The host with the most sleaze, that is. And, as it's James Franco, how can you resist?
The chameleon-like Franco has
transformed himself into yet another extremely distinctive character,
and this time one with some considerable historical significance (at
least in certain circles): Hugh Hefner, the man known for unleashing
Playboy magazine unto the world and one of the all-time great heroes of
high school boys 'round the world.
Franco plays the magazine publisher and notorious ladies man in "Lovelace,"
the upcoming biography film about Linda Lovelace, star of the porn
industry-changing "Deep Throat" and Hollywood tragic figure. And, as you
might expect, Franco plays the Playboy Enterprises guru with
ever-smirking, hand-kissing, ultra-icky charm.
Watch James Franco and Amanda Seyfried in an exclusive clip from 'Lovelace':The scene takes place at the 1972 world premiere of "Deep Throat," which is, not surprisingly, hosted by Hefner (or "Hef," as he corrects Amanda Seyfried's Lovelace). Upon trading two blondes for a brunette with Linda's beau Chuck Traynor (Peter Sarsgaard), Hef takes the guest of honor on a tour through the party, where the naive young starlet meets the likes of porn star Harry Reems (Adam Brody), the movies financier Anthony Romano (Chris Noth) and even Rat Pack member Sammy Davis Jr. (Ron Pritchard). It's sort of a double-meta (or something) variation on Franco being the host at another all-star party earlier this summer in "This Is the End."
Franco nails Hefner's air of vague
condescension and sly drawl — though, at age 35 the actor is a full
decade younger than Hef was at the time — in a scene that's most
remarkable for showing us how big of a deal "Deep Throat" actually was.
Really, this is a film premiere with A-list celebs on the guest list ...
and it's for a porn movie. And Linda Lovelace was arguably the only
porn star to receive the kind of celeb status that could rival that of
Angelina Jolie or Julia Roberts. "Deep Throat" was a pop culture
phenomenon, a product of a much different (and way long-gone) time.
Meanwhile, Franco's Hefner channels his "Spring Breakers" character
Alien as he leads an innocent (-ish) young girl down the rabbit hold of
decadence and lost innocence. In real life, Hefner allegedly contributed
to further corrupting Lovelace:
Chuck Traynor very much wanted to partner with Hefner and as an
incentive reportedly encouraged Linda to indulge the mogul's apparent
passion for bestiality films.It's been fun to watch James Franco try on many different suits over the past few years, from his Oscar-nominated role as Aron Ralston in "127 Hours" to Alien in "Spring Breakers" to the title role in "Oz the Great and Powerful" to, uh, James Franco in "This Is the End." It looks like his turn as Hugh Hefner in "Lovelace" will be a worthy addition to the line-up, even if it's only a cameo.