Saturday, March 25, 2006
Highlights from the screening by Christopher Folino
It was a great showing and we had a packed house, I got to the Fine Arts Theatre around 5PM and met Tito, our director of photography and executive producer so we could do a tech run with the theatre. Suddenly, I hear our main lead’s voice Kevin Kirkpatrick’s and I see him in the restaurant scene up on the big screen.
I looked over at Tito and just kind of smiled and soaked in the moment. It took twenty years to get here, sadly I had to be looking at Kevin Kirkpatrick, however, the moment wasn’t lost.
It just got better from there, the next thing the theatre did was place the words “Gamers” on the movie marquee and the movie posters on the front. I took pictures of it with my camera phone and then Kevin Sherwood arrived and it was nice to sit in an empty theatre with the three guys just chewing the fat and talking a little bit about how things would go.
I told Kevin I was going to make him stand-up and I would plea to all the talent agencies to take him on as a client. I kept my word on that bad boy.
From there it all happened pretty quickly, old friends, mentors, and co-workers all showed up. I’m talking old school friends from Interplay, Nativity School, Bishope Amat, KELM, and my real estate agent from Irvine Pat Roberson.
And some industry folks started coming in and then the actors arrived. John Heard came and he told me that this was his first time ever at a screening for a movie he’s been in.
My dad showed up with T-Shirts he had made for the night and he handed them out to some of the actors and crew. It was pretty damn cool, and I had my wife and daughter there and I sat next Virgil and Tess Thompson from Address One Post. The main actors Dave Hanson and Scott Allen Rinker brought a lot of friends and it was cool to see a very mixed audience.
My brother Michael flew in from Chicago and my brother Steven came with our good friend Jeff. However, we had a lot of folks I’d never seen or met before and that was cool, I didn’t want a totally friendly audience.
I spoke a little bit before the movie started and all I could remember was thinking “Man, this is a full house, and these suckers better laugh!”
The movie began and we had them laughing from start to finish. There was only one scene where it died and the next day I called the post house and had them remove it. It’s a flashbacks scene in Africa with some Pagan kid’s, we moved it to the end credits, because, it really killed the flow of the movie.
After the movie I had three distributors come up to me and talk about the film. They gave it a great review and I took their cards and we are sending them a screener copy to show their bosses and to get some offers. We are also sending out 30 DVD screener copies to various distributors who couldn’t make the screening.
I would guess in two weeks we will know exactly what will become of the movie and our goal is for theatrical distribution.
The day after the screening I woke up like I do every day and went to work.
It was cool with me, I got to make a movie and watch it with a real audience and we made them laugh. I’m not sure what’s going to happen next, however, I do believe the ride is just starting.
Tomorrow, I'll share some stories about my phone call with Harry Knowles from "Ain't it Cool News" and how we got a screener copy stolen of the movie. It was a strange 48 hours after the premiere.
posted @ 10:16 AM PDT [link] [Karma: 0 (+/-)]
Thursday, March 23, 2006
Reviews from the folks who attended the screening by Christopher Folino
Here now are some reviews from folks who attended Tuesday Night’s Screening of “Gamers”
Again thank you to all 400 or more of the folks that showed up, it was an incredible experience to watch the film with that large of a crowd.
Hi Chris,
I just want to say that you did a great job on the movie. I haven't laughed that hard because of a movie in a long time. It was funny all the way through and much improved from the version that you showed at Gen Con. The extra scenes were awesome. It's good enough to go out and compete with any comedy anywhere. I hope it gets distributed and makes $100 million. You Da Man!
Dr. Wolfgang Shane
Die Hard Gamer
Here now are some reviews from folks who attended Tuesday Night’s Screening of “Gamers”
Good Morning, Chris:
I trust you had a lousy night's sleep re-living every wonderful minute of the
Premiere. That should have kept you awake all night!
Here's my report: The movie was absolutely stunning. The theatre was a
house of belly laughs. I would guess that I am not alone in having seen the
movie twice, laughing even harder the second time than the first and leaving
with a "feelin' good" attitude. The production values were great; the dialogue
Phenomenal; and the acting superb. GAMERS is a winner. It is more than
a cult movie. It is a movie people can escape into. We know that laughter
has a healing impact on the body via the release of endorphins. GAMERS
will drive the endorphin supply nuts!
I don't know how you go about distributing GAMERS, but it will be a huge
money-maker. It's a word-of-mouth picture that people will come back to
for a second - even third - look. Advertising it will enhance its ticket sales
Enormously. The college education of your kids is guaranteed (please send
them to USC).
I am proud to have been a part of it!
Gratzi.
Max
Old Italian #2
Chris, thanks for letting me share in your victory (and for the credit - last time I saw myself on the silver screen was as an extra in the 70s John Ritter bomb Americathon.)
You have succeeded in what 95% of those folks in the theater would have liked to do. I tell you, you have a real gift for pulling people together for projects. I'm exceedingly proud of you buddy.
Plus, and I told him last night, tell Kevin that he executed his character perfectly. He's like a cross between Buster Keaton and Dennis Hopper (Blue Velvet meets The General.) The 'dick' studio song was so funny it hurt. It was his straight faced-clueless ness that made it.
Jim Clouet
The man who taught me how to make movies
I woke up this morning laughing my ass off
about the cable access scenes, the cucumber and the freak clowns.
It is now official Chris Folino is a bonified HOLLYWOOD DIRECTOR...
Congratulations on a Kick Ass film.
You inspire us all!
Your Digital Brother
Virgil P. Thompson
Address One
c/o Raleigh Studios
Dear Chris & Rose -
What a thrill to see you last night and be part of that fabulous event.
We so enjoyed the film - are so very impressed with your accomplishments.
Congratulations!
The film is a smash!
Best,
Virgil, Tess & Virgil II
Chris,
Thank you for inviting me to your movie. I was laughing through the whole thing. I'm not bullshitting you when I say that was the best independent film I've seen. Take care, I hope to visit with you before I leave. Talk to you soon.
Shawn Goodrich
Genius at Motion Graphics
Chris:
By now you certainly know how fabulous your movie is!
Thank you for coaxing me to be a small part of it. I'm proud to be included in the "cast."
The new version of the movie is just start to stop laughs. It is a movie that I feel the need to see again because I know I missed something just laughing hard at so many of the scenes. There are many parts and lines that stick in my head, which also makes it a "cult" classic. "I live with my parents temporarily, just until they die." Where did that come from? I think it is what made Tom finally move out! Thanks!!
I cannot express the pride I felt tonight, watching the film and remembering all that transpired on 8mm and then video almost 20 years ago! I was so pleased to see Rose and feel her total support for you and your dream! Lance Amater Rocked! Gamers Rocks even more... and to a wider audience!
Dr. Merritt Hemenway
Educator & my vote for the next President of the United States
posted @ 08:42 AM PDT [link] [Karma: 7 (+/-)]
Wednesday, March 22, 2006
Review of "Gamers" by Chris Ryall at www.comics101.com
Chris Ryall is the creator of Kevin Smith's www.moviepoopshoot.com and has now started his own web site www.comics101.com.
We sent him a screener copy and this is his review.
It's pretty damn sweet and this guy isn't easy on anybody!
http://www.comics101.com/?page=OHC
If your too lazy to click, here is the sweet review, but go visit his site, it's awesome.
Rolling the Dice: Chris Ryall gives a new mockumentary a 64-sided roll and comes away impressed by the powers of GAMERS: THE MOVIE.
I’m not now, nor have I ever been, a gamer. I don’t say this like there’s anything wrong with it, and as a comics junkie, I’m certainly not trying to place myself higher in the “geek hierarchy.” I just wanted to make it clear that while I never delved into role-playing games myself, I did enjoy like crazy a new movie, GAMERS, that does for gamers what TREKKIES did for STAR TREK fans.
GAMERS is a movie done in mockumentary style, and I can tell you that the people who say this style of filmmaking is overused are just citing bad examples. As evidenced by Christopher Guest movies, THE OFFICE, even Werner Herzog’s INCIDENT AT LOCH NESS flick and others, the format can be a lot of fun to watch if well-executed. Which GAMERS is.
Part of me was afraid to watch—an indie film about guys playing a D&D-type game had a lot of potential to be an ill-conceived and low-tech fan-film. And since the guys who made the movie have been so great to deal with, even offering to bring a print of the movie down to San Diego to screen it for me personally, I really didn’t want to find fault with it on that alone. But ultimately, it wouldn’t do them any good to lie and say I liked the film if I didn’t… so it was a pleasant revelation to find that the movie is shot professionally, well-constructed, and very entertaining and funny.
Of all the various mockumentary-style movies mentioned above, I’d say GAMERS shares the most in common with THIS IS SPINAL TAP. It’s not at that level, but in tone, crudeness and general deconstructing of guys who devote a bit too much of their life to their hobby, it has a similar feel. And I’d imagine that it could well become a beloved cult film, and not only for the gamers set.
GAMERS is the story of a group of friends who’ve been playing “DND” (here, Demons, Nymphs, and Dragons, but we all know what the game’s name is a thinly veiled reference to) for over two decades. The same game. For 23 years. Through the changes in their life (which really aren’t many, other than their physical age), the group has kept playing. In fact, the focus of the movie is a filmed look at their upcoming “record-breaking weekend,” wherein they will officially beat the previous record for playing a single game of DND (held by some Iowa corn farmers). But if, like me, you weren’t a D&D player, you don’t have to worry about the gaming scenes overtaking the movie. The game is the focus, but of course the real story of the movie is a deeper look at the lives of the guys playing the game. And not in one of those “DND is a metaphor for life” kind of ways; rather, the people and their foibles (of which there are many) are what the film really explores to funny effect. The game is just the glue that binds this group of misfits together.
You also don’t need to be a gamer (or a comic fan, or geek of other renown) to relate to the characters, although it does help. I could definitely recognize the various character types, and while some are on the surface your stereotypical geek (30 years old and living at home with the parents), the movie doesn’t relentlessly mock them or find cheap laughs at their expense. Well, some, but then again, some are needed. And some of their parents don’t come off any better (which makes me, a new parent, sit up and pay attention so I don’t do to my kid what these parents do to theirs). For these guys, amidst all the personal turmoil, problems at home, dead-end lives and worthless (yet very funny) jobs, DND is the glue that binds them together and gives their lives meaning. You hope that by the end, more meaning will be found, but either way, watching this all play out was a lot of fun.
The main gamers in the movie are unknowns, but they acquit themselves admirably. There’s not much stilted, new-to-acting awkwardness, and they all come off as believably pathetic. They also come off as believable friends who’ve interacted for the past two decades. To give the movie a bit more acting credibility, some well-known guest-stars show up, including John Heard and Beverly D’Angelo, along with Kelly Le Brock.
Like I said, the movie is funnier than it had any right to be. It didn’t just go for the easy gamer-related jokes, although the guys do take their deserved licks (anyone who lets their hobby supercede all other areas of their life for two decades needs to have a few jokes flung their way). The guys are immersed in their gamer lifestyle the same way other pop culture fans start to live and breathe their passions. So in this case, instead of a guy trying to pick up a girl by saying “How YOU doin’?” or some such, one of them tries “Hey, baby, do you have a comeliness of 18?” on a girl (to similar effect).
Oh, and there’s an angry midget, a good KKK joke, a flashback to some old McDonald’s try-out commercials, and other such potentially offensive and definitely funny moments that the movie doesn’t shy away from. Some films throw dumb jokes out there and move quickly past them, almost apologizing for including them. GAMERS, instead, owns the jokes and holds them a few seconds longer than you’d think they would/should… which only makes them funnier.
Don’t get me wrong—some of the scenes are absurd, and probably only in the movie because of their absurdity and not because they necessarily advance the plot, but this isn’t a plot-driven movie. It’s a good, funny character-driven movie.
I’ve rambled on a lot without really saying anything too specific about the movie itself (repeating jokes here doesn’t do anything but cheapen them for the people who haven’t but will see the movie), but I would like to specifically mention the soundtrack. A good thing about an indie film like this, other than the freedom and enthusiasm the filmmakers have for the project, is the freedom to use music that fits a scene, rather than a song that sells a soundtrack. The songs are recognizable (even the Cure is on there) and fit the moments in the movie when they’re used—they service the plot, or emphasize a joke, rather than beating you over the head with a band that some studio head heard the kids today would like.
The movie had its official premiere last night in Beverly Hills. Hopefully that means it’s one step closer to finding a distributor and working its way out into the world. The movie definitely has a comeliness of 18.
Check out the official GAMERS site
here.
posted @ 07:18 AM PDT [link] [Karma: 6 (+/-)]
Tuesday, March 21, 2006
Coolest Email and Review -From Derek Kagemann
Chris,
Yessum, and they fit it into the article: http://www.idsnews.com/news/story.php?id=34667&adid=arts. You'll see it isn't all inclusive (very short word count). I'd really wanted to fit in more about your background but that'll have to be for the next one. I know I made one mistake in it, but I think you'll dig the title (I'm not obsessed with Kevin Smith). They cut out the "fucks" from the article. Hope you like it.
Also, Jennifer and I watched the movie last night. Here's my opinion: Not many movies are consistently funny. Most tend to have these hillarious spikes interspaced with substantial lulls. What impressed me about Gamers the most was that it IS consistently funny. It also stuck with us. Even though I'd seen the Wake Up Dick part a good twenty times already from the website, it was still funny when viewed in context and we had it stuck in our heads all night and into today. We keep remembering scenes and laughing about them throughout the day. I judge the quality of a director by how much time it takes me to digest it, and it is apparent that you are a very good director. Parts keep popping to mind, I think them over, and laugh at them again and again. Plus, we want to watch the movie again, which speaks strongly for its merits. Knowing the story behind many of the parts was also great - make sure to have that as a feature on the DVD.
We wish that some of our favorite parts were a little longer - then again, that longing to see more may well be the strongest appeal. Johnny and his parrot are fucking hillarious. The meat video and the zooming was some funny ass stuff. Great job! You really have your shit together. There is no way that this won't find a distributor. Don't be discouraged if they don't go for it right away, because it's likely to stick with them and intrigue them as time passes. There's enough in the first fifteen minutes to keep them in their seats. So, a very heartfelt congratulations on a job well done and best of luck tonight (your congratulatory gift will be in the mail today, since we'd forgotten to bring it along to send last week). This movie truly rocks, and I can't wait to do a screening here!
Derek
posted @ 02:07 PM PDT [link] [Karma: 2 (+/-)]
Tonight, Tonight by Christopher Folino
One and a half hours away from a haircut
Six hours away from sound check
Seven and a half hours away from the screening.
And Twenty years of having one large ass monkey on my back finally removed.
It's all good in the hood.
I think we're down to 20 tickets, email info@gamers-themovie.com
posted @ 12:01 PM PDT [link] [Karma: 5 (+/-)]
Sunday, March 19, 2006
Sunday Night Blog by Christopher Folino
Two nights away from the premiere, the big show.
What’s going to happen?
I know about 80 people, however, the other 200 folks coming, I’ve never met and I have no history with. And with over 20 distributors screening the movie, we will able to predict that night the fate of the movie.
I’d prefer 412 strangers in attendance to give distributors an honest screening of how the movie will play to an audience and as a first time filmmaker I want to know that night.
Ain't one for waiting, kind of waited 20 years, so excuse me if I want to open up Christmas gift early.
How much is at stake here?
Only four people have watched this cut of the film and we’ve opted on rolling the dice to see how it all plays out without any smaller screenings prior.
And the press reviews aren’t coming until after the premiere, so we are flying blind.
So how will the screening go?
When I close my eyes all I can hear are the words “Lord Vader Rise.”
posted @ 10:13 PM PDT [link] [Karma: 4 (+/-)]
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