Sunday, October 18, 2009

If you have experienced a stroke or know someone who has, here’s a must see new film.

9000 Needles, an award winning, new film from Bigfoot Entertainment, One In A Row Films and co-executive producers Stephen Nemeth and John Cusack, recountsthe story of stroke survivor Devin Dearth and what for many is a somewhat unconventional road to recovery.   The film premiered two weeks ago at the Louisville International Film Festival, where it was runner up in the prestigious Audience Award category.   It premiered last week in Los Angeles and appears Sunday, October 17 at The Other Venice Film Festival in Venice, CA.   You can view the trailer through its Facebook fan page at: http://tinyurl.com/yl7zo5s

Stroke affects more than 700,000 people in the US alone each year and is the leading cause of disability in the US.  Stroke recovery and rehab costs can exceed $100,000, so the course of treatment is often limited by health insurance coverage.  Like Devin, many are left to fend for themselves after being told benefits are exhausted or they have gained as much as they need to live somewhat independently for the remainder of their lives.  As Devin and his family learn, there are other options.
In concert with the producers, we can make the film available for private, corporate and community group screenings across the country.  For more information, contact the producers through their Facebook fan page or China Connection Global Healthcare.
Don’t miss this opportunity to share a new hope of recovery for those who can realize it.  Please share this with anyone you know who can benefit.


Source:
http://chinaglobalhealth.wordpress.com/

Friday, October 16, 2009

Your 100 Days Are Up Within the U.S. Health Care System! Former Mr. Kentucky, Devin Dearth takes on '9,000 Needles' in China.

9,000 Needles: Faced with the confines of the American health system, both financial and scope of care, a stroke victim and his family travel to China for an alternative approach to his rehabilitation. How far would you go for a fighting chance?

Listen in as LaFern Cusack speaks with Devin and Stacey Dearth along with the producers of the documentary 9,000 Needles, Doug Dearth and Doug Busby. Photo ID: Producer 9,000 Needles Doug Dearth; Former Mr. Kentucky Devin Dearth and Martial Artist Benny "The Jet" Urquidez.

"My sister-in-law opened a letter from the insurance company today. It appears they have denied her husband's $20,000.00 life-flight claim. Apparently he should have taken an ambulance instead of the helicopter to the Intensive Care Unit." Doug Dearth (read more..)






9,000 Needles:
Director: Doug Dearth
Co-Producers: Doug Dearth & Douglas Busby
Executive Producer: Stephen Nemeth






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LaFern Cusack currently produces and hosts 710 ESPN's Experience (Sun. 5a-6a) and Radio Disney AM1110 Playground (Sun 6:30a-7a). With these shows LaFern delivers an inspiring, dynamic and insightful experience to listeners. She brings her humor, warmth and talent for tackling topical community issues with her unique style connecting with every aspect of the show.
Email: LaFern.Cusack@espnradio.disney.com
Twitter: http://twitter.com/laferncusack


Source:
http://laferncusack.blogspot.com

Monday, October 5, 2009

Bigfoot Entertainment Fund Behind Indie Film "3 Needles"

All-Star Ensemble Drama to Premiere at Toronto Film Festival

LOS ANGELES, CA -- (MARKET WIRE) -- 08/30/05 -- Bigfoot Entertainment announces the world premiere of its debut feature film, "3 Needles," as a Special Presentation at the Toronto Film Festival. The film, which is already garnering interest from top distributors, stars Chloe Sevigny ("Broken Flowers," "Boys Don't Cry"), Lucy Liu ("Charlie's Angels," "Payback," "Ally McBeal"), Olympia Dukakis ("The Event," "The Pentagon Wars"), Sandra Oh ("Sideways," "Gray's Anatomy"), Shawn Ashmore ("X2: X-Men United," "The Underclassman"), and Stockard Channing ("The West Wing," "Le Divorce"). Directed by acclaimed independent filmmaker Thom Fitzgerald, "3 Needles" is the latest production to be funded by Bigfoot Partners, the investment wing of Bigfoot Entertainment, and covers multiple storylines about the ways people deal with the AIDS epidemic, the relationship between parent and child and the sacrifices they are willing to make for each other.

According to Fitzgerald, "The film is about transformation. Each character sacrifices one seemingly insignificant belief about themselves, only to feel their entire identity unravel. It also exemplifies the challenges of simple people trying to seek education from an indifferent regime."

A porn actor Denys (Shawn Ashmore) hides his illness so he will not lose his job while his mother (Stockard Channing) makes her own death pact with the disease in order to care for him. A nun in South Africa (Chloe Sevigny) negotiates a dark deal to save the lives of disease-stricken children in her mission. And in a Chinese village, Jin Ping (Lucy Liu) buys blood from farmers who use the money to improve their lives, unaware that she is spreading death.

Tom Harting served as Director of Photography, and was produced by Bryan Hofbauer. Michael Gleissner is Executive Producer.

This project is part of Bigfoot Entertainment's commitment to help fund independent film projects along with their collaboration with Filmmakers Alliance.

"Bigfoot is dedicated to the community of filmmakers who possess the vision and passion to create critically acclaimed independent films," explains CEO Kacy Andrews.

Following the Toronto world premiere, "3 Needles" was also chosen to open the 25th Atlantic Film Festival. Bigfoot's upcoming film, "The Curiosity of Chance," a teen comedy written and directed by Russell P. Marleau, has begun principal photography this month in Belgium. For more information on Bigfoot Entertainment, visit www.bigfootentertainment.com.



Source:
http://in.sys-con.com/node/124093

Thursday, October 1, 2009

Midnight Movie (2008) Movie Review


8 out of 10 Skulls
Written by: The Creature

Midnight Movie is very original film. A great plot, a small but great cast of characters(loved the biker, Harly), and a really cool iconic looking slasher.

The film is about a group of teenagers who attend a midnight horror film titled "The Dark Beneath" in a small dumpy little theature. What the teenagers don't know is that the director, and the main antagonist of the film, was a murderer who escaped from an institution five years ago and is still on the loose. After 15 minutes into the film, they see one of their friends murdered on screen. They think it's a prank, but soon find out it's not. They then realize that the star of the film has become reality, and soon each teenager, along with the teens in the horror movie, are being killed one by one. It's a struggle to survive.

I think of this film kind of like a supernatural slasher. Sounds interesting? It definitely is. Go buy this film, it's a really great, and fun ride.

Midnight Movie is brought to you by Bigfoot Entertainment (cool name huh?). Directed by Jack Messit on a budget of $1,000,000.

One more thing I want to comment on. The weapon that the slasher uses is very original. And very unique too. He uses a corkscrew like knife. He stabs it into his victim's and then pulls out a large chunk of flesh. Really cool.

So in conclusion, if you want to see a really cool underated bad ass horror film, watch Midnight Movie.


Midnight Movie Movie Details


67% Score
by Horror Fans Based on 10 Reviews & 41 Quick Votes


Source:
http://www.horror-movies.ca/

Monday, September 21, 2009

The Key to Midnight Movie’s Most Striking Images

A Director’s Storyboard Comparison

by Jack Messitt

http://www.moviemaker.com/ producing/article/jack_messitt_midnight_movie_storyboards_20090915/


When you are deep into editing a movie, you start to see all the shots you didn’t have time to get on set, as well as all the great ideas you now wish you had written into the script. Midnight Movie, my directorial debut, was no exception.

Midnight Movie follows the terror that emerges (literally) from the screen as The Dark Beneath, a fictitious film from the late ‘60s, is played at a midnight showing. Unknown to the audience, the film’s director, Ted Radford, has embedded his soul into the film—allowing the killer from the movie, armed with his signature spiral knife, to emerge from the screen and slay those in the audience.

The original Midnight Movie shooting schedule was for 20 days in May and June of 2007. With all the action sequences and effects we had planned, 20 days was not a lot of time. We really had to make the very most out of every day. And when we lost an actor halfway through production, we had to spend a day re-shooting scenes. So an already tight schedule was made even tighter. But we managed to get it done.

When we finally wrapped principal photography, I headed to the Philippines to start editing and, within a month, we had a pretty good cut of the movie.

In August, we had a test screening in Los Angeles to help gauge how the movie was playing to an audience. It was full of temp effects, score and sound. After the screening, we passed out questionnaires and asked for opinions about the movie. Even in its rough state, it went over pretty well, but the screening pointed out a few areas where we could have done better.

So I went home and watched the movie about a thousand more times, really nitpicking every last frame. It was during this Midnight Movie marathon that the genesis for additional shooting began. I started to watch the movie in a different way. Not only living with the footage we had, but dreaming of footage we had yet to shoot. It was liberating and I saw the possibility of smoothing some rough edges and amping up the tension level of the movie as a whole. But this feeling was short lived as our original budget was so slim and we had yet to get into the heaviest expense of post: The visual effects. My producers brought me back down to earth and said that it just wasn’t possible.

Not wanting to take “no” for an answer, I went back to the movie and devised a shot list that we could shoot in one day—and that would make a huge impact on the areas of the movie that were bothering me.

I storyboarded these new shots and, as a test, I roughly edited them into the movie to make sure they worked. Armed with this test and a will to get it done, I went back to the producers and begged them to find the money for one more day of shooting. Even though the test was severely handicapped by my bad drawings, it had just the impact I was hoping for.

WATCH VIDEO HERE

As you can see, I am a terrible artist and should probably apologize to Rebekah Brandes for her portrayal in these storyboards (really, she is so much better looking in real life!).

Much to their credit, the producers saw the benefits to what I wanted and they found the money—where, I don’t really know, but I wasn’t going to start asking.

While I wrote one completely new scene, the main portion of the additional day of shooting involved shots specifically designed to be seamlessly edited into already existing scenes.

1 - Bobby Walks To The House: This scene from The Dark Beneath (our movie within the movie) needed something more. It was the introduction to the mystery house and was falling a little flat. It needed a little something weird or creepy that we just didn’t have.

One of the producers suggested that I add Bobby finding a dead animal. I wasn’t buying the idea until I took that idea a level further and added a cow that had been gutted by Radford’s signature knife. I storyboarded a sequence that we could shoot without revisiting the actual house location and it worked pretty well.

We shot this sequence in a parking lot, dropping a load of dirt to mimic the dusty house in the middle of nowhere. And while the rotting cow remains, the signature knife wound proved to be too expensive and was dropped (much to my disappointment as that was the reason I ran with the idea in the first place). But the giant maggots (especially a suicidal one) made these shots pretty cool and added just that bit of weirdness we were missing.

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2 – Radford Sharpening His Knife: While probably the signature shots of the movie, these were actually pick-ups. The shooting script had included a great knife “introduction” in the scene where Bobby is killed. But due to some safety issues on set, I was not allowed to shoot them. So when I got to the editing room, this was an expected hole that I thought I would have to live with.

Once I started dreaming up new shots, this was a hole that I was really excited to fill and these storyboards were a lot of fun to come up with!

Because we had broken all the original knives by the end of principle photography, Lunar Effects made me two new signature knives. The first was another “hero knife”—this one for close-ups—and the second was designed specifically for the grinding effect.

Being an aluminum alloy, the hero knife did not send as many sparks during the grinding as we wanted. So the FX guys welded several magnesium plugs into the blade of the knife. When that plug hit the spinning grinder wheel, we had the effect we wanted.

Seeing those sparks fly really sold how sharp that knife was. And the shot of Radford’s eyes being lit up by the flying embers was just what I was looking for.

I devised several set-ups around Radford’s basement grinder. To really give the knife some edge, I originally planned for Radford to test his knife on a dog he had hanging in his workshop. It was going to be a gruesome introduction to the power of the knife.

But again, our budget became my enemy and the dog went away. Too expensive. But even without canine intestines, we were able to give the knife the hero introduction it deserved.

And more than that, I was able to intercut this footage to enhance several more scenes in the film: The Dark Beneath‘s introduction to the Killer became a lot more fun and upped the ante on Bobby’s walk through the mystery house. And Bridget’s walk through the basement at the end of the film was brought to a whole new tension level by intercutting that footage.

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3 – Bridget Alone: After Josh dies (sorry for the spoiler but… well everyone dies; it’s a slasher movie after all), the original script leapt to Bridget finding Timmy in the theater. While this felt right on paper, it seemed way too abrupt when watching the movie.

So I penned the scene where Bridget falls apart in a storage room while Radford stalks her in the hall. Inspired by the scene in The Silence of the Lambs where the FBI rushes Buffalo Bill’s house in Chicago, only to realize that they are not at the right house, this scene is a trick of editing meant to play with the audience’s expectations.

Through this scene, I was able to emotionally bridge the gap between Bridget’s loss of her boyfriend and her finding the courage to save her brother. Rebekah’s great performance really sells this transformation. And within this scene, I was able to give the audience a look at the mystical way Radford appears and disappears from our world—a much needed missing element to the film. Previous to this, it is only seen in a shadow just after Harley gets killed in the closet, and that just wasn’t enough.

The VFX featurette on our DVD shows some of our early “film burning” entrance/exit effects. While I loved this concept, we ultimately went something more effective for our budget (a recurring theme, isn’t it?).

For his entrance, Jan Leung, my effects wizard in Cebu, Philippines, came up with some great alternatives for us. When Radford enters our world, his broken skull mask appears and starts to drop to the floor, leaving our killer in it’s wake. For his exit, Radford turns into the black-and-white film version of himself and melts away. They weren’t our initial ideas, but adaptation to challenges is the key ingredient to making a movie.

Note: As you can see in these storyboards, when we actually shot this scene I reversed the screen direction (what was left in the storyboard, is now right), but everything else stayed pretty close to what I had planned.

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The additional day of shooting went really well—and really long: Somewhere around 15 hours. But it was worth it. The additional scenes we picked up made a huge difference to the film.

Looking back, I can’t imagine Midnight Movie without them…

Midnight Movie is now available on DVD (Peace Arch).
The Blu-Ray disc will be available on October 13.
For more information visit www.midnightmovie.com.




Source:
http://www.moviemaker.com