The problem? There is no mill. The town’s historic mill burned down fifty years ago. But the director, Walt Price (a magnificent William H. Macy), refuses to change the title. "The Old Mill ," he sputters, "is the reason these people are giving us money."
A minor masterpiece. For anyone who has ever watched the credits roll and thought, "How did that get made?"—this film holds the answer. And it’s hilarious. Memorable Quote: “So, tell me, what's it like being the only person in America without a screenplay?” — Ann to Joe. Today, the joke would be: the only person without a podcast. Some things never change. State and Main
From that single, absurd lie, the entire machinery of Hollywood hypocrisy is laid bare. The star, Bob Barrenger (Alec Baldwin, channeling peak entitled narcissism), is a action hero who can’t memorize lines and has a "proclivity" for teenage girls. The leading lady, Claire Wellesley (Sarah Jessica Parker, pre- Sex and the City ), is a prim Method actor who refuses to do nudity ("I don’t wear the dress—I am the dress"). And the producer, Marty Rossen (David Paymer), is a fast-talking hustler whose moral compass spins so fast it generates static. Into this viper pit walks Ann (Rebecca Pidgeon), the owner of the local bookshop and the town’s unofficial conscience. She is the film’s secret weapon: pragmatic, witty, and utterly unimpressed by fame. When the screenwriter, Joe White (Philip Seymour Hoffman in a career-best "nice guy" performance), falls for her, he begins to realize that the script he’s frantically rewriting (he lost the only copy in a car fire) might be less important than the integrity he’s losing. The problem