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William H. Macy on The Deal

We weren't sure whether we'd be able to get this interview, but when we saw Bill Macy heading towards us at the Stella Artois lounge last week, we figured his publicist had made some time for us.  He was friendly and gracious, (and everything else you'd want from one of your favorite actors), and he even hung out to chat for a few minutes after the interview.  The Deal is a fun romantic comedy that skewers the Hollywood process and that Bill, (can I really call him that?), not only starred in, but he also co-wrote and produced.

Here's how the Sundance Guide describes the film:
What does it look like when a Hollywood movie producer suddenly has nothing to lose? Meet Charlie Berns, a guy whose suicidal tendencies give him the chutzpah to con a major studio into a $100 million deal on a script he hasn't even read.

At the very moment when his idealistic screenwriter nephew knocks on the door, toting a solemn art-house period script about Benjamin Disraeli, Charlie has literally had it with life. But the trade papers have announced that a recently converted black action star is actively seeking Jewish material, so the serendipity is too absurd to resist. Charlie masterminds a plan, making it impossible for the studio not to green-light this project, which, while Jewish, couldn’t be further from an action flick. No matter. In Hollywood, perception is everything. Along the way, Charlie meets his match in Deidre Hearn, a sharp-witted development executive who sees right through his games but also recognizes that maybe his caution-to-the-wind philosophy has serious merit.

The mischievous charm in this smart screwball satire about renegade producers bamboozling a soul-crushing industry hinges on the wonderfully crackly Tracy-Hepburn chemistry between William Macy and Meg Ryan. Steven Schachter's tongue-in-cheek romp revels in sending up Hollywood stereotypes—zealous star, histrionic director, slippery suits—but also Ryan’s legacy as romantic comedy’s “It” girl, and even the notion that it’s possible to make a meaningful movie.

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