US – Friday, July 3
The week's releases
Metro staff reviews the latest CDs, DVDs and books for your reading pleasure.
 
The gangster of Hollywood
FEATURE. Johnny Depp doesn’t know what time it is. Though he technically calls an adorable village in France home and owns an island in the Caribbean, the mercurial actor spends so much time working that his internal clock is all out of whack.
 
 
Directorial debut is a shot at the ‘Moon’
INTERVIEW. When directors are limited to a $5 million budget and a 33-day shooting schedule, they usually won’t do anything too arduous — especially for their first films. But director Duncan Jones, 37, tells us that he “wanted to do something with ambition” for his debut flick. So instead, Jones, who is the son of David Bowie, decided to make the sci-fi adventure “Moon,” which opens Friday. The affable Brit explains how.
 
The Beckhams’ island getaway
GOSSIP. According to the Sun, David Beckham is planning a trip to Necker Island, Richard Branson’s private island hideaway, to celebrate his 10th wedding anniversary with Victoria Beckham. And the best part? It only costs $51,000 a night to have the whole island to themselves.
 
Bale does light-lifting
 MOVIES. Christian Bale is more relaxed than usual, and with good reason. The heavy lifting in promoting his latest film, “Public Enemies,” falls to Johnny Depp. For once, the success or failure of the movie doesn’t rest on Bale’s shoulders. There’s no talk of on-set outbursts or franchise potential. And for that, he’s grateful — and cheerful.
 
Published 20:44, March the 24th, 2008
 
Pollack’s first book is a searing collection of short stories called “Knockemstiff.” Pollack’s first book is a searing collection of short stories called “Knockemstiff.” 
 

One heck of a midlife crisis

Author Donald Ray Pollock went from one side of the paper mill to the other

PROFILE. When former paper mill worker Donald Ray Pollock went through a midlife crisis, he didn’t buy a Ferrari, have an affair with a younger woman or make the unfortunate decision of getting hair plugs. Instead, he began to write. That decision led to him getting his MFA, then an agent, a book deal and praise from literary luminaries such as Chuck Palahniuk and Katherine Dunn  for his debut collection of short stories called “Knockemstiff” [Doubleday, $22.95].

“I’ve not always been a writer, but I’ve always been a big reader,” Pollock tells us with a slow Southern drawl over the phone from his home in Ohio. “Right around the time I turned 45, I went through a midlife shift. I’d been at the paper mill for 27 years and by that time, I was really not satisfied. I wanted to do something else before I kicked the bucket. I told my wife I was going to try to write and I would give it five years. If it didn’t happen, at least I gave it a shot.”

Influenced by such authors as Flannery O’Conner and John Cheever, Pollock looked to his hometown, Knockemstiff, Ohio, for inspiration. After publishing a few searing short stories about the disenfranchised, damaged characters who struggle to get by in the dismal small town, he earned acceptance into Ohio State’s MFA program. Eventually, his work came together as the  loosely connected stories in “Knockemstiff.”

“It’s more than I ever expected,” a modest Pollock says about his success. “When I told my wife I wanted to write, I told her if I just wrote one good story, I would be satisfied. Then to get it published by a major publisher — that’s been pretty exciting. I’ve known a lot of good books that come out and no one even reviewed them, you know?”

And while he’s currently enjoying the well-deserved critical praise for “Knockemstiff” and working on his next project, a novel (thanks to a Presidential scholarship from Ohio State), we did find out one drawback to his very-well-played midlife crisis. When we asked which paid better — being a published writer or working back at the paper mill, he set us straight. “Are you kidding me?” he laughed. “The paper mill. That was a union job.”

 
 
MMMpod
The June edition of MMMpod features an interview with Perry Farrell on getting Jane's Addiction back together, as well as a talk with actor Ed Helms about his love/hate relationship with a capella music. We also have new music from Phoenix, Magic Magic, Lady Sovereign, and a classic from Booker T. & the MGs. As always, there's a chance to win a whole lot of free music.
 
 
Metro Life Panel