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MADELEINE ZABEL – Short Film Review – We Are Movie Geeks

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MADELEINE ZABEL – Short Film Review

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MADELEINE ZABEL is the story of an infamous, Lindsay Lohan-type young celebrity named Maddy Z, and a stressed out reporter named Elliot Snow (Chris Henry Coffey) attempting to capture her in a controversial light. Both characters are far from happy. As we can imagine, Maddy Z (Jenna D’Angelo) is on the verge of a nervous breakdown, juggling too many “projects” from her modeling and music to fashion. Elliot is worn out but determined, potentially risking his own relationship during this brief 10-minute phone interview with Maddy Z.

Written, directed, produced and edited by Chris Shimojima, DP and editor of the acclaimed web-series Downsized, MADELEINE ZABEL tears away the makeup laden exterior of a fictional pop star and exposes the fragile, broken humanity that lies beneath. Jenna D’Angelo portrays the questionably talented, yet equally popular and criticized Maddy Z with a convincing range of emotions. She hides her true feelings until the end, when Elliot finally pulls the to the surface, practically sucker punching her with his questions as she sucker punched a paparazzi.

In the process of Elliot cracking Maddy Z, the two somehow reach a moment when they connect, inadvertently meeting on a path, headed in opposite directions, but ultimately benefit each other in unexpected ways. Coffey depicts the desperate reporter accurately, subtly conveying the gradual transition of his focus away from his own troubles to the troubles Maddy Z has finally come to confess to him on the phone, all while Maddy Z’s publicist Kelly Walters (Janet Laverty) attempts to control the spiraling situation with a military precision.

Cory Dross provides a flashy, glamorous sense of vision as the director of photography. MADELEINE ZABEL begins as a broadcast of a gossip/news style show airs a story about the her violent outburst against the paparazzi, then settles into the more somber isolation of Maddy Z in her luxurious hotel room, with sterile white walls and her publicist barking orders, but insisting she’s her friend and only has her best interests at heart. Elliot’s turn of the camera, however, tends to be more spontaneous, his perspective is more frantic, his world more chaotic.

The score, ranging from a techno-club infused opening to a more percussion-influenced dramatic undertone, comes from composer Thomas Vanoosting, who provided music for the PBS production Lincoln: Prelude to The Presidency. The music serves as an intricate underlay, helping to build the suspense of the phone interview, as Elliot’s questioning unravels into one strategically placed bombshell after another.

MADELEINE ZABEL is a powerfully energetic, neurotic tale of contemporary fame. The film tackles both sides of the monstrous pursuit of fame, the star and the star reporter, revealing that neither is far removed from the other. In the end, it’s all about what how to balance the persons of fame with the real person smothered beneath the artificiality.

Watch MADELEINE ZABEL by visiting the website, and “Like” the film on Facebook.

Hopeless film enthusiast; reborn comic book geek; artist; collector; cookie connoisseur; curious to no end