Archive for July, 2009

A Look Back at April Showers and a Glimpse Into the Future, A Reflection from Andrew Robinson

Wednesday, July 29th, 2009

andrewrobinsonA lot can happen in three years, more than I ever thought possible. Looking back, my life three years ago seems almost foreign to me now. If someone would’ve told me that on my 28th birthday I’d find myself where I am today I would’ve probably called that person crazy. Three years ago, at the age of 25, I was newly single after a very long-term relationship imploded around me of which I was partially to blame. I was living in LA, just outside of Hollywood, in a neighborhood I truthfully didn’t want to live in and had a condo that was ostentatious to say the least and had become very unhappy with who and what I had become. I somehow had lost my way over the years. I was working, being paid to be creative, however, I was supremely unhappy and had lost my zest for the design work I was doing long ago. I was on autopilot. I lived for my paycheck and lived in fear of my paycheck, for I thought that the nice cars, big TV’s, vacations, dinners etc were my happiness.

I was wrong.

Around this time I met someone, Andrea (my fiancée), and while much of my daily life had remained the same in terms of my career, her presence gave my life a new found perspective. Though, in the beginning, I was very non-committal and frankly scared partially because of what I had just gone through in a previous relationship and partially because I felt I was seemingly at the top of my game and yet somehow felt I had hit bottom.

So I wrote. I wrote largely in secret for I didn’t want anyone around me to think I was potentially contemplating a career move and largely because I wasn’t sure if I was any good. Andrea had left to go work on a movie in the desert for a month so I had a good deal of alone time to write. During this time I wrote two screenplays, one that I had dusted off and attempted to resurrect which gave way to the second, “The Summer of ‘99,” which would eventually become “April Showers.” I was half way through the ‘99 script when it dawned on me what I was, in fact, writing. ‘99 was never completed, scrapped instead for the first untitled draft of what would be known as “April Showers.” For days and weeks on end during this one-month period I wrote until I didn’t think it was possible to write anymore. When I was done, I put it away, forgot about it and returned to “reality” or so I thought. Little did I know that I had already set in motion a chain of events that would come to form a new reality for myself and many of the people around me.

I won’t retell the story of how “April Showers” went from a script in my drawer to yelling action on the first day of filming. If you want to know that story please check out any of a number of stories already posted on this site. I’m often asked if filming “April Showers” was a cathartic experience, in that it helped me to face my demons surrounding Columbine. I’ve always stated that the act of shooting ““April Showers”” was not the emotional release in terms of Columbine I think many wanted it to be, because frankly, I had hit that point years before. “April Showers” became an awakening for me in many ways, for I had gotten a second chance to do what I loved because I loved doing it and not because it was going to earn me money or prestige, two things I had become obsessed with over the years. I was able to be creative on my own terms and for my own reasons and it was liberating.

Despite being a sad film with a chaotic schedule and super low budget I was never happier then when I was on set. Professionally and personally I felt alive. The entire process was a daunting task, one that would see me sleeping two to four hours a night (if I was lucky) for a period of two straight years. I celebrated my 27th birthday at my editor’s house with his wife and Andrea because I couldn’t stop working on “April Showers”. Partially, because I feared that by stopping it would somehow all disappear and I couldn’t risk that. I’ve always been a workaholic and have derived a great deal of personal pleasure and satisfaction from my work. Up until recently I’ve never been one of those people who has been able to separate work from my personal life, for the two have always been intertwined; a truth I’m grateful Andrea and many of my friends have put up with for the past three years.

During the making of “April Showers” I moved out of my silly loft in LA and bought a house and got engaged to the love of my life. I quit my cushy job as an Associate Creative Director for a leading entertainment design firm and said goodbye to one of my best friends and biggest influences in my life; my grandfather. My grandfather was able to see my first attempt at being a director and if I’m honest I don’t believe it was quite what either of us was expecting. While he never came out and said that he didn’t like Shimmer I could tell my debut effort wasn’t his cup of tea. I didn’t set out to make “April Showers” to please my grandfather but I did want him to see it and to see that I had gotten back on the horse and never gave up. The one thing he seemed to love most about my work was never so much the finished product as it was seeing it all come together. He died shortly before we began filming.

When “April Showers” was completed in late January of this year I was hurled into a deep depression for there was no more cutting to be done. No more late nights. No more changes. It was done. I know I should’ve felt relieved and happy, however I felt very scared and helpless for it had been such a big part of my life for so long now that I didn’t want it to end. Around this time two things became very apparent, the economy had become a shadow of its former self and because of this simple fact the days of studios or mini-majors acquiring independent films at very advantageous prices had come to an end. It seemed my time with “April Showers” wasn’t yet over.

We had shown the film to numerous studios and mini-majors over the many months of postproduction and had gotten pretty much the same response across the board. If we were willing to pay (prints and advertising) then we would have a studio-backed release. However, paying for anything beyond simply making the film was not in the budget nor was it anything we had foreseen. The film was pretty much unanimously loved by all who viewed it around Hollywood, though given it’s tough subject matter and somewhat non happy ending those interested in releasing it wanted to hedge their bets by using our money. Money, we simply didn’t have. Fear began to rear its ugly head behind closed doors around the production; something needed to be done.

The one thing no one tells you about the filmmaking process is that it will test your limits emotionally, physically, spiritually and beyond, almost every step of the way. Shortly after taking one of our final meetings with an up and coming studio I discovered that I was done. I had had enough. To put it in the words of one of my favorite college professors, “I had been attacked and eaten by a bear then sh_t off a cliff.” Nothing, I mean nothing, made sense anymore. The offers were so littered with double speak and clauses, not to mention the simple fact that we would essentially be paying for someone else to do their job all the while giving up our rights to the film and its potential earnings, that I simply couldn’t go to another meeting or entertain another so-called offer. I wasn’t mad at Hollywood nor did I think what was happening to us was wrong. In light of the changing economic times the studios were protecting themselves, which I could understand, but that didn’t bode well for the film and those who worked so hard to see it through. There was simply no way their combined efforts were going to go unseen.

I never dreamt in a million years that on top of being a writer or a director that I would become the head of a studio or distribution company. It wasn’t in the cards, for what did I know about distributing a film? I learned quickly mind you and discovered a few things along the way that I hope to continue working on and perfecting in the future for there’s always a different way of attacking an age old problem. Did I make mistakes? Sure. Lots of them. Did I miss things, or get caught up in some of the excitement of it all? You bet. But did I learn? More than I ever thought possible. Truth be told, the fact that “April Showers” played in a theater, let alone 18 across the country, with roughly six weeks preparation is nothing short of a miracle. A miracle I cannot take full credit for because it wouldn’t have happened at all without Jenna and the support of some of our key team members who continued to work, without pay, so that “April Showers” could be given the chance to reach its audience.

“April Showers” was released on April 24, 2009 in theaters around the country and we did well in some of the theaters and not so well in others. I have to say that I’m happy with what we were able to accomplish theatrically given that we had no real money to promote it or inform audiences of where to go and see it. In retrospect, should we have opted for fewer theaters and been more targeted? Sure. However, our window of opportunity was so tight that if we had been in four cities versus 18 and the film had been more successful we couldn’t have ramped it up or expanded it right away due to the other studio films being released the following week(s). So, I made the best decision with the information and resources available to me at the time and haven’t looked back.

During the “April Showers”’ theatrical run I received countless letters and comments from audiences sharing their thoughts with me about the film. Despite being a nervous wreck during this time, those letters were a huge comfort to me, for win, lose or draw at the end of the day; the film was being seen and was having an effect. It wasn’t until IndieFlix came on board and we released on iTunes and later Amazon that I began to breath easier. It seemed that despite our modest beginnings and means “April Showers” was growing legs and stood a good chance to become one of those films that didn’t make a huge splash upon release but instead became one of “those” films that everyone knows about and sees somewhere along the way. Everyday, “April Showers” grows just a little more and I have to admit that is humbling and awesome thing.

Which brings me to the present. July 26th, 2009. My 28th birthday, sitting on the precipice of starting this whole process over again. “April Showers” was and will always be a unique experience in terms of filmmaking one I’m not sure I could repeat even if I tried. That’s not to say it’s lightning in a bottle or that I’ve peaked creatively, it was just serendipitous for so many things seemed to fall into place at the right place and time to allow “April Showers” to exist.

However, looking back on the whole process there are things I would change, ways of going about the process that I never want to repeat, for overall, “April Showers” is the type of film and style of filmmaking that I most likely will never repeat. “April Showers” is a special film for me and to many of you and it will always be that…special. “Dancing Carl” on the other hand is a film I’ve been wanting to make and in many ways have already spent more time on than “April Showers”. “Dancing Carl” is a film that I feel will be more representative of where I want to go and who I want to be as a filmmaker. It’s such a touching, beautiful story that has percolated with me over the years that I have to admit I’m very excited to see through to fruition, not only for the film itself but for possibilities it holds for the future.

Many people ask, why choose to do “April Showers” first then? Well, quite simply, I wasn’t ready to make “Dancing Carl” three years ago, or even a year ago. I had to grow up a bit, settle down and be in a place within myself that is much more solid, to whom I credit Andrea, Jenna and my family and countless more for helping me find solace within myself. I had a lot to learn, and while I’m still learning each and every day “Dancing Carl” is the right film for me now and I’m fortunate that it is the film I get to next.

I think “Dancing Carl” might surprise a lot of you. I don’t know how you view me or what you hope to see from me in the future as a filmmaker but I think if you’re reserving judgment for a later date “Dancing Carl” will give you a much better grasp on how I see things. I try to avoid cliché statements such as “you ain’t seen nothin’ yet” for I’m not entirely sure I’ve even really shown you what I feel I’m capable of. “April Showers”, aside from being the film that it was, served a multitude of purposes pertaining to the future. Workflow issues were resolved. Working relationships formed. Lines of communication solidified and the creation of a dedicated, talented and hard working team were all bi-products of making “April Showers”. Skill sets that will be brought to bear on “Dancing Carl”.

I hope that you will continue the journey with me and the hard working men and women that truly made “April Showers” possible as we transition into “Dancing Carl”. I can promise you that it’s not going to be more of the same in terms of our interaction (though it may seem that way now) for we have so many things in store as we get closer to yelling action that I think you’ll enjoy. I want to thank you all for allowing me the privilege of speaking my mind and sharing my thoughts, hopes, dreams and even frustrations each and every week with you and hope that you’ll stay tuned for round two. I sincerely appreciate everyone’s support and well wishes and all of your continued efforts to spread the word and bring new people to “April Showers” as well as what it is we do around here. I would also like to thank everyone on the “April Showers” team who helped make all of this even possible for no one person, myself especially, can single handedly make a film.

I appreciate you all taking the time to read this little retrospective. I cannot thank you enough for what you have all done for me and everyone associated with “April Showers” and “Dancing Carl” as we turn a page and begin a new chapter of this crazy story of ours. Take care everyone and as always stay tuned…

Sincerely,

Andrew Robinson

Andrew Robinson

IndieFlix Play It Again Podcast With The Trident Filmmaker Anurag Mehta Hosted By Lois Fein

Tuesday, July 21st, 2009

Anurag One

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IndieFlix Play It Again Podcast


“Here’s looking at you – the independent filmmaker”

Every Tuesday. A conversation with IndieFlix independent filmmakers –
producers, writers, actors, directors.

  • Listen NOW by clicking PLAY below

 
icon for podpress  IndieFlix Play It Again Podcast with Anurag Mehta Hosted By Lois Fein [27:54m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

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  • Play Podcast Puzzle
  • Name That Voice
  • Meet Host, Lois Fein

7/21/09 Podcast:

The Anurag Mehta Interview

Anurag Two

A conversation with award-winning independent filmmaker Anurag Mehta
- director and writer of The Trident

The Trident – Trailer

(7/21/09)    (Total time – 27:53)

What’s inside The Anurag Mehta Interview?

  • Listen to the Movie: “The Trident”  (0:53)
  • How “The Trident” was born  (1:22)
  • “The Warrior’s Dilemma”  (2:45)
  • Why the British banned Indian martial arts  (4:45)
  • “The weapons are pretty unique” (5:42)
  • Defending yourself from bandits  (6:48)
  • The path to divinity  (8:30)
  • What is Anurag’s dharma  — purpose and path?  (9:45)
  • “An artist asks the questions”  (10:05)
  • How do you know you’re on “the path”?  (10:25)
  • Working with brother, Aalok – actor and musician  (11:20)
  • Fighting with a trident  (11:55)
  • The challenges of filmming martial arts  (13:41)
  • Working with and learning from David Carradine  (16:02)
  • What about the music?  (20:34)
  • The Trident: First narrative-project done on 4K digital  (21:37)
  • Challenges and possibilities (24:33)
  • What’s next for “The Trident”?  (25:52)

STILL FROM THE TRIDENT
Anurag STILL ONE

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Play “IndieFlix Podcast Puzzle” (7/21/09):


Play “IndieFlix Name That Voice(7/21/09):


Meet Indieflix Podcast Host: Lois Fein

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Lois Fein is IndieFlix Filmmaker Interviewer,
Podcaster, and Host for
IndieFlix Play It Again Podcast.
Lois is a recording artist, songwriter, and performer.
Her songs “It Ain’t Easy” and “Chasing the Moon”
are featured on IndieFlix Play It Again Podcast.
Listen to more of her music from her debut CD
Step Into the Water at: www.LoisFein.com

_________________________________________________________

Podcast Music Credits: “As Time Goes By” (Herman Hupfield);
It Ain’t Easy” and “Chasing the Moon” (Lois Fein
)

_________________________________________________________

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Today’s edition of IndieFlix Play It Again Podcast was recorded with
audio-technica’s AT2020 USB Cardoid Condenser Microphone,
Skype™
and CallBurner; and edited and mastered with
Steinberg Media Technologies GmbH™’s WaveLab Studio 6
.

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_________________________________________________________

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This edition of IndieFlix Podcast Puzzle and
IndieFlix Name That Voice
is sponsored by IndieFlix -
“Connecting people through movies.”

__________________________________________________________

7/07/09 PODCAST ANSWERS:

THE ANSWER to IndieFlix Podcast Puzzle (7/07/09) is
“1989”

THE ANSWER to IndieFlix Name That Voice (7/07/09) is
“Scott Jackson – director of Iron City Blues”

__________________________________________________________

7/21/09 Edition – IndieFlix Play It Again Podcast

Hot Rod Monsters Film Festival Seattle, WA July 18-19 Check It Out!

Thursday, July 16th, 2009

HRMMFFPressreleaseb

Have you ever felt like there aren’t enough pinups, hotrods, zombies and beer at film festivals? Then maybe you should check out the Hot Rod and Monster Film Festival this weekend, July 18th and 19th at the 911 Media Arts Center in downtown Seattle.

The event is sponsored by Go-Kustom Rekords, Ol Skool Rodz, Car Kulture Deluxe, The Pin-Up Angels and The Rat Bastards Car Club. It’s their first film festival and is described as “a working class film celebration of grease, ink and iron.”

The beautiful Pin-Up Angels will be hosting the event and acting as official usherettes, selling beer and concessions during the festival. The Pin-Up Angels are a non-profit group that sends care packages to US troops in Iraq and Afghanistan. All donations will go to their cause.

Event Registrar D.A. Sebasstian says the festival will have “car-show feel” and hopes to bring people together who love iconic kustom kulture – for the non-greaser that means anything ‘50s. For a bit of spice, zombies were thrown in the mix. And who doesn’t love zombies?

“During the selection process local films went to the top of the list, I was surprised at the high number of submissions we had – considering it’s our first festival,” Sebasstian. “We also tried to make an interesting mixture of films. One block might be zombie shorts with a hot rod documentary; another might be a chopper film with Rockabilly music videos. The last block on Sunday night is all zombies!”

Among the 8 features screening at the festival are the Seattle premieres of “Hot Rod Girls Save The World,” “Choppertown: The Sinners, Hot Rod Havoc” and “The Road To.” Also playing is the lo-fi zombie extravaganza RetarDEAD, directed by Rick Popko and Dan West, featuring Dead Kennedy’s singer Jello Biafra as the Mayor of San Francisco.

The festival is laid out in six two hour blocks over two days with each block containing a mixture of feature films, shorts and music videos. The cost for a 2 hour block is $10 per person. Local radio station KGRG will be on hand to keep the party going.

The 911 Media Arts Center is located at 402 9th Ave. North, Seattle WA 98109, on the corner of 9th and Republican, in the same building as SIFF headquarters.

To learn more about the festival, please visit the 2009 Hot Rod Monsters Film Festival Official Website at www.hotrodmonstersfilmfest.com. It’s sure to be an absolute blast and we can’t wait to hear how it goes! If you’re out this weekend at the Bite of Seattle or just enjoying the nice weather, please come and support your local filmmakers!

Even for a short, “Thompson” captures a lifetime

Thursday, July 16th, 2009

Thompson Poster

“Thomspon” was a Jury Award Winner at SXSW 2009, an Official Selection at the Los Angeles Film Festival, and everyone please look out for upcoming screenings at the ‘Free Range Film Festival’ and ‘Doc Point’ in Helsinki!

Jason Tippet’s film “Thompson” packs a lot of punch for a short about two slow-moving high school friends from Newhall, California. Matt and Ryan have known each other since second grade and are quickly approaching adulthood without much of a game plan. They both love dirt bikes and fire, neither are very ‘cool’ according to the dictations of their peers and going fishing is their only priority.

They are so seemingly average that in person you might not think twice about these two but onscreen they could be poster children of a sleeping generation. Their commentary on life is juvenile at times but easy to appreciate and almost sweet. There is a great moment in the film where Ryan looks over at a huge butterfly lawn decoration someone pinned to a tree and talks about his desire to have a real one for a pet. It was hilarious and spontaneous and I laughed out loud. This film has such a simple yet thoughtful charm that makes it hard to resist… and you almost want to find them and hang out with them. Almost.

NewFlix Tuesday July 15, 2009

Wednesday, July 15th, 2009

This Week’s New Releases:
Horror

Gasoline Blood Gasoline Blood
SYNOPSIS: (Short Film)
Summer 1979. A young girl, her boyfriend and younger brother arrive in the middle of nowhere to find a disused warehouse, ideal as a location for a horror film that one of them is shooting. However they soon find themselves dealing with more than they bargained for – in the shape of a gang of mad zombie in-breds.

Watch STREAMING $1.95
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Eel Girl
SYNOPSIS: (Short Film)
In a secret military laboratory, a scientist has become obsessed with the half-human half-eel creature he’s studying. When she beckons him to her, it’s the call of a siren …
Film Festival Screenings:
Austin Film Festival Official Selection
deadCENTER Film Festival Official Selection
Oxford Film Festival Official Selection

Watch STREAMING $1.95 Purchase the DVD $5.95
Happy Holidays Comedy Happy Holidays
SYNOPSIS: (Feature Film)
Three childhood friends unexpectedly reunite in their New England hometown the week before Christmas. Now in their mid-thirties, it’s the first time Patrick, Alden and Kirby have been in the same zip code since their high school graduation. Each of them is at a different crossroads in his life and facing difficult hurdles. They pick up right where they left off, returning to a simpler time- before obligations, politics and agendas- but has life taken them too far to make that even possible?

Watch STREAMING $4.95 Purchase the DVD $9.95
Arizona Seaside Arizona Seaside
SYNOPSIS: (Feature Film)
The delightfully seedy Arizona Seaside motel serves as the momentous intersection for a supposed animal-rights do-gooder, a blue-collar Kazakhstan immigrant with dreams of stardom, and assorted underworld characters in this offbeat comedic gem. But as each encounters the other, they all get more than they bargained for. Written and directed by Pil Pilegaard, the film stars Alexandra Hunter, Richard Thorne, Jacob Witkin and Hugh Mason.

Watch STREAMING $4.95 Purchase the DVD $9.95
High Society: A Pot Boiler High Society: A Pot Boiler
SYNOPSIS: (Feature Film)
A dialogue-driven, rapid-fire comedy about three contentious roommates and their hapless guests, two lovely ladies and a very unfortunate intruder. Over the course of a long evening, we encounter vicious oneupmanship and poetically profane barrages to ‘impress’ the ladies, interspersed with frequent bong-binges. Crafted in the rich ’stoner’ tradition, our heroes and heroines struggle to retain their dignity and protect their innermost insecurities.

Watch STREAMING $4.95 Purchase the DVD $9.95

NewFlix Tuesday July 7, 2009

Wednesday, July 8th, 2009

This Week’s New Releases:

Thriller

The Fugue The Fugue
SYNOPSIS: (Feature Film)
Nora Dunn is a struggling artist desperately trying to recover from a childhood trauma, but her life is turn upside down when she is haunted by the vision of a long dead childhood friend. Is the spirit a hallucination or a foreshadowing of something worse to come? It is up to Dan Tsang, a young police detective to solve the mystery and save Nora before it is too late.

Watch STREAMING $4.95 Purchase the DVD $9.95

Dark Comedy

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The Stanton Family Grave Robbery
SYNOPSIS: (Feature Film)
The death of their father is the jumping-off point for this original comedy about three brothers looking to reconnect. Against his wishes, their father is buried in Texas. The older two siblings decide to take matters into their own hands, starting by kidnapping their baby brother and digging up their father’s coffin to return it to Oklahoma. Featured at the Austin Film Festival and the deadCenter Film Festival.
Film Festival Screenings:
Austin Film Festival Official Selection
deadCENTER Film Festival Official Selection
Oxford Film Festival Official Selection

Watch STREAMING $4.95 Purchase the DVD $9.95
Casi 10 Documentary Casi 10
SYNOPSIS: (Feature Film)
After nearly 10 years, Pol, a bartender in New York, is finally able to go to his hometown, Barcelona. For half an hour, we accompany him through his emotional homecoming. None of his family and friends is expecting him- while he lived in NY illegally, he couldn’t even think of leaving the country, and he decides to keep his return as a surprise.

Watch STREAMING $4.95 Purchase the DVD $9.95
LSD Finding Our Voices: Stories of American Dissent
SYNOPSIS: (Feature Film)
Dissent has brought about the greatness of the American dream, from the declaration of independence to civil rights, from the end of slavery to the enfranchisement of women. Today we are faced by a new tyranny… a war which the US government started in Iraq, a war that is costing tens of thousands of lives, and betraying the ideals and international reputation that for many Americans is the source of their national identity. New voices of dissent have, since before the war began, been raised to call the government to the standards of justice and democracy on which this country was founded. Finding Our Voices tells the stories of 8 of these courageous people. From a mother who lost her son at the WTC 9/11 and didn’t want his legacy to be one of more innocents dying to a US Congressman … from a diplomat to soldiers who served in Iraq, from a minister to other activists…this film reveals the sacrifice and motivation of 8 very different Americans who spoke out for peace.

Watch STREAMING $4.95 Purchase the DVD $9.95

Drama- Crime

Vuth Learns to Rock Vuth Learns to Rock
SYNOPSIS: (Short Film)
A Taiwanese rock and roll guru teaches a Cambodian named Vuth about Motorhead, the Ramones, the Kinks, Led Zeppelin, and more in this provocative cross-cultural documentary…watch as Vuth hears rock music for the first time!

Watch STREAMING $1.95 Purchase the DVD $5.95

To watch IndieFlix Films on Amazon VOD for the special price of 99-cents

Tuesday, July 7th, 2009

Amazon VOD

To watch IndieFlix Films on Amazon VOD for the special price of 99-cents CLICK HERE (Valid July 7-11)

As part of this promotion AmazonVOD will be offering the online rental for 99 cents starting tomorrow and extending through Saturday. If you rent any of the films via AmazonVOD for 99 cents you will have a week to begin watching the film and 24 hours to watch or finish the film once you begin. You can also watch it as many times as you wish within a 24 hour period once it begins. No word yet if this special is carrying over to the download purchase. The DVD price will remain unchanged though Amazon regularly discounts it a dollar or so on their own.

If you’ve already seen any of these films or own a copy, be it digital or DVD, please check out the promotion for we’re not the only film being featured.

Other than that, we hope everyone had a wonderful and safe July 4th weekend and we’ll talk to you all soon.

Team IndieFlix

IndieFlix Play It Again Podcast with Iron City Blues Filmmaker Scott Jackson Hosted by Lois Fein

Tuesday, July 7th, 2009

Scott Two headshot

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IndieFlix Play It Again Podcast


“Here’s looking at you – the independent filmmaker”

Every Tuesday. A conversation with IndieFlix independent filmmakers –
producers, writers, actors, directors.

  • Listen NOW by clicking PLAY below

 
icon for podpress  IndieFlix Play It Again Podcast with Scott Jackson Hosted By Lois Fein [41:33m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

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  • Play Podcast Puzzle
  • Name That Voice
  • Meet Host, Lois Fein

7/07/09 Podcast:

The Scott Jackson Interview

A conversation with independent filmmaker Scott Jackson
- director of Iron City Blues

Scott Jackson Photo 3

 Iron City Blues – Trailer

 (7/07/09) (Total time – (41:33)

What’s inside The Scott Jackson Interview?

  • Listen to the Movies: “Iron City Blues” (0:52)
  • What is it like to film in a lawless city?  (2:40)
  • What happened to the police force?  (3:28)
  • “Nothing in the world has happened worse
    than in Iron City”  (6:47)
  • “Iron City Blues” – a feel-good film!  (7:37)
  • Meet Big Mike Griffin – blues singer & biker  (8:27)
  • How Scott Jackson met Big Mike Griffin and
    conceived “Iron City Blues”  (9:10)
  • Finding a “framework” for a documentary  (11:35)
  • “Easy Rider” as visual influence  (12:42)
  • “Were you scared before arriving in Iron City?”  (13:12)
  • Guns, 7-foot bluesman, and an ex-Marine: getting ready
    for the road trip to Iron City  (14:13)
  • What Scott Jackson did NOT put in “Iron City Blues”  (15:09)
  • Lawrence County:  Highest murder rate per capita,  based on
    unsolved murders?  (17:26)
  • “Were you ever shot at during the filmming of Iron City Blues?”  (17:44)
  • A narrow escape  (20:55)
  • Camera-shy people  (22:23 & 24:33)
  • Town’s reaction to “Iron City Blues”  (23:45)
  • “…had to identify him by his teeth”  (24:33)
  • Shootings, stabbings, and tourism (25:31)
  • “Paddle like hell.  I hear banjos.”  (26:24 & 27:15)
  • Non-bikers love this film, too  (27:42 & 28:28)
  • Morgan Freeman, step aside (in Memphis)  (29:37)
  • What about the music?  (31:42)
  • “You won’t be able to resist”  (33:45)
  • “I wouldn’t stay after dark”  (39:19)
  • Iron City: “I’ll be back”?  (39:39)

Note:  Ideas expressed in this podcast are the opinions of
“Iron City Blues” director
Scott Jackson.

STILL FROM IRON CITY BLUES
Iron City Blues STill


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Play “IndieFlix Podcast Puzzle” (7/07/09):


Play “IndieFlix Name That Voice” (7/07/09):


  

 

Meet Indieflix Podcast Host: Lois Fein

seattle-songwriter-1111

Lois Fein is IndieFlix Filmmaker Interviewer,
Podcaster, and Host for
IndieFlix Play It Again Podcast.
Lois is a recording artist, songwriter, and performer.
Her songs “It Ain’t Easy” and “Chasing the Moon”
are featured on IndieFlix Play It Again Podcast.
Listen to more of her music from her debut CD
Step Into the Water at: www.LoisFein.com

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Podcast Music Credits: “As Time Goes By” (Herman Hupfield);
It Ain’t Easy” and “Chasing the Moon” (Lois Fein
)

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Today’s edition of IndieFlix Play It Again Podcast was recorded with
audio-technica’s AT2020 USB Cardoid Condenser Microphone,
Skype™
and CallBurner; and edited and mastered with
Steinberg Media Technologies GmbH™’s WaveLab Studio 6
.

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This edition of IndieFlix Podcast Puzzle and
IndieFlix Name That Voice
is sponsored by IndieFlix -
“Connecting people through movies.”

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6/23/09 PODCAST ANSWERS:

THE ANSWER to IndieFlix Podcast Puzzle (6/23/09) is
“Freedom to Parody”

THE ANSWER to IndieFlix Name That Voice (6/23/09) is
“Jenny Abel – writer, director, and producer of Abel Raises Cain”

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7/07/09 Edition – IndieFlix Play It Again Podcast

The Long Way Home: A BigFoot Story Check It Out!!

Thursday, July 2nd, 2009

The Long Way Home: A BigFoot Story

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Multiple award-winning Bigfoot Docu-Drama

Down-and-out former Miami Herald reporter D.J. Galloway finds himself facedown at his favorite watering hole in Southbeach when, out of nowhere, flashing across the T.V. is a breaking news story about Bigfoot sightings in D.J.’s hometown of Indian Camp Mountain in North Carolina. In a moment of clarity, D.J. decides to pack it up and move home and begin reporting these outbreaks in an effort to resurrect his career, re-connect with his roots and potentially reveal the greatest story ever. This feature film has it all: A Bigfoot, of course, but also a character named “Cornbread”, a snake handler, a drag queen, hundreds of dead chickens, and real salt of the earth southern locals who add a unique, gritty charm to a film you will be hard pressed to forget.

CULTURE HACKER: New Story Platforms

Thursday, July 2nd, 2009

Dee Cook reports – How are you telling your stories these days? Here’s a small rundown of three entirely different kinds of narrative frameworks using online media – and the audience – in new and sometimes unexpected ways.

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Alabaster
The Queen has told you to return with her heart in a box. Snow White has made you promise to make other arrangements. Now that you’re alone in the forest, it’s hard to know which of the two women to trust. The Queen is certainly a witch — but her stepdaughter may be something even more horrible…

Alabaster is a form of interactive fiction that sets about to retell the tale of Snow White from a somewhat different perspective. The story is told through text, and you are given a prompt to enter responses. The story then reacts to what you have just told or asked it. Additionally, Alabaster includes illustrations that change in accordance with the mood of the story. This collaboration between 11 different authors is a sophisticated tapestry of dialog and plot. In all, 18 separate endings are available, depending on the choices the player makes.

If you’ve never had the opportunity to explore the world of interactive fiction, or IF, you’re missing a treat. If Alabaster whets your appetite, give the classic Zork series a shot next. Theatre of the mind at its finest.

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Nawlz
Another sort of storytelling entirely, Nawlz is an online graphic novel. Nearly every panel features some sort of animation and sound, and some have interactive hotspots that readers can play with. The cyberpunk setting “follows Harley Chambers as he kicks thru the futuristic City of Nawlz engaging in overlaying virtual realities, mind-bending drugs and other strange techno-cultures.”

What’s interesting about Nawlz is that the panels are not static. Items and elements appear and rearrange themselves within the panels as the reader navigates through the story. This gives a totally new dynamic to the experience and is exciting even for graphic novel neophytes to navigate through.

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Survive the Outbreak
When the zombies attack, are you dead meat or will you be leading your people to safety? Chris Lund’sSurvive the Outbreak let people put their best armchair zombie quarterbacking skills to the test, providing a choose-your-own-adventure style interactive movie that allowed viewers to make the decisions what to do next. Unfortunately, the high quality version seems to be a victim of its own success (or perhaps it’s a vast undead plot), but a reasonable facsimile of the movie/game can be found on YouTube complete with the decision tree. According to the designers, there are eight possible endings – but only two where the protagonist lives. As Homer Simpson would say, “I like those odds!”

So take note, storytellers – every day there is someone out there finding another new and innovative way of captivating an audience. What’s been most interesting has been to see the shift from author-driven story to author/audience collaboration. Giving your audience a stake in the story is a sure-fire way of building a very strong relationship with them. Finding interesting ways of doing that is the challenge – and the fun part.

Dee Cook was elated to discover the world of interactive storytelling because, at that moment, she finally discovered what she wanted to do when she grew up. A fish out of water with lofty ideals and meta-theorizing, Dee finds herself most at home with her sleeves rolled up and the grease of a good story under her fingernails. In the last several years she has written, designed, and consulted on over a dozen alternate reality games, extended realities, and marketing campaigns, most recently World Without Oil, True Blood, Dead Space, and My Home 2.0. You can find her online at Addlepated.net.

Check Out The New Perfect Sport Website

Thursday, July 2nd, 2009

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Hi Everybody,

Please visit our friends at www.perfectsportmovie.com to get all things Perfect Sport!  The film is now available on IndieFlix, Amazon, Amazon VOD, NetFlix and iTunes so you have no excuse not to see this fantastic indie!

Thanks,

Team IndieFlix