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  • Four Indie Films “BURN,” “HIGH TECH, LOW LIFE,” “MISS GULAG,” “MY BEST DAY” to Get Digital Release

    [caption id="attachment_4094" align="alignnone" width="550"]BURN[/caption]

    Four independent films will be released on digital platforms on June 18, via the Sundance Institute’s Artist Services program. The films will be available on a variety of platforms, including iTunes , Amazon Instant Video,  Microsoft Xbox Sony Entertainment Network SundanceNOW VUDU and YouTube.  The upcoming releases include 3 documentaries – “HIGH TECH, LOW LIFE” “MISS GULAG,” and “BURN”; and “MY BEST DAY” which premiered at the 2012 Sundance Film Festival in the NEXT section.

    TITLES AVAILABLE JUNE 18

    BURN (Directors: Tom Putnam and Brenna Sanchez) — BURN is an award-winning, action-packed documentary capturing a year in the lives of Detroit firefighters who are charged with the thankless task of saving a city that many have written off as dead. A portion of proceeds from each sale go to the Leary Firefighters Foundation. (Released through Artist Services collaboration with Film Independent)

    High Tech, Low Life (Director: Stephen Maing) — High Tech, Low Life follows two of China’s first and most daring citizen reporters as they fight censorship, document the underside of the country’s rapid economic development, and challenge the boundaries of free speech. (2010 Documentary Edit and Story Lab)

    Miss Gulag (Director: Maria Yatskova-Ibrahimova) — Through the prism of a beauty pageant staged by female inmates of a Siberian prison camp emerges a complex narrative of the lives of the first generation of women to come of age in Post-Soviet Russia. (2006 Documentary Film Grant)

    My Best Day (Director: Erin Greenwell) — Karen has to work her receptionist gig on the Fourth of July. A call comes from her long-lost father. Enlisting her friend Meagan, Karen investigates her father’s trailer home. Karen’s journey sets in motion a chain of events that will change not just her but this one small town forever. (2012 Sundance Film Festival)

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  • 40th Student Academy Awards Winners Receive Medals at Ceremony in Beverly Hills

    Sixteen students from colleges and universities around the world were honored last night, June 8, and received medal placements, as winners of the 40th Student Academy Awards. The ceremony was hosted by writer-director and 1978 Student Academy Award® winner Bob Saget, and writer-director Kimberly Peirce and actors Clark Gregg, Jason Schwartzman and Quvenzhané Wallis presented the awards.

    The winners are:

    Alternative
    Gold Medal: “Bottled Up,” Rafael Cortina, Occidental College
    Silver Medal: “Zug,” Perry Janes, University of Michigan
    Bronze Medal: “The Compositor,” John Mattiuzzi, School of Visual Arts

    Animation
    Gold Medal: “Dia de los Muertos,” Lindsey St. Pierre and Ashley Graham, Ringling College of Art and Design
    Silver Medal: “Will,” Eusong Lee, California Institute of the Arts
    Bronze Medal: “Peck Pocketed,” Kevin Herron, Ringling College of Art and Design

    Documentary
    Gold Medal: “A Second Chance,” David Aristizabal, University of Southern California
    Silver Medal: “Every Tuesday: A Portrait of The New Yorker Cartoonists,” Rachel Loube, School of Visual Arts
    Bronze Medal: “Win or Lose,” Daniel Koehler, Elon University

    Narrative
    Gold Medal: “Ol’ Daddy,” Brian Schwarz, University of Texas at Austin
    Silver Medal: “Josephine and the Roach,” Jonathan Langager, University of Southern California
    Bronze Medal: “Un Mundo para Raúl (A World for Raúl),” Mauro Mueller, Columbia University

    Foreign Film
    Gold Medal: “Miss Todd,” Kristina Yee, National Film and Television School, United Kingdom
    Silver Medal: “Parvaneh,” Talkhon Hamzavi, Zurich University of the Arts, Switzerland
    Bronze Medal: “Tweesprong (Crossroads),” Wouter Bouvijn, RITS School of Arts, Erasmus University College Brussels, Belgium

    The Student Academy Awards were established in 1972 to support and encourage excellence in filmmaking at the collegiate level. Past Student Academy Award winners have gone on to receive 46 Oscar® nominations and have won or shared eight awards. The roster includes such distinguished filmmakers as John Lasseter, Pete Docter, Robert Zemeckis, Trey Parker and Spike Lee.

    Image:

    Front row (left to right): Talkhon Hamzavi, Brian Schwarz, David Aristizabal, Eusong Lee, Lindsey St. Pierre, Ashley Graham, Kristina Yee and Rachel Loube.

    Back row (left to right): John Mattiuzzi, Kevin Herron, Jonathan Langager, Perry Janes, Mauro Mueller, Wouter Bouvijn, Rafael Cortina and Daniel Koehler.

    credit: Matt Petit / ©A.M.P.A.S.

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  • Nicole Gomez Fisher Talks About her Sold Out Film SLEEPING WITH THE FISHES at 2013 Brooklyn Film Festival

    Nicole Gomez Fisher is the writer and director of SLEEPING WITH THE FISHES, an official selection of the 2013 Brooklyn Film Festival.  SLEEPING WITH THE FISHES which had its World Premiere at the festival last weekend, continues to screen to sold out audiences for all of the film’s time slots. SLEEPING WITH THE FISHES is a comedy which captures one girl’s journey of self-discovery and the dynamics of her zany family. The film features an incredible Latino cast of established and rising talent including Gina Rodriguez and Ana Ortiz. 

    We caught up with the super talented actress, writer, director, Nicole Gomez Fisher at the 2013 Brooklyn Film Festival to find out all there is to know about the hot ticket at the festival and what she is up to next.

    VIMOOZ: First, congratulations on SLEEPING WITH THE FISHES being an official selection in the 2013 Brooklyn Film Festival … and the World Premiere. How does it feel doing all this in your hometown Brooklyn?

    Nicole Gomez Fisher: It’s exhilarating! The whole process has been so overwhelming, that having the support of friends and family close by only helps get you through. Nothing like home!

    VIMOOZ: Tell us about SLEEPING WITH THE FISHES – the story?

    Nicole Gomez Fisher: SLEEPING WITH THE FISHES is about Alexis Fish’s (GINA RODRIGUEZ) journey back home to where it all went wrong, to face her uber-judegmental mother and reveal to her family that her perfect life with the perfect husband wasn’t so perfect after all. It’s a coming-of-age later in life comedy which captures Alexis’ roller coaster world as she tries to pick up the pieces of her life and put them back together under the critical eye of her Madre.

    VIMOOZ: Is the film set in Brooklyn?

    Nicole Gomez Fisher: Yes it is. They say write what you know…I say shoot where you know. It would stink to have to Mapquest your way around your shoot, especially for your crew and talent! That’s a sure way to lose a team! Brooklyn is amazing! It’s where my heart is. I wouldn’t have shot it anywhere else.

    VIMOOZ: You also wrote the film, what was your inspiration?

    Nicole Gomez Fisher: My family. The characters are all loosely based on my family and I wanted to write a mother/daughter story that came from a voice not heard very often in Hollywood. I enjoy films that have the perfect blend of humor and heart and I felt that this story embodied both.

    VIMOOZ: You have a very impressive writing resume. Was writing for a film different from your prior writing experiences?

    Nicole Gomez FisherWriting for film versus any other medium, for me, is quite daunting at first. It’s like building a tower of the unknown. Structure is so important and without that set in place, moving forward is futile. I’m great with story and character development, but again, without structure, you’re just flying blind. But once you manage to reach the top, it’s the most rewarding feeling ever.

    VIMOOZ: You also have a lot of acting credits and experience. Are you done with acting?

    Nicole Gomez Fisher: I prefer being behind the scenes, but if someone offered me a role that required kissing Ryan Gosling…I wouldn’t pass on it. Seriously, I’d jump back on that pony if the right opportunity presented itself.

    VIMOOZ: The film is sold out at the festival, how will unlucky film lovers get to the see the film? What’s up next for SLEEPING WITH THE FISHES?

    Nicole Gomez Fisher: We are screening again in August at the San Francisco Jewish Film Festival and after that, we are hoping to either screen at the Hamptons Film Festival or Woodstock, but we have to get accepted first! The goal is to sell the film so that those “unlucky film lovers” can have the opportunity to see it on the big screen in multiple cities!

    VIMOOZ: What’s up next for you?

    Nicole Gomez FisherI recently completed my second feature, an action comedy entitled Good Egg about an egg donor that gets stalked by her recipient and I was just offered to adapt The Yankee Princess by Jennie Paul.

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  • Cinedigm and Slamdance Announce Partnership to Release Indie Films

    [caption id="attachment_4071" align="alignnone" width="550"]STRANGER THINGS[/caption]

    Cinedigm and Slamdance (Slamdance Film Festival) announced a partnership to bring feature film programming to digital platforms beginning on June 11th.  The first two films releasing on June 11th are STRANGER THINGS and HYBRID, while THE FIRST SEASON will launch in September. 

    STRANGER THINGS 
    Set in a remote village on the south coast of England, STRANGER THINGS tells the story of Oona, a young woman who develops an unusual and touching bond with a streetwise homeless man after returning to her childhood home. A New York Times Critics’ Pick, the film was the winner of the Grand Jury Prize at the 2011 Slamdance Film Festival and the Raindance Film Festival. The film, described by Filmmaker Magazine as “a delicately beautiful debut feature,” stars Adeel Akhtar (FOUR LIONS, THE DICTATOR) and is Eleanor Burke and Ron Eyal’s directorial debut. 

    HYBRID 

    [caption id="attachment_4072" align="alignnone" width="550"]Hybrid[/caption]

    Winner of the Truer Than Fiction Award at the 2002 Independent Spirit Awards, HYBRID explores the life of Milford Beeghly, an Iowa farmer who led the charge for hybrid corn during the 1930s. The award-winning documentary is directed by Beeghly’s grandson, Monteith McCollum, and combines interviews, archival footage, original animation and a rare dry wit to create a meditative portrait of the decidedly odd Beeghly. HYBRID is the winner of numerous awards, including the Honorable Mention Award at the 2001 International Documentary Association, the Grand Jury Prize in the documentary category at the 2001 Slamdance Film Festival and the Award for Original Vision at the 2001 Newport International Film Festival. 

    THE FIRST SEASON 

    [caption id="attachment_4073" align="alignnone" width="550"]The First Season[/caption]

    In an intimate, verite style, THE FIRST SEASON tells the story of Paul and Phyllis van Amburgh who spend their life savings on a dream: starting a small, family farm. With three children, a fourth on the way and their savings depleted, the van Amburghs are forced to confront the risks and challenges of living their dream. THE FIRST SEASON premiered at the 2012 Slamdance film Festival and is Rudd Simmons’s (PRODUCER, BOARDWALK EMPIRE) directorial debut.

     

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  • New Poster for Serial Killer Movie MANIAC Starring Elijah Wood

    New poster was released today for the serial killer movie MANIAC starring Elijah Wood and directed by Franck Khalfoun. Just like the poster shows, the film is about a serial killer with a fetish for scalps on the loose.

    In the film, Frank (Elijah Wood) is the withdrawn owner of a mannequin store, but his life changes when young artist Anna (Nora Arnezeder) appears asking for his help with her new exhibition.  As their friendship develops and Frank’s obsession escalates, it becomes clear that she has unleashed a long-repressed compulsion to stalk and kill.  

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  • Sarah Friedland Talks About her Vibrant New Documentary RINK at Brooklyn Film Festival

    New York filmmaker Sarah Friedland took a trip across the Hudson to make a documentary about the Branch Brook Park Roller Rink, located in Newark, New Jersey, one of the few remaining urban rinks of its kind. Now, one might think how interesting can a documentary about a roller rink be, but Sarah digs way deep, and after almost five years of hard work, she emerged with “RINK” a film thats tells more than a story about a roller rink, but a space transformed and its symbolic representation to those who use it. In the documentary “RINK,” two main characters emerge: Bonesaw, a tough talking, tattooed member of the Garden State Roller Derby Team; and Graylen, a deeply spiritual, Gospel Night skater. On the surface these two characters are different, both ideologically and in their social and racial backgrounds. However, the film reveals a shared past of violence and drug abuse from which the rink provides a much needed refuge. 

    We caught up with director Sarah Friedland at the 2013 Brooklyn Film Festival where she is screening RINK, to learn more about the film, and find out how did a New Yorker end up making a documentary about a roller rink in Newark, New Jersey.

    VIMOOZ: First, congratulations on RINK being an official selection in the 2013 Brooklyn Film Festival … this is the NY premiere – are you ready for the NY audience?

    Sarah Friedland: I am extremely excited to be part of BFF.  My first feature, “Thing With No Name”, premiered at BFF in 2009 and we had  great festival experience then.  The Rink is a film about Newark but New York City is my home, so I am thrilled to show it to the NYC audience.  

    VIMOOZ: How was the World Premiere screening at the NJ International Film Festival?

    Friedland: The NJIFF screening went very well.  We had a very receptive and large audience of folks from all over New Jersey.  It was great to be a part of a New Jersey festival and share the film with Newarkers and folks from the rink.

    VIMOOZ: Tell us about RINK – the story? 

    Friedland: The film is about Branch Brook Park Roller Rink in Newark New Jersey- one of the last remaining roller rinks in the tri-state area.  We use the rink as a microcosm for the city of Newark and, in doing so, the film dips into many facets of Newark’s rich history, including: urban renewal, the rebellion of 1967, and the current gentrification of downtown Newark. We follow two main characters: Bonesaw, a tough talking, tattooed member of the Garden State Roller Derby Team; and Gralen, a deeply spiritual, Gospel Night skater.  These two folks appear very different on the outside but have a shared past of violence and drug abuse from which the rink provides a refuge.  In many ways, their stories parallel that of Newark, which is often labeled as violent and crime ridden, while all of its good parts are ignored. The film also sees the rink as an endangered space of urban recreation.  There used to be hundreds of roller rinks in the tri-state area, now there is one.  So Branch Brook is a very important place, not just for Newark, but for the entire skating community, which has recently lost many key rinks to real-estate speculation and gentrification.

    VIMOOZ: Where are you from? 

    Friedland: I am from Hastings-on-Hudson New York, but I have lived in New York City for the last fifteen years.  When I was little growing up in Hastings, we used to skate in the basement of the high school.  It was something I looked forward to every week.  Most people seem to have some connection to skating from there childhood, even if they don’t skate anymore, and that is one of the great things about this film- we enter it from a point of nostalgia.

     

    VIMOOZ: How did you find out about the rink in New jersey?

    Friedland: My co-producer, Ryan Joseph, was living in Newark at the time and was the staff photographer for the Garden State Roller Derby team who practice at the rink. We originally thought that we would make a film about them, but when we spent time in the rink, it became clear that the space itself was so interesting and that the film should reflect Branch Brook as a whole.  

    VIMOOZ: How long did it take to shoot the documentary?

    Friedland: We shot for about three and a half years and edited for a year and a half.  It took us so long because we made a big effort to get to know the people we were following and make sure everyone was comfortable before starting to shoot. It’s very important to both Ryan and I that we have a certain level of intimacy with the folks in the film before pulling out the camera.  Ryan knew Bonesaw from working with the derby girls but I met Gralen after doing a series of pre-interviews with other Gospel Night skaters.  So that was a new relationship.  He and his family were really gracious with their time and let us into their lives openly. It was also a complicated film to put together because it was ricky to weave Newark in as a character.  We started editing and then realized we needed to shoot more to flesh out a few things, so it was a back and forth.

    VIMOOZ: What’s up next for RINK? 

    Friedland: We received a small grant from my union, I am an Assistant Adjunct Professor at John Jay College, to take the film on tour to roller rinks around the country.  I am currently contacting rinks and planning where to take the film.  We will actually be showing the film inside the roller rinks to create a more visceral response between the viewer and the space. If anyone out there knows any rinks that might be interested, send them my way!

    VIMOOZ: What’s up next for you?

    Friedland: This year I co-founded Perinspire, a production company with my long term film partner Esy Casey.  We are finishing a film called Jeepney, which she directed and I am co-producing.  The film is about the most popular form of transportation in the Philippines  beautiful, blinged out buses called Jeepneys.  These fascinating  handmade and designed vehicles have their origins in US military jeeps that were left in the Philippines after World War II.  The film speaks about Filipino history and culture through the Jeepney.  It will come out sometime this fall.  I have also been working as an editor on two feature docs: tentatively titled “Camp Kinderland” by Katie Halper, which is about a political, Jewish summer camp; and “Kate Bornstein is a Queer and Pleasant Danger” by Sam Feder, which is about the amazing gender theorist and performance artist Kate Bornsteim.  Both of those films are slated to come out this year.  After that, I will take a nap.

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  • Sundance Selects to Release Roman Polanski’s VENUS IN FUR in US

    Sundance Selects will release Academy Award-winning filmmaker Roman Polanski’s VENUS IN FUR in the US. With a screenplay by Polanski and David Ives, based on the critically acclaimed, Tony award winning stage play by Ives, the film stars Emmanuelle Seigner and Mathieu Amalric.  The film made its world premiere in Competition at the 2013 Cannes Film Festival. Sundance Selects did not announce an official release date, but the film is expected to be released later this year.

    Set in modern-day Paris, VENUS IN FUR follows writer-director Thomas (Amalric) and a pushy, foul-mouthed actress named Vanda (Seigner) who bursts into auditions in a whirlwind of erratic energy. Vanda’s emotionally charged audition for the gifted but demanding playwright becomes an electrifying game of cat and mouse that blurs the lines between fantasy and reality, seduction and power, and ultimately, attraction and obsession.

    Polanski won the Academy Award for Best Director in 2003 for his film THE PIANIST.  His other acclaimed films include TESS, ROSEMARY’S BABY, CHINATOWN, THE GHOST WRITER and REPULSION.
     
    In addition to VENUS IN FUR, Sundance Selects will release other films out of this year’s Cannes Film Festival including Abdellatif Kechiche’s Palme D’Or winner BLUE IS THE WARMEST COLOR; Kore-eda Hirokazu’s Jury Prize Winner LIKE FATHER, LIKE SON; Clio Barnard’s Directors Fotnight title THE SELFISH GIANT; Francois Ozon’s Competition title YOUNG & BEAUTIFUL; and Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne’s TWO DAYS, ONE NIGHT starring Oscar-winner Marion Cotillard, which is currently in pre-production.

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  • Civil War Indie Drama “COPPERHEAD” Sets June 28 Release Date | Trailer

    [caption id="attachment_4049" align="alignnone" width="550"]Peter Fonda in Copperhead[/caption]

    The independent film “COPPERHEAD” billed as the ‘great untold Civil War story’ will open nationwide in select cities on June 28, 2013.

    Directed by Ron Maxwell (“Gettysburg,” “Gods and Generals”) , and featuring a cast that included Billy Campbell (ABC drama “Once and Again”), Angus Macfadyen (Braveheart), Academy Award nominated Peter Fonda, and Augustus Prew (Charlie St. Cloud) COPPERHEAD is based on the novel by Harold Frederic who witnessed these conflicts firsthand as a small child.

    Copperhead tells the story of Abner Beech, a stubborn and righteous farmer of Upstate New York, who defies his neighbors and his government in the bloody and contentious autumn of 1862.

    Theaters showing COPPERHEAD

    http://youtu.be/A7Zx0ZN80vk

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  • Director Dan Eberle Talks About His New Film, CUT TO BLACK at the Brooklyn Film Festival

    Director Dan Eberle returns to the Brooklyn Film Festival for a second time, this time around with his new film “CUT TO BLACK” in which he again plays multiple roles – actor, director, writer, and producer. Eberle, who also lives in Brooklyn, New York was featured in the 2008 festival with his film, the critically acclaimed action thriller “THE LOCAL.” In his latest film CUT TO BLACK  which is shot in lavish black and white tones, and set against stark, gritty urban modernity, Eberle, plays Bill Ivers, a disgraced ex-cop, hired by a wealthy former friend to rid his estranged daughter Jessica of a stalker. We caught up with the super talented Eberle at the Brooklyn Film Festival to talk about CUT TO BLACK.

    VIMOOZ: First, congratulations on CUT TO BLACK being an official selection in the 2013 Brooklyn Film Festival again … which time is better, the first or second time?

    Dan Eberle: We were in the Brooklyn Film Festival in 2008 with an earlier feature called ‘The Local’. It it was a great experience for us, but it was definitely a looser, scrappier event back then. The Brooklyn Film Festival has come a long way in the intervening years. They now have their own swanky venue, indieScreen, the movie theater/lounge in Williamsburg–that alone gives the event a cool, nightclub-like experience. The theater itself is a great sounding room and excellent projection. As a filmmaker, you really couldn’t ask for a better screening venue. I’ve always liked the diversity in the film selections at the BFF. Marco and his crew are fearless in their programming! They are also among only a few established festivals that still program gritty crime films like ours–right along side introspective character pieces, documentaries, and international films. It really is about the quality of the films, and nothing else.

    VIMOOZ: Tell us about CUT TO BLACK – the story?

    Eberle: ‘CUT TO BLACK’ is about a depressed ex-cop named Bill, who is hired by a wealthily former friend to run off a peeping tom who is terrorizing his estranged daughter, Jessica. In the course of Bill’s investigation, he learns the stalker is the least of Jessica’s problems. As the stakes get considerably higher for everyone involved, Bill pins the sum of his life’s worth to the resolution of Jessica’s increasingly intractable situation.

    VIMOOZ: Your film is stylistically different, was there a reason behind that/any influences?

    Eberle: In some ways, ‘CUT TO BLACK’ is a throwback to classic film noir. We lean on some familiar character archetypes and setups, but that’s really just a point of departure. ‘CUT TO BLACK’ is deliberately mired in anachronism. Its a modern story, shot in Black and White, with high contrast lighting. There are present-day affectations like cell phones and new cars, but much of the architecture of Brooklyn is very old world. The characters listen to a mix of traditional jazz, but the score is overtly electronic. Because of these elemental contradictions, the overall experience of the film is transporting. ‘CUT TO BLACK’ becomes a world of its own.

    VIMOOZ: You write, produce, direct and star in all your films – what do you not do?

    Eberle: I may do all those things, but I do none of them alone. Every part of the filmmaking process is a collaboration of one kind or another. Even though I didn’t have a co-writer on ‘CUT TO BLACK’, many of the clever ideas in the script came from other people, both in and out of the production. For example, another filmmaker friend of mine, Jonathan Jacobson, actually suggested the one-way mirror at the strip club where Jessica works. He came up with the ‘confessional’ idea and I ran with it. I’d go on about how that idea actually became an integral story element, but I don’t want to get into spoiler territory! My co-producer, Danielle Primiceri, designed all of Jessica’s elaborate costumes for the dance sequences and Gayle Madeira choreographed all of Jillaine’s dances. Those scenes are some of the most striking imagery in the film. Obviously no part of the film would have worked without the executional brilliance of our director of photography, James Parsons, who I’ve collaborated with going back to my first full-fledge feature ‘Jail City’. James once said that he likes working on independent films because, out of necessity, the vocational boundaries are softer. Everyone is seemingly working in every department, pitching in where help is needed, or where a creative solution is required. For this reason, working in independent film is not for everyone. I’ve learned the hard way that you just can’t be rigid. The words ‘its-not-my-job’ have no place on an indie set. 

    VIMOOZ: I read that you worked as a jazz musician? Do you still play jazz?

    Eberle: I do, but not professionally. For now.

    VIMOOZ: What’s up next for CUT TO BLACK?

    Eberle: We’re thinking about what festivals we can do next before a theatrical run. We are planning a US release in the Fall or Winter of this year. 

    VIMOOZ: What’s up next for you?

    Eberle: I’ve got a new project called ‘The Interventionist’ that is right on the cusp of a greenlight, but we’re still ironing out some business there. It’s about an unconventional evangelical minister who performs Christian interventions. He comes to the big bad city to find a secular friend who has disappeared while working under his auspices. It’s not a comedy. 

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  • Justin Reichman Talks About His New Film “A WIFE ALONE” World Premiere at the Brooklyn Film Festival

    A WIFE ALONE, “a neo-noir thriller about an ill-fated marriage in the suburbs of upstate New York,” directed by Justin Reichman is having its World Premiere on Thursday June 6, at the 2013 Brooklyn Film Festival, in Brooklyn, New York City. We had the opportunity to catch up with the director, to talk about how he got into filmmaking , his new film A WIFE ALONE  and all about taking the ‘plunge.’ Justin Reichman should know a lot about taking the plunge, after all, he left a pretty stable job as a lab tech at an AIDS research facility on 21st street in New York City to pursue his dream. Now he’s back in New York, years later, to premiere his first major film.

    [caption id="attachment_4039" align="alignnone" width="551"]Justin Reichman[/caption]

    VIMOOZ: Congratulations on your film “A WIFE ALONE” being an Official Selection in the 2013 Brooklyn Film Festival. How does it feel being included in the festival?

    Justin Reichman: It feels great to have a festival like Brooklyn on our home turf to premiere.

    VIMOOZ: Is this your first film?

    Reichman: Yes, it is. I did a few shorts, but nothing approaching the scope of A WIFE ALONE.

    VIMOOZ: How did you get into filmmaking?

    Reichman: I always loved to read and draw. When I was a kid I’d make stupid home videos with my siblings, but the decision to pursue filmmaking came about later in life after working a 9-5 job at an AIDS research institution in NYC and realizing that the sciences weren’t for me. I traveled around a lot after that, lived in South America for a year and started writing, doing some acting and working on sets.

    VIMOOZ: Tell me about the film. What is it about?

    Reichman: It’s about a ruthless young woman, a former prostitute, who infiltrates the upper echelon of suburbia through marriage.

    VIMOOZ: By the way, are you also the writer?

    Reichman: Yes, myself and Pete. We wrote the script while I was engaged to be married so a lot of it plays on the fears young people have before taking the plunge. Do I really know this person? Is our love real? That kind of thing. We created a noir story revolving around this collective psychological questions we all ask and then created the nightmare version of that. Infidelity, mistrust, sex tourism, years of misery tied to a lifestyle rather than love.

    VIMOOZ: The film is set in upstate NY, whats the connection there?

    Reichman: I grew up there. After traveling around a lot, I had a distant, objective affection for Rochester that I had fun playing around with in storyland.

    VIMOOZ: What happens after Brooklyn Film Festival?

    Reichman: We have a stunning theatrical release and sign a 3 project deal with a reputable studio. We all have agents and don’t have to worry about money ever again. I’d like to make a black comedy.

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  • PETUNIA, Comedy Film Starring Christine Lahti, Michael Urie To Open in NYC on June 28 | TRAILER

    PETUNIA, a new comedy film written and directed by Ash Christian (Fat Girls, Mangus!) and starring Oscar and Emmy award-winner Christine Lahti (Chicago Hope,  Running on Empty), Golden Globe nominee Thora Birch (American Beauty, Ghost World), Brittany Snow (Pitch Perfect), Michael Urie (Ugly Betty), and Eddie Kaye Thomas (American Pie), opens in NYC on June 28 at Cinema Village. PETUNIA is described as a film about a dysfunctional family unit on the verge of a nervous breakdown. This is the story of how they pick up the pieces.

    PETUNIA follows an off-beat family of New Yorkers as they come to terms with their own misgivings about life, relationships and the sheer unpredictability of love itself.

    PETUNIA weaves together the lives of brothers Charlie, Adrian and Michael as they unlearn everything their psychoanalyst parents have taught them. While Michael’s cynical wife Vivian discovers she is pregnant, the family is also changing. Charlie’s would be boyfriend George is in a polyamorous relationship with fitness fanatic Robin and Adrian has developed an unrelenting sex addiction. Meddling parents Felicia and Percy must decide whether to reignite the spark in their relationship or start all over again.

    http://youtu.be/2OCVajmoP1I

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  • Jeremy O’Keefe Talks About His New Film “SOMEWHERE SLOW” at Brooklyn Film Festival

    Jeremy O’Keefe is the director of the new independent film SOMEWHERE SLOW, now playing at the Brooklyn Film Festival in Brooklyn, New York through Saturday, June 9, 2013. SOMEWHERE SLOW, also an Official Selection at Cinequest, Omaha Film Festival, Vail Film Festival and the Monadnock International Film Festival, is described by the Brooklyn Film Festival as “intimate, raw and funny,” and “a searing and complex portrait of Anna Thompson, a 40 year old skin care rep, coasting through an unfulfilled marriage and an estranged relationship with her family.”

     [caption id="attachment_4030" align="alignnone" width="550"]Jeremy O’Keefe[/caption]

    We recently caught up with the Los Angeles native O’Keefe at the Brooklyn Film Festival to find about more about his film, SOMEWHERE SLOW.

    VIMOOZ: First, congratulations on SOMEWHERE SLOW being an official selection in the 2013 Brooklyn Film Festival … this is the East Coast premiere – are you ready for the NY audience?

    Jeremy O’Keefe: Thank you! I have been dying to screen a film for a NYC audience for a decade.  I used to live in NYC as I was just scraping together my first film, WRESTLING, and I loved nothing more than discovering small indie movies in the Village Voice and checking them out at the Quad or Sunshine Cinemas.   Screening in Brooklyn is a major personal feat for me! 

    VIMOOZ: You’ve screened SOMEWHERE SLOW at other film festivals, is the NY audience really different?

    O’Keefe: We’ve been fortunate to screen in a lot of various places around the country and the audience response has been passionate.   The Brooklyn Film Festival will certainly be opening up our film to an even broader cross section of people from all walks of life, and it’s really exciting for Jessalyn and I.   I don’t anticipate that the audience response will be all that different — people who go to see movies at festivals tend to be cut from the same cloth.   Should I be scared?? 

    VIMOOZ: No, but New Yorkers are known to be very opinionated. Tell us about “SOMEWHERE SLOW” – the story?

    O’Keefe: Plot-wise the film is about a woman (played by Jessalyn Gilsig, who produced with me) who breaks free of a boring, suffocating life and goes an adventure in New England with a teenage drifter  (played by Graham Patrick Martin of TNT’s Major Crimes).    Thematically, the movie is about taking risks and making the changes necessary to find the life you’ve been yearning to live.  It’s something I believe we can all relate to and a desire we all have at some point (or several points) in our lives.  The movie is funny and sexy, heartbreaking and provocative.

    VIMOOZ: You have a very impressive cast for an independent film. How were you able to get such great talent?

    O’Keefe: I, too, am impressed with who we were able to get to tell this story with us. I honestly can’t believe it.    Jessalyn reminds me that we were able to get talents like David Costabile and Robert Forster because of the script I wrote.  The film has become so much bigger than the 100 pages of paper I wrote it on  — with so many brilliant and creative actors, designers, producers and crew members all investing so much that I forget that it all began with an idea I had one day a few years ago.    I set out to tell a story that didn’t gloss over the imperfections and inconsistencies of real people.  I wanted to live in the nuance of life.  Actors are first and foremost warriors of the human experience.  I believe we were able to get the talent we did because they wanted to get down and dirty and explore some of the moments in life that are too crucial to be lost in a montage.  

    VIMOOZ: You also wrote the screenplay, how did you come up with the idea? 

    O’Keefe: Like most writers, we draw from our own experiences.  I wrote the script to explore a time in my life when I was living at the bare-minimum and floating through a kind of stasis.   I think we, as people, often look to external events to tell us whether we are meant to be happy or sad.  It’s human nature to look outside for change, but I’ve discovered that the best, sturdiest change comes when we look inside.  And that’s what I wanted to write about — a bunch of  external events taking my main character on a roller coaster that would cause her to take control of herself for the first time in her life. 

    VIMOOZ: What’s up next for SOMEWHERE SLOW?

    O’Keefe: Exciting things! We are playing in Brooklyn and at the Lighthouse International Film Festival in Long Beach Island, NJ this weekend, and we are signing our distribution deal so we can share everybody’s efforts with a worldwide audience.  

    VIMOOZ: What’s up next for you?

    O’Keefe: I’ve got a comedy short about hospice care called FINALE about to start festivals and am prepping two different features, a sex comedy and a 1940’s revenge thriller. I’m also shopping a pilot script based on the critically-acclaimed novel, BODY OF A GIRL, written by my sister-in-law, Leah Stewart.    I want continued success for Somewhere Slow and my other projects because it means I get to get another crew together, make a make-shift family again, and tell another story. 

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