Archive for September 4th, 2003

Support The Red Bank Film Festival!

September 4th @ 10:08 pm | No Comments » | Scooped by Brad & Chris

  • Sumbissions for this year’s festival are currently coming in from around the world. Genres will include narrative features and shorts, documentaries, animations, and experimental films. Their “Jersey Fresh” segment will feature the best of local filmmaking. The festival is organzied and run by the Freedom Film Society, a non-profit group founded to promote and support independent film and other media arts.
    This year, the festival has moved from our Vulgarthon-familiar digs the Clearview cinemas, into the larger Count Basie Theatre on 99 Monmouth Street, as well as sections of Asbury Park. It takes place from October 3rd to the 5th, a beautiful time of the year to visit Red Bank. The Count Basie is a beautiful, historic theater and seats 1400.

Kevin filmed a quick little commercial for this year’s festival, which we thought you’d all enjoy watching. Click the still photo of Kevin to check it out in Quicktime (MOV) format.
Visit the Red Bank International Film Festival website for all the information you could possibly need on the event.And get yourself some tickets!

O’Halloran LIVE In “The Good Daughter”…

September 4th @ 10:08 pm | No Comments » | Scooped by The New Jersey Reporter

  • The New Jersey reporter has informed us that fans will have another chance to catch the great Brian O’Halloran LIVE as he apperars in the drama “The Good Daughter”, starting in October, at the New Jersey Repertory Company. Here’s the full article:
LONG BRANCH – Brian O’Halloran (A.K.A. Dante) will be appearing live in the world premiere drama, “The Good Daughter”, at the New Jersey Repertory Company, 179 Broadway, Long Branch October 9 – November 16.

Poets and songwriters may well look upon years gone by or life on a farm as a simpler place and time where cares and worries are few. Such romantic notions bear little resemblance to the very realistic portrayal of life in the American Midwest conjured by D.W. Gregory’s epic drama, “The Good Daughter,” which begins performances at New Jersey Repertory Company on Oct. 9.
Here Gregory creates a simple, yet noble everyday hero who struggles against the changing times of pre-World War I America, the threatening ebb and flow of the Missouri River and the whims and passions of his three grown daughters.
A pious farmer, Ned Owen’s desires are few. His greatest wish is to care for his family the only way he knows how. Unfortunately, in the early decades of the 20th century, that meant finding each woman a suitable husband who could provide food and shelter, if not love.
But Owen has his work cut out for him as each of his daughters presents a unique challenge. His eldest, Cassie, is beautiful and rebellious. Esther is obedient, but having been born with a birth defect, not very marriageable, and then there is Rachel, the baby of the family, a curious young woman who looks at the world with wonder.
Owen is determined to marry Cassie to a neighboring farmer, Rudy Bird (played by Brian O’Halloran), but Cassie is not ready to commit to a marriage with a man she doesn’t love. Her wandering eye leads her to the town agitator, a man who wants to bring about change in a town steeped in tradition.
Add to this mix the impending war and the aftermath, and the unpredictable Missouri River, and you get an epic story of love, loyalty, defiance, and the choices that forever change a family’s destiny.
“The Good Daughter” previews at 2 and 8 p.m. on Oct. 9. The show continues through Nov. 16 with additional performances at 8 p.m. on Thursdays through Saturdays and 2 p.m. Sundays.
Preview tickets are $20; all other seats are $30. Discounts are available for students, seniors, and groups.
New Jersey Repertory Company, located at 179 Broadway in Long Branch, is completely wheelchair accessible and provides assistive listening devices and large-print programs on request. There is convenient, on-site, free parking and easy access from NJ Transit; for additional information, visit www.njrep.org or call the box office at 732-229-3166.
The New Jersey Repertory Company is a member of the New Jersey Theatre Alliance, the association of professional theaters of New Jersey, the Monmouth County Arts Council, the National New Play Network, the Long Branch Arts Council and Theatre Communications Group. This program is made possible in part by funds from the Geraldine R. Dodge Foundation, the New Jersey State Council on the Arts/Department of State, a Partner Agency of the National Endowment for the Arts, the Sunfield Foundation, the Gannett Foundation, and the Puffin Foundation.

We highly recommend everyone in the area grab a ticket and watch Brian work! With that long of a run, you have no excuse not to make it out to the show. Brian’s a great guy and we’re betting that he’ll be very accessible before or after the show if you’d like to say hello.

Jason Lee NewsBites™

September 4th @ 10:07 pm | No Comments » | Scooped by Crystal

  • We got a bunch of Lee news today, and since Lee’s such a great dude, we thought we’d share some of this stuff with you:
  • The Toronto Film Festival screens the film “I Love Your Work” at the following times:
    Fri. Sept 5, 6:30pm, Bader (450)
    Sat. Sept 6, 12:00pm, Elgin (1358)
    [Press/Industry Screening:] Fri. Sept 5, 9:15 am, Varsity 1 (204)
    Cyan Pictures is now looking for a distributor. Lee has a supporting role in the film, which is about a star who stalks his fan.
  • There’s at least 3 pictures of The Lee in the October ‘03 issue of Transworld Skateboarding Magazine (not to be confused with Skateboarder Magazine). This includes a small one of Lee and Chris Pastras at the DC Video premiere. Plus, a full page picture of Lee (at the DC premiere also) in an ad to subscribe to the magazine… “Jason Lee, skater/part-time thespian”.
  • And here’s an item that Lee fans might love to have as a fun conversation starts — A “Fletch Won” shirt (fan made) featuring LEE as Fletch! The image looks familiar, we may have run it here before.
  • From 411vm: “In 1991 the 80s skate boom had burst, the United States economy was in recession, and President Bush declared war on Iraq. Skateboarding was at a crossroads then, with fresh styles, new companies, and young pros pushing past the old brands and tired heroes. With the rest of the country languishing in a funk of war and recession, skateboarders were celebrating the transformation of their own little world. That transformation was documented in a video filmed and directed by a young photographer named Spike Jonze. Featuring Mark Gonzales, Jason Lee, Guy Mariano, and the rest of the Blind team, Video Days captured the unique talents of a seminal group of skaters at a critical time in the history of modern skateboarding. In its Summer 2003 issue, ON Video presents the story behind the Blind video, looking back at the project that defined street skating for an entire generation. Also in this issue, Ed Templeton takes his art and skating skills to Paris, the Bootleg team rolls through Europe, Kenny Reed checks in from Hungary and Vietnam, Tom Green and the Birdhouse team go to Hooters, and the ONtage declares an all-out Popwar with Chad Muska ON The Side.”
  • Palm Pictures is releasing a DVD entitled “The Work Of Director Spike Jonze”, which will include a 52 page booklet, seventeen music videos, commentaries, a few short films with Mark “The Gonz” Gonzales, and three documentaries (on the fictional Richard Koufay, rodeo riders, and Fatlip from the Pharcyde). We haven’t seen any mention if among those seventeen videos will be Sonic Youth’s “100%” featuring The Lee skateboarding, but it’s a safe bet to assume so. Best Buy says it’s release date is Oct. 28.
  • As it stands Lee’s still going to be in the film about the West Memphis 3, which is scheduled to start filming in the Fall.
  • Don’t forget that the Dreamcatcher DVD comes out on September 30th! VHS too, so rent it, or buy it. Lee’s really got a fun, but sadly small, part in the film. The DVD will include extras such as Alternate Endings and deleted scenes, which piques our interest. Let’s hope they put on that hilarous behind-the-scenes clip where Jason Lee tells us his character’s name. Still funny to this day.

View Askew NewsBites™

September 4th @ 10:07 pm | No Comments » | Scooped by Josh, Crawford Briggs, DarkHost

  • A small Clerks sighting happens in the last frame of a recent edition of the Cinerama web cartoon.
  • And finally today, definitely one of the more involved costumes spotted at DragonCon 2003 this year. Catch ya next time, folks!