Saturday Films and Sierra Spirit Award to The Groundlings: Mammoth Lakes Film Festival 2019 Day 4

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What’s a Saturday morning without cartoons? As Day 4 of the Mammoth Lakes Film Festival 2019 began — with sun instead of snow showers — a screening of animated kids shorts began the day.

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Narrated by the ever-irrepressible Flula Borg, the shorts included the hilariously sardonic Troll Bridge, an Australian short about an old Barbarian named Cohen and his friendly encounter with a troll he was planning to annihilate, and the rather surreal and beautiful Swiss short: Autour de l’Escalier,  depicting a mysterious and fantastical town in which images and events repeat. As it concluded, Borg drew laughs saying “That’s Pittsburgh.”

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Borg also offered his take on the Shleep which disappeared as a man drifted off to slumber, quizzically asking “Where did they all go?”

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After this delightful start to the morning, festival filmmakers and press attended a panel on distribution and publicity among other topics, featuring Shalinni Dore; Andrew Borden, Katie Walsh, Gus Krieger, Mia Galuppo, and Sean McDonnell.

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McDonnell, from releasing and production company A-24 explained the importance of making one’s work known on the festival circuit; Dore discussed the ways in which she can be attracted to providing press coverage for an unknown auteur, among the other topics discussed over mimosas, coffee, and quiche.

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Shorts Block 4 included a charming but dark stop-motion animation depicting love, binary code, and a dissolving world in 11010; and the haunting cosmic images of Eyes at the Specter Glass from filmmaker Mathew Wade. Wade notes “This started as a project to see how far I could push my computer’s ability…I just started building these scenes and movements, I then wrote the score that I matched to it without even seeing the visuals again. At first I thought maybe this would just be a gallery piece, but then film festivals gravitated toward it.” Wade’s abstract vision of what appears to the creation of a universe or a space travel dream defies easy categorization; Wade himself replied to a question asking what the short meant, “I make up a different story each time someone asks me that. I don’t want to ruin other people’s take on it.”

Gone is a heart-breaking take on Lysistrata,  a beautiful, funny, sad, and terrible response to women abandoning men and boys for 5 months and counting. We see a men’s support group of one counselor and three men, each with their issues; and we see one woman leaving, making a decision that tears at her heart as well as the viewer’s. A profound film from UK-based director Emma Sullivan.

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Lemons, from Simon Werdmuller Von Elgg, was the director’s response to stories he’d listened to about child abuse and sex abuse. The film depicts a man who may or may not be a missionary revisting a childhood nanny who’d abused him. As writer as well as director, Von Elgg notes “When I moved to Nashville, the culture struck me as potentially being ripe for this kind of story about subtext.” He’ll be working with his lead actress and his producer again on future projects, asserting “We’re a team now.” The film has a gothic, tension-filled pace and palette that evokes a sense of dread in the viewer, even before its intent is revealed.

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In Diva & Astro, director Angel Barroeta and his astonishingly skilled director of photography have created  a work that “is really different. We wanted to do a piece all in one day. We shot using a telephoto lens from different locations.” Seen from a distance, the piece follows the parallel paths of the two title characters in a riveting street drama whose style as well as virtually silent story is a richly involving 9 minutes.

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For director Ariel Gardner,  the funny/sad take on dating culture in Los Angeles, Molly’s Single, became an exercise in practicality. “I shot on mini-DV because I wanted to stand out by making it look as dirty as possible. And I know how to use auto exposure and auto focus, not sure I wanted to learn on an AK rig.” He wrote out beats but allowed the actors to fill in their own dialog as he crafted a semi-autobiographical piece about a bad break up. “It was kind of a cathartic experience which began with me watching Somewhere over the Rainbow in a film clip on my phone.”

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The narrative feature A Great Lamp from director Saad Qureshi and his highly collaborative cast including Max Wilde, who also provided scoring and animated elements, was a beautiful black and white piece about three lost souls:  Max, a good-hearted,  cross-dressing street kid posting flyers about his late grandmother throughout the town; Gene, a drop out from the world of insurance processing who is lying to his father about leaving his job; and Howie, who fears a recurring dream and hopes to see a rocket launch through binoculars. Set in the dark and often derelict looking streets of downtown Wilmington, N.C., the lushly filmed, moody piece has an interesting back story. “I was having a very rough time,” Qureshi reports, “so since my friends and I all love each other, we all quit are jobs to make the movie.” Cinematographer Donald Monroe laid out the film and locations daily, cast and crew while minimal, shared fun as well as filming a work which the director calls “really a combination of ideas from three different minds.” Monroe adds “With no crew I knew I had one light and black and white was easier for me to make a cohesive language.” Qureshi sums up the experience “It was the best moment of my life to see my friends together. Life can be a sad thing, but the best way to survive is to be with your friends.” The film, which premiered at Slamdance this year, will be screening at the Arclight Hollywood July 8th.

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An Evening with the Groundlings, the renowned comedy theater troupe and school based in LA, offered a short documentary on the history of the group and its alums; Groundling Cheri Oteri’s hilarious  short Turkey’s Done, and a second viewing of Groundlings’ member Ryan Gaul’s poignant and funny Jack.  Oteri’s short was a straight-up hilarious revenge comedy of a cheated-on Philly wife on Thanksgiving; Gaul’s – discussed at length in yesterday’s review segment – is a sweetly humorous tale of putting a beloved pet to sleep.

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What followed was a pure hour of delight, in which festival director Shira Dubrovner presented the group’s managing director, Heather de Michele with the Sierra Spirit Award.

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Dubrovner, Sweeney, Sterling, above

Dubrovner conducted an absorbing hour-long panel celebrating Groundlings members “for life” Julia Sweeney, Ryan Gaul, Jordan Black, Mindy Sterling, and Cheri Oteri discussed how many years of Groundlings classes they took; current projects; working in a male-dominated world on Saturday Night Live – where many Groundlings alums found new homes; and the differences between the Groundlings rigorous Sunday Show, which the “best of the best” participate in following class training, before graduating to the Saturday company.

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Oteri, Gaul, Black, above.

As Gaul says “We are like a weird gang. We’re addicted to improv, we love it.” Sterling seconded that assessment. “You do it for the love of it.”

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The group discussed everything from the non-pay of Groundlings actors and their labor-of-love experiences in the theater, to performing on SNL, developing their characters, and more.

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A highlight: Black and Gaul performed a short-form improv with an audience member: a father-daughter talk about car ownership, below.

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To catch any of these performers live at The Groundlings — still located on Melrose Ave. in West Hollywood after all these years – stop by regularly: almost everyone on stage still drops by to perform. Black runs a regular monthly show called The Black Version, which he described as “long form improv. Audience members suggest a movie, and my cast and I do our ‘black version’ whether it’s the Titanic or whatever is suggested.” Sweeney, who just jubilantly returned to showbiz after a 15-year hiatus raising her daughter, is back doing improv regularly on Tuesday and Wednesday nights. Gaul can also be seen performing in The Last OG on TBS weekly.

Full day, fun night – and more tomorrow.

  • Genie Davis; photos: Jack Burke

 

From East German Cartoons with Hilarious Narration to Honoring Melissa Leo: Mammoth Lakes Film Festival Day 4

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We started Day 4 of the Mammoth Lakes Film Festival with a charming collection of East German cartoons from Defa Studios – circa the 1960s through 1980s.  Interesting stop action animation came alive with an on-site narration and commentary by the hilarious Flula Borg.

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Borg’s voice-over not only translated but offered pithy commentary such as a repetitive musical jingle defined as “Kanye’s new single,” and the idea of the live narration as “very exciting, like a cold splash of Guinness to the Head.”

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A delightful and truly funny experience as well as an insightful look at these classic animated works made a great start to the morning; the audience, including a cadre of young viewers, was thrilled.

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Borg, who has several new film projects in the works can also be heard currently voicing characters on the Boss Baby series on Netflix.

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A morning producing panel offered insightful tips for filmmakers from a terrific panel that included Emmy-award winning producer Allison Amon; filmmaker and co-founder of Slamdance Film Festival Peter Baxter; Devin DiGonno, director of acquisitions at Lakeshore Entertainment; Academy Award winning producer Rachel Winter; and filmmaker David Zellner, whose film Damsel opened the fest Wednesday night.  A buffet brunch included mimosas, veggie quiche, and blueberry blintzes: like everything else about this event, it was both first rate and inclusive.

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Top tips included DiGonno asserting that “Filmmakers should not be afraid of hearing the word no. Establish people in your corner. If you’re passionate about what you do, people will come on board.”

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Winter said “You have to buy into your own brand. Stay committed, and when things go wrong, go forward.” Zellner noted “We made a feature, we thought that was it, no one saw it – we went back to making shorts, and now we have a feature. The point is that it’s a journey. Just keep going.”

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And talk about a journey, the doc White Tide took audiences on a terrific ride, the true story of contractor Rodney Hyden’s attempt at retrieving over $2 million worth of buried cocaine in Puerto Rico – based on a treasure story he’d heard, told by a neighbor in Archer, Fla. The film is as compelling and sleek as a narrative feature, but it’s all true.

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Director Theo Love has previously directed the narrative Little Hope Was Arson; a making-of documentary about that film led to his interest in non-fiction film-making. “All the people wanted to be in the movie,” Love said, explaining some of the rich interviews and reenactments in the film. “We sought out a true story and told it.” The events in the film transpired in 2012; Love, producer Bryan Storkel, and crew shot and edited from last September to February of this year; the film premiered at Tribeca Film Festival earlier this year, and had its west coast premiere at MLFF.  White Tide has received a distribution deal; look for it.

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We promised no spoilers, so you’ll have to see for yourself what a wild and wonderful ride this film is – which so far is one of our very favorites in the festival. A more extended review of our top picks will run on this space next week, expect White Tide to be one of these.

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Next up, a narrative feature from Norway, Vidar the Vampire. Both poignant, comic, and horrifying, this vampire is “pathetic,” as actor and co-producer Brigt Skrettingland explained of director Thomas Aske Berg’s project.  The film skewers the domination of organized religion, therapy, and the vampire genre itself. Skrettingland portrays a rather malevolent Jesus in the film, and related that he was brought on board because “Thomas said I looked 50% like Jesus and 50% like the devil.” The film took 7 years to complete, predicated on cast and crew schedules; it mutated from what was originally conceived to be a comic mockumentary about a vampire to something darker and sadder, but still laced with potent humor. Berg is also the star of the film, and Skrettingland said “He always wanted to play a vampire, but there are no such movies in Finland. So he wrote his own. It’s about loneliness and power and abuse and bullying,” he summed up.  Fresh and well-conceived, this is a vampire with a resounding bite. The  short accompanying this feature, Clean Blood, was a horror and religion laced riff on a “fight I had with my sister over who made the mashed potatoes,” director Jordan Michael explained.

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And of the red-washed ominous images, he said: “The aesthetic was old, disposable photos.”

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Academy award winning actress  – and icon – Melissa Leo was the recipient of the Mammoth Lake Film Festival’s Sierra Spirit Award this year. Following a screening of the gut-wrenching Frozen River,  the story of a mother trying to hold her family together, Native American tribal poverty, and human trafficking;  Leo sat on stage to discuss her work with MLFF founder and festival director Shira Dubrovner.

As Dubrovner said “Melissa Leo is unique in her ability to be her characters. She doesn’t enact the parts, she inhabits the people she portrays.” Leo related that her career has followed this trajectory: “The beginning is a lot like the middle and now —  I never pick and choose my roles. I take the work that is handed to me,” she said.

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Leo began her professional career with a year stint on ABC Daytime’s All My Children; receiving Oscar nominations and an Oscar win has made little difference to the actress.

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“The honor of winning an Oscar is unspeakable, the fact that my peers chose me.  Work-wise the only real difference is that there is an expectation now.” Leo stated that “It’s hard being a woman in film. There aren’t enough roles for women to being with … to take control of the industry we as women have to start by being nicer to each other.” Asked what kind of role she’s currently seeking out, she insisted “The next one.” Leo described the experience of working with first-time feature director Courtney Hunt on Frozen River as “brilliant.” Hunt, Leo, and film co-star Misty Upham had made a short together as a calling card to “entice people to produce the film” three years before the feature’s production began. The budget for the 2008 release – hard to believe with the incredible images on-screen- was just $250,000 and Leo received $100.00 per day for her work.  “What Courtney Hunt did with this movie was write two women incredible roles.” Leo said she felt very “moved” watching the film again herself for the first time in years. “Misty Upton is now deceased, and her death is a real Native American issue. Her body was found in a gully she’d fallen into weeks before; no one had devoted the resources to look for her. She was one of the finest actresses I’ve ever worked with.”

And last but not least, an after-party at Mammoth Lakes local hangout Rafters served up Blue Moon and Saint Archer brews as well as Black Box wine, and offered a chance to mingle with filmmakers and other fest attendees.

There’s one more day ahead: what are you doing with the last half of your Memorial Weekend?

  • Genie Davis; photos: Jack Burke 

 

 

 

 

 

Once in a Buddymoon: Hilarious and Fresh Comedy

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One of our favorite films at the Mammoth Lake Films Festival – and the audience award winner for best narrative – Buddymoon will be coming to theaters and digital media (iTunes, Amazon) July 1st. One of the freshest buddy comedies we’ve seen in years, this sweet tale of friendship and priorities unfolds in the nature of the Oregon woods.

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Above, Simmons with the film’s Audience Award trophy, Borg, and the author.

DiversionsLA had the chance to interview director Alex Simmons and co-star Flula Borg about the film, their friendship, and more.

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According to Simmons, the film came about because Simmons, Borg, and the film’s other lead, David Giuntoli, lived in LA as roommates a number of years back. “We always wanted to make a movie, but it seemed unrealistic. We had our lives and careers that got in the way, and Dave moved to Portland to work on Grimm. But magically, we all had three weeks free two years ago and we thought that if we didn’t make a movie in that time it wouldn’t ever happen.”

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Still, there were obstacles: “We had no script, no other talent, no money  – we just knew instinctively it wouldn’t happen if we waited, so we reverse engineered it. We had two months to prep, including story outlining,” Simmons relates, most of which fell on his shoulders.

Borg says “I was in New Orleans working on Pitch Perfect 2. All I can say is that Alex is the most talented juggler outside of Cirque de Soleil. He juggled all the balls with this film.”

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Juggler or not, other issues cropped up: Giuntoli’s shooting schedule changed, and Borg’s extended. They both suggested the film be postponed, but Simmons says “I was delusional enough to push everyone forward.”

With such a hectic pace, Borg notes “The night before we shot, we would write the scenes because we had so little time, the final script was really still overall an outline.”

“Editing saved us,” Simmons laughs.  “Basically,  we knew we had to shoot in Oregon because that’s where Dave was; we decided we should shoot outdoors, because we didn’t have time for complicated lighting set ups, so that piggy backed into our story about two friends hiking. It was very practical, and our creative limitations were a benefit, not a hindrance, in the end.”

“But we had a lot of boundaries to keep,” Borg adds.

“It was kind of like if had been making lasagna, and I discovered I only had a few veggies and a cheese I never ate before – with those limitations, you hope you might come up with something great anyway,” Simmons asserts.

Borg agrees. “Even if you had no pasta or stove, you still have to cook the lasagna and make it delicious.”

Simmons continues the analogy. “It was like a no-bake lasagna – you have to try a short cut, something new like that, in order to finish what you’re making.”

Shot on a miniscule budget – “Our budget was one lasagna versus 45 million lasagnas for a studio film,” says Borg – on a Canon C 500,  the film was self-funded through savings and credit cards.

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Above, film festival programmer Paul Sbrizzi, Simmons – with the film’s “Honey Buddies” T-shirt, and Borg. 

Although the film shoot was a brisk ten days, Simmons edited the project over a two year period.

“Editing the film myself was a great lesson. You see what you did wrong and what you did right. I literally cried at 4 a.m. up against a deadline, but it’s something you should do once, like running a marathon. People may ask you if you’ve run a marathon and then you can say you have. They usually don’t ask if you ran it twice – once is usually enough,”  Simmons says. “Editing was like that.”

“I should never run a marathon,” Borg adds.

When the editing was complete, the group’s expectations for the project were low.

“We were surprised and felt as if we have won four thousand consecutive jackpots when we were first accepted at Slamdance and then this sassy Mammoth Lakes Film Festival,” Borg laughs.

Simmons started a Facebook and Instagram page to support the film, which has now found distribution through MGM Orion and Gravitas.

“I was especially excited,” Borg reports. “I saw the Orion logo before so many of my favorite films, like Robocop. It’s like we had one nickle to bet in a casino and we won fifteen cheeseburgers and that lasagna, of course.”

While the rewards – and awards – the team are reaping are exciting, the trio’s friendship continues to be a driving force.

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“What I hope shows when you see the movie is that we are all best friends, and the friendship comes through. It’s hard to fake that. There’s an honesty in friendship, it’s not always the easiest thing. There are peaks and valleys.”

And what does the future hold?

“We’ve already shot another film, Johnny Fist,” Simmons explains. “It’s a documentary about Flula making a movie, a western called Johnny Fist, and trying to enter it in Sundance. We shot it between Los Angeles and Park City last year, and are in editing now. It’s more about the journey and the experience of making the film – it’s not a spoiler to say we did not get into Sundance.”

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The Buddymoon team is also pitching other shows, separately and together, and we have little doubt that whatever their next project, it’s going to delight.

Look for Buddymoon July 1st and see if you don’t agree.

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Above, Borg, Simmons, and award presenter, actor Robert Picardo 

  • Genie Davis; All Photos: Jack Burke