Tuesday, March 18, 2008

A Few Festival Acceptances


In the last few weeks Borderline has been accepted to the following Festivals...

Nashville International Film Festival
http://www.nashvillefilmfestival.org/

WorldFest Houston International Film Festival
http://www.worldfest.org/

Rochester/ High Falls International Film Festival
http://www.rochesterfilmfest.org/
http://www.highfallsfilmfestival.com

Monday, March 10, 2008

LA Screening


March 29th
2:15pm

Borderline will be screening at USC's First Look Film Festival - a medley of all the thesis and high end short films made in the last year. Click the link below for more information...

http://www.evite.com/pages/invite/viewInvite.jsp?inviteId=PFYFDDZNJFPPRHUMOCZD

Tuesday, March 04, 2008

Palm Beach International Film Festival




Borderline has been accepted into the Palm Beach International Film Festival!

Borderline to Air on TV!!!


Borderline has been selected along with 2 other shorts from USC to air on KCET periodically over the next 2 years. It will be a part of "Fine Cut: KCET's Festival of Student Film." It will begin to air in April.

Below is a description of the 2006 festival:

"Each year the many top notch films schools that populate the Los Angeles area book the Directors Guild of America Theatre on Sunset to showcase their students' thesis films to the industry at large. Now, thanks to "Fine Cut: KCET's Festival of Student Film," there's no need to drive to the DGA in order to check out the work of the latest diploma-clutching filmmakers. Every Thursday at 9:00 p.m. during the month of October, Southern California's esteemed PBS station is broadcasting an hour-long block of handpicked student films and then streaming them for the worldwide audience on its website.

Celebrating its tenth annual incarnation, "Fine Cut 2006" debuts seventeen films ranging from one to thirty minutes in length. The film schools made the initial recommendations (of over 200 films), with KCET responsible for the final selection. "KCET proudly continues its commitment to showcasing the region's best student films," proclaims the series executive producer, Bohdan Zachary, who predicts the October 2006 screenings will "have the largest audience ever.""

Monday, March 03, 2008

Post Durango Independent Film Festival Stress Syndrome

Pictures from the festival will come in a few days...

This past weekend, Borderline took my mom, my girlfriend Natalie, and myself to Durango, Colorado for the 9th annual Durango Independent Film Festival for it’s premier screening. I was so excited to go that even picking out the rental car was a thrill.

The audience LOVED Borderline. Lots of laughs and chuckles. I think people feel kind of creepy laughing at the Mother in Borderline. The first time it is revealed that the Mom is behind everything people don’t bust out laughing, it’s more of an, “oh my god, that’s messed up, what the hell is wrong with people, etc.” The biggest laugh of Borderline at both screenings was at the end of the film when Timothy innocently suggests of Chelsea’s dad “Maybe he can give you some therapy.” I never thought that that would get the biggest laugh. In all honesty, I wrote that last scene pretty quickly, I just needed to wrap everything up. You gotta love it.

Borderline screened with a feature called “The Passage.” The Passage was directed by the same guy who made “Alpha Dog” so there was a packed house at the first screening at 6pm on Saturday Night. Unfortunatly for me, The Passage was an INTENSE horror/ thriller and by the time the credits stopped rolling and the lights came back up, there were only about 8 people left in the theater for some Q&A on Borderline (No one was there to speak about The Passage”. Everyone wanted to get the hell out of there. The first thing I said before the brief Q&A began was “Thank you so much for staying. Listen, I wanna get out of this theater after that just as much as you do!”

Durango was extremely beautiful, and with temperatures at around 50 during the day we never worried about us LA people getting too cold. It was a really cute festival. I met the head of Features for the fest and she seemed interested in the feature I’m writing. She’ll be one of the first people I’ll be calling once I’m done.

This weekend really made me realize that my future is not in this short film. Sure it’s fun to go to festivals, but I can’t rely on Borderline to jump start my career. I have heard so many awesome stories of people getting agents, or people screening their films and getting approached to direct some feature. These, I’m guessing, are probable 1 in 1000 stories that are like miracles to filmmakers. I think I’m just like everyone who thought that it was going to happen to me.

If you ask my mom or my girlfriend, I was in kind of a bad mood all weekend. I think I now know why. I have a good amount of festivals I have left to submit to, but
It’s time to begin the end of Borderline’s chapter in my life. It’s time to look at what’s next….


(it’s a full length movie I’m writing that I want to direct in case you were curious)