With the crushing loss of this year’s SXSW Film Festival at the onset of our nationwide lockdown, 2020’s year in film has never fully recovered. Thankfully, though, many worthwhile indie endeavors are bursting into the forefront of newly-released cinema. The latest low-budget gem finding its way to streaming platforms across the globe comes from writer, director and star Cooper Raiff, whose deeply genuine work, Shithouse, was crowned the Grand Jury prize winner for Best Narrative Feature from this year’s SXSW class.

The earnest and dialogue-driven film follows Alex (Raiff), a college freshman struggling to find his social footing in the highly superficial and raucous world of campus life. With a roommate (Logan Miller) who doesn’t appear too fond of him and his only source of emotional support being his close-knit family that lives over 1,500 miles away, difficulties adjusting to this new lifestyle are even taking a toll on Alex’s grades. Yet, the bored and desperate loner decides to give socializing one more chance. He attends a party at “Shithouse” where he crosses paths with his sophomore RA Maggie (Dylan Gelula) whose looking for some company after experiencing a bad day herself. Together, these two drastically different young-adults will teach each other valuable lessons about “growing up”.

Shithouse relies heavily on the emotional bond forged between its two leading character and the audience that watches their every encounter. One of the most interesting and brilliant decisions by Raiff is his shattering of stereotypes. Rather than giving us a female lead who’s more in-touch with her feelings, Raiff hands us a male who isn’t afraid to cry and wrestle with his inner emotions. Conversely, Maggie’s character is more outgoing, sexually adventurous, and less-invested in personal interactions. By turning these expected social-norms on their side, Raiff is able to craft characters that are far more interesting to examine. And if penning diverse and fascinating characters weren’t enough, Raiff also demonstrates his long list of talents both behind the camera and on the screen. Shithouse isn’t pampered with exquisite cinematography, but Raiff wisely allows for his stellar writing and the ensemble’s solid acting to shine by never overstepping from his place in the director’s chair. Speaking of the film’s ensemble, leading actress Dylan Gelula delivers an impassioned performance and co-star Logan Miller is undeniably hysterical as a source of comic relief. The only dark cloud looming over the effort is its clearly limited budget. I can’t wait to see what writer, director and star Cooper Raiff is capable of creating with a looser set of purse strings.

The number of cinematic options isn’t as robust in 2020, but the lack of content certainly doesn’t mean a step-down in quality, especially when it comes to Cooper Raiff’s Shithouse. The film beautifully captures the struggles of transitioning into adulthood through the lives of two imperfect and naïve college students. Shithouse is fully deserving of its SXSW Grand Jury recognition and it’s a fantastic directorial debut from a truly versatile budding artist.

Stars: 3.5/5

Maika Monroe was a female face of indie horror for a brief moment in time. With leading roles in the beloved festival darling, It Follows, and the campy b-horror movie, The Guest, Monroe felt like a modern-day scream queen in the making. Yet, as her career has materialized over the past few years, she’s dabbled in all sorts of genres in both large scale and very modestly budgeted films. But finally, Monroe returns to her horror roots in the buzzed-about SXSW entry, Villains.

Mickey and Jules (It’s Bill Skarsgard and Maika Monroe) are a crazy-in-love pair of amateur criminals determined to start a new life on the coastal beaches of Florida. But when their car breaks down after a convenience store robbery, the couple quickly ventures to the closest residence they can find. Hoping to steal a new set of wheels and quickly be on their way, Mickey and Jules stumble across a sadistic husband and wife (Jeffrey Donovan and Kyra Sedgwick) harboring a deep secret inside their home.

There are quite a few elements that propel co-directors Dan Berk and Robert Olsen’s Villains into a standout film from this year’s crop of SXSW titles. A witty interweaving of dark comedy and edge-of-your-seat suspense join with wonderful lead performances to help shape this brilliantly bizarre and creepy endeavor. And while Maika Monroe has cemented herself as a true horror fixture, her onscreen beau is magnificently delivered by Bill Skarsgard. He ditches the Pennywise makeup for dopey but lovable character whose buffoonish charm shines through despite his obvious poor moral decision-making. And even though Mickey and Jules are criminals themselves, they aren’t the real villains so blatantly addressed in the film’s title. That’s where Jeffrey Donovan Kyra Sedgwick turn their dials up to “11” with skin-crawling turns that in actuality set the proper mood for this modern horror-thriller. Villains compels, disgusts and entertains in the most shocking of ways making it an ideal SXSW world premiere and one that has set a steady buzz around the viewing masses here in Austin, TX.

GRADE: 4/5

It’s been over a decade since Jonah Hill and Michael Cera helped set the bar for teen comedies in Greg Mottola’s Superbad. And in a lot of ways, Olivia Wilde’s directorial debut feature Booksmart takes a similar vulgar-laden approach but infuses it with a refreshing female perspective that gives the film its own sense of identity. We’re all well aware of Wilde’s onscreen abilities but behind the camera and in tandem with the underrated talents of co-stars Kaitlyn Dever (Short Term 12) and Beanie Feldstein (Lady Bird), Booksmart serves as a fearlessly funny and welcome addition to the 2019 SXSW festival lineup.

It’s the day before graduation and best friends Amy (Dever) and Molly (Feldstein) are up to their usual shenanigans as they head to their last day of high school ever. But it’s here that the inseparable pair are reminded of their years-long failures, where Amy is still yet to be intimate with a female after “coming out” during sophomore year, and Molly’s all-work and no-play approach to being the Valedictorian hasn’t actually separated her college prospects from most other classmates. Yet, for these forever friends, tonight is different. Tonight is their final chance to live it up with no regrets before they embark on their separate futures.

Booksmart has no issues ushering in the laughs thanks to a well-used R-Rating filled with female masturbation jokes and other irreverent raunchiness. Refusing to masquerade as anything more than a female-centric buddy comedy, its easy to ignore the film’s disregard for purposeful character development. Instead, we’re guided down a hysterical series of obstacles and resolutions that unfold in an eerie familiar fashion. This direct parallel to the events in Superbad mildly spoils the onslaught of hilarity that ensues, but there’s enough laughter throughout to erase the unpleasantry. And much like elder comedy’s everlasting effect on the careers of Hill and Cera, don’t be shocked if Booksmart becomes a similar vessel that helps launch Kaitlyn Dever and Beanie Feldstein into the mainstream. There’s something to be said for the film’s wading in familiar waters, but Olivia Wilde’s unapologetically racy and laugh-filled debut still stands as a winning comedic effort from this year’s festival lineup.

GRADE: 3.5/5

https://youtu.be/Uhd3lo_IWJc

The romantic comedy, a genre born to rectify the stress and combativeness of date night decision-making. But in all of its easy-viewing fluff, occasionally one breaks through the mold to deliver something more. Whether it’s a truly romantic tale with affable characters with performers donning an uncanny onscreen chemistry, or perhaps just an elevated level of humor that’s relentless in its pursuit of laughter, the rare rom-com gem is a transcendent work that typically appeals to all. And we’re given all of that and so much more in Jonathan Levine’s (50/50 and Warm Bodies) emotionally pleasing and riotously funny new film, Long Shot.

Fred Flarsky (Seth Rogen) is a political journalist with conviction. His edgy writing style and brash wit make him a low-key internet mainstay until the company he works for is purchased by a ruthless media conglomerate. Forced to resign out of honor and dignity to his craft, Flarsky looks to drown his newly unemployed sorrows with his lifelong best friend (O’Shea Jackson Jr.). But as the rowdy pair of friends find their way into an upscale fundraising party, they cross paths with Flarsky’s former babysitter and first-crush, Charlotte Field (Charlize Theron), who also happens to be the current Secretary of State and a rising political star. Flarsky and Charlotte reconnect over some laughs and it isn’t long before she decides to bring him on board her staff as a speechwriter.  The two slowly start to develop feelings for one another but, as she gears up for a run at the presidency, it’s clear that Flarsky isn’t the optimal relationship choice for boosting her poll numbers.

Long Shot infuses robust comedic energy into a Cinderella-esque story with a role-reversal twist. And while Seth Rogen is hardly a belle of the ball, he makes for a root-able underdog in this savagely funny R-rated rom-com. His onscreen counterpart, Charlize Theron, trades her Atomic Blonde kicks and kill-scenes for a more reserved role. It’s a smooth and easy transition for such a rangy and adaptable talent that she is. On the other hand, we’re gifted the prototypical Seth Rogen role, a routine he hardly shies away from but consistently delivers to perfection. And if you haven’t been worn out by his comedy schtick already – something that I’m not sure I’ll ever get bored by – Long Shot is chock full of quintessential Rogen-style humor that hardly gives you time to settle from joke to joke. A lengthy and diverse list of co-stars keep hilarity flowing as O’Shea Jackson Jr. (Straight Outta Compton) absolutely steals the show whenever he enters the frame. As far as the romantic aspect of the film, Long Shot offers a relatable tale of forbidden love that’s neatly wrapped in a somewhat contrived, but certainly acceptable, political backdrop. Thankfully, the film doesn’t dive too deep into our volatile political extremes without attaching comical hysteria to it, which surely helps the movie stray from alienating certain types of audiences. Long Shot’s characters are warm, affectionate, earnest and downright vulgar, allowing for a healthy dose of edgy humor that’s counterbalanced brilliantly by a satisfying relationship story. I’m glad to say that Jonathan Levine returns to form with one of the finest rom-coms in years.

GRADE: 4/5

It feels like Jordan Peele’s seamless transition from sketch comedy star to Oscar Winning writer and budding director happened overnight. His masterfully penned and hypnotic – for lack of a better word – psychological thriller Get Out was certainly deserving of its massive commercial success and countless awards season accolades. But it all boils down to expectations, and this time around, expectations couldn’t be higher for Peele and his new SXSW Opening Night Film, Us. With a packed house in place for the movie’s world premiere at the Paramount Theater, where hordes of fans were sadly turned away after spending hours crossing their fingers in hopes of being granted entrance into the event, all eyes eagerly converged on the big screen in anticipation of another crowning achievement. Unfortunately, Us is nowhere near as gratifying as the expectations we’ve placed on the film.

Married with two children, a grown-up Adelaide Wilson (Lupita Nyong’o) reluctantly finds her family on the same sandy beaches of Santa Cruz, California where she experienced a traumatic, life-changing event as a child. And with eerie hints of déjà vu floating all around what’s intended to be a peaceful vacation, things take a turn for the worse when night time hits and the Wilsons’ discover four strangers holding hands at the top of their driveway. These dark figures converge on the home with vengeance, wearing only red jumpsuits, carrying sharp sets of scissors and possessing the same exact faces as Adelaide and her family.

While perhaps it’s unjust to pit Jordan Peele’s newest creation against the towering masterpiece that is Get Out, truth is it’s only natural to do so. And by comparison, these films aren’t even in the same stratosphere. Where Get Out oozes with nuance and sleek social metaphors, Us holds a far less impactful punch with a wildly cryptic and off-kilter story. And properly assessing the film requires examining the many distinct elements that unite to make the whole. First and foremost, Jordan Peele’s advancements behind the camera continues to grow and his direction stands as the film’s strongest aspect. However, while his evolution as a filmmaker is apparent, Peele’s writing isn’t as crisp or refined. He still manages to conjure up a truly original horror tale that, unfortunately, concludes as more of a gimmicky approach than his deeply involved character development from Get Out. But let me be clear, Us is a horror-first project that levels its sheer moments of intensity with a healthy dose of Peele’s trademark laugh-out-loud comedy. Yet, for me, Us has too soft of a voice, as its subtext and themes are either muddled or just completely nonexistent. And rather than searching for a deeper meaning, I will take the film on its face value as an entertainment-centric endeavor that dazzles on occasion but hardly separates itself from the pack.

GRADE: 3/5

I was able to catch 18 films at this year’s SXSW festival. Some of the titles are primed for anticipated releases all throughout the calendar year, while others are relying on positive exposure from the festival in order to expand their reach to additional audiences. This year’s crop of selections included a wide range of styles, genres and subject matters, making it a fantastic group of films courtesy of SXSW’s program directors. Here’s a look back at each film I saw (in alphabetical order) with a brief description of the synopsis, as well as a quick and to-the-point assessment of each movie:

All Square

House of Cards‘ Michael Kelly stars as a struggling small-town bookie who decides to take bets on local little league baseball games. There are some laughs to be had and the film’s accuracy regarding underground sports betting is commendable, yet there’s very little depth to the characters and a lack of meaningfulness to the story.   GRADE 3/5

American Animals

This witty and energetic docu-drama recreates the insane true story of 4 college students who researched, plotted and committed a heist at their university in 2005, hoping to cash in on millions of dollars worth of books and other art pieces. American Animals was one of the more memorable films at this year’s festival for its gripping screenplay and styled execution.   GRADE 4/5

Blindspotting

Carlos Lopez Estrada’s Blindspotting was without question the pinnacle of this year’s festival. Tackling a wide array of social issues, the film follows a convicted felon with 4 days left on his probation who witnesses a police officer fatally shoot an unarmed and fleeing African American suspect. Blindspotting takes you on a roller-coaster of emotions and intensity as it bridges sound storytelling with a unique and innovative flavor.   GRADE 4.5/5

Blockers

Kay Cannon’s comedy headliner earned loads of laughs during its world premiere, which only seems natural as Blockers follows a trio of high school seniors who form a pact to lose their virginity on Prom night. Unfortunately, their parents (Leslie Mann, John Cena and Ike Barinholtz) discover the girls’ promiscuous intentions and try desperately to stop them. A strong central theme attacks society’s double-standard when it comes to this landmark sexual event, yet a tiresome reliance on shock-value and full frontal male nudity to generate laughs really sours the effort.   GRADE 3/5

Boundaries

Vera Farmiga stars as a habitual animal-rescuing mother forced to help her flaky father (Academy Award Winner Christopher Plummer) after he’s kicked out of his senior living facility for selling marijuana. Plummer steals the show in this often hilarious story of familial struggle, despite the fact that very little materializes in the film.   GRADE 3.5/5

Fast Color

Julia Hart’s Fast Color was regrettably the weakest link at this year’s SXSW festival. The sci-fi drama follows a woman (Gugu Mbatha-Raw) on the run because of her family’s history of possessing unique, super-human abilities. Flimsy storytelling, one-dimensional characters and cheap reveals plague this lifeless sci-fi drama.   GRADE 2/5

Final Portrait

Stanley Tucci is a fantastic character actor but he returns to the director’s chair for SXSW entry, Final Portrait, which chronicles the odd and brief relationship between Swiss artist Alberto Giacometti and an American (Armie Hammer) he asked to pose for a portrait. And what was supposed to be completed in one afternoon went on to last for many weeks, thanks to Giacometti’s frequent moments of intense self criticism. It’s a silly premise that proves quite witty and charming as it develops, however a repetitious feeling and constricted story leave this film as a hollow attempt at addressing the inevitable imperfection of art.   GRADE 2.5/5

First Match

First Match is a Netflix film that will arrive by the end of March, giving you an opportunity to see it soon via the streaming service. The movie centers around a troubled teen (Elvire Emanuelle) whose bounces around the foster care system, until she finds strength and structure competing against boys on the wrestling mat where she wants nothing more than to win the admiration of her biological father. Inspiring and heartbreaking all at the same time, First Match is a winning attempt from this year’s SXSW slate.   GRADE 3.5/5

Galveston

French actress Melanie Laurent tries her hand at directing an American tale with Galveston. Ben Foster stars as a henchman for a mob boss who goes on the run with a prostitute (Elle Fanning) after becoming the target of a “hit” by his employer. Galveston’s a slow-burner that builds its characters well despite a crawling pace and outstretched screenplay.   GRADE 3/5

Hereditary

Another clear highlight of this year’s SXSW festival was the “midnighter” selection Hereditary. What’s been crowned as this year’s “scariest movie ever”, the film follows a family’s spiral into madness after the passing of their grandmother. The scares are legitimate, thanks to creepy visuals and superb sound editing that help build the tension beautifully throughout.   GRADE 4/5

Isle of Dogs

The latest from Wes Anderson marks his return to stop-motion animation, something he executed quite well with 2009’s Fantastic Mr. Fox. Set during the not-so-distant future in Japan where a dog-hating ruler banishes all canines to “trash island”, Isle of Dogs follows the tale of a brave young boy who travels to this castaway island to find his pet. However, what begins as a fun and humor-filled idea eventually goes off the rails in its questionable third act.   GRADE 3/5

A Quiet Place

John Krasinski’s A Quiet Place opened this year’s festival and brought the crowd to a rousing applause at its conclusion. A family is forced to live in absolute silence as deadly, sound-sensitive creatures have nearly wiped out the entirety of Earth’s population. The creatures are pretty awesome, I’ll admit, but the lulls in action in between the film’s sporadic suspenseful moments leave much to be desired.   GRADE 3/5

Ready Player One

Steven Spielberg’s newly adapted sci-fi effort was without question the most anticipated debut at this year’s SXSW festival. The film follows Wade Watts, a teenager trapped in the mundane circumstances of everyday life in the year 2045, so he takes to the virtual reality world known as the Oasis where tries to find a hidden fortune left by the game’s deceased creator. Ready Player One is as visually overwhelming as it is impressive, yet a gripping dystopian tale makes this 140-minute journey a surprisingly easy ride.

Sadie

One of the clear indie darlings from this year’s lineup was Megan Griffiths’ Sadie. This gripping tale centers around a 13 year old daughter (Sophia Mitri Schloss) of a soldier serving overseas who will stop at nothing to end the romantic affair between her mother and a new neighbor at their trailer park. The escalation is subtle but explosive as Sadie stands as a true testament to the power of independent filmmaking.   GRADE 4/5

Shotgun

In Shotgun, twenty-somethings Elliot (Shameless‘ Jeremy Allen White) and Mia (It Follows‘ Maika Monroe) stumble into a romance that begins moving incredibly fast when he becomes diagnosed with cancer. Writers/directors Hannah Marks and Joey Power tell an interesting story with immense emotional depth. Shotgun is a true love story, all in spite of its cheap reaches for the occasional sentiment.   GRADE 3.5/5

The Unicorn

One of the most insanely hysterical films at SXSW was Robert Schwartzman’s The Unicorn. Lauren Lapkus and Nicholas Rutherford star as Malory and Caleb, a boring couple going four years strong on their engagement. But when their mutual reservations with marriage force them to question the current state of their relationship, “Mal & Cal” decide that spicing things up with a threesome may be exactly what they need. The Unicorn is a riotous journey that refuses to let up on the laughs.   GRADE 4/5

Unlovable

Joy (Charlene deGuzman) is a sex-addict who craves the attention of the opposite sex.  Yet, she finds genuine human connection when she begins a garage band with her “sponsor’s” older anti-social brother. The masterful John Hawkes, a hometown SXSW hero, delivers a knockout performance once again in the hearty, feel-good comedy Unlovable.   GRADE 4/5

A Vigilante

Olivia Wilde goes straight badass in the domestic abuse thriller, A Vigilante. Wilde stars as an abuse survivor who enlists her services to fellow abused women who need her to rough up and intimidate their husbands. And what begins as a compelling character study, eventually transitions into an unappealing thriller. Wilde gives a committed performance, but the story simply falls flat in its third act.   GRADE 3/5

Write When You Get Work

Stacy Cochran’s Write When You Get Work follows Jonny and Ruth, former lovers and small-time thieves who cross paths after years apart. But when Jonny discovers Ruth’s new career at an upper class private school, he plots a scheme to steal from a wealthy parent (Emily Mortimer) involved with the school. This battle-of-wits caper comedy just never seems to entertain as much as its heady screenplay deserves. I believe it’s because the characters aren’t endearing enough for the audience to forge a connection.   GRADE 2.5/5

SXSW is known for launching world premieres, yet they reserve special places for 14 carefully chosen Sundance Film Festival selections for their annual lineup. And it was clear from the moment the crowd erupted as its title flashed on the screen and the credits rolled, that none of the other 13 films would make as big of a splash at SXSW as Carlos Lopez Estrada’s pulsating and original new drama, Blindspotting. Timely, innovative and remarkably poignant, Blindspotting is exactly the film that this country needs at this precise moment in time.

Estrada transports us into the life of Collin (Daveed Diggs), a convicted felon with only days remaining on his probation before he becomes a free man. Collin works alongside his best friend Miles (Rafael Casal) at his ex-girlfriend’s moving company, and he witnesses a police officer kill a fleeing black man on his way home from work one evening. He struggles to shake the memory as his clock to freedom continues to wind down, and he also finds difficulty trying to walk the straight and narrow on the streets of Oakland, where gentrification is running rampant and the local law enforcement view boys from the hood solely as volatile threats

Placing countless societal issues, racial misconceptions and human introspection all under one single microscope, the collaborative trio of Estrada, Diggs and Casal help deliver the most important film of the year. Blindspotting will do for a generation of youth what Spike Lee’s Do The Right Thing did for mine. The film touches deeply on sensitive hot button topics, which will assuredly alienate select audiences, but sparking any conversation whatsoever is a step in the direction of progress. And that’s what Blindspotting champions, progress. Openly reflecting on its own title as a systemic reminder that we inherently see the perspective of reality we choose to see in any given person or situation, perfection is not realistic but progress is always attainable. Perhaps most astonishing is the film’s unique ability to place you in the mind-frame of its African American lead. While I’m not suggesting that I fully comprehend what it’s like to be a person of color in today’s America, Blindspotting forces you to question and second guess every decision made by Collin, as if any given choice will be the one that ultimately leads to his demise. It’s eye opening, it’s enthralling and it’s absolutely heartbreaking, all executed with dramatic precision and an onslaught of riotous humor that never lets up. Carlos Lopez Estrada provides sharp direction, dwarfing the stereotypical debut feature by incorporating phenomenal camerawork and vivid imagery that will forever be tattooed in your memory. And Blindspotting wouldn’t be as wonderfully poetic as it is without lead acting talent and co-writers, Daveed Diggs and Rafael Casal, who push the envelope creatively and have it pay off in huge dividends when all is said and done. Blindspotting isn’t only the best film at this year’s SXSW festival, it will stand as one of the finest films of 2018, period.

GRADE: 4.5/5

For other reviews, trailers and movie lists, visit MCDAVE’s host site

We all know John Krasinski, the handsome and lovable sitcom star best known for portraying “Jim” on the hit show The Office. But there are some things you may not know about him, such as his deep, burning desire to be an appreciated filmmaker. In fact, Krasinski has ventured down this path twice before, first with the ambitious adaptation of American author David Foster Wallace’s novel, Brief Interviews with Hideous Men, and more recently with the 2016 dysfunctional family dramedy The Hollars, both of which provided very little fanfare from critics and audiences alike. Something else you may not know about John Krasinski, he doesn’t want to be labeled or branded as a genre filmmaker. He simply wishes to pursue the stories, characters and ideas that he’s most passionate about, even if they come with a horror backdrop like his SXSW Opening Night selection, A Quiet Place.

We’re given a vague sense of time and global catastrophe in the opening sequence of the film, shown that the events take place in the not-so-distant future of 2020 where an unexplainable monster shrieks, howls, and barrels through whatever’s in its path in order to destroy anything that makes a loud, sustainable noise. And through this insidious elimination of the human species, a family forced to live in a world of utter silence has survived, thanks in large part to their knowledge of sign language which is needed to communicate with their deaf daughter (Millie Simmonds). But as the family tries desperately to create a life worth living, despite these terrorizing creatures lurking and waiting to pounce at any noisy misstep, figuring how to kill these monsters and fighting back may be their only chance at survival.

Both strong and flimsy elements surround Krasinski’s third feature film. His insanely gripping premise serves as a building block for masterful onscreen moments that fuse together fear and tension brilliantly. The painful silence supplements the horror remarkably well which, also to its detriment, handcuffs the viewer into wishing there was a lot more of it. Yet instead, A Quiet Place wanders from each widely spaced heart-pumping scene to heart-pumping scene, getting lost in cheap and lifeless subplots that remind us how this silent novelty wears thin well before the film’s brisk 95-minute runtime comes to a conclusion. Krasinski’s intentions are apparent as his dramatic horror serves as a metaphor regarding the fear of a parent allowing his children to “leave the nest” and fully preparing them to face a cruel and harsh world head-on. However, the emotional component of the film pales in comparison to the thrilling and suspenseful backdrop which Krasinski creates, leaving a disjointed and uneven sense of dissatisfaction. And when it comes to these characters and their decisions, many behaviors and rationalizations are completely baffling given the dire day-to-day circumstances they face. I struggled to wrap my head around the entire film, massively impressed by these grisly monsters and regrettably disinterested in the remainder of the story. A Quiet Place offers a few exceptional moments, Krasinski’s direction included, yet the film struggles to frame everything together in a neat and fulfilling package.

GRADE: 3/5

For other reviews, trailers and movie lists, visit MCDAVE’s host site

 The South by Southwest (SXSW) Conference and Festival has officially ended in Austin Texas. Over the weekend the 2017 Audience Awards were announced for the Film Tract of the Festival.

Over the course of nine days, the 2017 SXSW Film Festival screened 130 features, consisting of 84 World Premieres, 14 North American Premieres, and 5 US Premieres, with 54 first-time filmmakers. 128 shorts screened as part of 12 curated shorts programs. The 258 films were selected from 7,651 overall submissions, consisting of approximately 2,432 features and 4,975 shorts. 

 The 2017 Audience Awards Winners:

NARRATIVE FEATURE COMPETITION
Audience Award Winner: 
The Light of the Moon
Director: Jessica M. Thompson

DOCUMENTARY FEATURE COMPETITION
Audience Award Winner: 
Dealt
Director: Luke Korem

HEADLINERS
Audience Award Winner:
 Baby Driver
Director: Edgar Wright

NARRATIVE SPOTLIGHT
Audience Award Winner:
 Mr. Roosevelt
Director: Noël Wells 

DOCUMENTARY SPOTLIGHT
Audience Award Winner:
 The Untold Tales of Armistead Maupin
Director: Jennifer M. Kroot

VISIONS
Audience Award Winner: 
Becoming Bond
Director: Josh Greenbaum

MIDNIGHTERS
Audience Award Winner:
 68 Kill 
Director: Trent Haaga

EPISODIC
Audience Award Winner
: Dear White People
Director: Justin Simien

24 BEATS PER SECOND
Audience Award Winner: May It Last: A Portrait of the Avett Brothers
Directors: Judd Apatow and Michael Bonfiglio 

GLOBAL
Audience Award Winner:
 Divine Divas
Director: Leandra Leal 

FESTIVAL FAVORITES
Audience Award Winner
The Big Sick
Director: Michael Showalter 

Audience Award: 24 Beats Per Second
May It Last: A Portrait of the Avett Brothers
3/18/2017, Alamo Ritz 2, 4:00 PM

Audience Award: Documentary Feature Competition
Dealt
3/18/2017, Alamo Lamar A, 4:00 PM

Audience Award: Documentary Spotlight
The Untold Tales of Armistead Maupin
3/18/2017, Stateside Theatre, 7:30 PM

Audience Award: Festival Favorites
The Big Sick
3/18/2017, Alamo Ritz 1, 2:30 PM

Audience Award: Midnighters
68 Kill
3/18/2017, Alamo Lamar A, 11:00 PM

Audience Award: Narrative Feature Competition
The Light of the Moon
3/18/2017, Alamo Lamar A, 1:30 PM

Audience Award: Narrative Spotlight
Mr. Roosevelt
3/18/2017, Alamo Ritz 1, 5:30 PM

Audience Award: Global
Divine Divas
3/18/2017, Alamo Ritz 2, 1:00 PM

Audience Award: Visions
Becoming Bond
3/18/2017, Alamo Ritz 2, 7:00 PM

For specific information on these films check out www.SXSW/film

The South by Southwest (SXSW) Conference and Festivals announced the digital industry’s most transformative advancements of 2017 on March 15, in Austin, Texas.

The SXSW Interactive Innovation Awards ceremony was held Tuesday evening and was hosted by “Sleepy Hollow” actresses Lyndie Greenwood and Janina Gavankar. This was the 20th year of the award show that showcases the evolving and broadening trends in the digital industry including software, apps, and devices.

The awards include 13 awards and 6 special honors, including Best of Show, People’s Choice, Breakout Trend of the Event, Speaker of the Event, Meme of the Year and the David Carr Prize, which were presented to innovators spanning categories from healthcare to sustainability, privacy & security, music, finance, communication integration and beyond.

New to the Awards ceremony this year was the second annual David Carr Prize, awarded for the best essay submitted from writers, bloggers and journalists. Created last year to honor the late David Carr, a friend and great contributor to SXSW and the journalistic community, the essay topic follows Carr’s interest in the convergence of new media, technology, and culture. Mike Armstrong took home this year’s David Carr Prize for his essay “The Heart of Something Heartless,” about morality and emotions in Artificial Intelligence.

How the awards were selected from the press release:

“A panel of judges comprised of industry peers and experts selected the winners based on four criteria: creativity, form, function and overall experience, except for the People’s Choice Award. SXSW Interactive attendees voted for the People’s Choice Award at the second annual Innovation Award Finalist Showcase on Sunday, March 12, where the 65 finalists had the opportunity to exhibit and demo their work.”

2017 SXSW INTERACTIVE INNOVATION AWARD WINNERS:

Health, Med and Biotech – Awarded for the new technology that best improves the quality, efficacy and cost-effectiveness of prevention, diagnosis, treatment and care in health and medicine.

 PRIME Needle Free Injector by Portal Instruments, Cambridge, MA

Follow the link above to see a video on how it works. It’s a device the delivers injectable medicine WITHOUT a needle.

Innovation in Connecting People – Awarded for the best new way to connect and communicate with others.

Blendoor by Stephanie Lampkin, San Francisco, CA

Follow the link above to see a video about the app. It facilitates diversity in human resources by focusing on merit and not molds.

Innovative 3-DIY – Awarded for making 3D printing technology more accessible or affordable, or to the Maker using such technology in new and exciting ways.

3Doodler PRO by 3Doodler, New York, NY

This device is a handheld printer that lets you make 3d constructs.

Music and Audio Innovation – Awarded for 2016’s best device or service that changes and improves the way we listen to and enjoy music.

HOLOPLOT Wave Field Generator by Holoplot GmbH, Berlin, DEU

The website shows applications for the tech. It’s a device that allows you to send audio/ control audio via sound beams. You could have an event and with this tech have a designated section with one audio stream (or multiple) and another section with a different audio stream with precise control.

New Economy – Awarded to those redefining the exchange of goods and services, from the sharing economy, to virtual currency, to micro-finance, to mobile-device-payment systems and beyond.

Blinker App by Blinker Inc., Denver, CO

It’s an app that helps you sell you car with ease.

Privacy and Security – Awarded for 2016’s most progressive accomplishment in the way we go about securing our data and ensuring our privacy. <from press release – “2016”>

D3CRYPT3D by PADECA LLC, Chamblee, GA

A system designed to keep your information safe, encrypted, and ways to access it as well as monitor.

Responsive Design – Awarded for excellent digital design, creating the best-integrated interaction in terms of content, aesthetics, and functionality.

My Grandmother’s Lingo by SBS Online Australia, Sydney, NSW, AUS

Online tutorial for teaching a language.

SCIFI No Longer – Awarded for the coolest scientific achievement or discovery that before 2016 was only possible in science fiction.

DuoSkin by MIT Media Lab, Cambridge, MA | Microsoft Research, Redmond, WA

DuoSkin is a fabrication process that enables anyone to create customized functional devices that can be attached directly on their skin. Using gold metal leaf, a material that is cheap, skin-friendly, and robust for everyday wear, we demonstrate three types of on-skin interfaces: sensing touch input, displaying output, and wireless communication. 

Smart Cities – Awarded for innovations in eco-friendly or sustainable energy, transportation, and IoT technology, making life in the connected world a smarter, cleaner, greener, and more efficient Internet of Everything

V3 by Pavegen, London, UK

This is flooring that captures information about the traffic coming in to your event/store.

Student Innovation – Awarded to the student with an exceptional interactive technology project or startup; both of which are the future.

BionicM – Powering Mobility for All by Xiaojun Sun | JSK robotics lab at The University of Tokyo, Tokyo, JPN

Robotic devices to be utilized by amputees.

Visual Media Experience – Awarded for content creation and delivery that moves beyond passive viewership by providing a more immersive and engaging entertainment experience.

JourneyMaker by The Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago, IL

It’s a personal map to a museum based on some whimsical choices.

VR and AR – Awarded for breakthroughs in augmented reality & virtual reality technology including the application of new hardware or software which truly make the Virtual a reality.

Tilt Brush by Google, San Francisco, CA

It’s a program that lets you 3d paint in virtual reality.

Wearable Tech Awarded for the new hardware that revolutionizes the convenience, comfort, functionality, efficiency, and fashion of having a device literally “on you.”

Halo 2 Made for iPhone Hearing Aids by Starkey Hearing Technologies | Karten Design, Eden Prairie,   MN

Hearing aid that is controlled with your phone.

SPECIAL HONORS for SXSW 2017

BEST OF SHOW – Finalist from the competition, who, overall, best exemplifies the values of innovation, inspiration and creativity.

 The Sensel Morph by Sensel, Mountain View, CA

It’s a device that replaces your touch pad on your computer, plus some much more.

PEOPLE’S CHOICE Voted on by the SXSW Interactive community at the second annual Interactive Innovation Awards Finalist Showcase 

 Johnson & Johnson CaringCrowd by CI&T and R/GA, New York, NY

Crowd funding that is dedicated to improving global public health.

BREAKOUT TREND OF THE EVENT – Trend that gained the most traction during SXSW Interactive 2017.

 Deep Machine Learning

SPEAKER OF THE EVENT – Speaker from SXSW Interactive 2017 whose presentation makes the biggest impact on the digital community.

Joe Biden

MEME OF THE YEAR – Most ubiquitous meme that went viral in calendar year 2016 and that we just can’t get out of our heads or off of our screens.

Prankster Joe Biden

 Formal Announcement from SXSW to the winners:

 “The Interactive community extends our sincere congratulations to this year’s winners for this esteemed industry accolade and well-deserved recognition,” said Mason Stewart, SXSW Interactive Innovation Awards Coordinator. “Over the next few years, we look forward to seeing many more outstanding achievements from the winners of the 2017 SXSW Interactive Innovation Awards.”

For a complete list of SXSW Interactive Innovation Award finalists and winners, visit the following: https://www.sxsw.com/awards/interactive-innovation-awards/.

SXSW’s first ever Virtual Cinema tract opened Tuesday at the JW Marriott in Austin, TX. The event features a wide variety of virtual reality experiences that badge and film wristband attendees can access from Tuesday 14 though Thursday 16.

While virtual reality isn’t quite a household name in entertainment, many studios are investing now in the technology and the talent (producers, writers, directors) to create virtual reality entertainment (and augmented reality). I sampled some of the experiences and the equipment including the Sony Playstation VR headset, Oculus Rift, The HTC Vive, and more.

SXSW is once again, ahead of the game by featuring the medium in its own showcase with 38 curated experiences that evoke the entire spectrum of emotional range.

“Chocolate” sponsored by Viacom NEXT

If there was just one SXSW VR that sums up the joy that can be found in technology it would be this short 4 minute VR from Tyler Hurd. I asked Tyler what his main goal was in creating the VR,

“I wanted it to evoke childhood wonder, the joy and awe feeling you get when you look at something shiny.”

His VR lives and breathes in a world of childhood wonder.

The “Chocolate” experience includes you wearing a back pack that contains the bass part of the soundtrack which delivers a full body sound, head phones, and a HTC Vive, plus two hand controllers. When it begins you hold the hand controllers in front of you and they calibrate to ones in the experience. The sound of a house music-like beat surrounds you as you look around in a surreal night sky.

The hand controllers convert to a unique looking devices that have little alien wispy tendrils on top that flow as you wave them around. You get a quick look at yourself before it officially starts and you a colorful alien with multiple long crustacean legs.

As it begins you can see your hand controllers in front of you and you can wave them around; About 1/3 of the way through little kittens will be shooting out of them into the air (yes little kittens!), where they will float like bubbles. As they float down you can interact with them with the controllers and make them change positions and float up some more.

While this is happening with the house music flowing appears large Budha like cats that are smiling… and then the little kittens the shoot up in the air. Does this sound weird yet? Yes, it is weird but at the same time it’s just fun and evokes joy exactly as the creators hoped to achieve, and after all, who doesn’t love Chocolate?

“Behind The Fence” Created by Lindsay Branham

The juxtaposition is “Behind the Fence,” from producer Sally Smith who visits a real world concentration camp of Muslims being held in the mostly Buddhist country of Myanmar. She goes behind the scenes and literally gets into the mud with the suffering people who have been relegated as criminals and denied citizenship. If you know much about Buddhism this is quite shocking.

Sally shared with me that she has traveled all over the world and witnessed many atrocities.

“If only I could bring people with me, they would want to do something about this.”

Using VR in this manner is a way to bring people first hand to places and experiences and her hope is to create awareness. Her film while worthy felt a bit short on explanation but in fairness the situation is political, convoluted, and probably worth a lot more than the seven or so minutes using the Samsung VR. For more info Novofilm.


“Fistful of Stars”

Now this is what VR was created for… a journey into the Orion Nebula, using real photos as a basis for the experience.

Creator New York city native, Eliza McNitt spoke to me that she “wanted to create an environment where you felt like you were floating in the stars.”

This VR experience is similarly set up like the Universal’s “The Mummy” VR (detailed in previous article), where you actually sit in a pod that slowly tilts and turns enhancing the experience while the others were sitting or standing. It begins with a floating view of the Hubble telescope and you slowly spin, taking in the cosmos as narrated by Dr. Mario Livio, senior astrophysicist at the Hubble Telescope Institute (1991-2015). The sound track comes from The Hubble Cantata, a composition featuring a 30 piece ensemble, a 100 person choir, and two stars from the Metropolitan Opera.

McNitt’s shared that her hope is that this will lead to an episodic version and I can’t help but see this as a wonderful tool for teaching students about the cosmos. While this was a unique experience you get the feeling that this technology still has a ways to go but Fistful of Stars is a proof positive of the future of the technology.

SXSW kicked off officially today and the city of Austin and convention center is literally swarmed with people from all over the world. It’s hard to decide what and where to go so Twitter can be very helpful. Yesterday, almost by accident I came across a post about some Virtual Reality activation for Universal’s “The Mummy” starring Tom Cruise.

If you’ve seen the trailer then you may already know there is an exciting plane crash scene where the cast are literally floating through the rapidly descending plane. This Virtual Experience (VR) is a 20 minute How-We -Did -It video. In a day and age where CGI replaces so much, this action sequence (plane crash) has been shot using 90%practical effects according to the Universal release.

What happens and is it worth the effort?

You go to Ballroom B on the far side of the convention center. You can only go one direction so do not think you can save time and go from E straight to A and B. Seriously you have to walk around so be sure to adjust your schedule to accommodate the walk. Once there, you have 2 choices. If you pre signed up (info at bottom) you get an assigned time and go right in. If you didn’t get a reservation you may wait in the standby line. The line on Friday was 30 people deep. They take 20 people every 20 minutes. When I arrived only 7 of 20 showed up… so the line does move.

Once inside, there is a brief film trailer with Tom Cruise discussing his dedication to one-upping himself in every film and that this Zero G action stunt is one of his most grandiose stunts to date. There are some very limited set pieces including a sarcophagus from the film to check out as well.

After the briefing you enter a very unique screening room. See pics. There are 20 open, half circle pods that you sit in. There are plenty of staff to assist you in donning the VR camera and Bose headphones so the change out is fast. As the video begins, it’s the same video again. I couldn’t believe that this was going to be the VR experience. I was almost willing to concede this was a huge waste of time and effort but then the VR kicks in and it’s pretty spectacular.

The screening room.

I’ve seen a few VR experiences including the “Game of Thrones,” “F/X’s American Horror Story: Asylum” and “Interstellar.” This one rates as next to best. “American Horror Story” last year at San Diego Comic Con was just incredible. This one is pretty worthy though.

The pod moves to help simulate some of what you will be feeling. The 20 minutes is a scenes from a separate camera crew that was in the jet when they filmed the zero G sequences for the film. They are actually in there with the film crew and cast and you get an unbelievable view of what it was like to be in that jet and how the stunts were performed (all by Tom Cruise and Annabelle Wallis).

Should you do it?

I would recommend doing this VR experience if you want a break from the conference meetings, or if you are in between films. If you have a limited amount of time and have never done a VR Experience then you should make a point to try it out. If you done them before and you have a tight schedule this may be something you can skip. It’s also next to the Vimeo which has been relocated from where it was last two years. You may be able to screen a film or TV show and schedule this close to it.

How to Sign Up:

Here is the link to sign up. It opens everyday at 6 PM CST for the next day. It will list the day you are reserving on the page. Then you need to select how many people, there is only an option for 1, and then go to the bottom of the page to find the “next” button. A friend of mine missed out because he was on his phone and didn’t scroll down far enough. He assumed it locked up. It will ask for your email. A confirmation for your time will come quickly to your email. You can only make one reservation a day per name and email. They do have a record at check in.

Patience is the name of the game for Sonic fans.

This year during Sonic’s 2017 SXSW panel, Sonic Team’s Takashi Iizuka will be heading the panel and be giving out new info about the highly anticipated Sonic Mania and Sonic 2017. It’s very likely that we’ll get a solid release date for Mania as well as an official title for Project 2017. All we can do right now is speculate, so tell us what you think will happen in the comments below!

Briefly: This looks so freaking good.

Somehow (despite being a huge fan of 28 Days Later, Sunshine, AND Dredd) Alex Garland’s directorial debut, Ex Machina somehow slipped under my radar until I saw a few post-SXSW reviews. A new trailer for the film has just hit the web, and wow, wow, wow, does this look good.

Did it slip you by too? Here’s the synopsis:

Caleb Smith (Domhnall Gleeson), a programmer at an internet-search giant, wins a competition to spend a week at the private mountain estate of the company’s brilliant and reclusive CEO, Nathan Bateman (Oscar Isaac). Upon his arrival, Caleb learns that Nathan has chosen him to be the human component in a Turing Test—charging him with evaluating the capabilities, and ultimately the consciousness, of Nathan’s latest experiment in artificial intelligence. That experiment is Ava (Alicia Vikander), a breathtaking A.I. whose emotional intelligence proves more sophisticated––and more deceptive––than the two men could have imagined.

Sounds pretty neat, right? Now check out the new trailer.

I cannot wait for Ex Machina to hit Canadian theatres. Already see it? What were your thoughts?

Briefly: This looks so freaking good.

Somehow (despite being a huge fan of 28 Days Later, Sunshine, AND Dredd) Alex Garland’s directorial debut, Ex Machina somehow slipped under my radar until I saw a few post-SXSW reviews. A new trailer for the film has just hit the web, and wow, wow, wow, does this look good.

Did it slip you by too? Here’s the synopsis:

Caleb Smith (Domhnall Gleeson), a programmer at an internet-search giant, wins a competition to spend a week at the private mountain estate of the company’s brilliant and reclusive CEO, Nathan Bateman (Oscar Isaac). Upon his arrival, Caleb learns that Nathan has chosen him to be the human component in a Turing Test—charging him with evaluating the capabilities, and ultimately the consciousness, of Nathan’s latest experiment in artificial intelligence. That experiment is Ava (Alicia Vikander), a breathtaking A.I. whose emotional intelligence proves more sophisticated––and more deceptive––than the two men could have imagined.

Sounds pretty neat, right. Now check out this visually spectacular trailer.

Ex Machina goes wide on April 10th, and I really can’t wait to see it. How about you?

Joe, the latest from eclectic and prolific filmmaker David Gordon Green, is being released in theaters and on VOD tomorrow, April 11. I had the opportunity to sit down with Green, along with stars Nicolas Cage and Tye Sheridan, during a panel discussion on the film.

The interview was lengthy so get cozy. My questions are in bold. I’m sure they’re the only ones you care about. Right?

I wanted to ask about a lot of the locations and the people within the movie. A lot of that stuff feels very real and that shows through in the film. Can you talk a little bit about finding the different locations that you used and the people that you interacted with. In particular, Gary Poulter because he’s so terrific in the film.

David Gordon Green: I remember when Nic came into town and we were talking about how to flesh out the cast. I really wanted it to have a raw southern authenticity and not necessarily a Hollywood polish. To make sure these characters were of a real world and we were dropping in on guys who really knew how to do this labor and had voices that were either poetry or horror depending on who we were looking at. Outside of Nic, it’s all Texans. People who were living here and had the voice of here. In the morning we’d go downtown, it was all shot in and around the Austin area, so we’d go down to the day labor center in the morning and there’d be a construction foreman looking for guys for a job. Some people with some landscaping needs looking for guys for a job. We’d be out there looking for guys for our job. We were casting based off their face and their voice and taking a leap of faith with the instinct of me and my casting directors who were really unique and really visionary in the lengths and detail of looking for fresh faces. We also did traditional casting. There’s lots of really talented local actors like Adriene Mishler, Heather Kafka, and Jonny Mars. The difficult part of this movie in putting the cast together, in a lot of ways, was finding the character who would play Tye’s father in the movie. I knew I needed a movie star with the magnitude of Cage and a fresh faced, young voice, super energy character for the Gary character, but for that I just didn’t want the cynical Hollywood villain. I wanted somebody that felt sad in a way and had a depth and darkness behind his eyes rather than the guy that was just going to roll up his sleeves and chew on a bad guy role. I auditioned a lot of incredible actors, well known actors, for the part. For those that are familiar with the novel, it’s a very memorable and notable character in contemporary southern literature so we really needed to finesse the casting process. John Williams and Karmen Leech, who were our casting directors, met Gary Poulter at a bus stop here in downtown. He was just waiting for a bus on the way back from his father’s funeral. He’d been living on the streets downtown for quite a while and had a lot of hardships; a lot of stories to tell and a wonderful charisma and positive ambition to bring to the table. He was really looking for a new step in life, so it was amazing to work with him. I introduced him to Cage, it was fun. We had breakfast one morning and they hit it off. Introduced him to Tye and they hit it off. We just really had a wonderful time working on this.

Nicolas Cage: It’s a little sad because I said to Gary, “Just keep it together for one year. Just one year and your life is going to change dramatically. You’re going to get all kinds of phone calls. You’re going to be making all kinds of movies.”

And has that happened?

NC: No, he passed on. So it’s a little bit bittersweet.

Can you also talk about what David was saying. About working with real people. People off the street as opposed to working with other actors and what that was able to add to the authenticity of the movie?

NC: Well the thing is, is that everyone that I worked with had tremendous work ethics. Gary Poulter had a work ethic. He had the Vincent Price monologue from the Black Widow Alice Cooper song down. He performed it all the time.

Will that be on the DVD?

NC: It was outstanding. He was a real trained street performer. So when I was ready to work, he was ready to work and vice versa. It didn’t feel that much different than working with someone out of Julliard. He was on point.

This movie is different. It’s a mix of friendship and violence and redemption. Were you trying to escalate your career to new heights?

NC: Who?

For you.

NC: No. I was just trying to make a good movie.

Joe had all these inner demons, it seems, but he was also like an everyday man. What do you bring to a character like that who is obviously very different than yourself. There must be a lot of similarities somewhere in there for you to reach in and get that for your performance.

NC: The great news was that when I read the script I knew right away that this was something where I wouldn’t have to act too much and I could bring whatever my life experience was from the last two years into the role. It’s interesting because when my wife saw the movie when it premiered, I think in Venice, she said, “Well that’s you.”

I have a question for the director. What drew you into making a picture about what I see as a community of violence where problems are generally solved through aggression rather than through reasoning. Is there something in your background or your special interests that draw you to that?

DGG: Well I’ll work backwards. When I read the script it struck me as a great contemporary western, a genre that I’ve always been really drawn to and that I love. This story, particularly, was based on a novel by Larry Brown and when I was in college a film professor of mine named Gary Hawkins introduced me to Larry’s work as a southern writer among other writers such as Harry Crews and Tom Franklin, a lot of great writers. Cormac McCarthy is generally escalated but then there’s guys like Charles Morris that are amazing and when you dust them off it’s beautiful literature.

So you’ve known about this?

DGG: Known about the novel for a long time. I worked on a documentary about Larry, the novelist’s, life. So I got to know Larry when he was alive. My professor did the adaptation of the novel after Larry passed away. My professor, in honor of Larry, said “I want to take a stab at Joe because that’s the one I find most personal.” The most personal to Larry and the most personal to himself. The story is very distant from me but it’s something that really resonated with a lot of relatives to me, people I know. I feel very familiar with this world though I can’t say I’ve grown up in the squalor of Tye’s character and can’t say I’m as badass and masculine as Nic’s character. It’s people I look up to and I wonder about even the horrific characters or the quirkier characters. They’re people that I feel in my strange life I’ve met along the way. I love to explore and take these steps in their shoes.

That’s what I liked about it, because all the characters felt lived in and these two actors were just perfect. It’s almost as if the roles were made for them but of course they weren’t.

DGG: I talked about the authenticity of the raw, untrained actors but it’s great when you have actors that can find within them depths of reality and really trigger something in audiences. It’s the reason we go to movies. To see guys like these guys that really invite us into their lives and experience characters through their eyes. That’s the most rewarding part of a movie like this. Getting in the ring with Nic and Tye and bringing a story that’s very passionate and I have a great history with to life.

NC: One of the great things about working with Dave is that he will interview his actors. He’ll invite little stories that you may recall in your own lives and just put them into the film so you get that feeling of spontaneity and feeling of life actually happening as opposed to just sort of acting.

And that makes it more your story too, right?

NC: Little memories. Little bits and pieces. Little bits of dialog. Little thoughts or experiences that actors kind of put into the performance so that you don’t have to act so much. It’s very much a part of the process working with David. He genuinely goes through an interview process.

I have a question for Tye. You have had a pretty remarkable start to your career. Something that a lot of actors couldn’t even dream of having off the bat. What did you learn from working with David and Nic? Was there something unique about working with them?

Tye Sheridan: Yeah, absolutely. I loved working with both of them. I liked working with David because, as Nic said, he likes incorporating a sense of realness and honesty into his films. He’s very spontaneous. I remember one time he told me to eat a booger. I told him no. And Nic is a true professional and has had a great career over a number of years. I look up to him, he’s one of my role models.

David, you said something about Tye being in a point in his career where he’s perfect for the film.

DGG: Perfect for me to mess around with him. Sometimes people get a little manicured. It’s fun to find someone that’s fresh and energetic. You can sculpt things. People are self conscious, especially young actors who are starting to look at themselves and see themselves in certain interviews and think “Man, I’m cool as shit.” So it was good to get Tye before he took on that teen idol role. I got to be a big brother to him. He brings a lot of ideas to the table. As much as me or Gary or Larry are looking at this period in a young man’s life, why not look to the young man to tell us what to say. He would come up to us and say “This line’s bogus.” Hey man, it’s gone. Say what you need.

NC: I was also witness to the moment Tye said “No, I will not eat a booger.” It shows that he has dignity.

That’s one funny story. Did you have other on set funny things that happened?

DGG: I work with a real loyal group of filmmakers as a part of the crew and I always cast, regardless of the darkness or dramatic nature of the film, I always cast people with a sense of humor because people that are super serious don’t understand when I ask them to eat a booger it’s not necessarily about that. It’s about something more. It’s about inviting a little bit of absurdity into the process and humanity into the process. Making sure that no matter who we are and what sort of pedestal or glamorous lighting we’re under, we’re all eating boogers man.

NC: I do remember in between some takes that were particularly tense scenes I would go into my David Lynch impression and David would start cracking up at that. I remember we had a few laughs about that.

Can we see a David Lynch impression?

NC (as David Lynch): Solid gold, Nicster buddy. That was solid gold! That’s the margarita talking, Nicster. That’s the margarita.

I’d like you to talk about the deer scene, because that was the most epic scene ever. You have these three characters and then Nic’s character walks in and it’s a whole scene of hilarity and I was wondering how much was adlibbed in that scene in particular and the movie?

DGG: That was funny. I happened to see the movie Bernie when we were casting and so this lady Kay Epperson was in that movie and kind of stole the show in a lot of ways for me. Everytime they’d interview her I’d just pee my pants. So I was like, “Man, where’s that lady?” So we brought in Kay. She was out in Longview so we brought her in and all bets were off when Kay showed up. I just finished a new movie with her too because I just fell in love with her. She’s the lady that’s sitting the a wheelchair just talking trash. So, we had a good game plan. Tye’s more of a deer hunter than anybody else that was working with us so we looked to him for a little technical advice and expertise. We kind of just let it loose. It’s one of those scenes where there’s the elephant in the room, so to speak. In this case it was a deer. So we just wanted to get in there and make it have a sense of strange absurdity within this southern world. I wanted a little ensemble. It’s different than the novel. In the novel it’s all very straight forward. It’s all a bunch of brothers including, I think her name was Stacey, but she was a guy in the book. It was like, well let’s make Stacey a woman and get Kay. I tried hard for Kay. I think it was pretty much all improvised. Then we let chickens loose in the house. Nic was chasing them out. That was my favorite stuff. I love animals, man. With animals you never know what you’re getting. Everybody says don’t mess with animals and little kids in movies but those are the funniest things because you can’t be in control. I like to lose control as a director.

Well the dogs are like characters in the movie in and of themselves. Can you talk about working with the dogs. Having the good dog that’s always out of control and the evil dog that just won’t shut up.

DGG: Nic’s like a dog whisperer.

NC: That’s true. I love dogs. So did Larry Brown. He had a passion about them. In fact when he started making a little money he spent it on dogs. He would study them. Faith was the name of the American Bulldog that was really the star of the movie and she was a dog that liked to run off. She’d smell a cat or something and off she would go. It took a little bit to get her to stay on her mark and be in the scene, but she was a real sweet dog. I don’t know where she is now. I think she was up for adoption.

What about the other dog, because the timing on that dog was perfect.

DGG: That dog had done some shows, man. We needed a ringer for that one. Obviously, dealing with things like animal violence you want to be very ethical about and Bobby Colorado, our little animal wrangler, was on point and brought in a dog she knew could be pro and give us some grisly intentions without actually having to have a connection between the two animals. It’s kind of funny, I learned a trick from that movie Amores Perros. You just kind of have dogs playful and they’re just “Yap, yap, yap” and kind of playing grab ass and then you just add some vicious sound effects. All of the sudden you’ve got a pretty off putting thing.

Nic, when I was watching Joe I had recollections of Leaving Las Vegas. When you were reading the script did you have that in mind as well?

NC: No, I didn’t. I saw them as two entirely separate kinds of characters. Ben is someone who is actively drinking himself to death by design, by will. He wants to die. Joe wasn’t really someone who was on a death trip, in my mind. He was a pretty together guy. He had good relationships with people in the community. He showed up for work every day. He paid everybody. He was fair. Two different kinds of characters, entirely.

David, can you talk about any of the connective tissue, if there is any, between this film and Prince Avalanche because you made them right on top of each other and they’re taking place in the same location. Can you talk spiritually about the connective tissue?

DGG: I was kind of in development on them at the same time. I was location scouting for that film while I was trying to woo Nic into being in this movie. He came out to Austin and drove around in the ashes and remains of the state park forest fire in Bastrop with me. It was kind of cool to be able to overlap them in a way and there is a spiritual connection between the two projects. There’s something about mother nature’s efforts and the catastrophic nature of a forest fire and also something very intimate and peculiar about a man that takes a hatchet with poison and takes out a tree. There’s a will. As much as a lot of my films have been kind of studies of strange conflicts of masculinity I think there’s also a great backdrop. I’m always fascinated by where we are and who are these people in this place at this time. We shot right across the highway from where we were shooting Prince Avalanche. In Avalanche we were looking for where the char ended, where the fire ended. With Joe we wanted to cross the street to where life began again. With a little more hindsight and reflection I’ll be able to connect them a little bit, but we really made them back to back. One of them is certainly a little funnier and one’s a little darker. It’s up to you to decide which one. Your own personal perspective would dictate which one that is. For me, I think Joe is hilarious.

That’s one of the things I really liked about the movie. I feel like it characterized the male psyche in many Texas communities. There’s that type of character. In contrast, the women are pretty ineffectual and in the background. Is there anything to that?

DGG: Actually, there were two female characters that we shot substantial amounts of from the novel. One being Joe’s ex-wife and one being a woman he meets at a bar. Something about those felt like they were detours for another film, because this was a portrait or a study of Joe and the masculine fabric of this character. We had great performances from two great actresses and you see little glimpses of them. One of them he just pulls up next to her and rolls down his window halfway and looks at her. We know there’s substance and I like knowing that there’s ambiguity there for the audience. We know there’s something. Who is this person? Have I seen her before? We as an audience get to wonder about it. I think when I spelled it all out it was a little too distracting to what this particular movie was trying to say.

There’s a line in the film that really stood out to me. It’s said by Joe. “I can’t get my hands dirty in every little thing.” Do you feel like this idea of getting your hands dirty applies to your life, whether it’s your career or otherwise?

NC: I certainly understand that line. I understand the need to have restraint. I have friends that, and I won’t mention any names, could be liabilities. If they want to go to jail, you don’t want to go with them. So you have to try and not get your hands dirty in every little thing.

David, you were talking about the connective tissue between Prince Avalanche and Joe, does that extend beyond Joe to Manglehorn and possibly The Line, which you reportedly could be directing?

DGG: I’m not sure about The Line. It definitely does to Manglehorn. I really think this is a strange Texas Trilogy. There’s this movie called Manglehorn that I’m editing right now with Al Pacino and Holly Hunter and Harmony Korine and Chris Messina. A strange cast of characters. I think a lot of it is just when I moved to town. I’ve known Austin well and grew up in Texas, but when I started to look at it through the lens of a camera and started finding these faces and voices and what appeals to me about the region and the landscape. In the case of Manglehorn it’s a little bit more of an urban movie, but all the story of three wandering souls looking for their place in this somewhat magical journey. Manglehorn kind of heightens that and actually is magical, but definitely the same kind of melancholy structure and looking for a little bit of life and love in wandering souls, I guess. I haven’t polished that movie off yet so I’m not really sure exactly what it is at the end of the day, but it came from a very similar place and a similar heartbeat.

Can you talk about the evolution or the genesis of the “Pain Face” sequence and where that came from?

NC: About 2000 years ago I had put a script together called Heartbreaker Inc. which never got made. In that script I put a line in there and I never found a place that made sense where it could work. I thought maybe with Joe, it could work. I don’t know how it came to me. I think I was looking at old commercials of the Marlboro Man and there was always this guy that was squinting and kind of smiling. It was like, “You look like you’re in pain, but you’re smiling. Is that the icon of cool? Is that what it means to be cool?” I broke it down. I did the math on it. Make the face of pain and then smile. Yeah, that’s cool. So I thought I ‘d put that concept in this movie. You wanna make the anatomy of a cool face? Ok, make a face of pain and now smile through it. Now, you’re cool. That’s how it happened.

What about the line where you say you’ve made mistakes but the people of the town won’t let you outlive those mistakes? Did that come from you or from the book or from David?

NC: It was Larry. You mean about the law? That’s a very, kind of, Larry Brown honest statement about once you get on the bad side of the law they’re not going to let you forget it. Which is very true.

The hatchet work that you do in the wooded area is a very backbreaking work. Do you have any personal experience with labor intensive work? What’s been the most back breaking work that you’ve done?

NC: I used to sell popcorn at the Fairfax Movie Theater in Los Angeles. That was my first job. I took the tickets as well and was also the usher in that movie theater. I was trying to figure out how I could get from selling the tickets to the screen, you know? I’d look and watch the movies and one guy, one day was smoking in the movie theater. My boss said, “You gotta tell him to put it out.” I went up to the guy and said, “I’m sorry sir but you’ve got to put your cigarette out.” He took one big puff and had some girl around him and he just blew all the smoke in my face. I quit. That was the most back breaking work I’ve ever done. My dad said, “Go back to the theater and get your job back!” So I had to beg the boss to give me my job back.

DGG: I’ve had a lot. Literally back breaking work. I had to insulate attics. I was a little guy so they’d always send me into the little cramped attics and rolling out the insulation or whatever we were putting in there. We’d be crawling around in small spaces and that was in North Carolina so it was pretty intense in the summertime. I also did a weird job where I worked at a door knob factory. I could only work 20 hours a week but they paid me real well to dump door knobs in acid when they would bronze these chrome door knobs. So it was just me in this HAZMAT suit dunking door knobs all day into big tubs. It really worked out the shoulder muscles.

For Nicolas, for every scene you show a lot of body language. Whenever you act in a scene do you act as if that was the last scene of your life?

NC: Well….um. Body language. Last scene of my life. I have this, believe it or not, this mantra before I start a movie where I want to really treat every film I’m making as though it were my last. Meaning that, no matter what the genre, I want to give it 100%. My all. Try to get close to whatever vision I had in my head for the part. I don’t know if that answers your question. Then body movement has always been important to me. My mother was a dancer. An experimental dancer. A modern dancer. So I take dance seriously. I’m not a dancer but the way I move in a character is important to me.

With movies that are based on books, filmmakers have to make certain cuts to the novel so that things can work as a film. If somebody were to make a movie about y’alls life, what kind of cuts do you think people would make?

NC: I don’t think I’d cut anything. I don’t think it’d all fit into one movie. Might have to be episodic.

DGG: That’s a good question. I like that one a lot.

I was interested in the films cutting, where you sometimes have another scene start visually while you’re still verbally left in the previous scene. It seems like you use that technique a lot.

DGG: I just get super excited to see what’s going on next. I work with this editor named Colin Patton. He was an assistant editor I had for a number of years on movies and I started to wonder, “What is he doing over there?” Looking through his eyes and seeing the strange way he would approach a narrative. When it came time to make Prince Avalanche, actually, we didn’t have any money to pay my big Hollywood editor so I said, “Hey Colin, do you want to come edit this movie for me?” He was like, “Sure, let’s do it.” What I love about Colin is that he just really brings a fresh innovative way of looking at a scene. Sometimes rhythmically he just finds a way to put voices from other scenes into previous scenes and intercut them in a way where it’s not like flashbacks or flash forwards. There’s nothing traditional about it. It just feels organic and feels correct. He comes from a visual arts background, not a technical filmmaking background and I really like his approach in that way.

It feels anticipatory.

DGG: Yeah, I like that. In a lot of ways I like to bring a little anxiety and plant a seed of discomfort while you’re trying to settle in. Just when you feel like you’ve got your groove it comes and tickles you in the butt.

This question is for Nic and Tye. I was wondering, in terms of your chemistry on screen which is a knockout, did you guys go through any bonding prior to the film in order to kind of get that on screen chemistry with one another?

NC: We just read through some scenes together with David and I knew right away that I could really care about that person.

TS: Yeah, you’re a pretty easy person to get along with.

I think the elephant in the room is of course the beard you’re sporting in this film. I’m serious. I think facial hair is an important thing in the way it changes the way your face looks. Can you talk to us about getting up in the morning and seeing that beard?

NC: The beard was really important to David. When you look at the book and you see Larry’s picture you’ll see why. Larry’s got a nice beard. I think there is a physical resemblance between the two of us. It’s interesting, I just finished working with Paul Schrader and the one thing he wanted to know was, “Is the facial hair real?” I said, “Yes it is. It absolutely is real.” I want that on record.

David, why was it important that he have a beard?

DGG: In looking to cast Joe, my first instinct when looking at the book way back was that this was Robert Mitchum. Whenever I read a book I’m thinking about the movie. I’ve been that way since I was a little kid. So I’m thinking about Robert Mitchum. Someone who really has this sense of wit and masculinity and dramatic ability and Nic is the only guy when I started thinking about the reality of putting this project together that carries those with gusto. That has the Oscars to prove it, that has the bad ass action movies to prove it, that has the hilarious comedies that I could quote to you all day to prove it. So I really wanted that complicated texture. Also, I wanted to being Larry out. I wanted to bring Larry out to the show and there was a resemblance. There is a resemblance if you look at images of Larry. When Nic grows the beard out there is a very vivid resemblance. When I started imagining that, I couldn’t get it out of my mind. I talked to him about it, and he’s never sported it for a movie as far as I know.

NC: First time. I tried to, but you were the first director that said go ahead and wear a beard.

Going back to Nic and Tye, Nic I find one of the things that’s great about you as an actor is that you’ve always been really good with working with younger actors and with children. What do you find enjoyable about that experience and what was unique about working with Tye?

NC: Well Tye is just an exceptional talent. We know that and we’ve seen it time and again in his performances. I like to work with young people because young people haven’t had their dreams kicked out of them yet. They’re full of confidence and imagination and vision and when they score, that all get’s empowered. Tye was a great example of that. Yeah, I do prefer to work with younger people.

Related question in some ways, I was just at a festival with Matthew Modine and they screened Birdy and he had amazing things to say about you. I had not seen it since it was out and was just struck by how young and beautiful he looked in that movie. So I’m curious, connected to that question, how it feels having done so many roles as a young actor and now you’re one of the old guys on the set. Subjectively in your experience, what is that like?

NC: It’s a good question. It’s definitely different. Yeah, I was 19 when I did Birdy and Matthew was beautiful then. I never wanted to be the older actor that was giving advice. That, to me, is just so incredibly obnoxious. I just always wanted to be there and working together and finding it together. I never wanted to be the guy that said, “This is how you do it, son.”

Tye, you’ve worked with three Austin based directors with Terrence Malick, David, and Jeff Nichols. We’ve talked a little about what you’ve taken away from the actors you’ve worked with, but what about the directors? What did you take away from them that you’ve been able to apply to roles that you’ve done since.

TS: I think each one has a different style of working. Terrence Malick is super spontaneous, and David as well, but I think he’s a little bit more off book. You never know what you’re going to be shooting that day. Jeff Nichols is solemnly based off his script. You know the schedule three weeks before you shoot it. With David, you show up and you do the scene but then you might change it a couple ways, you never know. I love working with Texan filmmakers. I’ve worked with so many great, talented directors and I always try to take away one thing that I liked about what they do. I was just working a director, Rodrigo Garcia, and one thing I really loved that he did was he always got variations. I think that’s important because when you get into the editing room you never know what’s going to happen. I know a lot of directors do this and I think it’s a smart thing to do. One day, hopefully, I can take some of these and apply them to my movies when I start directing. So I’m very fortunate to have been able to work with the talented filmmakers that I have.

Tye, are you looking forward to any particular kind of role now. The roles you’ve had in these last three movies have been somewhat similar. Do you already have something else in mind?

TS: Sure, yeah. I would love to do a movie where I don’t have to wear dirt on my face and I’m allowed to shower. That’d be really great. Maybe an opportunity will arise soon.

Briefly: Following the film’s awesome debut at SXSW (watch the pre-premiere video here), and an epic premiere during Epix’s Zombie-thon, we’re ready to keep sharing Doc of the Dead with as many people as possible.

The Denver Film Society just announced the opening night film for this year’s Stanley Film Festival, and guess what film it is?

Yeah, it’s Doc of the Dead. Awesome, right? You can take a look at the full announcement below, and if you’re in the area, be sure to let us know if you’ll attend!

The Stanley Film Festival (SFF) produced by the Denver Film Society and presented by NBC Universal’s Chiller, announced today its Opening Night film and several special event highlights and experiences taking place at the four-day event (April 24-27). The Stanley Film Festival celebrates the best in independent horror cinema at the hotel that inspired The Shining. The Festival will host a full slate of films, panels, competitions, and special events – all at the beautiful and historically haunted Stanley Hotel.

 

The Stanley Film Festival will open Thursday, April 24 with a Gala Presentation of an original documentary from EPiX, Doc of the Dead. Directed by Colorado filmmaker, Alexandre O. Philippe (The People Vs. George Lucas), the film explores the evolution of the zombie genre in film, television and literature, as well as its impact and influence on pop culture. The film features footage taken at the 35thStarz Denver Film Festival’s “George Romero’s Zombie Town Hall Meeting.”

 

“We are thrilled to open this year’s Festival with a locally-produced film. The Denver Film Society is excited by the strength of the work we are seeing come out of our home state and we cannot think of a better way to celebrate the iconic status of the Stanley Hotel than with a film produced right here in Colorado,” says Denver Film Society Festival Director, Britta Erickson.

 

In addition to the Opening Night film, SFF announced it will host a series of events, sure to satisfy even the most dedicated horror fans. Throughout the Festival, “players” of the Horror Immersion Game will use multiple media platforms and game elements to delve deep into a mystery/horror narrative that uses the Stanley Hotel and the Festival as a vehicle to engage its participants in a story that seamlessly exists concurrently with everyday life. On Friday evening, Fangoria Entertainment and ShockTilYouDrop.com will bring their Dead Right Horror Trivia from Los Angeles to Estes Park. Saturday evening, Glass Eye Pix will present The Stanley Edition of TALES FROM BEYOND THE PALE with hosts, Larry Fessenden and Glenn McQuaid, featuring two brand new tales performed at the Historic Park Theater in town by special guests with films at the Festival. Additional events include a Murder Mystery Dinner Friday evening, Zombie Crawl Saturday afternoon, and a Big Wheel Death Race on Sunday morning, all at the Stanley Hotel.

 

“While we are incredibly excited to announce our full film line-up next week, we are just as ecstatic to unveil some of the atmospheric and interactive special events that will immerse our guests completely in the horror experience” says Landon Zakheim, Stanley Film Festival Program Director. “The entire weekend is designed to work as one big dark carnival.”

 

The Stanley Film Festival will celebrate their programming announcement this evening with an advance screening of the film Oculus at the Reel Mountain Theater in Estes Park. The film will be followed by a post screening Q&A with Director Mike Flanagan, producer and SFF alum Jason Blum and Producer Trevor Macy and an after-party at the Stanley Hotel.

 

FEATURE PRESENTATIONS:

 

● Doc of the Dead – USA (Director: Alexandre O. Phillipe, Featuring George Romero, Simon Pegg, Bruce Campbell, Max Brooks, Tom Savini, Greg Nicotero, Robert Kirkman) – Could there be a real zombie outbreak? If so, Doc of the Dead can help you prepare. This definitive guide to all things undead delves deep into the evolution of the zombie genre in film and literature, as well as its impact and influence on pop culture, to deliver a comprehensive, fast-paced, highly entertaining look at a contemporary social pandemic of global proportions.

 

SPECIAL EVENTS:

 

● HORROR IMMERSION GAME Bleeding seamlessly into the atmosphere of fear and suspense we are excited to announce the Stanley Film Festival’s Inaugural Immersive Horror Game, a real horror/mystery narrative using the Festival itself as its medium. Those who follow the clues opt in to the game, becoming the protagonists of an engaging and creepy interactive thriller culminating in an irreproducible climax you can never unsee.

 

● Glass Eye Pix Presents TALES FROM BEYOND THE PALE: The Stanley Edition An ongoing series of audio dramas penned by luminaries from the world of contemporary horror from JT Petty (HELLBENDERS) to Simon Barrett (YOU’RE NEXT), and Kim Newman (ANO DRACULA), featuring players from Ron Perlman (HELLBOY), to Angus Scrimm (PHANTASM), and Mark Margolis (AMERICAN HORROR STORY). The Stanley edition will feature performers culled from the film lineup. Join horror impresarios Glenn McQuaid and Larry Fessenden as they invite you to close your eyes and… listen. Learn more at talesfrombeyondthepale.com

 

● DEAD RIGHT HORROR TRIVIA HOSTED BY FANGORIA ENTERTAINMENT AND SHOCKTILYOUDROP.COM Do you consume horror as voraciously as zombies eat flesh? The hit Los Angeles horror event comes to the Stanley Film Festival! Join Fangoria’s Rebekah McKendry and ShockTillYouDrop.com’s Ryan Turek and test your horror knowledge in eight rounds of terrifyingly titillating trivia. Scare yourself with how much you actually know about horror. Trivia will be held early Friday evening at the Wheel Bar in Estes Park. Come with a team or join one there. All are welcome.

 

● MURDER MYSTERY DINNER Murder is afoot at the old Stanley Hotel. Guests of the festival are welcome to register for a night of intrigue and deception unraveling over a wonderful three-course meal as they become their very own detectives.

 

● BIG WHEEL DEATH RACE Guests will racethrough the expansive grounds of the Stanley Hotel on their very own adult sized big wheel, just like Danny Torrance. Festival pass holders will have an opportunity to race using adult sized big wheels on a course that runs the grounds of the Stanley Hotel. Registration will take place at the guest relations table for teams of four for a relay style race between 32 teams to determine one winner who will walk away with a complimentary stay at the Stanley Hotel.

 

● EYE HEART BRAINS ZOMBIE CRAWL When there’s no more room in hell, the dead will walk the Earth. And, now you can too. Converge upon the Stanley Film Festival in style by participating in a good ol’fashioned Zombie Crawl hosted by Eye Heart Brains, purveyors of the world’s largest zombie gatherings. The death march will move along The Stanley Hotel grounds and through the neighboring streets of Estes Park in search of brains. BRAAAAIIIIIIIIINNNNNS!!

 

IMPORTANT DATES:
April 3: Full Program Announced & tickets go on sale to the public
April 7: Press Accreditation closes
April 24: Festival Begins

 

To keep up to date with the Stanley Film Festival visit www.stanleyfilmfest.com, “Like” SFF on Facebook (Facebook.com/StanleyFilmFest), “Follow” SFF on Twitter and Instagram (@StanleyFilmFest), join the conversation using the hashtag #StanleyFilmFest

http://youtu.be/gZHLS2PwMKs

It’s been a while since comic book writer Tom Pinchuk has been on Geekscape! Luckily, we correct that oversight in this episode in which Tom drops by to talk to us about his new comic book Max Steel: Haywire, coming soon from Viz Media! Tom also educates us on the differences in some of the various conventions as Con Season starts up and also about the cultural and narrative differences between Manga and traditional US comic books! Also, when is a character’s internal dialogue too much…?

Subscribe to the Geekscape podcast on iTunes!

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Max Steel_3 cvr [Clr]

 

IntoThePixelFEAT

Video games, such as The Legend of Zelda, Journey, and Super Mario Bros. have inspired artists from around the world to create some amazing artwork. While many works from these artists are currently being used as wallpapers for smartphones and computers around the globe, the coordinators from Into the Pixel would like to give these artists and their creations the spotlight at some of the biggest gaming events of 2014–and it could be you.

Now entering its eleventh year, the duo consisting of the Academy of Arts and Sciences and the Entertainment Software Association are accepting submissions for their Into the Pixel gallery. All selected artwork will be featured from June 10-12 at E3 2014 in Los Angeles followed by stops at PAX, D.I.C.E., and SXSW. Last year’s group of selected entries (16 in all) featured popular franchises such as Assassin’s Creed, the highly-anticipated Destiny, and The Last Of Us.

Artists looking to submit their artwork can do so by clicking here. The deadline for submissions is March 28.

Briefly: Just a few days ago, the Geekscape co-produced Doc of the Dead premiered at SXSW in Austin, Texas (Jonathan’s hometown) to some pretty stellar fan reactions.

Overwhelmingly positive reviews for the documentary have also been rolling in, which we’re of course very excited about. Now, most of the world hasn’t had a chance to see the documentary yet (we do sincerely thank every single person that attended the SXSW screenings), but remember that those of you in the US will get your chance on March 15th (more on that later).

We had to take some footage from SX to show all you ‘Scapists. Helping to create and craft Doc of the Dead has been an amazing privilege, and we’re so happy to see so much positivity emanating from the finished product. Take a look at the footage from the premiere below, and let us know what you’re looking forward to seeing in the full feature.

Now, US readers, the film will premiere on EPIX at 8PM Eastern on March 15th during a 24-hour zombie marathon that will also include the television premiere of last year’s much-better-than-expected World War Z. Here are the details, straight from the press release:

Premium entertainment network EPIX announced today that Doc of the Dead will premiere at the SXSW Film Festival on March 10 and on EPIX on Saturday, March 15, at 8PM ET. The feature length EPIX Original Documentary, directed by Alexandre O. Philippe, examines the rise and evolution of zombies in film, television and literature and the impact on pop culture. Many of the genre’s most influential figures are featured in the film, including the “Godfather of the zombie genre” George A. Romero (Dawn of the Dead), actors Simon Pegg (Shaun of the Dead) and Bruce Campbell (Evil Dead), producer Greg Nicotero (The Walking Dead) and acclaimed author Max Brooks (bestsellers The Zombie Survival Guide, World War Z).

 

Doc of the Dead premieres on EPIX March 15 at 8PM ET as part of an all-day Zombie-thon celebrating the full range of zombie movies from a newly re-mastered HD version of director George Romero’s seminal cult classic Night of the Living Dead, with a special introduction by Max Brooks, to the world television premiere of this summer’s blockbuster addition to the zombie movie cannon, World War Z starring Brad Pitt.

Here’s a schedule for the Zombie-thon, or more importantly, where Doc of the Dead sits on that schedule:

6:00am – Zombies of Mass Destruction
7:35am – Night of the Comet
9:15am – White Zombie
10:30am – House of the Dead 2
12:10pm – Zombies of Mass Destruction
1:45pm – Night of the Comet
3:25pm – White Zombie
4:35pm – House of the Dead 2
6:15pm – Night of the Living Dead w/Introduction by Max Brooks
8:00pm – Doc of the Dead (World TV Premiere)
9:30pm – World War Z (World TV Premiere)
11:30pm – Night of the Living Dead w/Introduction by Max Brooks
1:15am – Nightmare City
2:45am – Poultrygeist: Night of the Chicken Dead
4:30am – Zombie Lake

The first film of my SXSW 2014 experience was Bad Words, the feature film directorial debut of actor Jason Bateman.

The film is about an adult man that finds a loophole in competition rules that allows him to compete in a kid’s spelling bee. Bateman plays a mean, cynical man and much of the humor is derived from his inappropriate interactions with the children, especially a young Indian boy who attempts to befriend him.

After the film I was invited to partake in a roundtable interview with Jason and his co-star Kathryn Hahn. For clarity’s sake, all reporter questions and comments are italicized. I’ve also bolded my own questions, so you know I’m not the weirdo saying women shouldn’t curse and Yale alumni can’t be funny.

Bad Words opens in limited release tomorrow, March 14th, before expanding on March 28th.

Kathryn Hahn:

Is it ok to look at you while we ask questions? (This is in reference to a running joke in the film where Kathryn’s character does not like to be looked at during the act.)

No! Please avoid eye contact.

I have to ask, was that drawn from some sort of personal experience? Maybe not necessarily from you…

You have to ask that? Boy, this just got real personal. That’s from the sicko mind of Andrew Dodge, the writer. That was kind of the parameters of the sex scene.

I’m sure when you’re looking at that in the script you’re like ‘Oh my god, I can’t wait.”

Could. Not. Wait. I knew it would be twice and I also knew that with Bateman it was going to be a beautiful launching pad for us to kind of fill it out and make something happen. Yeah, very funny.

It’s sort of a great structure for your relationship.

I love that every time he looks at her she has to start completely over. Like literally from the very beginning. Like, ‘This is gonna go on all night. Back to one.”

Was that also one of those things that when you’re shooting it you are trying a variety of different ways of doing that?

I mean, we shot in a practical janitors closet at the lovely Sportsman’s Lodge in Burbank, California. Or maybe not Burbank, I think it was Studio City. Details, guys. I gotta fact check myself. I think, in the parameters of that, there were like six of us in there. So there wasn’t a lot of room for trying different positions. We knew that we were stuck in ye olde missionary.

I meant more in like, line delivery…

(Laughs) Sorry, my mind is stuck. Yeah we did, there was some playing around. Absolutely. But, you know, Andrew Dodge wrote such a crazy, tight, economic gem. There really wasn’t a ton we had to do. I think that would have defused what was there.

Jason mentioned last night that you guys had a personal friendship, and how that could make that scene pretty awkward…

Oh my god, yes! So awkward! I was really like, ‘Don’t look at me. I’m going to break and we’ll never get it back.” Which is a hilarious metaphor. We had a pillow between us. Two pillows. So we could just go for it and not be uncomfortable.

So I’m guessing that’s how you go onto the project in the first place? The fact that you guys have a personal relationship?

As it were. Yes, we’ve been friendly for a couple of years. I adore him. I adore his wife. Huge crush on his wife. I knew when the script was sent to me that whatever he decided was gonna be his first time out as a feature director was going to be something special. I’ve always just trusted his taste. Just as an audience member. I’m always checking in with Jason Bateman on screen because I just know that’s where the brains are. I just know that his POV I trust.

That’s got to be interesting because of that dynamic of working with an actor and director but then adding friend into that equation. You don’t ever want your friend to be your boss.

Yeah. I’m telling you, it sounds so cliche but it was a ball. It was a ball. You could tell that he was having the time of his life. He had done so much prep work. He armed himself. I think he knew that with the parameters of the shoot that it was going to be short, so he armed himself with so much prep that by the time we started shooting he was so calm and so comfortable. It would be very hard not to micromanage, I could imagine. Especially your first time out to bat. Especially with a world that is so specific. He created such a visual, tonal world. It would have been very difficult to just relax had you not done all the work up till then.

Obvious question here, would you talk about your own spelling bee experiences.

Awful. I never did an actual spelling bee but I took latin in high school so I thought that I had a leg up on the root words. So I can usually dig a root word out of something but I’m not very good at spelling.

Were you familiar with any of the words that were used in the movie?

Nougat. Very familiar with nougat.

There’s a lot of cursing in this film. Some people would say that the classier the woman the less they curse. Would you agree with that?

No. I like a broad.

What are some life situations that would get you to start letting them fly?

Oh, anything. Name your poison. I love a swear word. I really do. But I have the two peanuts at home, so you gotta edit yourself big time. They take it all in.

Do you have a favorite?

A favorite child? Yes. Absolutely. And I’ll tell you why. (Laughs) No, I love a simple fuck. It’s always so horrible to actually say it out loud but that’s true. Just a simple fuck. In a pinch, guys, it covers a lot. I grew up in Ohio, I don’t know if this is particular to Ohio, but with my parents there was a lot of ‘Oh, poop on a stick! Shut the front door!” You almost with they would have just let it fly. It would have been a little less embarrassing.

What do you like about playing characters that are shameless? You seem to have a couple of those under your belt. Stepbrothers comes to mind.

I’m a fan of bite in comedy. I’m a big fan of comedy that’s got an edge to it. And as a character, comedy or drama, I like a woman that’s on the edge of an abyss. Whatever that is. It could be big or small. It’s just a precipice I’m always interested in. Exploring that leap into the unknown.

How funny were you allowed to get at Yale?

There’s nothing funny about Yale.

I mean on stage. Did you ever do any comedy there?

We had an awesome ragamuffin class. I loved my class at Yale. We got a clown teacher up there. We did some comedia. Not a lot of improvising, that didn’t come for me until later. I never took improv classes or anything like that. It was being introduced to Adam McKay that really cracked that open for me. I think I’ve talked about this before, but at Yale… I will never forget that experience. It was a rigorous, blessed three years. I didn’t have to worry about anything but just the work. We were producing plays at one in the morning. It was heaven, heaven, heaven. We didn’t have a television. The best. I will hold that to my heart forever. I was accruing loans but it was just like pretend. I knew I’d have to eventually pay that off but you didn’t have to really think about that while you were there. It was pure and really blessed. Of course we did a lot of comedy. I think a lot of my classmates would say I was like the clown. There were a lot of clowns in my class, though. We laughed a lot. I think in the theater you find that. It’s not fun to see a real serious serious play.

When you think Yale theater the first thing to pop into mind isn’t a bunch of people up there horsing around.

But the play is to a point. It’s about cracking something open. Comedy is hard, I think. Really hard. We were grad student kids, we had a ball, but it was to a point.

On the same note of being a clown at Yale. Were you aware that on IMDB your one trademark is “known for making exaggerated facial expressions’?

Yeah, I saw that. We were laughing and I said ‘I think that should be the name of my autobiography’. Like ‘Making Faces: The Story of Kathryn Hahn’.

Maybe the quote on your tombstone? ‘She was really good at making exaggerated faces’.

(Laughs) Hmm, I don’t know about that.

Can you talk a little bit about Afternoon Delight? That is such a wonderful film. We always see you in these supporting roles but you totally owned that film. How hard is it to get something like that made?

I will just forever be grateful to Jill Soloway for seeing that in me and giving me that opportunity. They had not come my way with that kind of a role since Yale, really. That hadn’t been really asked of me. To go to those kinds of places, which is all you want to do as a performer. That was heaven. Heaven. We shot it in three weeks. We used my minivan. It was like a three week fever. We shot six days a week and rehearsed on the seventh day. Rented a little house that the DP and Jill and I would just take turns sleeping in so we could get a full night’s sleep because we all had kids. We knew no one could get any sleep. The bar really was raised with that particular experience with me.

Jason Bateman –

Your costar Rohan is a very mature young man. Was it challenging to throw out those expletives his way?

The film was not improvised. He and his parents knew everything that was coming and were certainly prepped for it. I had extensive conversations with him and his parents about the kind of tone and spirit and where all these prickly scenes were coming from. What the deeper and slightly more sophisticated agenda was that would play, hopefully, underneath the whole movie. Certainly Guy’s journey. I just asked them to trust me that I was going to build the film and aesthetic and that it wouldn’t feel gratuitous or arbitrary to the audience. That this wasn’t going to be something embarrassing for them. This was a drama for everyone inside the movie. This guy got his feelings hurt and he’s just not properly equipped to deal with that. And we, the same audience, laugh at his inability to manage his life, but it is a drama to them. That would be, hopefully, the spine of the movie and make those prickly things feel a little less sophomoric.

Can you talk a little bit about where Arrested Development falls into that position where you are now allowed to make your directorial debut?

Arrested Development is the father and mother of my career now in the second half. I was a working actor for the decade between The Hogan Family and Arrested Development but I certainly was not making a lot of choices, you know? I was basically taking what I got and Arrested Development provided a project that was embraced by those who hand out jobs in Los Angeles. That was really, really fortunate. I would have taken a job that was half as good and would have perhaps stayed on the air twice as long. Respect and quality I think is the fuel of longevity as opposed to fame and fortune. Arrested Development gave me a great deal of much needed credibility and was a basic reset button on some of the stuff that I had done in the past. I’m just gonna try my damndest not to screw it up and stay at the party for another 30 years.

A lot has been made about this being your directorial debut, but you’ve been directing television since you were 18…

Yeah, with the exception of Arrested Development all of the directing has been multicamera. Which, I do not mean to belittle, but it’s a different job as a director. You’re mandate there is to corral the rehearsal and make the comedic writing work and have its rhythm stay intact. It’s shot proscenium style where it’s three walls; it’s theater. There’s and audience and it’s a different process. When you direct single camera you are choosing lenses, there’s a lighting strategy, music, and a whole environment that a director is allowed to build. In television it’s a bit more of a writer/producer’s medium. In film you’ve got a bit of creative autonomy that is extremely exciting to me. But very challenging.

Talking about the aesthetic a little bit more, and I don’t know if I’m completely wrong here, but I saw the tiniest twinges of the aesthetic of Wes Anderson in the beginning of the film. Has anybody said that to you or are there any references you used?

That’s high praise. I mean Wes Anderson, Paul Thomas Anderson, David O. Russell, The Coen Brothers, Alexander Payne, and Spike Jonze… these guys have a rawness to the aesthetic. A palette that they use. The way that they use the visual element of this medium to perform. That is a character in the film. It sets a mood for the audience that hopefully allows the audience to be a bit more accepting of a fringe society that these filmmakers usually like to tell their stories in. The characters are usually people that you drive by but you don’t often talk to. Situations that you usually skirt because we’re a bit more highly functional. Decisions that are made that are less responsible than those of responsible adults like us. I think there is a visual component to that and a musical component to that that is fascinating to me and I really look forward to learning a whole lot about. One of the main things that attracted me to this script was that that would be a necessary world and a palette to establish to the audience because we’re dealing with an odd group of people making odd decisions. If it looks like today and like where we all live it would feel broad and hokey, but if it feels real and feels raw then you accept the eccentricities of the story and the characters.

Kathryn was talking, specifically about the “don’t look at me” scene, about how a lot of what was there was in the script. I’m curious about one of my very favorite scenes in the movie which I kind of think of as the ‘Five Easy Pieces’ moment where you’re talking to the woman in the diner and kind of putting her in her place. Is all that in the script as well or did you get to kind of play around and try different retorts?

Well I’ve never been a fan of actors talking about what they wrote and what the writer wrote because that’s very unfair to the writer, but Andrew was incredibly collaborative for a long time. All the way through the process. I invited him to be on set the entire shoot and he was there every day. We worked long and hard on the script for about a year before we ended up shooting it. There were two phases of that. One was just me as a director trying to funnel all that was in the script into the version, style, and aesthetic that I wanted to use. Then once I decided to play the lead character we went through it again and I knew the way I was going to play that part very specifically. So certain words might be inconsistent with that approach and certain words might better enhance that approach.

But not a lot of improv in the film itself? It’s pretty much all what’s on the page?

There certainly was some, which I’m a fan of because once something becomes three dimensional and other actors start doing things that you can’t predict the night before when you’re practicing your faces in the mirror, things are different and you need to be able to pivot. So sometimes certain words or certain things could be a little bit better, but for the most part Andrew and I got that exactly the way we wanted it all the way down to the shooting. Everything was shot listed and storyboarded and I knew exactly the way that every single piece… the way that I’d like to shoot everything. I decided on lens sizes and everything. Scouted. We knew we’d have a pretty abbreviated schedule and that I was going to be splitting my duties, so everything was kind of done.

Can you talk about the color palette because it’s more of a drama color palette…

I was getting a lot of green and that was in sharp contrast with the HD scenes where we see the live television.

Sure. We wanted to make sure that the television had a different look than the film. What you’re privy to in the audience versus what the audience that’s watching the tv show would be privy to. So we shot that on different equipment and had a whole different process. The overall palette of the film is what we were talking about. It was very desaturated, and the greens, and the blues, and the things that just lend themselves to establishing a bit more of a melancholy, introspective position for the audience because hopefully that’s where I wanted the audience to start and to remember as they were experiencing all of the humor and the veneer of Guy. I wanted them to remember that this was a guy that was raw and wounded inside. Something that’s oversaturated, something that’s super lit, something that’s on wide angle lenses usually feels a little bit safer. It’s all parts of the process that I’ve never been able to participate in and the fact that this script demanded that was one of the big draws.

Speaking of script demands, all of the prep that goes into spelling the big words, would you still be able to spell floccinaucinihilipilification?

I could get close, but everything was written on big white boards. The fun part was that we had to write them on multiple boards around the auditorium so that I could get three letters there, three more there, three more there so it didn’t look like I was reading it. I was in one spelling bee in grade school and I lost in the first round because I forgot the w in answer. I’m not bookish.

Briefly: Doc of the Dead is nearly here!

We let you know back in January that the film would be premiering at SXSW along the likes of Veronica Mars, Jon Favreau’s Chef, and plenty of other exciting features. Now, we’re just two days away from its SXSW premiere (Jonathan is in Austin right now in fact), and we couldn’t be more excited to show it to the world.

Of course, most of us (myself included) won’t be making it to SXSW this year. You lucky folks in the United States won’t have to wait long to see the film, however, as the documentary will premiere during EPIX’s Zombie-thon on March 15th (that’s just ONE WEEK away)!

To celebrate the pending launch, here’s an EXCLUSIVE clip from the film. It features Kane Hodder, best known for playing Jason Vorhees in Friday the 13th parts 7, 8, 9, and 10, as well as Victor Crowley in the Hatchet series, reading an ACTUAL LETTER from THE ZOMBIE WAR! Didn’t read about it in the history books? Then watch this clip to learn more about it, then head below for all the info about the upcoming Zombie-thon!

Doc of the Dead premieres on EPIX March 15 at 8PM ET as part of an all-day Zombie-thon celebrating the full range of zombie movies from a newly re-mastered HD version of director George Romero’s seminal cult classic Night of the Living Dead, with a special introduction by Max Brooks, to the world television premiere of this summer’s blockbuster addition to the zombie movie cannon, World War Z starring Brad Pitt.

Here’s the schedule!

6:00am – Zombies of Mass Destruction
7:35am – Night of the Comet
9:15am – White Zombie
10:30am – House of the Dead 2
12:10pm – Zombies of Mass Destruction
1:45pm – Night of the Comet
3:25pm – White Zombie
4:35pm – House of the Dead 2
6:15pm – Night of the Living Dead w/Introduction by Max Brooks
8:00pm – Doc of the Dead (World TV Premiere)
9:30pm – World War Z (World TV Premiere)
11:30pm – Night of the Living Dead w/Introduction by Max Brooks
1:15am – Nightmare City
2:45am – Poultrygeist: Night of the Chicken Dead
4:30am – Zombie Lake

We can’t wait for you to see the film!

Briefly: Doc of the Dead is coming!

We let you know back in January that the film would be premiering at SXSW along the likes of Veronica Mars, Jon Favreau’s Chef, and plenty of other exciting features. Today, we’re announcing the television premiere date for all of us normal folk who can’t attend SXSW and/or don’t live in Austin (like me… though I’m in Canada so that’s another story altogether).

The film will premiere on EPIX at 8PM Eastern on March 15th during a 24-hour zombie marathon that will also include the television premiere of last year’s much-better-than-expected World War Z. Here are the details, straight from the press release:

Premium entertainment network EPIX announced today that Doc of the Dead will premiere at the SXSW Film Festival on March 10 and on EPIX on Saturday, March 15, at 8PM ET. The feature length EPIX Original Documentary, directed by Alexandre O. Philippe, examines the rise and evolution of zombies in film, television and literature and the impact on pop culture. Many of the genre’s most influential figures are featured in the film, including the “Godfather of the zombie genre” George A. Romero (Dawn of the Dead), actors Simon Pegg (Shaun of the Dead) and Bruce Campbell (Evil Dead), producer Greg Nicotero (The Walking Dead) and acclaimed author Max Brooks (bestsellers The Zombie Survival Guide, World War Z).

 

Doc of the Dead premieres on EPIX March 15 at 8PM ET as part of an all-day Zombie-thon celebrating the full range of zombie movies from a newly re-mastered HD version of director George Romero’s seminal cult classic Night of the Living Dead, with a special introduction by Max Brooks, to the world television premiere of this summer’s blockbuster addition to the zombie movie cannon, World War Z starring Brad Pitt.

Here’s a schedule for the Zombie-thon, or more importantly, where Doc of the Dead sits on that schedule:

6:00am – Zombies of Mass Destruction
7:35am – Night of the Comet
9:15am – White Zombie
10:30am – House of the Dead 2
12:10pm – Zombies of Mass Destruction
1:45pm – Night of the Comet
3:25pm – White Zombie
4:35pm – House of the Dead 2
6:15pm – Night of the Living Dead w/Introduction by Max Brooks
8:00pm – Doc of the Dead (World TV Premiere)
9:30pm – World War Z (World TV Premiere)
11:30pm – Night of the Living Dead w/Introduction by Max Brooks
1:15am – Nightmare City
2:45am – Poultrygeist: Night of the Chicken Dead
4:30am – Zombie Lake

Sounds like a great day, doesn’t it? As Jonathan revealed in the announcement last month, he “wrote and directed the ‘Geekscape segments’ in the movie, which you’ll know ‘em when you see ‘em, and my Geekscape business partner Georg Kallert produced them. Who knows, you might even see a Geekscape character or two pop up in the film!”

Take another look at the trailer below, and let us know if you’re excited to see it. International distribution plans are still in the works, but we’ll be sure to let you know those details as soon as we can.

http://youtu.be/gZHLS2PwMKs

A packed episode! In the first half hour, we have the cast of the hilarious ‘Bitter Party of Five’! If you haven’t watched an episode yet, go to Blip.tv and check it out. They are amazing! Mary Birdsong, Greg Cromer, Tricia O’Kelley and Romy Rosemont talk failed pilots, the ups and down of being a Hollywood actor and spider impregnation… don’t worry… it makes perfect sense!

bitter-party-of-5

Then, in the second half of the show, ‘Zero Charisma’ directors Katie Graham and Andrew Matthews drop by with star Sam Eidson to talk role playing games, finally having the movie released and the sincerity of being a geek! I would say that’s a pretty action packed episode right there!

‘Zero Charisma’ finally comes to VOD this coming Tuesday!

Briefly: Big Ass Spider is now just a few weeks away from VOD (and theatres), and Snowfort Pictures has just debuted a new trailer for the anticipated monster flick.

It looks hilarious, it looks creepy, it looks cheesy as hell, and it stars Greg Grunberg. It doesn’t get much better than that, does it? Take a look at the trailer below, and let us know if you’ll be watching Big Ass Spider when it releases on October 18th!

The unlikely heroic duo of a blue-collar exterminator (Greg Grunberg) and Latino security guard (Lombardo Boyar) must save the day when a giant spider escapes from a military lab and rampages the city of Los Angeles.

Briefly: Zero Charisma has to be my most anticipated film for the remainder of 2013, and this trailer is absolutely wonderful.

Following the poster release earlier this week, Nerdist today debuted a phenomenal new trailer for the comedy. Zero Charisma premiered at this year’s SXSW, and has been garnering universal acclaim ever since. Our very own Jonathan London even said that “Zero Charisma is one of the best Geek culture films of all time.” Yep, it’s that good (check out his full review here).

Sadly, I still haven’t had an opportunity to see the film. That’s all set to change next month however, as Zero Charisma is scheduled to hit VOD and iTunes on October 8th, before beginning its theatrical run on October 11th. I can’t freaking wait.

Take a look at the new trailer below, and let us know just how much you want to see the film!

As the strict Game Master of a fantasy role-playing game, Scott (Sam Eidson) leads his friends in a weekly quest through mysterious lands from the safety of his grandmother’s kitchen. But his mastery of his own domain starts to slip—along with everything else in his life—when neo-nerd hipster Miles (Garrett Graham) joins the game, winning over the group with his confident charm and dethroning Scott with an unexpected coup. Caught in delusions of grandeur, Scott must roll the dice and risk everything to expose Miles as the fraud he believes him to be. A darkly comedic fable of epic proportions, Zero Charisma is an ode to nerds from every realm.

Briefly: Preceding a brand new trailer that’s set to be released on Monday, Nerdist today debuted a phenomenal new poster for Zero Charisma.

Zero Charisma premiered at this year’s SXSW, and has been garnering universal acclaim ever since. Our very own Jonathan London even said that “Zero Charisma is one of the best Geek culture films of all time.” Yep, it’s that good (check out his full review here).

Sadly, I still haven’t had an opportunity to see the film. That’s all set to change next month however, as Zero Charisma is scheduled to hit VOD and iTunes on October 8th, before beginning its theatrical run on October 11th. I can’t freaking wait.

For now, take a look at the new poster below. We’ll be sure to share the new trailer when it’s released on Monday, and be sure to watch for more Zero Charisma in the coming weeks!

ZEROCHARISMA_27x40_FINISH_final_halfsize

Last month we got our first look at Joss Whedon’s Much Ado About Nothing via the films official trailer. A few days later, the movie premiered at 2013’s SXSW festival to largely positive reviews (read ours here). With the movie getting a wide release this June, LionsGate has released an official theatrical poster for the anticipated project.

Based on the play by William Shakespeare, Joss Whedon’s adaptation is most intriguing not only for the names attached, but the contemporary look and feel of the film. Check out the poster below, and let us know what you think! Much Ado About Nothing hits theatres on June 7th.

MuchAdo

Leonato (Clark Gregg), the governor of Messina, is visited by his friend Don Pedro (Reed Diamond) who is returning from a victorious campaign against his rebellious brother Don John (Sean Maher). Accompanying Don Pedro are two of his officers: Benedick (Alexis Denisof) and Claudio (Fran Kranz). While in Messina, Claudio falls for Leonato’s daughter Hero (Jillian Morgese), while Benedick verbally spars with Beatrice (Amy Acker), the governor’s niece. The budding love between Claudio and Hero prompts Don Pedro to arrange with Leonato for a marriage.In the days leading up to the ceremony, Don Pedro, with the help of Leonato, Claudio and Hero, attempts to sport with Benedick and Beatrice in an effort to trick the two into falling in love. Meanwhile, the villainous Don John, with the help of his allies: Conrade (Riki Lindhome) and Borachio (Spencer Treat Clark), plots against the happy couple, using his own form of trickery to try to destroy the marriage before it begins. A series of comic and tragic events continue to keep the two couples from truly finding happiness, but then again perhaps love may prevail.

Source: EW

The wide release of Fede Alvarez’ anticipated horror remake Evil Dead is just around the corner. The film premiered just a few weeks back at SXSW 2013, and while Evil Dead has been mostly revered (check out Jonathan’s review here), it also holds its fair share of contrasting opinions (check out a second opinion from Brent Moore here).

Via World Star Hip Hop, today saw a new red band clip released for the film. It’s bloody, gory, and not for the faint of heart, but if you’re looking forward to the film, you’re going to love it.

Watch the clip below, and let us know what you think! Grossed out? Don’t say I didn’t warn you! Evil Dead hits theatres on April 5th.

 

In the much anticipated remake of the 1981 cult-hit horror film, five twenty-something friends become holed up in a remote cabin. When they discover a Book of the Dead, they unwittingly summon up dormant demons living in the nearby woods, which possess the youngsters in succession until only one is left intact to fight for survival.

If you weren’t in attendance at this year’s SXSW (check out our two contrasting reviews here and here), you haven’t yet seen Evil Dead. To make the wait for the film’s release just a little bit sweeter, Sony has just released both eight new images from the film, AND over 20 minutes of behind the scenes footage.

 

Check everything out below, and let us know what you think! Evil Dead hits theatres on April 5th. Excited?

 

EvilDead1 EvilDead2 EvilDead3 EvilDead4 EvilDead5 EvilDead6 EvilDead7 EvilDead8

 

UPDATE: The behind-the-scenes footage has been taken down, so here’s five minutes of B-Roll! There are probably some light spoilers in here, you’ve been warned!

 

 

In the much anticipated remake of the 1981 cult-hit horror film, five twenty-something friends become holed up in a remote cabin.  When they discover a Book of the Dead, they unwittingly summon up dormant demons living in the nearby woods, which possess the youngsters in succession until only one is left intact to fight for survival.