CHRISTINA, the thrilling drama from director Larry Brand, raked in the awards last week at the Buffalo Niagara Film Festival on the other side of the states, winning Best Director, Best Actress (Nicki Aycox), Best Actor (Stephen Lang), and Best Picture.The film showed there as the closing night feature, and drew audiences in with it's powerful story about the destructive power of secrets, and finding a future with the after experiencing a horrifying past.
Inspired by a true story about a young German woman prepares to leave her war-ravaged city to begin a new life in America with her G.I. fiance. But standing between her and a hopeful future is a relentless police inspector, determined to prevent her from escaping her past. He pushes her to face the truth about a child, whose secret the woman has kept all this time. Before she can leave for her new life, she will be forced to confront the past she's been trying to leave behind.
CHRISTINA screened Friday, April 23 and will be showing again, due to raving response, at 1:15 PM on Thursday, April 29 at the Edwards Island Theater 4. Cast and Crew are scheduled to attend the event.
By Kelly Strodl
Today I talked with Marco Amenta, director of The Sicilian Girl, a film about a young girl who is raised within the mafia. Motivated by a combination of idealism and revenge after the murder of her father and brother, both members of La Cosa Nostra, 17-year-old Rita Atria went to Palermo's legendary anti-mafia magistrate Paolo Borsellino and revealed all she had written in her diary since she was seven years old. The contents of that diary unlock a hunt against the mafia with details that can ruin the organization. The magistrate takes the girl under his wing and offered her protection against the sure-to-come retribution. Based on true events.
Q: How did you hear about the Newport Beach Film Festival?
A: The US distributor of my film got in contact with the festival. The us distributor is showing the film in many festival before the official US theatrical distribution that will start August 4th in NY (Film Forum). Only 2 Italian films have US distribution this year! So I am so happy abut this. Us audience love the film ! go to the Facebook page "The Sicilian Girl" and become a fan !
Q: Tell a little about the story of your film and the production of it.
A: My sister Simonetta is the producer of the film. We have a family business !!! She got money to produce the film from Italy and France. And the film has be sold and theatrical released to many countries - Italy, France, Belgium, Holland, Australia, New Zealand, etc.
Q: Tell a little about yourself and your story in filmmaking.
A: It is the story of a young Sicilian girl who grows up in a mafia family. She believe mafia is good! And that her father is a good guy, like robin hood! Growing up mafia will kill his father.. and she will go against the mafia... the first girl against the mafia ! a big fight for a young girl.. against powerful and strong godfathers...
Q: Your take on the performances of the lead actors, (set backs, triumphs, impressions, good surprises, etc.)
A: It was very difficult to choose the lead actress, Veronica D'agostino, who plays the girl against the mafia. I auditioned hundreds of actresses and non actresses.. but in the end I was sure : she was the girl! The right one! No doubts! She is perfect in the role. she has the strength but also the tenderness of a young 17-year old girl, and she felt so natural and real in the role since the first audition.
A she has a great energy. We rehearsed a lot before the shooting, exploring the context, I look to do this with all the actors. and it is the moment where we change sometimes the lines, to adapt to the characters. And after, during the shooting we don't need to talk a lot, because they know exactly what i want from them. Veronica was so "inside" the character, that we almost didn’t need to talk...
For the role of the prosecutor, because it is based on a famous anti-mafia Italian prosecutor, I wanted that he looked like the true character. and also I wanted a new face. not an actor that everybody knew... So I chose a very famous French actor that in Italy is not famous.
Then the role of the father, the mafia boss, Don Vito, is Marcello Mazzarella a great actor, who is also a friend of mine. he felt do much inside the character, that during the days of the shooting he wanted to go around the village with the motorbike of the character in order to continue to be him... even out of the shooting. I like actors that "do not act,” meaning that feel their emotion. They don't play the emotion in a fake way. During the shooting days "they are the character" and they feel like him/her. They are actors that play with "guts" not with the head. Even if the study and prepare a lot, then they are able to be instinctive and true.
Q: What do you do when not making a smash indie film?
A: I work full time in film. While not filming a lot of working is for writing the films and also in financing the films. I have a production company together with my sister, so we produce also other filmmakers and we are trying to grow also a s a film company.
THE SICILIAN GIRL screens at 7:30 and 7:45 PM today, Monday, April 26 in the Edwards Island theaters 1 & 5.
Click here to purchase tickets for shorts showcase:
http://newportbeachfilmfest.tix.com/Event.asp?Event=256843
By Kelly Strodl
Today I sat with Chris Landon, director of BURNING PALMS, which sold out at last night’s screening and has been slotted again to show at 5:45 PM tonight. I know not much time, but if you get down here you could just catch this smash hit starring Adrianna Baraza, Dylan McDermott, Jamie Chung, Lake Bell, Nick Stahl, Paz Vega, Robert Hoffman, Rosamund Pike, Shannen Doherty, and Zoe Saldana. This subversive comedy takes a stab at satirizing the well-known stereotypes of varying Los Angeles neighborhoods. The stories of five interlocking characters who must deal with their own varied, darkly funny fates, are followed in this entertaining film boasting an ensemble cast large enough to leave Hollywood reporters joking about being out of breath at the end of the litany of names. In this daring romp no taboo is left unexplored.
Q: How did you hear about the Newport Beach Film Festival?
A: I’ve heard of the festival just from word of mouth, general mentions. I had a short film that cruised the film festival circuit. But this year we were invited to screen BURNING PALMS by the festival. I’ve spent a lot of time though checking out the website.
And the whole thing is really laid back. Which I like. Other festivals seem to have a “douche” factor that is very absent. Here, people come out to generally support movies and that’s great.
Q: Tell a little about the story of your film and the production of it.
A: It’s a dark comedy where five stories are all inter-connected. It’s a meditation on loneliness and the really dark places that can take you to… Not for the faint of heart – it’s some really bizarre, outlandish stuff.
I wrote the screenplay six years ago, It’s been gestating for some time. It’s a risky work so getting it financed was risky too. But once it got financed it was a quick pre-production – six weeks. Then a year of post, which is longer than usual, but that’s because we had an animated section of the film.
Q: Tell a little about yourself and your story in filmmaking.
A: Went to film school at LMU. Then, I actually had an internship at Disney, working for a number of producers. They were cool, and made me an unofficial reader, reading scripts all day. Most were not very good and I got to thinking that I could do better. So I started writing my own scripts. And that was the impetus for getting started with the whole thing.
It was such a hobby – I really didn’t think anyone would take it seriously. That feeling never goes away. I know I’m a professional, and the validation is not getting paid. It’s being given the opportunity to make a living creatively. It is a gift.
Q: Your take on the performances of the lead actors, (set backs, triumphs, impressions, good surprises, etc.)
A: Zero complaints in actors performances. They were a dream - beyond talented. They brought so much more to their characters and that was the thrill for me.
We even had some non-professional actors and they were awesome. One of the actresses who played a doctor in a mental hospital – it was written for a doctor that was an Indian woman, but we couldn’t find anyone in casting that really did it for me. Well, one of our investors just happened to be Indian, she just was it. So I turned to her one day in the middle of casting and said, “Can you do it?” She, kind of shocked, said, “I’m not an actor.”
“I don’t care.”
And she was perfect. She was the character. Every screening, when she comes on the people just start laughing hysterically, every time.
It’s those challenges that really push you and make you better as a filmmaker.
Q: What do you do when not making a smash indie film?
A: I’m a film geek through and through. I see everything. If I hear a movie’s really bad I actually run to see it. You can learn a lot from a bad movie. You're not going to learn every thing you need from just seeing good films. You learn from others mistakes, too. It’s those times when I stop viewing a movie with that analytical eye that I know a movie’s really amazing. Those are the great ones.
BURNING PALMS screens at 5:45 PM today, Saturday, April 24 in the Edwards Island 4.
Click here to purchase tickets for shorts showcase:
By Kelly Strodl
We talked to Gayla Kraetsch Hartsough, Writer/Producer of the short film SLAP, which will be screening in the EXPECT THE UNEXPECTED shorts showcase tonight.
Somewhere in an American car garage, two regular guys take a break to discuss world events – and smack each other across the face as it quickly becomes apparent that they will never see eye to eye. A shocking and simultaneously hilarious romp through small talk that quickly turns ugly, SLAP will shock you into laughter, again and again.
Q: How did you hear about the Newport Beach Film Festival?
I met Ginny Laird, Senior Film Programmer for Newport Beach Film Festival (NBFF), when our short film SLAP premiered at the Palm Springs International Film Festival last June. She had seen SLAP, liked it, and suggested that we submit it to NBFF. I liked her enthusiasm and love of edgy, quirky, indie films. We were ecstatic when we learned that NBFF accepted SLAP. It screens Saturday, April 24, at 4:45 pm in the perfect program title – 'Expect the Unexpected' – at Edwards Islands 2.
SLAP screens as part of the EXPECT THE UNEXPECTED shorts showcase @ 4:45 PM today, Saturday, April 24 in the Edwards Island 2.
Click here to purchase tickets for shorts showcase:
http://newportbeachfilmfest.tix.com/Event.asp?Event=256812
Watch the trailers for SLAP here:
Today I talked with Brooks Branch, director of MULTIPLE SARCASMS, a film about a successful architect who decides to become a playwright – to cope with his mid-life crisis, and finds he does some of his best writing on the john. Gabriel is a man who on the surface has it all-successful professional life, a beautiful wife, and a devoted young daughter. But slowly it dawns on him that he is not really happy. So, he decides that he wants to write a play about the sorry state of his life. He quits his job and starts writing. However, the struggle of composing the play becomes a catalyst in his life, pushing away those close to him and testing his resolve to complete the work that will ultimately change his life forever.
The film screens tonight as one of our Spotlights.
Q: How did you hear about the Newport Beach Film Festival?
A: From our PR Gang (MPRM) -- they spoke highly of festival and so we're excited.
Q: Tell a little about the story of your film and the production of it.
A: It's a drama which the tone was inspired by quirky late 70's relationship dramas like An Unmarried Woman, Starting Over and other Hal Ashby and Woody Allen type films. This era of film had characters that seemed very real and relatable, but at the same time were in films that were at times imperfect and funny. In Multiple Sarcasms, the lead character, Gabriel (played by Timothy Hutton) is a man who's path to happiness is not cut and dry. Unlike other films, he does not have a cancer to point at for his unhappiness and so (like those of us in real life) has to work hard to figure out what the problem is in an otherwise seemingly happy life. From the talented crew right through the amazing actors -- everyone was on the same page to try to bring the down-to-earth elements of this story to life.
Q: Tell a little about yourself and your story in filmmaking.
A: I grew up a painter in the incongruous locale of Salt Lake City. Then became a graphic designer and ultimately Creative Director and went into publishing -- then I shifted into entertainment and ran a creative division of Paramount Pictures -- only to then leave and have my own branding company where I have strategically helped heads of most all the studios (as well as other highly visible companies) to produce, launch and leverage their brands and other projects. While I have written many books, and other projects, Multiple Sarcasms is the first feature film that I have directed. Aside from my professional background, I have been seeing films since I was a little kid and so I'm a true lover of film -- which is my main credential in terms of making a film.
Q: Your take on the performances of the lead actors (set backs, triumphs, impressions, good surprises, etc.)
A: I was lucky to work with amazing actors who shared a vision that I helped to set with the script. Once they bought into that, then the rest was just a healthy collaboration. Casting is a long process and boring real life issues enter into it like finances and schedules, but at the core of the process is a chemical chain reaction that you have to both start, and know how to control. Set backs are part of that process and to be expected. And triumphs come in many shapes and require risk, so don't be afraid to try new things or to let the actors. Each actor has a unique set of gifts and also some insecurities... so try to figure out their specific language and then speak it as best you can.
Q: What do you do when not making a smash indie film?
A: Experience life enough to try and create more and more.
Oh, and watch other people's smash films.
MULTIPLE SARCASMS screens at 6 PM on Saturday, April 24 at the Edwards Island Theater 5.
Buy ticket here:
http://newportbeachfilmfest.tix.com/Event.asp?Event=256900
Watch the trailer for WE WERE FEARED here: