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DVD - Just My Luck
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Ashley Albright (LINDSAY LOHAN) is the luckiest woman in the world,
a person to whom all the good things in life have come far too easily.
She can pick a lottery ticket at random and hit the jackpot. In
New York, the world’s busiest city, Ashley never has to wait for
a cab. And she has a terrific job as an account exec at a prestigious
public relations firm. Everything goes Ashley’s way. And now, she’s
been given a great opportunity to advance her career: she is to
plan a masquerade ball in downtown Manhattan for record mogul Damon
Phillips (Faizon Love) and his company. Jake (CHRIS PINE), on the
other hand, is a bad luck magnet. His skies are always raining;
his pants are always on the verge of splitting at the seams.
His job is cleaning toilets at a bowling alley. But even a steady
bombardment of catastrophes doesn’t dim Jake’s dreams. He thinks
he may have his chance at the brass ring with his discovery of a
rock band McFly. If Jake can keep his bad luck at bay for just one
night, he’ll sneak into a masquerade ball and get McFly’s CD into
the hands of music titan Damon Phillips. On this night when dreams
can be made or broken, fate brings Ashley and Jake together on the
dance floor. Instantly taken with one another, they share an electrifyingly
kiss – and with that one kiss, their luck switches places. Suddenly,
Ashley’s dress rips. Her heel breaks. Her good luck seems to have
finally run out. Jake, in his rush to catch Phillips before he leaves,
ends up saving the record mogul’s life and earning with that one
simple twist of fate, the chance to make all his dreams come true.
As Ashley desperately races to regain the luck she blithely took
for granted, she begins to see that it’s not so much having good
luck but what you do with it that counts, and that her greatest
chance of redemption lies with the guy who holds the key to her
sudden change of fate. Lindsay Lohan shot to worldwide attention
after having grown up before the camera – from her feature film
debut as precocious estranged siblings in “The Parent Trap” to the
acclaimed comedies “Freaky Friday” and “Mean Girls.”
JUST MY LUCK’s Ashley Albright represents the actress’
first adult lead. “It’s a great story about coming of age and I
thought it would be the perfect part for me to transition into adult
roles,” says Lohan. “Ashley has got her head on straight and she’s
determined, which I think is great,” Lohan continues. “But she has
never been tested; she has never known what it’s like to really
work for something and through that experience learn what life is.”
“Lindsay has such a warm and likable screen presence that you can’t
begrudge her character’s initial good fortune,” says co-screenwriter
Amy B. Harris. “When Ashley is down on her luck and her life is
literally falling down around her, Lindsay is able to bring a real
sense of fun and broad physical comedy while still showing vulnerability.”
Director Donald Petrie felt Lohan’s performances in “Freaky Friday”
and “Mean Girls” revealed a budding comedienne within her striking
beauty. “Lindsay has a sparkling comedic talent,” he says. “Her
ability to make physical comedy flow so naturally while also being
funny and charming, makes her an absolute joy to have in front of
the camera.” Petrie has directed numerous actresses in breakout
comedic roles, such as Kate Hudson in “How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days,”
Sandra Bullock in “Miss Congeniality,” and Julia Roberts in “Mystic
Pizza.” “I loved those movies,” says Lohan. “I love comedy and I
really wanted to work with Donald on this film.” Lohan found some
of the physical comedy more challenging than she’d imagined. “You
don’t realize how hard it can be until you’re actually there,” she
says. “You’re reading the script and you say, ‘Oh, that’ll be so
much fun to do,’ but then you perform the action or stunt, and that’s
the hard part. But it’s fun when you can just let go and free yourself.
It’s like therapy in a way.”
Lohan’s on-screen leading man, Chris Pine, appreciated Petrie’s
flair for physical comedy. “You know when Donald gives you direction
that he knows exactly what he’s doing.” Pine (“Princess Diaries
2: Royal Engagement”) plays Jake, who works at a rock-‘n’-roll bowling
alley while nurturing dreams of someday making it as a record producer.
“Jake is a guy from a small town who finally made it to New York
City and is swimming upstream with thunderstorms and lightning to
make it,” Pine says. “Jake is an unlucky schlub of a guy who, once
it all turns around, you still believe will be dashing and charismatic
without being arrogant about his good fortune,” adds co-producer
Marjorie Shik. Pine came to the filmmakers’ attention during video
tests of young actors, from which he immediately stood out. “Donald
saw something in Chris’s eyes that was about heart and warmth,”
remembers producer Arnold Rifkin. “He approached the role with a
wonderful, admirable spirit.” “I think the saving grace of Jake
is that he’s honest and optimistic,” Pine says. Jake’s relationship
to 10-year-old Katy (Makenzie Vega, the young Nancy in “Sin City”)
adds a dimension to his character that makes him instantly likable.
“Jake has accepted his rather unfortunate plight in life,” says
producer Rifkin, “being broke, looking after his young neighbor
and cousin, Katy and helping her with her homework. He’s not angry.
He has no concept of fate. He didn’t look for luck. He’s just assumed
Murphy’s Law.” “Katy’s his best friend,” says Pine. “In fact, she’s
his only friend.
Jake’s luck is so bad that he has no friends his age. Their relationship
was easy for me to relate to because I have a wonderful sister I’m
really close to who also happens to be named Katie.” Missi Pyle,
who is best known for her roles in the Tim Burton films “Charlie
and the Chocolate Factory” and “Big Fish,” plus the comedy hit “Dodgeball:
A True Underdog Story,” plays Ashley’s boss, Peggy Braden, head
of the prestigious PR firm, Braden & Co. Making sure Peggy’s
needs are met is just one of the tasks at hand during Ashley’s big
night at the masquerade ball, which must go smoothly for record
producer Damon Phillips, played by Faizon Love (one of Santa’s helpers
in “Elf”).
All the New York glitterati are there. But closing in is Jake who
is gambling it all on getting the CD of the band McFly into the
right hands. “In order to get into this big, beautiful Masquerade
Ball, Jake has to pretend he’s a male dancer,” Pine says. “Jake
is not physically inclined in the least, and neither am I, so it’s
a nightmare to say the least.” But it all turns around when Jake
is pushed onto the dance floor with Ashley. Moments before, Ashley
had been warned by a fortune teller, Madame Z (Tovah Feldshuh),
that those who don’t appreciate their good luck risk losing it forever.
Ashley brushes off the advice, and joins Jake. “It’s a bit of a
lark for her,” says co-producer Shik. “She figures, ‘Sure, I’ll
dance with this guy, why not?’ It’s nothing to her but for Jake’s
character it’s a really daring moment because he’s been turned down
so often.
They just dance and get caught up in that moment and of course,
kiss.” “In that moment our luck passes,” Pine adds. “My bad luck
passes to her and her good luck passes to me and all of a sudden
I’m not accident-prone,” he says. Though he’s enchanted with Ashley,
Jake also has a now-or-never shot at getting to Damon Phillips.
“He’s desperate to stay with this girl he’s probably fallen in love
with,” says Pine, “yet he only has moments to get the McFly CD to
Damon Phillips, and happens to save Damon’s life in the process.
The next day he has his own office and the band is signed and playing
the radio – all because he kissed Ashley. Jake’s struck dumb because
nothing ever goes his way.” Ashley’s best friends are Dana and Maggie,
played by Bree Turner (“Bring it On Again”) and Samaire Armstrong
(“The O.C.,” “Entourage”), respectively. “Dana’s a bit older,” says
Turner, “and has been working a little, so naturally she’s wondering,
‘Wait a minute! You get all of these things and I’ve been working
my butt off and I should have it.’ They’re not horrible to each
other, but it’s just baffling to work so hard and not have the luck
to get ahead, whereas Ashley gets everything she could ever hope
for with very little effort.” Samaire Armstrong plays Maggie, who
keeps her friends together through thick and thin. “She really believes
in the bond between all of her friends and cares a lot about that,”
Armstrong says. “She’s a struggling musician and doesn’t want any
kind of success if it means compromising her friendships.”
“There’s a nice dynamic between the three with Ashley being the
most well- rounded,” Turner says. “Maggie is the extreme of sweetness
and I’m a bit more of the other extreme, hard-edged and intense.”
Peggy Braden, Ashley’s sophisticated boss, is played by Missi Pyle.
Peggy is “likably mean,” says Pyle. “She’s a fun character.” Adds
Lohan: “On paper she’s like a bulldog, no heart, cold. But Missi
brings such a vulnerability to her character that makes it so much
funnier.” “Peggy is a very tightly wound woman,” Pyle says. “Her
shoes are tight; everything she does is sort of severe and bottled
up.” When Ashley sets her up on a date with her neighbor, Antonio
(played by Latin pop icon Carlos Ponce), Peggy’s inner self is unleashed.
“Everyone is shocked because Peggy is so uptight and Antonio is
so easy-going, yet they really hit it off,” says Pyle. The band
Jake manages is played by real life British band McFly.
With two solid hits in the UK, McFly (comprised of lead singer Tom
Fletcher, Danny Jones, Dougie Poynter and Harry Judd) was brought
to the attention of filmmakers through music supervisor Lisa Brown.
“Petrie had a hand in choosing the songs, going through McFly’s
older and new works,” says co-producer Shik. “He wanted to use the
band’s big hit in the UK, ‘Five Colors in Her Hair,’ as a signature
song in the film.” As Jake and McFly’s stars ascend, Ashley’s descends.
After losing everything, she’s forced to move in with her friends
Dana and Maggie. But someone else takes an interest in her sudden
bad luck. Not realizing it’s the girl he kissed at the party, Jake
takes the newly destitute and unlucky Ashley under his wing and
gets her his old job at a bowling alley. “He meets up with Ashley
for the second time when he sees her at this diner,” explains Pine.
“This poor girl is trying to get a coffee but can’t even afford
that. It’s one of those moments of shared pain where you see someone
going through what you’ve been through, what you went through as
a kid and Jake wants to help her out in any way he can. And of course,
she’s great to look at, which never hurts.” As Ashley closes in
on the truth of her fate, she must brace herself to discover that
the one to whom she gave all her good luck is the same boy with
whom she has fallen in love.
“Ashley takes advantage of the fact that she is so lucky and doesn’t
really recognize how much she had before,” says Lohan. “She then
has to go through the hardships of struggling and having to get
a normal job working at a bowling alley to figure out that nothing
is really worth having unless you’ve worked for it. And she finds
love in the midst of it all.” “Sometimes what makes us happy is
not what we were looking for,” adds co-screenwriter I. Marlene King.
JUST MY LUCK was shot in locations in New Orleans (prior to when
the tragic hurricane devastated the city) before moving to Manhattan
to capture the exteriors of Ashley’s world. The filmmakers searched
for interiors that would bring to mind the style and energy of New
York City. The first location was a high-rise office building on
busy Pydras Street in the Business District standing in for Braden
& Co., the PR firm where Ashley works. Production designer Ray
Kluga referenced the New York offices of high-powered public relations
firm to capture the energy of Ashley’s workplace environment. To
create the Rock ‘N’ Bowl, where Jake works and McFly serves as the
popular house band, the filmmakers found inspiration and a living
set at New Orleans’ Mid-City Lanes Rock ‘N’ Bowl. This provided
myriad backgrounds for the montage which shows Ashley, who also
takes a job there when her luck spirals downward, armed with a plunger
and gas mask cleaning out toilets, and performing an array of unglamorous
custodial tasks.
Ashley and her boss, Peggy Braden, are jailed as a direct result
of Ashley’s plummeting luck. The filmmakers, needing a realistic
jail setting, set their sights on Jefferson Parish Correctional
Facility, just outside New Orleans. State officials sealed off a
section of the working prison to allow the crew to shoot in an authentic
environment. The historic State Palace Theatre, adjacent to New
Orleans’ French Quarter, mirrored London’s Apollo Hammersmith concert
arena for the filming of a live McFly concert in front of thousands
of screaming fans (extras recruited locally in New Orleans). Kluga’s
biggest challenge was bringing to life the all-important masquerade
ball, where Ashley and Jake have their life-altering kiss. The event
is to be Ashley’s ultimate expression of style, where she must live
up to her boss’ enormous expectations and wow even the most sophisticated
member of New York’s glitterati. For this event, Kluga and Petrie
used the Beaux Arts interior of New Orleans’ historic FNBC Bank
Building near the French Quarter to stand in for the New York Palace.
Kluga transformed the massive space with marble columns and grandiose
chandeliers with lots of color throughout.
“My idea was to use striking jewel tones,” Kluga says, “unlike the
typical idea of what a Manhattan nightclub looks like – which is
generally sleek and grey. Because we were doing a masquerade party,
I wanted to incorporate strong dashes of color. The movie starts
out very light, white and neutral. But then, you get into this magic
scene and suddenly the colors begin to pop. It’s an explosion of
shapes and exciting things.” Ashley’s vision for the masquerade
ball was an atmosphere where “anything can happen.” The massive
interior was divided into sections: a VIP area; a place for record
company execs to present their artists; and an area with giant projection
screens where the latest rock videos are showcased. “We created
private corners that have veils of fabric so that you get a sense
of ‘what’s going on in these dark corners?’” Kluga describes. “We
built in lighting to all of the furniture, up-lighting so the people
sitting in the banquettes would be artfully backlit.” To match the
lush interiors, costume designer Gary Jones needed a drop-dead gorgeous
ensemble for Lohan, who is at the peak of her winning streak on
the night of the ball.
Director Petrie wanted to make sure Lohan’s eyes were visible behind
her mask (it is, after all, a masquerade ball). “We had to find
a way to make a mask that would not hide or bury her eyes so far
behind it that we would lose her,” says Jones. He designed a headpiece
using beige ostrich and rooster feathers; and a mylar silver, gold
and beige horse-hair veil to match her Balenciaga dress. Lohan,
a fashion enthusiast, relished the opportunity to bring her sensibilities
to Ashley’s wardrobe and immediately clicked with Jones. “He’s amazing,”
she says. “We worked together on everything. We started way before
we even started prepping for the movie, just bringing in clothes
and having fun. It was nice for me to get to play a character that
is into fashion.” At the film’s start, Ashley’s “lucky look” is
quickly established. “She is this pristine, dressed-in-white, almost
impermeable person who can walk through the streets of New York
and never get a drop of anything on her,” says Jones. “She wears
a white Versace cashmere coat in the opening shots of the movie.
Underneath is a sheer top in a creamy white color with gold threads
and a great silk charmeuse skirt. Very pale, high-heeled Valentino
boots, a pale Valentino purse and a white cashmere pashmina complete
the look.
She starts out in white and in shades of white and continues that
way until she loses her luck.” To create that pristine, untouchable
sparkle, makeup artist Kimberly Greene patterned Ashley’s masquerade
makeup after the 1940s Varga girls with bright lips and eyeliner.
“She was literally born under a lucky star and everything she does
is just perfect and gorgeous,” Greene describes. “She knows the
right make-up, the right hair, the right outfits – everything comes
to her very easily.” Greene also found the task of making Lohan’s
eyes “visible but hidden” a challenge. “We wanted to see her and
not see her; make it gorgeous and beautiful but also make it a masquerade,”
Greene says. The final look chosen for the masquerade ball is Italian-themed,
inspired by traditional Venetian masks. Greene used Swarovski crystals
and swirls of gold traced around Ashley’s eyes. “The look starts
out flawless,” Greene says. “But when she loses her luck, everything
becomes smeary.
We see a physical transformation which helps to sell the idea that
her luck has really gone sour.” The newly-unlucky Ashley wears a
hodgepodge of clothes that reflect her unfortunate turn of events.
“She starts borrowing clothes from other people, which puts her
in a lot of color and a lot of different kinds of clothing that
she would never have worn as Ashley, the successful and lucky young
woman,” says Jones. “Her ‘borrowed look’ is a mish-mash of sorts
and takes her into a palette of bright colors, casual clothing and
jeans. Her hair and makeup become clean and simple, with a natural
prettiness showing through.” Ashley’s look hits rock bottom as she
gets doused with real mud. “It was funny because Donald Petrie likes
to shoot shots from every possible angle, especially the mud scene,”
Lohan recalls. “And we repeated it several times and there came
a point where I said, you know what? I’m just gonna put my head
back in and let’s just do it again while I’m already muddy.” Greene
put in a bid to help Lohan through it by offering up face mask mud
instead of real mud, but Lohan refused, “I was like, fine, let me
just do it,” she says, laughing.
In March 2005, the production moved to New York City to shoot exteriors.
Making themselves visible to the public proved tricky with Lohan’s
rapidly ascending profile as a prime target of the paparazzi. “Some
days there were as many as 30 or 40 paparazzi on the set,” co-producer
Ellen H. Schwartz says. “The crew often had to erect physical barriers
to preserve a comfortable shooting environment and eye-line for
the actors.” Many of the film’s pivotal scenes take place in some
of the city’s famous landmarks and vistas, which give the film a
cosmopolitan look. Central Park and Times Square were vital set
pieces to the action, with the film’s finale set at the always romantic
Grand Central Station. For the climactic concert scene finale, set
at the then-uncompleted Hard Rock Café in Times Square, the
crew dressed the outside marquis for the movie concert scene. This
enabled the filmmakers to capture a nighttime exterior of the famous,
brightly lit landmark. The production team managed to get the massive
Reuters video board, adjacent to the Hard Rock, to play fictional
McFly concert promos which ignited a few British tourists familiar
with the band into thinking their favorite band had finally hit
America.
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