I admit I was killing two birds with one Stone: checking out the spanking new Gensler CAA building at 2000 Avenue of the Stars, and spending an evening hanging out with pals of Oliver Stone as we watched the latest expanded "final" hi-def cut of Alexander "Revisited" in the fancy CAA screening room.
The building is a glass stunner, with a lobby looking through to the hillside lawn on the other side. CAA is down the hall to the right, and once you get through those portals, no cameras are allowed. No shots of the rosy-hued reception area, the tall central atrium, the fabulous art. I meekly handed over my camera to security and went up to the buffet dinner, said hi to Don Murphy and Roger Avary, and ate souvlaki, hummus and grape leaves on my lap with Jessica Bendiger and pals on the balcony outside.

Inspired in part by seeing Paul Haggis's no-frills In the Valley of Elah, Stone is prepping to shoot Pinkville, starring Bruce Willis as Army general William R. Peers, who investigated the massacre of hundreds of Vietnamese civilians in My Lai by U.S. army soldiers. United Artists' Paula Wagner, Stone's old agent, is putting up $40 million for Stone to shoot the pic in super-16. Willis was willing to cut his price to do this. Channing Tatum and Michael Pena also star. (Stone was unable to land his U-Turn star Sean Penn.) The movie starts shooting in Thailand in early November. Jon Kilik is producing.

Alexander Revisited: The Final Cut is not the version released on DVD not so long ago, but Stone's fourth pass in two and a half years at this epic biopic of the conquering Macedonian hero. Thanks to Warner Home Video, he got to tinker and fuss. I didn't see the intervening shorter "director's cut." I saw the first theatrical cut in 2004--the one that was rushed into release because neither Intermedia nor Warners was able to stop the global release date that was apparently written in stone. Whoops. I keep using that word.

So Stone made some mistakes first time out. The very Black Irish Colin Farrell was too blond. Nothing to be done about that. And there were some awkward bloopers, scenes that rang false, made you cringe. Not so now. This is a damned good movie, it runs much longer, with a great battle right at the top and an intermission dividing the two halves. Now, the male/male relationships make sense, as does Roxanne (a sexy Rosario Dawson) and the parental dysfunction with Dad (Val Kilmer) and Mom (Angelina Jolie). Most important, the reason why Alexander kept going, the urge to conquer, to keep conquering--that rings clear, too. In this case, more is more. It's a good movie.
Next up on the classical sword and sandals front: Leonardo DiCaprio may star in a big-screen adaptation of Robert Graves' I, Claudius for producer Scott Rudin.
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