Posts Tagged ‘Los Angeles’

Perfect Sport on all major platforms today!

Tuesday, May 19th, 2009

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SEATTLE, WA – May 18, 2009 – Washington-based entertainment production company Building Block Pictures LLC, in conjunction with Washington-based distributor Indieflix Inc, is releasing the multi-award-winning feature “Perfect Sport” on DVD on Tuesday May 19 2009 after a successful festival run.

Writer-director Anthony O’Brien stars in the teen sports drama, alongside Jessica Rose (Lonelygirl15, Greek) and Gary Hudson (Roadhouse, Paradise Falls). “Perfect Sport” won Best Picture at both Worldfest Houston 2008 and MyFestival 2008, and also the Audience Award at both the Seattle International Film Festival 2008 and the National Film Festival For Talented Youth (NFFTY) 2009, where it received a standing ovation.

This is not your average teen movie, and Lee Bishop (Anthony O’Brien) does not have the same problems as your average teenager. When his mother leaves for Iraq, Lee is forced to grow up quickly. As though maintaining his varsity spot on the wrestling team wasn’t enough to deal with, his younger sister Tina (Jessica Rose) decides to join the team. In addition Tina is being aggressively pursued by an upperclassman and since their father is out of the picture, Lee feels he is her only defense against the corrupting influences around her.

Enter Joe Kross (Gary Hudson), the owner of a local gym, who agrees to help coach the wrestling team. Because Lee is without guidance, Joe’s increasing influence threatens to push Lee over the precipice. Lee must decide how far he is willing to go to secure his own future while protecting his sister – all before personal demons, and an act of sexual violence threaten to destroy him. With standout performances by Gary Hudson, Jessica Rose, Nick Richey, Anthony O’Brien and Jim Turner, Perfect Sport will make you question – how far would you be willing to go?

Perfect Sport is available on DVD and video on demand at IndieFlix and Amazon. The award-nominated soundtrack by Tim Borquez is available on iTunes and Amazon MP3.

About Building Block Pictures:

Building Block Pictures, LLC (BBP) is an independent production company committed to creating intriguing film, television, and new media content for the ever-evolving audience. Established in 2006 by Anthony O’Brien, Zach Mann, and Mark Mathias Sayre, BBP’s business paradigm focuses on originality, topicality, and engagement.

About IndieFlix Inc.

IndieFlix.com (Seattle,WA) is dedicated to providing a forum for filmmakers and their audience to interact, and to building a community that translates artistic vision into commercial success. IndieFlix provides a fair and open marketplace to empower filmmakers to be the engine of their achievement and audiences to be a vital part of a movie’s success. IndieFlix is committed to encourage public opinion and power of choice while reinvesting in the independence of film, the people that craft them, and the organizations that support them. We believe that every movie has an audience, every filmmaker has a story to tell and each story has the right to be shared.

Andrew Robinson Interviewed in the L.A. Times

Thursday, April 16th, 2009

andrew-robinson

Hello Everyone,

Andrew Robinson, writer/director of April Showers was recently interviewed by the Los Angeles Times.  Please click the link or just read the article below!

L.A. Times Article

Andrew Robinson’s ‘April Showers’ focuses on survivors of Columbine

He knows first-hand what they went through afterward. He ran to safety that day.
By Yvonne Villarreal
April 16, 2009

It was supposed to be just another day in high school. Prom was over. The spring play had wrapped. No sporting events were scheduled. Only a couple of weeks stood between student Andrew Robinson and summer vacation.

Then, in an instant, that carefree Tuesday at Colorado’s Columbine High School turned violent.

Robinson, then 17, was initially oblivious as Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold began to fire their weapons. The sound of gunshots was muffled by the concrete walls of the computer lab where he was studying. And the fire alarm didn’t cause him panic. He figured it was simply a drill or a senior prank. But when he walked out to the hallway, he knew something was horribly wrong.

“There’s a big difference between the way a person looks when they’re running track and field and the way people look when they’re running for their lives,” said Robinson, a self-proclaimed “terrible” student. “I’ve never seen anything like that. Until that day.”

Robinson survived the shooting rampage on April 20, 1999, that left 15 people dead, including the shooters, and injured 24 others.

A decade later, he’s written and directed “April Showers,” a dramatized retelling of what it’s like to be a survivor of one of the nation’s deadliest school shootings.

The movie, which features Tom Arnold (“True Lies”) and Daryl Sabara (“Spy Kids”), is set to be released in selected theaters around the nation on April 24, when it will play five times a day during a one-week run, in commemoration of the 10th anniversary of the Columbine tragedy. The film is not scheduled to play in Los Angeles theaters, but it will be available for downloading beginning May 5 on iTunes and for streaming at IndieFlix.com with a portion of every download being donated to charity.

The filmmaker’s portion of all first-week proceeds from theatrical screenings will be donated to local schools.

Jenna Edwards, producer of the film, said she hoped that the R-rating by the Motion Picture Assn. of America for “some disturbing content” doesn’t deter viewers from seeing the film.

“The message I want audiences to take away is to not take anything for granted,” Robinson added. “When you’re young, you think that you are indestructible; you think that nothing bad is going to happen to you. When it does, you realize that there are quite a few instances in your life that you didn’t get to play out. You have to kind of grapple with that feeling of regret.”

Robinson’s film isn’t the first cinematic dramatization of a school shooting post-Columbine. In 2003′s “Elephant,” writer-director Gus Van Sant chronicled the events surrounding a massive school shooting. Ben Coccio’s “Zero Day” (2003) looks at the planning stages of two students that lead up to their shooting rampage at school. “Home Room” (2002) is a story that deals with the aftermath of a high school shooting and the unlikely friendship of two survivors. But “April Showers” isn’t like the others, Robinson said.

“I didn’t want to focus on the gunmen or the actual shooting,” Robinson said. “What is more important is what do we do now? You know, these neighborhoods get turned upside down. These lives get turned upside down. We kind of almost became strangers in our own land.”

The movie, filmed in Omaha and Plattsmouth, Neb., follows the lives of a handful of survivors in a middle-class suburban neighborhood as they deal with issues that Robinson said weren’t addressed by the media, such as post-traumatic stress disorder and sensational media coverage.

“The media trucks just sort of descended upon everyone,” Robinson said. “And the camera lenses became similar to guns in a way. Out to get us. It made it hard for some people to get closure.”

Robinson eventually moved to Southern California to study advertising and film at the Art Center College of Design in Pasadena. He worked as art director for various entertainment design firms before leaving to devote his time to “April Showers,” his second writing-directing effort, once he secured investors in the project.

It’s a project he’s hoping young people will see. Shedding light on the issues students struggled with afterward — faith, mortality, regret — is something that he believes needs more awareness.

“The idea of ‘out of sight, out of mind’ is asinine,” Robinson said. “You’re taking away students’ ability to face what may be ailing them. We need to allow them to face it. Hopefully this film will make others realize that.”