Tag: comedy

  • 2018: Meme, Rubber Ducky, and It’s Normal

    2018: Meme, Rubber Ducky, and It’s Normal

    It has been a minute since I’ve updated this site. Between keeping Meme and 4MileCircus up to date I tend to forget to keep this one up. So, here is a quick look at my three projects for 2018. 

    Meme

    Meme is, of course, the biggest project on my plate for 2018 as it is my first feature. Post-production wrapped at the beginning of the year and in January we held a very successful cast & crew screening. This was then followed by the joys of the film festival submission process. As of the writing of this post Meme has been accepted to three festivals: The Underground FilmFest, The Art of Brooklyn Film Festival, and Cucalorus

    Meme has already screened at The Art of Brooklyn in June and they awarded the film Best Feature. It was a lovely festival and I tried to go to as many screenings that week as I was able to. The staff and volunteers were great. I’m looking forward to going back to it again, whether I’m screening or not, next year. 

    Meme will be screening on November 10th and 11th at Cucalorus in Wilmington, North Carolina. I’m currently preparing to head there for the long weekend. I’ve heard wonderful things about the festival and I’m excited to experience it for myself. 

    In addition to festivals Meme has also gotten a little bit of press. I did an interview with Spoiler Free Movie Sleuth, and then they had one of their writers review the film. It was a very positive review:

    “Meme masquerades as a common relationship drama, when in fact it presents a fascinating existential commentary that is perfectly tied up in a full circle approach”

    Tasha Danzig, Spoiler Free Movie Sleuth

    More news on Meme will be coming for 2019. In the meantime, here is the latest trailer: 

    Rubber Ducky

    Rubber Ducky is a short film I wrote and directed in 2017 during Meme post-production. I completed post-production for Rubber Ducky while waiting to hear back from festivals on Meme. I am currently submitting it to festivals. It had it’s premiere at the August screening of Congested Cat’s IndieWorks. Rubber Ducky is a fun odd little film I hope to share more widely soon. Here is the teaser for Rubber Ducky: 

    It’s Normal

    I started writing It’s Normal after the 2017 presidential inauguration. I shared the draft with Nicole Solomon, my business partner at 4MileCircus and she was very eager to make it. I worked with her on revising the script and she took on directing duties. The film is at its core about the normalization of fascism, but it uses vampires instead. We shot it in the spring of 2018 and finished a cut of the film just in time to premiere at the Ax Wound Film Festival November 10th. As I’ll be with Meme at Cucalorus in North Carolina, I won’t be at Ax Wound for the film’s premiere, but Nicole will be in attendance. I’m looking forward to hearing about the audience’s reaction to the film.

    Wide Poster for It’s Normal

    Nicole wrote a blog post about It’s Normal on the 4MileCircus blog.

    2019

    While 2018 isn’t over it is about the time to start working on 2019. There will be updated reels and more screenings and we’re looking forward to releasing all three of these films through platforms that will allow anyone and everyone to watch them. More updates to come. 

  • Beneath the Black Moon: A Film Within a Film

    Beneath the Black Moon title screenshot

    Beneath the Black Moon is our film-within-the-film for Meme. It’s not our main video in the film but it serves some important plot points. It was referenced in some earlier versions of the script and ultimately became a bigger part of the story as rewrites progressed. No scenes were explicitly referenced but the tone and style was. So, after we’d begun shooting Meme, I needed to write this project to shoot during the process of shooting Meme.

    As we were shooting Meme on no budget we needed to work around everyone’s schedules. That stretched production out a bit and by June we had only a day or two left of principal photography but availabilities put us on hiatus until August. So, I decided to pull together the shoot for Beneath the Black Moon. We shot with a different cast and crew but still a wonderful group to work with.

    For Beneath the Black Moon I tagged my friends Lisa Hammer and Levi Wilson, co-creators of the web series I’ve been producing Maybe Sunshine. I wanted them both to be on camera for this project. I also grabbed Jeanette Sears to shoot the project, who I work with sometimes as an instructor for the I Was There Film Workshops. Nicole Solomon, Art Director for Meme, joined to help me produce and do the practical special effects. The cast except for Lisa and Levi had to be newly recruited as I was using most of the actors I like to work with in the main storyline for Meme.

    Beneath the Black Moon is very different from Meme in that it is pretty much a parody. It’s purposely cheesy and hastily put together. The film is supposed to be a homage to low budget straight to VHS horror of the 80s and 90s. I think we pulled it off. I think we made something fun that people have appreciated over the last few months since we released it. It’s not a wink and a look how bad this is style parody. It’s earnest in its way. We’re not trying to draw attention to what’s bad or cheesy. None of the instruction I gave actors on set was about doing something for a joke about the film. It was all about playing the characters they were playing, who were all already pretty absurd from the start. I think that allowed us to have a lot of fun shooting and makes the project more fun to watch on its own.

    While you can watch Beneath the Black Moon now on YouTube not all of what you see is likely to make it into Meme.Beneath the Black Moon will show up on TV screens in Meme and certain scenes will be used to parallel the events of Meme and help make or contrast the point of those scenes. That’s what the film was primarily written for. How much will ultimately make it into Meme remains to be seen as we are still editing. I’m looking forward to seeing how much we keep and how much we cut and how effective it is as part of this feature. In the meantime, if you haven’t watched it again recently, take a look at Beneath the Black Moon again. Do you recognize the final scene from anywhere? It’s a recreation of the final scene from a classic mind-blowing film of the 1980s. How did we do in recreating it?

  • New Web Series: New York Filmmakers

    New Web Series: New York Filmmakers

    Today I launched the first two episodes of a new web series entitled New York Filmmakers. The series features interviews with New York-based filmmakers of various backgrounds and levels. We talk about them, their work, and New York. Many more coming soon but check out these episodes featuring animator and filmmaker Ed Mundy and writer/director Christina Raia.

    Official site for the show is NYFilm.Tumblr.com