Monday, June 25, 2012

Indie or big budget: it's all about people in the seats



I found myself getting a bit jealous of the movie TED this past weekend.  Not because it features a talking stuffed animal - hey, I wrote a play about talking cats, so been there, done that!  No, because they get to inundate us on TV or on-line with ads about how cute the bear is, and how much you should want to see him with Mark Wahlberg and Mila Kunis. 

The more I thought about it, however, the more I realized that there really isn't a whole lot of difference between what Universal Studios is doing and what indie filmmakers do:  it's all about putting people in the seats.  Yeah, they have a few (hundred) million more dollars to play around with than I do.  But the goal is the same.

So you'll see Surviving Family on Facebook, and Twitter, and Blogger rather than on Dancing With The Stars.  And we'll use posters in stores in Woods Hole, MA during their film festival.  And we'll hand out our postcards person-to-person.   But in some ways that's nice, in an old-fashioned sort of way, because you never know who you'll meet, and talk to, and maybe make friends with, as you hand out the postcards and explain to people why THIS is the movie that they should see.

Don't miss us when we come to a film festival near you:

Friday August 3 at 9 PM, Woods Hole Film Festival in Woods Hole, MA
Saturday August 18 at 7 PM, Columbia Gorge Int'l Film Festival in Vancouver, WA

AOF Film Festival in Monrovia, CA, date and time to be announced
Central Florida Film Festival, Labor Day Weekend, date and time to be announced

More coming soon!

Tuesday, June 19, 2012

First up: Woods Hole Film Festival


After a year of pre-production, a 2 month shoot, and 6 months of post-production, we finally know when and where Surviving Family will premiere!  It's an official selection of the 21st annual Woods Hole Film Festival in Cape Cod, MA, and will screen on Friday night August 3 at 9 PM.  It's a terrific time slot (dinner and a movie, anyone?), both for festival goers and tourists!

We'll get everything off to a hopefully-smooth start a few days in advance:  in a well-choreographed scheduling dance, director Laura Thies will arrive on an over-night flight from her home in Germany, and writer/producer Mara Lesemann will swoop into Newark Airport to pick her up.  The two of us will then hit the road (traffic-free of course!) from New Jersey to Cape Cod.  Nothing can go wrong.  Right?

Please follow us and share our festival experiences through the summer, and fall, and into next year! 

And if you haven't yet seen our trailer, you can check it out here.