Di Di Hollywood
Di Di Hollywood | |
---|---|
Directed by | Bigas Luna |
Written by | Carmen Chaves Gastaldo Bigas Luna |
Produced by | Bigas Luna Beatriz Bodegas Pedro Pastor[1] |
Starring | Elsa Pataky Peter Coyote Paul Sculfor |
Cinematography | Albert Pascual |
Edited by | Regino Hernández Jaume Martí |
Music by | Lluís Lu |
Production companies | El Virgili Films La Canica Films Malvarrosa Media |
Distributed by | Warner Bros. Pictures |
Release date |
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Running time | 96 minutes[1] |
Country | Spain |
Languages | Spanish English |
Budget | $8,600,000[2] |
Box office | $1,002,398 (Spain)[3] |
Di Di Hollywood is a 2010 Spanish drama film written, directed and produced by Bigas Luna. It stars Elsa Pataky, Peter Coyote, and Paul Sculfor. It was released in Spain on 15 October 2010. It was Luna's final film before his death from leukemia in 2013.
Summary
Diana Diaz (Pataky) works at a bar in Madrid; she wants to be famous, and sets off for Miami. When she arrives, she meets Robert (Hacha), and the pair head to Hollywood, willing to do anything to become famous. Once there, she meets agent Michael McLean (Coyote). He changes her name to "Di Di" and gives her false hopes of becoming famous. But she discovers he really just wants to use her as a beard for gay actor Steve Richards (Sculfor).[4]
Cast
- Elsa Pataky as Diana Diaz "Di Di"[4]
- Peter Coyote as Michael Stein
- Paul Sculfor as Steve Richards
- Giovanna Zacaría as Nora
- Luis Hacha as Robert
- Flora Martínez as María
- Jean-Marie Juan as David
- Leonardo García as Aldo
- Ben Temple as Richard Low
- Ana Soriano as Madre de Diana
Production
Filming
Filming took place in Madrid, Spain;[2] Valencia, Spain; Elche, Spain; Ciudad de la Luz;[2] and the hospital scene was shot in Benidorm, Spain. Filming was shot from October - November 2009.[2]
Soundtrack
- "Where No Endings End" by Keren Ann (3:37)[6]
- "Time of Our Lives" by Gram Rabbit (4:06)[7]
- "Sad Song" by Au Revoir Simone (4:09)[8]
- "Loba" by Shakira (3:07)
- "La Vie en rose" by Louis Armstrong (3:26)
- "In My Book" by Gram Rabbit (3:25)[9]
- "Heidi's Theme" by Decoder Ring (2:37)[10]
- "Candy Flip" by Gram Rabbit (4:46)[7]
- "Azabache" by Lucas Masciano (5:48)[11]
- "Amor y lujo" by Mónica Naranjo (4:06)[12]
- "Curtain Up" by John Cacavas
- "Fiera inquieta" by Nicolas Uribe
- "If I Were A Boy" by Kym Mazelle (4:09)
- "One Way or Another" by Blondie (3:31)
Reviews
Variety reviewed is as "the script proves unable to make Di Di’s journey interesting or credible, while the uncharismatic Pataky is unconvincing as star material."[4]
References
- ^ a b c "Di Di Hollywood". Chicago Reader. Retrieved 28 October 2013.
- ^ a b c d "Di Di Hollywood". ScreenDaily.com. 11 November 2009. Retrieved 28 October 2013.
- ^ a b "DI DI HOLLYWOOD". Box Office Mojo.
- ^ a b c Holland, Jonathan (14 November 2010). "Review: 'DiDi Hollywood'". Variety. Retrieved 28 October 2013.
- ^ "Di Di Hollywood (2010) Soundtrack". RingosTrack.com. Retrieved 28 October 2013.
- ^ "Keran Ann by Keran Ann". iTunes.
- ^ a b "Miracles & Metaphors by Gram Rabbit". iTunes.
- ^ "The Bird of Music by Au Revoir Simone". iTunes.
- ^ "RadioAngel & the RobotBeat by Gram Rabbit". iTunes.
- ^ "Somersault by Decoder Ring". iTunes.
- ^ "Siempre y Cuando Sobre Todo by Lucas Masciano". iTunes.
- ^ "Tarántula by Mónica Naranjo". iTunes.