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Park City • Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Julianne Moore and Tony Danza walked the red carpet at the Eccles Theatre on Friday night to promote Levitt's directorial debut, "Don Jon's Addiction."

The film focuses on Don Jon, a pornography addict who doesn't know how to enjoy sex with a real person, and instead satisfies himself through internet porn.

Scarlett Johansson plays Gordon-Levitt's romantic interest. Johansson, who is performing on Broadway, wasn't in attendance at the premiere.

Before he spoke with The Tribune, Gordon-Levitt offered some advice to two students from the Park City High School film studies class promoting his own collaborative production company and website (http://www.hitrecord.org).

"HitRecord! Make shit. That's my advice. Don't wait for somebody else to tell you that you can. Don't wait for somebody to hire you. Don't wait for an agent, you don't have to move to LA, f—k all that."

A Sundance regular, Gordon-Levitt was especially enthusiastic about this year's trip to Park City. Before the screening, he chose to stick to the script when answering questions. When asked if he felt that pornography addiction was a real problem or a copout that justified indulgence, Gordon-Levitt talked about why he made the film.

"I just wanted to tell a story about how people objectify each other and I wanted to tell a love story ultimately, and to me, that's what always gets in the way of love is people putting these expectations on each other," he said. "My character in the movie watches a lot of porn, Scarlett's character in the movie watches a lot of romantic Hollywood movies and they both are sort of missing each other.

"They think they're in love —but are they really? Or are they just comparing their relationship to something they saw in a movie or in a porn video? I find all that stuff hilarious so I wrote a comedy about it," Gordon-Levitt said.

Recent Golden Globe winner Julianne Moore said she was drawn to the film based on the writing. "It was a movie that's very surprising, certainly comedic, but then it ends up being much more, and also I was very touched by it. I turned to my husband; I read it on the plane, and I said, 'Oh this is lovely.'"

Tony Danza's favorite part about the movie was "being in it." He also enjoyed reunited with Gordon-Levitt, whom he worked with 20 years ago on "Angels in the Outfield."

"I'm excited for him more than anything else," Danza said. "I think you're going to see a really good movie and what's going to surprise you is how good of a director he is."

Autumn Thatcher