McCarthy is at Sundance with his newest writing-directing effort called Win Win. Here’s an excerpt from an LA Times article on him:
“Tom is adamant about exploring every possible variation,” said Michael London, who produced both “The Visitor” and “Win Win,” alluding to McCarthy’s perfectionist tweaking on scripts, on set and in the editing room. “It’s painful at times, but in the end it’s exhilarating because he gets to a place most directors never get to.”That place is visited frequently in “Win Win,” with McCarthy again exploring the poetry of the everyday, in which the lives of normal people take unexpected turns, usually after a chance encounter with a stranger. In the McCarthy canon, authenticity and nuance are prized. Characters are rarely all good or all bad, and they almost never say anything they wouldn’t say in real life.
“I would almost rather risk being boring as a writer than feel I’m manipulating an audience,” McCarthy said in an interview. “For 98% of our lives, we have boringness or stillness, and you can allow some of that in the movie.”
There is little, however, that’s boring about “Win Win,” which stuffs a surprising number of characters, genres and even laughs into its unassuming frame.
The movie begins with Mike Flaherty (Giamatti), a New Jersey father, lawyer and part-time high school wrestling coach facing financial troubles. After pulling a slightly underhanded move with an older client to make a few extra bucks, he finds he and wife Jackie (Amy Ryan) in a complicated relationship with the man’s disaffected teenage grandson (newcomer Alex Shaffer), who has shown up unexpectedly from Ohio.
The boy is a gifted wrestler, and “Win Win” soon turns into a high school sports film before veering back to family drama — all while sprinkling in a buddy comedy via a relationship between Mike and childhood friend Terry (Cannavale). If “Black Swan” blends ballet with horror, thriller and other intense genres, “Win Win” does the same with less Hitchcockian ones.
Here McCarthy and Giamatti talk about the movie:
The Station Agent
The Visitor
For more of the LAT article, go here


Another weird coincidence. I just watched The Station Agent yesterday. By my count that's at least the fifth weird coincidence I experienced while reading this blog. Koinda stroinge. Ha, ha, I like it (and it worries me a bit).
Love McCarthy's movies. The Visitor was one of the first screenplays I ever read. I did know nothing about it, but its mysterious title intrigued me. The final movie was exactly like it was laid out on the page.
Beautiful, beautiful stuff.
Marc, glad you're a McCarthy fan. I saw him speak at a WGA event a few years back and he seems like a totally great guy. That meshed with his obvious talent, and the fact he's been involved with both Pixar and "The Wire," the latter the best TV show ever, the former the best filmmakers of the last decade, says tons about who he is and what he does as a filmmaker.
Re coincidences: I'm guessing C.G. Jung didn't believe in coincidences, seeing as we're all part of this overarching collective unconscious. Whatever the circumstances, I now have my personal E-Vectors on high alert because who knows — maybe there's something that will emerge on this blog that is intended to give a jolt to your creative ambitions.
I heard good things about this coming out of Sundance and am really looking forward to it.