No sense of unifying identity to this thing. We get mostly option two with flashes of option one and. What we get is hovering limply between option one and option two. So let's just tell the story, right? It's a pulpy thriller. I just worry that if we start doing these accents, you're going to slide out of character into caricature. You're actors, right? So you're all Italian.
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Like, I just worry that if you all had crazy Italian accents, it might get distracting. And, guys, we've been kicking it around, and let's not do these accents. With recognizable emotions and an actual inner life? No, Jared, I said, inner life - inner. But instead you say, OK, y'all see what Adam's doing - acting, where he's playing a human being. You, the director - you gather everybody around. Option two - and I don't recommend this - you leave it at this running time, but you pull all your actors back from the brink. WELDON: We're going to give the gays everything they want. WELDON: We're going to have some fun with this. She's over here widening her eyes and flaring her nostrils and heaving her bosoms like she's - you know, she's seething like a Disney villain. WELDON: You know, he's bringing all the performative nuance of Waluigi - cartoon camp. WELDON: And you, the director - you gather your actors around, and you say, y'all see what Jared's doing? Like, if a chef on a pizza box came to life. 1, option one, the one I'm leaning toward - you chop this sucker down to an hour and a half. Look there are two ways this film could have worked. WELDON: Well, choices were made, and I giggled at many of them - not always the ones I was supposed to be. I don't really know where to start with this movie. I have given you all the details I possibly can. Ridley Scott directed from a screenplay by Becky Johnston and Roberto Bentivegna, and the whole thing is based on a book by Sara Gay Forden. Salma Hayek also shows up as Patrizia's psychic, who ultimately gets involved in the unhappy resolution of Patrizia and Maurizio's disintegrating marriage. Leto's Italian accent has already been compared to Mario and Luigi from the world of Nintendo, with good reason. That leads to a battle for control of Gucci with his uncle Aldo, played pretty broadly by Al Pacino, and his cousin Paolo, played for pure comedy by Jared Leto. But they get married, and she starts to push him to assert himself about the famed family fashion business. We meet them when they're young and first falling in love over the objections of his father, played by Jeremy Irons.
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#MARIO SOMEBODY ELSE INFO DRIVER#
Adam Driver plays the wealthy Maurizio Gucci, and Lady Gaga plays his wife, Patrizia.
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HOLMES: "House Of Gucci" is based on a true story. Hey, Aisha.ĪISHA HARRIS, BYLINE: (Imitating accent) Father, son, house of Gucci. GLEN WELDON, BYLINE: (Imitating Mario) It's-a-me, Jared Leto. Also with us from his home studio is Glen Weldon of the NPR Arts Desk. And today we're talking about "House Of Gucci" on POP CULTURE HAPPY HOUR from NPR. And did we mention Jared Leto's accent? I'm Stephen Thompson. It's all in service of a spin on the true story of the Gucci family. "House Of Gucci" is a whole lot of movie, that's for sure - Lady Gaga in fur hats, Adam Driver in huge glasses and Jared Leto using an Italian accent so thick it will stick right to your pasta.