HOUSE HOME At The Movies TO THIS SEASON, TRANSFORM YOUR HOUSE INTO THE HOME OF YOUR DREAMS. THE PROFESSIONALS AT CONSTRUCTION ZONE HAVE 26 YEARS OF EXPERIENCE IN MAKING DREAMS COME TRUE. Wayne Kramer draws from his own family's bad luck to create a comedic Vegas mob tale/love story. NAOMI PFEFFERMAN Jewish Journal of Greater Los Angeles W FROM A KITCHEN OR BATHROOM REMODEL TO AN ENTIRE UPSCALE RE-DO. KITCHEN & BATHS ADDITIONS & DORMERS HOME OFFICES RECREATION ROOMS LICENSED SINCE 1976 NAHB NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF HOME BUILDERS CALL US FOR A FREE ESTIMATE 248-593-0975 CONSTRUCTION 01111MV. 01111a, RE 401:ATI() mr1911.11 Errol ma I :011 30- . IIIIIIDER•REAL TOR' 790780 LEaRoNKS The Home Theater Specialist SALES • SERVICE • DESIGN • INSTALLATION 248-681-8509 Hours: M-Th 9-6 • Fri 9-7 • Sat 10-4 • Sun Closed WE DESIGN AND INSTALL: • Multi-room AudioNideo • Home Theater • Satellite Cable Telephone, Security & Central Vac Systems AUTHORIZED DEALER FOR: • Panasonic ---".."1"111111111. • SharpVision • B&K • Marantz • Onkyo • Paradingm • Klipsch • Snell • Russound d more! ESTIMATE S ON NEW CONSTRUCTION-< PREAN IRE 751340 12/19 2003 82 `The Cooler' 3355 Orchard Lake Rd. • Keego Harbor (Between Cass and Commerce Rd.) ayne Kramer identifies with the karmically challenged hero of his sleek new movie, The Cooler. Bernie Lootz (William H. Macy) has bad luck so contagious, a Las Vegas casino employs him to cool down high rollers. Kramer more than relates. "My fami- ly has a legacy of terrible luck," the Johannesburg native said. "It's like a black cloud hovers over us. His grandmother, a compulsive gam- bler, squandered her money and a cou- ple of husbands. His father lost several businesses, the family home and his eyesight, due to retinal pigmentosa. Kramer's mother uses an oxygen tank due to a SARS-like illness; his 40-year- old brother had rectal cancer; an uncle had his fortune stolen out of a safe; and Kramer almost lost his life to malaria while in the South African army. In an interview from his Los Angeles home, he described how he survived anti-Semitism at boot camp, only to be shipped off to Angola to shoot a training video. "They didn't bother to give us malaria pills," the candid Jewish director said. While on leave for the High Holidays two months later, he experi- enced severe chills and was rushed to the hospital. "I was told that the strain I had would either kill me or that I'd completely recover, with no recurrences," he said. Of course, he got it twice. No wonder he was drawn to sad sack Lootz when his friend, Frank Hannah, e-mailed him The Cooler idea around 1999. "I immediately knew I had to [co-write] and direct it, because this guy was me," Kramer said. "I was going to make a movie about the world's biggest loser and exorcise several generations of rotten luck from my psychic aura." Kramer, 38, has often courted disas- ter. As a teenage film buff, he collected videotapes of classic films, such as A Clockwork Orange, banned due to vio- lence, political or sexual content. But a classmate ratted on him, and the vice squad banged on his door one day when he was 17. "It was like a drug raid," he said. Although the charges were dropped, casino owner, Shelly Kaplow (Alec Baldwin), modeled after brutal Vegas moguls such as Meyer Lansky. For Kramer, getting to direct the film, his first feature, proved brutal. "No one wanted to know from me," he said. He braved rejection until hooking up with producers Sean and Bryan Furst in 2001: "Wayne was more than ready to make this movie," Sean Furst said. "He came to us with more than a thousand storyboards he had drawn, a detailed outline of what the film was going to look like frame by frame." Yet even after top actors signed on, Kramer remained nervous. He knew he would have only 21 days to shoot the film, including explicit sex scenes and ultra-violent sequences, on a budg- et of just $3 million. And he had that penchant for bad luck: "I felt, if things could go wrong in a big way, this would be the time," he said. Kramer again found himself in trouble when he suffered a malaria relapse just before moving to the United States in 1986. He refused to postpone his trip, however. "I hated South Africa because of apartheid and because of the artistic repression," he said. "Ever since I saw my first American films when I was small, it had been my dream to live and work in America." Eventually, Kramer moved into a series of dumpy apartments in Orange County, where he bused tables and resurfaced bathtubs while trying to hus- tle screenplays. "I survived on $400- $600 a month," he said. When he tried to direct a low-budget feature in 1990, much of the film came back out of focus. Five years later, his luck began changing when he became a teaching assistant at Stephen S. Wise Temple Elementary School, where he met his future wife, teacher Maria Bello, Alec Baldwin and William H. Macy in Jodi Kabrins. "The Cooler" One of his screenplays made the semifinals of But when The Cooler received rave the 1995 Nicholl Fellowships in reviews at the 2003 Sundance Film Screenwriting contest, and in 1996, his Festival, Kramer was suddenly hot. short film Crossing Over premiered at "My phone started ringing off the the Santa Barbara International Film hook, and I'm now booked two years Festival. in advance," he said of his career. His But his career progress was slow. "My projects include directing his original bad luck was holding steady," he said. screenplay Running Scared for Lions Thus he was riveted when Hannah Gate and his noir thriller The Sleeping began regaling him with stories about Detective for Paramount. Vegas "coolers" in the late 1990s: Kramer, nevertheless, remains phobic "Frank described nights playing craps about his history of bad luck. "I've on a roll, when suddenly someone already suggested to The Cooler's' distrib- would show up at the table and the air utors that they hire some armed guards pressure in the room would change," to protect the negative," he said. ❑ Kramer said. "The whole mood would change, and he would start to lose." "I realized that I could have been The Cooler is scheduled to open employed as a cooler," he said in an Friday, Dec. 19, at the Main Art essay. "Maybe my whole family Theatre in Royal Oak, (248) 542- could've gotten on the payroll." 0180, and the Michigan Theater The authors decided to set their gritty in Ann Arbor, (734) 668-8463. fable in the seedy remnants of old Vegas, Start dates are subject to post- "which is sort of Fellini-esque in its char- ponement after we go to press. acters," according to Kramer. The pro- Check your local movie listings. tagonists include "older cocktail waitress- es with big bouffants" and a retro Jewish