This Weeks Reviews on Kevchino.com

This Weeks News on Kevchino.com

Showing posts with label Film. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Film. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 08, 2011

Brooklyn Director Christopher Arcella releases debut film to DVD

Independent Brooklyn director Christopher Arcella releases his film Giver Taker Heartbreaker, to DVD. This final version is 89 minutes long, quite a bit tighter than the original 116 minute cut. We attended the premiere in Brooklyn last year and loved the film. You can know pick up a copy for purchase via Amazon here.

Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Boardwalk Empire Finale Screening

Brooklyn Exposed & The Green Building are hosting a Boardwalk Empire Finale Screening! Throw on your prohibition era garb and get down and dirty with fellow Nucky lovers! Arrive at 7:30 for $4 drink specials, flapper dancers and photo op fun before the last episode of the season airs. The evening is also sponsored by the Park Slope vintage shop Odd Twin who will host a costume contest and are offering a 10% discount at the store with your ticket purchase. The event is at the lovely Park Slope space The Green Building which the following week will host two Jens Lekman shows. Visit here to get a ticket.

Sunday, May 09, 2010

Watch amazing Scott Walker doc on Sundance this Monday

Director, Stephen Kijak's amazing documentry Scott Walker: 30th Century Man, will premiere on US Cable TV on Sundance Channel this Monday. Film will start running on Monday, May 10 at 8pm. Check the website for times.

Monday, December 15, 2008

Flaming Lips Film X-Mas on Mars Free Tonight

The Flaming LIps movie Christmas on Mars will be shown for free at 7pm in Park Slope tonight at The Brooklyn Independent Cinema Series at Barbés
376 9th St (at 6th Ave) Park Slope, Brooklyn. For more info visit www.brooklynindependent.com


2008 - Christmas On Mars - Trailer from George Salisbury on Vimeo.

Scott Walker Film Finally Reaches the US


The Scott Walker film entitled Scott Walker: 30 Century Man directed by Stephen Kijak will finally see the light of day in US theatres. I believe the film will run in NYC, LA and SF from December 17th for limited engagements so please visit www.scottwalkerfilm.com/blog/ for more details on show times.

Thursday, July 03, 2008

Gonzo: The Life and Work of Dr. Hunter S. Thompson

Start your Forth of July with a bang and check out the documentary film Gonzo: The Life and Work of Dr. Hunter S. Thompson. The film features clips of never-before-seen or heard home movies, audiotapes, and passages from unpublished manuscripts of the great, late writer Hunter S. Thompson. Johnny Depp, Hunter's long time pal, who paid for the 2005 funeral in which Thompson's ashes were fired out of a cannon, narrates the film.

What would be more patriotic than learning a little more about this great American writer on Independence Day?

Monday, June 16, 2008

Croquet at the Club

Another great film by kevchino headquarters neighbor!

Monday, June 09, 2008

Choke film premiere at BAM Sundance in Brooklyn


Kevchino.com was recently invited to attend the sold-out premiere of actor-writer-director Clark Gregg’s film “Choke” a creative adaptation of Chuck Palahniuk’s novel about a sex addict’s search for love. The BAM (Brooklyn Academy of Music) showing was the first time the final director’s cut was screened, as Gregg has revised the film after showing at Sundance. He likened his experience of screening the movie at Sundance to being in the trenches of World War I, watching as other films that screened before his were mowed down by the critics and jury. The film deservedly won the Special Jury Prize for the ensemble cast and Fox Searchlight picked it up immediately. The experience was incredibly special for the actor turned writer-director as it had been a dream of his to return to Sundance since he had taken a short film to Park City fourteen years earlier and was struck by the energy and creativity of the festival.

I was impressed not only with the adaptation but with the poignant and comedic performances of the cast. Sam Rockwell’s gift in fusing comedy and drama in his roles was well suited to the character of Victor Mancini, while Anjelica Huston and Kelly Macdonald gave stunning performances as Ida Mancini and Paige Marshall. Gregg himself played a superb Lord High Charlie and Joel Grey was a welcome surprise as Phil.

As a semi-cultish devotee of Palahniuk’s writing, I was initially disappointed that the film’s ending was not true to the novel, but Gregg pointed out that Palahniuk had instructed him not to be too faithful to the original in his adaptation and the author had expressed his delight in the film’s new creative elements. “Choke” is a fine example of American “dramedy,” blending complex and emotionally intense drama with unexpected moments of absurd comedy. Thanks to the BAM and Sundance for bringing yet another fine program to audiences in Brooklyn. After the screening, the film’s director Clark Gregg took questions from the audience.

The Q & A transcript to follow was reconstructed from notes taken and are not necessarily verbatim.

Q: Why did you change the ending?

A: The book actually has a couple of endings, four endings actually, which works better in a book than a movie. I actually shot three endings. I had been working on this film for seven years. Adaptation is a tricky thing, especially given Palahniuk’s funny, brilliant satirical voice, I was tempted to just lift the whole thing and basically cut and paste my way into getting an easy adaptation credit. But then you have characters like Paige Marshall and you simply cannot believe that she’s from the future. I did try to preserve some of the lines from the book, like “ come on down, bring a rock” where in the book people do, and this is the way that all the people who have helped Mancini from choking all start talking and realize that their proudest moment was a lie and they naturally got a little pissed and there’s a passage where Denny is trying to hide him and they start stoning him, but I couldn’t make that scene work with our budget. Michael Bey could make it work, but that would be a totally different movie. I guess I didn’t want there to be a way that the movie broke the connection with what could feel real. And what Choke comes down to is a really twisted romantic comedy, so that is where I chose to put my emphasis. Now there are cult members, fans of Chuck’s who’ll never forgive me.

continue reading the entire Q & A with director Clark Gregg by clicking here.

Reported By: Leo Deresa