We Are Movie Geeks All things movies… as noted by geeks.

November 11, 2011

Shorts Programs – SLIFF Review

Review by Wyatt Weed, Pirate Pictures

Once again, the St. Louis International Film Festival is fast approaching. Primarily sponsored by Stella Artois and now in its 20th year, the fest has really established itself as one of the best around. It will hit multiple venues around the city beginning November 10th and continue through November 20th.

This is a call, a challenge to the local filmmakers out there: Get up, put on your shoes, and go see some of these films. You owe it to your fellow filmmakers and yourself as well, because the work is amazing.

As one of the volunteers involved in assembling the shorts programs, I have to tell you, the shorts I have seen thus far are nothing less than spectacular. This past summer’s Showcase of local talent featured some of the most technically proficient pieces I have ever seen, and this years’ SLIFF is following suit – technology is getting better all the time, and that technology is being utilized by filmmakers all around the world.

Pixar-level quality is evident in a number of computer animated pieces. “Mac N’ Cheese” and “Alex and the Ghosts” are in the same class as “Cars” and “Monster House”. For all of its technical virtuosity, “A Morning Stroll” is also one of the most hilariously graphic shorts you will ever see as a plucky little chicken goes nose to nose with a rapidly deteriorating zombie. Wackiness ensues.

Similarly, “Enrique Wrecks the World”, a more traditionally animated piece, begins sweetly enough and then spirals into lunacy. If you like “Happy Tree Friends” or “Llamas with Hats”, this piece will slay you.

The best of the animated bunch might be “The Origin of Creatures”, a striking post-apocalyptic piece that defies my ability to figure out how the filmmakers accomplished this – I believe it is part miniature and part computer animation, but it is unlike anything I have ever seen.

Of the live-action shorts, they vary from the dramatic to the comedic to the outrageous, as usual, but the level of production quality has never been greater. “Dolls Factory” is a fascinating piece that is part Metropolis and part Jean-Pierre Jeunet. It is also, in my opinion, photographically perfect. “Ex Sex” is as sexually graphic a piece as I have seen, but still manages to be tasteful and heartbreaking.

“Recess” and “The Extraordinary Life of Rocky” are both beautiful to look at, but feature two very different and darkly humorous takes on childhood. You will never look at the game of “duck-duck-goose” – or remote controlled helicopters – in the same way ever again. The absolutely ridiculous but no less funny “Red Moon” reminded me of “The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou”, complete with stylized effects and sets.

Star power also runs strong in this year’s shorts. Michael Biehn of “The Terminator” stars in “From Darkness”, a creepy thriller that has a strong “X-Files” vibe. “The Third Rule” features Jason Biggs of “American Pie” and Joel Moore from “Avatar”. Scott Thompson from “The Kids in the Hall” stars in two shorts, and even plays his own mother.

In fact, there is so much star power this year that two entire shorts programs (Stars 1 & 2) are dedicated to name actors and feature the likes of Gérard Depardieu, Jeremy Davies, Rita Wilson, Anna Paquin, Jason Ritter, John Hurt, Wes Bentley, Selma Blair, J.K. Simmons, Sasha Grey, John Hurt, Brendan Gleeson, Tom Hardy, and Julia Stiles. Even the great Sir Anthony Hopkins makes an uncredited appearance – but I won’t tell you which short he appears in…

Rounding out the amazing assortment of shorts is a selection of science fiction pieces, and once again, they benefit greatly from advances in digital production and effects. Three of them – “Protoparticles”, “Cognite”, and “Yuri Lennon’s Landing on Alpha 46” – all feature lead actors in spacesuits who have very different adventures. “Yuri Lennon” plays its first few minutes from one amazing point of view as an astronaut enters the atmosphere of an alien planet, while “Cognite” has only one line of dialogue in an otherwise completely visual piece. “Gear School – Plug and Play” is the best live-action interpretation of Japanese Anime ever filmed. You will believe attractive teenagers in skin-tight suits can fly.

I have only nicked the surface of the approximately 400 films playing over the 10 days of the fest, so please take a few moments and go to www.cinemastlouis.org, familiarize yourself with the theaters, download the schedule, AND GO SEE SOME FILMS!! To be a filmmaker is to be familiar with both the technology and the techniques out there, so get out of your comfort zone and go see something new. I promise you will be challenged to make your next film be better than the last after seeing what the rest of the world is doing.

November 29, 2010

SHADOWLAND On DVD

Winner of “Best Feature Film” at the Fright Night Film Festival, Best Actress (Caitlin McIntosh) at both Freakshow Horror Film Festival and St. Louis Filmmakers Showcase, Best Director at Yellow Fever International Film Festival and many other awards, SHADOWLAND will have it’s official North American DVD release on November 30, 2010. Directed by Wyatt Weed and produced by Gayle Gallagher the vampire feature film was made right here in St. Louis.

Here’s an exclusive “Behind the Scenes” featurette about the making of SHADOWLAND. In it Weed, describes and shows how he assembled the deleted opening scene of the cathedral.

The DVD is chocked full of many cool extras. For all you vampire film lovers, this one is a definite must-add to your collection.  It ranks right up there with the classic Hammer films! Here’s hoping we’ll see more from producer Gayle Gallagher and director Wyatt Weed. We Are Movie Geeks would love to see a SHADOWLAND 2 in the future.

Here’s a few of the special features on the dvd:

  • “Beneath The Soil”: a behind-the scenes featurette at the making of SHADOWLAND. You’ll see and hear from the filmmakers and actors of the film.
  • “Low-Tech and Hands-On”: this in-depth, visual effects is a ‘How-to’ primer for filmmakers
  • Deleted Scenes: included is the original opening to SHADOWLAND
  • Audio Commentary: a great addition and a big positive by the filmmakers.

Of special note is the “Beneath The Soil” Featurette. There’s a ton of interesting details on the local principal photography, how they cast the actors and special makeup applications. I especially appreciated how Weed addresses the MPAA’s ‘R’ rating of SHADOWLAND and his thoughts on moving forward without re-editing his film to PG-13. Another example of the care taken by the filmmakers on their vampire film.

Order your copy of SHADOWLAND by clicking on any of these links below:

Amazon
Barnes and Noble
Borders
Wal-Mart
Target
Book-A-Million
Family Video

Synopsis:

An old church in a modern North American city is undergoing a renovation. Construction equipment and piles of debris cover the grounds. A deep pit has been dug for new sewer pipes.

Night falls. A woman crawls from the pit. She is weak and covered with mud, her face beaten, her throat cut. She is unable to speak, remember who she is, or how she got there. This is Laura.

Hungry, thirsty, she ventures out into the city, stealing food and warm clothes to survive. As she wanders the streets, she begins to see things that jar her memory: a picture on a wall, a historical marker, a map. Slowly, she starts to put the pieces together – the Old River Front, a house and family, a lover and a jealous suitor. She embarks on a trek across the city, trying to blend in and adjust to a modern world she has never seen before.

Julian, a mysterious young man employed by the church, is sent out to find her. He seems to know more about her than she does, tracking her, quickly deducing that she is headed home, to the place where she used to live – more than a hundred years ago.

Is Laura reincarnated? Resurrected and risen from the grave? Or is she just the unfortunate victim of a horrible crime, buried in the mud and left for dead? Is Julian really trying to help her, as he claims, or is he part of a conspiracy, a plot to kill her? Soon Laura is in a race for her life, trying to reach her home and her memories before Julian, the police, and the church can find her.

Check out our rave review of the film here. Visit the SHADOWLAND’s new official site here, on Facebook here, and on Twitter here.

The film is rated R for some bloody violence.

August 18, 2010

WAMG Exclusive: New SHADOWLAND Poster and More News!

Very nice! Saint Louis’ own SHADOWLAND, directed by Wyatt Weed, has a wicked awesome new poster… just in time for the film’s appearance at this year’s Chicago Comic Con Wizard World Convention, which runs August 19-22 at the Donald E. Stephens Convention Center (Rosemont). SHADOWLAND will be playing on Saturday night at 8pm CST at the Convention Center. Director Wyatt Weed — as well as stars Caitlin McIntosh, Jason Contini, and Carlos Antonio León — will be in attendance on Saturday.

Synopsis:

An old church in a modern North American city is undergoing a renovation. Construction equipment and piles of debris cover the grounds. A deep pit has been dug for new sewer pipes.

Night falls. A woman crawls from the pit. She is weak and covered with mud, her face beaten, her throat cut. She is unable to speak, remember who she is, or how she got there. This is Laura.

Hungry, thirsty, she ventures out into the city, stealing food and warm clothes to survive. As she wanders the streets, she begins to see things that jar her memory: a picture on a wall, a historical marker, a map. Slowly, she starts to put the pieces together – the Old River Front, a house and family, a lover and a jealous suitor. She embarks on a trek across the city, trying to blend in and adjust to a modern world she has never seen before.

Julian, a mysterious young man employed by the church, is sent out to find her. He seems to know more about her than she does, tracking her, quickly deducing that she is headed home, to the place where she used to live – more than a hundred years ago.

Is Laura reincarnated? Resurrected and risen from the grave? Or is she just the unfortunate victim of a horrible crime, buried in the mud and left for dead? Is Julian really trying to help her, as he claims, or is he part of a conspiracy, a plot to kill her? Soon Laura is in a race for her life, trying to reach her home and her memories before Julian, the police, and the church can find her.

SHADOWLAND is a thrilling throwback to the classic vampire lore, with an original story and incredible special effects. This independent phenom has been rocking the house across the world at film festivals, so don’t miss this opportunity to see the film and meet the cast and director in Chicago!

July 9, 2009

WAMG Exclusive: New Poster Art for ‘Shadowland’

Shadowland-poster-600

Back in November of 2008, I saw a film called ‘Shadowland’ at the Saint Louis International Film Festival (SLIFF). ‘Shadowland’ is a fresh take on the classic vampire story, written and directed by Wyatt Weed and starring Caitlin McIntosh and Jason Contini.

The cool thing about this poster is that it highlights the romantic element of the film as well as the more traditional Gothic influence on the vampire story. ‘Shadowland’ will be playing at the Tivoli Theatre during the Saint Louis Showcase series from July 24 through July 31, 2009.

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