Gabba Gabba Do: Four View Solo Shows

Gabba Gallery's "Four View" solo exhibitions - All photos: Jack Burke
Gabba Gallery’s “Four View” solo exhibitions – All photos: Jack Burke

Saturday night marked the opening of another stand-out show at The Gabba Gallery, “Four View,” four separate solo shows, one roof. The Westlake district gallery is fast becoming a hot spot for cutting edge art with a strong emphasis on street talent. Curated by Jason Ostro, artists Michael Christy, Phobik, Jeffrey Gillette, and CANTSTOPGOODBOY were the four views on display.  Music: DJ Ale of dublab.

gabba dj

Michael Christy’s exhibition, “Genre Paintings” takes viewers into a surreal world, vivid colors pulling into scenes whose depth have a 3D feel. The worlds depicted may be imaginary, but the lifeforms present are real and grounded. The juxtaposition of heightened reality and different time-frames and realms keeps eyes riveted to the details on every inch of canvas.

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Michael Christy

“I work in multiple directions at the same time, revealing the past, present, future. I like this type of color palette. When I switched from oil to acrylic paints, I wanted an artificial looking landscape that was still reflective of the world. I created a sense of happiness and hope in the colors and smiling figures, even though the landscapes are strange.”

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Michael Christy, right

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“The images can be construed as people ignoring crises of bio-diversity, or that overall, perhaps we are happy in the greater scheme of things, despite the crises,” Christy explains. “I use a figurative mythology that’s very allegorical, even though it suggests specific scenes.” His illustration is a kind of visual poetry.

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Jeffrey Gillette

Jeffrey Gilette

Jeffrey Gillette, one of Banksy’s DISMALAND artists, also depicts another world: this one featuring detailed slums and iconic ruins, both as paintings and sculpted forms. “Dread” is an exhibition intertwining these intense visions of loss with pop culture icons from Goofy to the Minions. This isn’t your four-year-old’s cartoon world.

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“I travel to India every year, the houses here are based on what I observe there. I also lived in Nepal which is a strong influence. My wife said the work would be too oppressive, harsh, too real – without an avenue for access for the viewer. That’s where the iconic figures like Mickey, and other characters come in,” Gillette says.

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Phobik and his alternative universe.

Phobik

Phobik has painted a mind bending, comic-book-centric exhibition of pieces centered around The Phobik God. Titled “Figments and Particles,” the dimensions he depicts are not of this planet – at least not yet.

“Each piece is a part of a story I’m trying to tell in my own comic book that I’m creating. From murals to canvases, each piece tells a story like a panel in a comic book,” Phobik relates. “My own icon is a monocle, representing thoughts, different dimensions or portals between dimensions, and it appears repeatedly in the works.”

CANTSTOPGOODBOY
CANTSTOPGOODBOY

CANTSTOPGOODBOY presents “realfake: UNKNOWN” a world of superheroes, All-American icons, and repeated images that pulse with intensity. “Overall this room, this show, is designed in museum-style, with minimal pieces. Jason (Jason Ostro, curator) and I collaborated on redoing the room with new lights, paint, and floor.” The artist described several of the pieces included in the show.

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The striking piece “Color into Thin Air: Inside Out” is an example of one of the artist’s repeated images. 60 x 17 here, there is a more massive version of the image in the painting at the San Francisco museum Mu Mu.  “While the images are similar – I repeat images a lot – each one has unique attributes,” he says. “I repeat images throughout my work, but with slight variations of color or layers.”

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CANTSTOPGOODBOY’s color pallet is vivid. “The colors are inspired by the Malibu mountains outside my studio. They’re the colors of nature and flowers.”

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“Realfake is the name of my design studio. Here I’m illustrating it in neon.”

Missed the opening? Catch this exhibition through October 24th. The Gabba Gallery is located at 3126 Beverly Blvd LA, CA 90057

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  • Genie Davis, all photos:  Jack Burke

UCB Theater Goes Film

Cast of A Better You
Cast of A Better You – All Photos: Jack Burke

Brian Huskey star/co-writer "A Better You" - Photo - Jack Burke

Brian Huskey star/co-writer “A Better You”

Sunday night at the new UCB Sunset theater in Los Angeles, the comedy wasn’t on stage, as it usually is – it was on screen. And in the red carpet line and at the after-party. The occasion: the premiere of “A Better You,” directed by UCB co-founder Matt Walsh, co-written by Walsh and star Brian Huskey. A full review is also up on this blog: bottom line, yes, it was  hilarious. How could it not be, with a cast that included Andy Daly (Review), Joe Lo Truglio (Brooklyn Nine Nine), Erin Hayes (Children’s Hospital), Morgan Walsh (Hotwives of Orlando) — plus the improv-sketch-comedy scripting UCB has long championed. Co-producer Anthony D’Alessandro kept the press line and interviews moving, aptly describing the film as “A comedy about alternative therapy, Matt Walsh’s second directorial effort. He’s like Altman, he puts a cast together fast, no waiting around, says everyone let’s show up, and shoots it in a week.” The film may well have viewers laughing longer than it took to film the project.

The stars weigh in on the film, film-making and life in LA.

Director, co-writer, and co-star - and UCB co-founder, Matt Walsh
Director, co-writer, and co-star – and UCB co-founder, Matt Walsh

Matt Walsh

“I hope people laugh and enjoy it,” Walsh said simply of the film, which opens Friday on VOD and in Los Angeles at the Laemmle Music Hall.

Inspiration? “I live in Los Angeles, but I grew up in Chicago, where if there’s something troubling you, you see the psychiatrist or the doctor. Here you might see your trainer or your acupuncturist. There’s a whole list of choices,” he notes. “I was a psych major in college which was also a factor. Brian and I created the character of Dr. Ron – a hypnotherapist with a self-published book and a mom and pop business. We spent a lot of time researching alternative therapy in Los Angeles.”

Casting? “Pretty much everyone from Brian to Horatio Sanz, we’ve all been friends for years. Seth Morris, Mo Gaffney – she’s the godmother to two of my children. I was kind of like The Godfather. I told people to do this movie or else, and they complied. So that’s how we got our cast together. Brian and I wrote the project with him in most of the scenes, so he could make a lot of the improv choices, and really keep the film together. Once we got on set, we’d rehearse the instructions and improvised story, and then we’d film.”

Sum up the story? “It’s a simple story of a man whose life has collapsed, trying to save himself.”

A new project in the works? “Maybe my third movie will be about that guy in Colorado whose cattle were grazing on federal land.” Walsh is also working on Veep, and the new Ghostbusters film, but is planning to get to work on another script next year.

Andy Daly - Dr. Ron's nemesis neighbor
Andy Daly – Dr. Ron’s nemesis neighbor

Andy Daly

Daly plays the role of hilariously obnoxious neighbor Joel in the film, and is the star and creator of Comedy Central’s Review.

How was making A Better You? “Matt Walsh honestly creates an incredible environment to improvise.  I think the movie reflects that comfort level and spirit.”

What’s new for Review? “All of Season Two has aired on Comedy Central now, and we’re waiting to hear if we get to make a third season. I couldn’t be more proud of it, whatever happens.”

Brian Huskey, star and co-writer
Brian Huskey, star and co-writer

Brian Huskey

The co-writer/star of A Better You carries the film, it’s tough to take your eyes off of him as he pushes the limits of comedy to the edge of tragedy and back, giving us loneliness, heartbreak, and inept, self-involved wannabe-guru all at once.

How did the project get started? “Well, Matt had an idea about a guru, who thinks he can heal others but can’t heal himself. The film grew out of that idea, with my character, Dr. Ron completely in denial.”

Shoot length? “12 days. Which was long enough in the wig.” Huskey’s character wears an obvious toupee through most of the film. “Wearing the wig was hot and it was sweaty. It more or less gave me a different dimension for the character though; costuming is really about changing yourself.”

Personal epiphany? “I was going through a divorce myself when we shot the film, so it was a pretty meta experience. As I was doing it, seeing this guy not dealing with himself, it was intense. But it was good for me to have that personal access to the character, even if it wasn’t entirely easy. During the time we were shooting,  my daughter would stay with my ex while I was working. I really got into a frame of mind where it was all about the work. You focus on that. ”

Working with Matt Walsh? “Matt did an amazing job, editor Jay Daniels did, too. He did a great job of restructuring and balancing the film, giving it the right rhythm.”

What do you think happened to Dr. Ron after the movie ended? “After the film ended, he went out with his (former patient) Lindsey for awhile, then she got more confident, and the relationship changed, and Dr. Ron had to change himself again. His changing on screen – that’s not the last time he has to go through that kind of alteration.”

Morgan Walsh, Dr. Ron's wife, Margo
Morgan Walsh, Dr. Ron’s wife, Margo

Morgan Walsh

Walsh plays Dr. Ron’s restless and ready-to-move-on wife, Margo. She’s essentially the straight-man here, leading Dr. Ron, their marriage counselor, and their children, onto more serious and stable territory.

How was it working with your husband as director? “We’re all friends, we’re all team players. It was a small budget film, with a big, fun, creative environment. I’ve been acting a long time, and I don’t always feel super comfortable in a role. Matt has such a gift, he’s a great director and great at improv. I knew Matt and the cast would take care of me in the more difficult scenes.”

What happened to Margo after the film ended? “I think she was very happy moving on with her life and her career. I think she was very happy as a single mom, sharing co-parenting with Dr. Ron but living her own life. Maybe she writes her own self-help book and goes on a book tour.”

Also at the premiere:

Kirk Roos

Kirk Roos, Producer (High Road, The Brass Teapot)

Tony Hale

Tony Hale (Veep)

Gary Cole

Gary Cole (Veep) “I had to come see this venture. I haven’t been to a crazy therapist. I can only imagine.”

David Wain

David Wain (Wanderlust)

Mo Gaffney - the verbost patient, and Walsh family friend
Mo Gaffney – the verbose patient, and Walsh family friend

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Mo Gaffney (Dr. Ron’s unstoppable-talker patient, Veep) goofing around with Morgan Walsh

Kevin Weisman
Kevin Weisman (Scorpion)

Nate Corddry

Nate Corddry (Ghostbusters)

Owen Burke

Owen Burke (Handyman Hugo’s friend)

Riki Lindholme

Riki Lindhome  (Obnoxious neighbor Joel’s wife, Another Period)

Therapist to the therapist
Therapist to the therapist

Joe Lo Truglio  (Dr. Ron and wife’s marriage counselor/psych, Brooklyn Nine Nine)

Seth Morris
Seth Morris (Children’s Hospital, Kroll Show)

Nick Kroll

Nick Kroll (Stuttering patient, Kroll Show, The League)

Paul Scheer

Paul Scheer (The League)

Jason Mantzoukas

Jason Mantzoukas (The League)

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After Party - Photos: Jack Burke
After Party – Photos: Jack Burke

You won’t get to try the delicious macaroni and cheese on hand at the after-party, but you should see the film anyway. And laugh.

  • Genie Davis; ALL PHOTOS copyright Jack Burke

Film Review: Matt Walsh and Brian Huskey Craft “A Better You”

 

Brian Huskey, star of "A Better You" - Photo - Jack Burke
Brian Huskey, star and co-writer of A Better You – Photo – Jack Burke

Releasing Friday, October 9th, this hilarious, low-budget indie relies on the talents of many Upright Citizen Brigade comedy theater alums and their friends. With a stellar cast that includes star and co-writer Huskey, co-writer and director Walsh, and Walsh’s wife, Morgan Walsh, the film is a fresh look at the often-crazy reliance on self-help gurus that is part of the Los Angeles scene. Supporting cast includes Review‘s Andy Daly and Brooklyn Nine Nine’s Joe Lo Truglio, and SNL‘s Horatio Sands, but it’s Huskey’s movie and he runs with it.

Matt Walsh - director/co-writer of A Better You and wife/co-star Morgan Walsh - Photo - Jack Burke
Matt Walsh – director/co-writer of A Better You and wife/co-star Morgan Walsh – Photo – Jack Burke

 

Dr. Ron Knight (Huskey, Veep, Neighbors, Another Period) portrays a Los Angeles hypnotherapist with an self-published self-help book, a bevy of suggestible clients, and even more ads on bus stop benches. Maybe he’s onto something with his fast-track hypnosis and his call to patients that they should “wake up, wake up, wake up,” but maybe he’s not. He’s definitely clueless when it comes to his own marriage and relationships.

In the throes of a divorce from wife Margo (Morgan Walsh, Hot Wives of Orlando), Huskey reaches out to his handyman (Sanz), his patients – including pretty young Lindsay (Erinn Hayes, Children’s Hospital), and even his hilariously anal, pompous, and generally obnoxious neighbor (Daly).

Along with Dr. Ron’s misguided, sometimes poignant misadventures, the film pokes genial fun at the uniquely Los Angeles alternative help craze – it’s not just the M.D. or the shrink you can turn to when you have gurus and personal trainers peddling their quick fixes as well.

A Better You is director/co-writer Walsh’s second feature, and along with Huskey, the pair created the frame work for the fully improvised script, following the precepts of sketch comedy that UCB has made famous in LA and NYC. Funded on Indiegogo, this low budget fun-fest among talented friends will keep you laughing in the theater or on VOD; theatrical release in Los Angeles will be at Laemmle’s Music Hall in Beverly Hills.

  • Genie Davis; All photos copyright Jack Burke

Dances with Films: The Ultimate Indie Film Festival

Festival Screen with TCL

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Dances with Films dances with pure delight. If you have to pick one film festival to attend, pick this one. Indie films you won’t see anywhere else, some as perfectly honed and crafted as anything you’d see in the multi-plex – except more interesting; others showing a more home-made vibe. But every one worthy of watching.

Festival Poster Autographs

I’m a veteran of Sundance, the Los Angeles Film Festival, and AFI – and I had no idea what to expect out of Dances with Films. What I got was an eclectic, lovingly curated explosion of cinematic story-telling from shorts to features, screened over eleven days. Founded eighteen years ago by filmmakers Leslee Scallon and Michael Trent, the festival more than lives up to its goals of being a prime source of great talent.

Held late May through early June at the TCL Chinese Theaters in Hollywood, there were a lot of standouts in the 2015 selections.

Cast and Crew of Echo Lake
Cast and Crew of Echo Lake

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Echo Lake, written and directed by Jody McVeigh-Schultz, is a poignant, taut coming-of-age-late and getting in touch with your demons story about a 30-year-old functioning alcoholic, an inherited cabin, and a lost – and found – dog. It’s a vibrant, heart-filling film with a lot of laughs in with the darkness.

Strangers love in Fools
Strangers love in Fools

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Benjamin Meyer’s Fools is a chance meeting love story set in Chicago about two strangers who randomly come together, live together, and fall in love. Witty, sharp, both romantic and decidedly unromantic, this is a relationship story that takes you along for the ride.

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In Stereo is all about relationships - and relationships in New York
In Stereo is all about relationships – and relationships in New York

Mel Rodriguez III is the force behind In Stereo, the tale of David and Brenda, who may or may not be perfect for each other, even after they rekindle a past romance. This very New York tale dissects the human condition and gets under your skin the way the main characters get under each others.

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Superior acting makes the film Superior a mighty coming-of-age treat
Superior acting makes the film Superior a mighty coming-of-age treat

Edd Benda’s 1969-set Superior takes a 1,300 mile bike ride around Lake Superior, two best friends, and the looming shadow of the Vietnam War, and blends them seamlessly into a moving comedy drama about hard choices and true friendship.

Lots of laughs and screams in Bad Exorcist
Lots of laughs and screams in Bad Exorcist

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Bad Exorcists, filmmaker Kyle Steinbach’s horror comedy about awkward teens making a horror movie and igniting their lead actress’ own possession, is fresh, funny, and scary, too.

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Powerful film-making for Wildlike
Powerful film-making for Wildlike

If I had to pick one film as a favorite, it would be the astonishing Wildlike, an unlikely and breathtaking drama about a troubled teen’s escape from an abusive uncle, her survival in the Alaskan wilderness, and her moving friendship with a recent widower. Frank Hall Green has written and directed a simply stunning film – see it in theaters and VOD this October. Star Ella Purnell is poised to be a breakout.

Barn Wedding was a do-it-yourself affair
Barn Wedding was a do-it-yourself affair

Also viewed: infidelity and a home-made, Pinterest-style wedding cross paths in the comedy-drama Barn Wedding; an estranged brother and sister must solve their deceased father’s annual treasure hunt to receive their inheritance in The Last Treasure HuntLola’s Last Letter is a compelling micro-budgeted tale of an ex-con’s confessions on camera; Kathleen Behun’s 21 Days is the length of a nail-biting, scream-inducing paranormal challenge to stay closed in a haunted house.

Micro-budget meets multi-talents in Lola's Last Letter
Micro-budget meets multi-talents in Lola’s Last Letter

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Janet Jackson lends her support to writer/director Kathleen Behun's chilling supernatural 21 Days
La Toya Jackson lends her support to writer/director Kathleen Behun’s chilling supernatural 21 Days
Festival Shorts captivated
Festival Shorts captivated

The shorts program was equally compelling, with standouts including Madam Black, the surprisingly sweet and funny tale of a dead cat and true love; The Girl in the Green Dress, a Stepford-wives-esque tale of repressed feminism and sexual liberation; the buzzy Shevenge, directed by Buffy the Vampire Slayer‘s Amber Bensen, a short but hilarious comedy about women’s revenge on their men; and Selling Rosario, detailing the hard choices made by a family of migrant workers and their faith in a brighter future for their daughter.

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Look for these films and these filmmakers; and get ready to dance with films yourself in 2016.

  • Genie Davis; all photos Jack Burke (copyright Jack Burke)