don't want to say in any way that I ever faced the hardships of an undocumented immigrant or a marginalized sex worker," he says. "But being an independent filmmaker for 30 years, there was a hustle. Up until fairly recently, I was struggling to pay rent."

Baker grew up in New Jersey outside New York City. He attended film school at NYU. When he began, he envisioned himself making "Die Hard." But as his exposure to arthouse and international film expanded, so did his interests as a filmmaker. Still, his Richard Linklater-influenced first feature, 2000's "Four Letter Words," drew heavily from his suburban upbringing.

But in the four years between that film and his next, he "finally" had some life experience, he says. Baker became less interested in himself than in other parts of the world. He also developed a debilitating drug addiction that took years to shake. While living above a Chinese restaurant, Baker would talk to the delivery people, many of them undocumented immigrants, in the stairwell. Those conversations led to "Take Out," co-directed with Shih-Ching Tsou.

"That really gave me a chance to restart myself because I was down and out," Baker says. "I lost all my friends. I lost everything. I had no more contacts. Everybody who I went to school with had been in Hollywood working. Todd Phillips, I went to school with. He was already making his first film, and I was getting off of heroin."

With "Take Out," Baker hit on an approach that he's carried through to "Anora." He leaned into immersive research, after which he built screenplays that served as a blueprint for improvisation-heavy films, eclectically populated by professional and non-professional actors. In "Anora," he cast Madison (as well as Yura Borisov and Mark Eydelshteyn) before writing the script. He and Quan also lived briefly in the Brooklyn neighborhood of Brighton Beach to soak up the setting.

"Even though my films are taking place pretty much now, they're contemporary stories, I want it to feel like it's shot in 1974," Baker says.

As much as Baker might connect his films to a '70s sensibility, he's largely focused on where movies might go from here -- and how he might nudge its direction a little bit. The attention for "Anora" Baker hopes will carry independent, arthouse cinema into a wider arena, and, maybe, convince Hollywood that smaller, less expensive movies can punch well above their weight.

That "Anora" and Brady Corbet's "The Brutalist" -- a 3 ½-hour epic shot in VistaVision and made for less than $10 million -- seem to be in the awards mix, Baker says, is telling of a shift.

"That's going to be a signal to the industry," Baker says. "Right now, it's panic in LA. I'm like: We don't have to make films for that much."

Continue Reading...

Popular

Tech YouTuber MKBHD Says 'I'll Shave My Head On Camera' If Elon Musk's Tesla Delivers Cybercab Before 2027 As Robotaxi Timeline Faces Skepticism

Tech YouTuber MKBHD expressed skepticism about Tesla's ability to deliver its $30,000 fully self-driving Robotaxi by 2027, promising to shave his head on camera if the company meets that timeline.

Jim Cramer Hand Picks These 3 Stocks To Ride The Crest Of The Chinese Stimulus Frenzy

China has gone out in full throttle to stimulate its economy and analysts are mostly upbeat about its ramifications.

Meet The Companies That Could Be Behind Apple's "AiPhone" - Ad

"According to my research, these three tiny companies may be working behind the scenes to produce Apple's first ever AI-powered iPhone..." -- Luke Lango, Silicon Valley Insider

For migrant women who land in Colorado looking for jobs, a common answer emerges: No

AURORA, Colo. (AP) — East Colfax Avenue was the best place to find a job. That's what everyone told Sofia Roca.

Bill Gates' Mysterious New AI Project Revealed - Ad

Tech expert Jeff Brown uncovers Bill Gates' latest AI project, Stargate, which Forbes claims could reshape everything we think we know about our world.

A Look At Upcoming IPOs For The Week

With the start of a new week comes the excitement surrounding a new set of companies looking to make an impact through their public offerings. According to Benzinga Pro, these enticing companies are scheduled to trade publicly this week.

Apple's iPhone 16 Powers Record Sales In Q3, Just Behind Samsung In Global Market Share Battle

Apple has set a new sales record for its iPhone during the third quarter of 2024, coinciding with a broader recovery in the global smartphone market.

This Oil Investment Is Crushing Traditional Stocks - Ad

This is not your average oil play. It's an alternative investment with way more potential than traditional stocks... This oil play offers the best of both worlds -- income and growth. Take a look and discover how this oil investment leaves stocks in the dust.

Bankrupt EV Maker Fisker Under US SEC Investigation For Potential Securities Law Violation

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission is investigating bankrupt EV startup Fisker, the regulator said in a filing dated this month.

Elon Musk Joins Fight For Election Reform With Vivek Ramaswamy: What This Could Mean

Elon Musk has publicly endorsed a set of election reforms proposed by Vivek Ramaswamy, describing them as "simple and effective."

Early Nvidia, AMD, and Tesla Investor Shares New AI Picks - Ad

Jeff Brown, the tech expert who recommended Nvidia, AMD, and Tesla, is now releasing new AI stock picks. He believes they could deliver even bigger gains than before.

Chief operating officer of Truth Social's parent company resigns

The chief operating officer of Truth Social's parent company has resigned and the company must hand over almost 800,000 shares to one of its investors as part of a court ruling, according to a regulatory filing.

You're About to Lose the Majority of Your Wealth - Ad

Whether you want to admit it or not... America is headed over the cliff. That's why I put this presentation together at great personal risk. Because starting on Nov. 5th you could lose everything you're entitled to as an American, including the majority of your wealth.

Bathroom break at work? Swiss court upholds watchmaker's rule to do it on your own time

GENEVA (AP) — A court in Switzerland — where time is money for its famed watchmaking industry — has ruled that a dial manufacturer was justified in telling workers: If you need a bathroom break, clock out and take it on your own time.

The 20 Year Bull Market Is Here - And This Tiny Company Holds the Keys - Ad

Without vast amounts of energy, AI will NEVER scale. Microsoft, Tesla and Google are all begging for more. Even signing multi-decade deals to secure private sources of this powerful energy to fuel their data centers.. Best of all, a company with quite possibly the most potential in this sector trades for less than $1...

Details on the U.S. $7,882 Stimulus - Ad

The U.S. Government recently announced a new "stimulus program"...And it could hand you a payment for as much as $7,882 -- each quarter. See, it has to do with a leaked 19-page memo...Better still, you can collect these payouts every single quarter -- for life...I call this the "Stimulus Stipends" program.

Russia's Latest 'Time Bomb' Sparks Fear, But It's Not What You Think

Economist Konstantin Sonin says that the ongoing conflict in Ukraine is setting the stage for a major economic crisis in Russia.

Disturbing New AI Stock Chart [This Is Bad...] - Ad

The last time this pattern appeared was 1999, just before the entire stock market imploded. $5 TRILLION of investor wealth was wiped out. That's why Addison Wiggin has stepped forward to reveal what you can do to protect yourself before this catastrophic event hits again.

Former Scottish First Minister Alex Salmond, who sought Scotland's independence from UK, dies at 69

LONDON (AP) — Alex Salmond, the former first minister of Scotland who for decades championed Scotland’s independence from the U.K. and nearly accomplished it, has died. He was 69.

Tips for keeping your wedding from becoming a political battleground

NEW YORK (AP) — Uncle Jim is profoundly red, politically speaking. Cousin Jane is liberal, activist left. The two can't usually be in a room together without sparks flying, but both are invited to your .

Don't Tell ANYONE About This Altcoin (Until It Pops)... - Ad

Quiet now! This governance token could be the sleeping giant of the crypto world... In the next bull market, this "DeFi 2.0" powerhouse might soar 10x... 50x... perhaps even 100x.

TotalEnergies Locks In Renewable Electricity Supply Deal With Saint-Gobain

TotalEnergies signs PPA with Saint-Gobain to supply renewable electricity to French facilities, targeting 30% renewable energy in France by 2027.

America Can't Afford a Harris Presidency - Ad

New research from Jim Rickards - former advisor to the CIA - reveals shocking predictions about an "Election Meltdown" coming this November. Jim's showing all American patriots why an "Election Meltdown" could crash stocks by 50%, lead to the final demise of the dollar, even cause violent riots in the streets.

Safety board says pedals pilots use to steer Boeing Max jets on runways can get stuck

WASHINGTON (AP) — Safety investigators are making “urgent” recommendations to Boeing and the Federal Aviation Administration after determining pedals that pilots use to steer 737 Max jetliners on runways can become jammed because moisture can leak into a rudder assembly and freeze.

Are Investors Over 55 Are In Grave Danger? - Ad

A disturbing, new piece of market intelligence indicates over $5 trillion of investor wealth could be wiped out practically overnight ... and would take 20+ years to recover. Take these steps before Oct. 30 to help preserve your financial future before it's too late.

Samsung Warns Of Q3 Profit Drop Amid Shipment Delays Of AI Chip Approved By Nvidia

Samsung Electronics has issued a warning, predicting a significant drop in third-quarter profits, due to various factors including one-time costs and a surge in supply from Chinese rivals.

Elon: Tesla Is a Robotics Company Now - Ad

Elon Musk's new plan for Tesla's future has nothing to do with electric cars... TechRadar reports it "will blow your mind..." & McKinsey says it "will shape the coming decade." We recently got our hands on a video clip detailing this breakthrough.

Polls Suggest This Candidate Holds Slim Lead In Presidential Race With One Month To Go

With one month to go, Kamala Harris is slightly ahead of Donald Trump in the presidential race, as per recent polling data.

Investigation finds widespread discrimination against Section 8 tenants in California

LOS ANGELES (AP) — California tenants who held Section 8 housing vouchers were refused rental contracts by more than 200 landlords, including major real estate firms, according to an undercover investigation that found widespread discrimination in the state.

Elon Musk Wants Uranium... But This $3 Million Miner Could Beat Him to It! - Ad

While tech giants like Elon Musk are pouring billions into nuclear energy, a tiny firm selling for less than $1 has quietly secured land in Canada holding some of the richest uranium deposits ever discovered. With energy demand skyrocketing, this tiny company could soon make big waves in the market.

Trending Now

Information, charts or examples are for illustration and educational purposes only and not for individualized investment management This message contains commercial elements, such as advertising. We only send these offers to those who have opted in to our newsletter. Past performance is not indicative of future results. For these reasons we strongly suggest trading in a DEMO/Simulated account. The information provided by us is for educational and informational purposes only. We make no representations or warranties concerning the products, practices or procedures of any company or entity mentioned or recommended and have not determined if the statements and opinions of the advertiser are accurate, correct or truthful. If you use, act upon or make decisions in reliance on information contained or any external source linked within it, you do so at your own peril and agree to hold us, our officers, directors, shareholders, affiliates and agents without fault.

Copyright finstrategist.com
Privacy Policy | Terms of Service