FOUR COLOR EULOGY Screens at Schlafly Bottleworks September 1st

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The St. Louis-lensed FOUR COLOR EULOGY screens Thursday September 1st at 7:00pm at Schlafly Bottleworks (7260 Southwest Avenue Maplewood, MO 63143). $6  for the screening. Cast members will be signing autographs and fundraising DVDs will be available for sale. Cool comic book stuff will also be available from The Fantasy Shop before and after the screening.

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Read my interview with Wyatt Weed, director and co-writer of FOUR COLOR EULOGY  HERE

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Shot in the St. Louis area by the team behind SHADOWLAND, FOUR COLOR EULOGY is a dramatic comedy that shows it’s never too late to let go of the past or to create a new future. Growing up the only child of a single mother, aspiring comic-book creator Chris (Jason Contini) escaped St. Louis 10 years ago and moved to Portland, Ore., with girlfriend Anne to forge a new life. But when Chris learns that his mother is ill, he and Anne have no choice but to pack up their lives and move back home. Uprooted, his life completely disrupted, Chris is forced to face both his mother’s mortality and a nagging childhood question: Who was his father and why wasn’t he around? With the help of longtime buddy Brian, a pop-culture geek, and family friend Rich, a bartender with a secret, Chris will have to determine what’s ultimately more important: the hero’s origins or his ongoing journey.

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FOUR COLOR EULOGY features a cast of familiar faces from the stages of St. Louis theaters representing over 30 metro area production companies. Prominent local actors Jason Contini and his father John developed the concept together and both star in the film. John plays a bartender and mentor to Jason’s character. “The opportunity to create this film with my Dad has been such a rewarding experience, from writing the film via Skype…to watching these characters come to life …to the release of the film,” reflects Jason. “And then to include people like Nicholas J. Hearne, who has been a surrogate brother of mine for 15 years, and Wyatt Weed, the older brother I never had, into the process made this a giant ‘family’ experience in every aspect.”

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Coupling 18 years of Hollywood experience with a love of all things comic-related, director, co-writer and cinematographer Wyatt Weed assembled a final product that puts geek culture into the main-stream. Weed feels that “FOUR COLOR EULOGY has been an opportunity to really mash things up – the look of the film is straight out of Close Encounters, but the mood is somewhere between a classic 50’s melodrama and an 80’s comedy. Yes, there are some in-depth geek references, but you don’t have to get them in order to understand the film. [Overall the film] is about family, friendship, and love and when it’s over…it will make you appreciate your family and your crazy friends.”

FOUR COLOR EULOGY is Weed’s second St. Louis-based feature film project with his producing partner Gayle Gallagher and second collaboration between Weed and Jason Contini. Weed praises Jason as a very experienced and studied actor, and states “I can always call on him for anything, behind the camera or in front of it. Through all of this we’ve become really good friends.”

St. Louis stage actors aren’t the only ones who get to shine in this feature, the soundtrack features songs from popular local bands and musicians such as Clockwork, Taylor Pietz and Abby Stahlschmidt.

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Shot exclusively in the St. Louis area during the summer of 2014, local businesses and institutions such as Uncle Bill’s Pancake House on South Kingshighway, Melrose Club on The Hill, Newcastle Comics in Maryland Heights and Saints Mary and Joseph Catholic Church feature prominently in the film.

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A yummy variety of food from Schlafly’s kitchen is available as are plenty of pints of their famous home-brewed beer.

A Facebook invite for the event can be found HERE

https://www.facebook.com/events/1005490002905064/1015659955221402/

“Culture Shock” is the name of a film series here in St. Louis that is the cornerstone project of a social enterprise that is an ongoing source of support for Helping Kids Together(http://www.helpingkidstogether.com/) a St. Louis based social enterprise dedicated to building cultural diversity and social awareness among young people through the arts and active living.

The films featured for “Culture Shock” demonstrate an artistic representation of culture shock materialized through mixed genre and budgets spanning music, film and theater. Through ‘A Film Series’ working relationship with Schlafly Bottleworks, they seek to provide film lovers with an offbeat mix of dinner and a movie opportunities.

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This Week’s WAMG Podcast – THE BOSS, MIDNIGHT SPECIAL, and More!

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This week’s episode of our podcast WE ARE MOVIE GEEKS The Show is up! Hear WAMG’s Michelle McCue, Jim Batts and Tom Stockman discuss the weekend box office. We’ll review FOUR COLOR EULOGY, THE BOSS, MIDNIGHT SPECIAL, and what we saw of HARDCORE HENRY . We’ll also discuss funny ladies on the silver screen.

Here’s this week’s show. Have a listen:

WAMG Interview: Wyatt Weed – Director of FOUR COLOR EULOGY

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FOUR COLOR EULOGY opens in St. Louis April 8th at The Ronnies Cinema

Shot in the St. Louis area by the  team behind SHADOWLAND, FOUR COLOR EULOGY is a dramatic comedy that shows it’s never too late to let go of the past or to create a new future. Growing up the only child of a single mother, aspiring comic-book creator Chris (Jason Contini) escaped St. Louis 10 years ago and moved to Portland, Ore., with girlfriend Anne to forge a new life. But when Chris learns that his mother is ill, he and Anne have no choice but to pack up their lives and move back home. Uprooted, his life completely disrupted, Chris is forced to face both his mother’s mortality and a nagging childhood question: Who was his father and why wasn’t he around? With the help of longtime buddy Brian, a pop-culture geek, and family friend Rich, a bartender with a secret, Chris will have to determine what’s ultimately more important: the hero’s origins or his ongoing journey.

Wyatt Weed, the director of both SHADOWLAND and FOUR COLOR EULOGY, took the time to talk with Tom Stockman of We Are Movie Geeks about his upcoming film.

We Are Movie Geeks: What locations did you use for FOUR COLOR EULOGY?

WW: I would say a third of the movie took place in the South city home of a woman named Michele Bolen. We shot there for about eight or nine days and that was the majority of the film. Another major location was Melrose bar over on Southwest Avenue.

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WAMG: So that ‘Sassetti’s’ sign was a digital overlay I assume?

WW: Yes. FOUR COLOR EULOGY is not the kind of special effects film that our last film SHADOWLAND was, but it still has a lot of subtle visual effects. For example, we could never get the pretty thunderstorm over the tops of the buildings that we wanted so we got a thunderstorm someplace else and then put it over the top of the buildings ourselves, in the computer. Also, there’s a scene where the main characters travel from Portland to St. Louis. Obviously we never went to Portland. We went to the Larson Park area of Webster Groves, then out to Wentzville and shot the countryside and dropped Mt. Hood into the background along with some freeway signs, making it look like Portland. There were many other locations. We shot at a great comic book store out in Maryland Heights called Newcastle Comics. That was one of the few locations that was not in South city. It is supposed to be a South city film but we never found a comic book store that was big enough and would let us take it over for the required amount of time. Newcastle Comics was big and they had periods of time where they could let us come in and shoot, so we turned it into “South City Comics”. We were originally going to do something elaborate with the sign outside, make something really cool, but we realized that no local comic book store has that kind of big expensive sign. That would have screamed “digital effect” so we just painted out the Newcastle logo in the white box over the store and replaced it with a plain “South City Comics” text. It couldn’t have been more simple, but that’s the type of effects in the film – simple, but very effective and money-saving.

WAMG: So you shot in South City and Maryland Heights, where else did you shoot?

WW: All over the place. We shot at SSM St. Joseph Hospital in Lake St. Louis. There are a couple of hospital scenes near the end of the film but if we’d had to pay for that, we wouldn’t have been able to do it. St. Joseph provided a room and some equipment for us and it turned out fantastic, really great production value. We also filmed at Crane’s Country Store which is way out in Williamsburg. They were so cooperative and friendly, really willing to bend over backwards for us. Then there was U-Gas, that big gas station that looked like it was out in the middle of nowhere, which we made look like it was out in the desert. That was in Wentzville. They were really great, too. They were a little concerned at first, wanting to know if we needed to block their whole parking lot. But we just needed to film at one pump for 45 minutes and they were fine with that. We also shot at Uncle Bill’s Pancake House, which I’ve wanted to do for years, so I was really excited about that. In addition to the cooperative locations, I have to say that the in-kind donations and the equipment that we were able to arrange from places like Bad Dog Pictures and Avatar Studios really helped us out. I’m not exaggerating when I say there are parts of the film we couldn’t have done without their help. I know other film productions are chasing the money, chasing the tax credits, but this was a $15,000 film. It wasn’t worth our time or energy to leave the city – we wouldn’t have even qualified for a tax credit in Illinois. But once again, St. Louis really came through for us. All of the locations that we took over and all of the food and donations we received was really just stunning.

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WAMG: There are scenes all throughout the film in a church. Was that the same church you’ve used in SHADOWLAND?

WW: No, it was a church called St. Mary and Joseph Chapel and that was also in South city. There was the main church that was a couple of blocks away, then there was the chapel, which was only used for certain functions. They handed us the keys on a Monday morning, we went over there, lit, redressed, and shot all day. Then we moved outside in the early evening to shoot a short scene and got rained out. That was the scene at the end of the film where two characters exit the church and are talking to each other about the service. The chapel was nice enough to let us come back for a pickup day to shoot that.

WAMG: You said the budget was $15,000. What was the shooting schedule?

WW: It ended up being a total of about 23 days. We had 21 principal days and two days of pickups. We shot over the course of two months. We started shooting in early June and we didn’t finish until late July. With so little money, we could afford to pay people something, but most of the actors had to maintain their day jobs. So we’d find a five day block where everyone was available and go and shoot in the house. Then we’d find a four day block and go shoot at the bar. The comic book store we broke up a bit. We would go there at 8 o’clock at night after they closed and we didn’t have to be out of there until noon the following day. But we didn’t push a lot of super-long hours either. I think most of our days were just 10 to 12 hours. There was one time that we got rained out on a night scene, and the schedule was getting tight so we pulled everyone aside and told them that we really needed to pick up this night scene that we had lost and the only time to do it was on a certain day, which meant they were looking at a 16 or 17 hour day, but everyone was cool and agreed so we pulled the long day and got caught up.

WAMG: Speaking of rain, there’s a big dramatic scene that takes place in the rain. I assume that was scripted to take place in the rain. How did you film that?

WW: It was scripted to take place in the rain and we thought it would be great if it was raining that day, but of course it was not. Jason Contini wrote the scene to take place in a rainstorm. I was originally hesitant because rain is tough. A couple of days before we were scheduled to shoot that, we were really exhausted. We were pushing the boundaries on a couple of things; pushing our technical limits as we had so little resources. I tried to talk Jason out of it, but he really wanted to do it, so all we got garden hoses with those adjustable spray nozzles and rigged them to light stands. We had a couple of stagehands off screen and had them adjust those nozzles from about 20 feet away, spraying them up and into the air so a light rain would come down. The shots you see in the film, there was no rain to the left or the right of frame – we had just enough rain to cover the main area in any shot. Rain is hard to photograph so we kept adjusting the lights and we ended up back-lighting very heavily so the rain would pop out. The big master shot where they bust out the front door and argue we did in one take. We knew that if we had to do that more than once it would be a problem because everyone would have to re-dry their hair and their clothes, and we didn’t have a wardrobe truck or mobile homes standing by. So we rehearsed it and blocked it for lighting and sound and camera, really got it down, then fired up the rain and did it just one time. After that the actors were already established as wet, so the scene where Jason and Jessica come out and argue could be shot more than once. We did the lightning with photo strobe units. Bob Clark had some big flash units that could be manually operated, so he would hit the strobes and create lightning on cue.

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WAMG: One thing that surprised me about the script, after reading about it the past few months was that I was expecting more comic book culture and trivia. There is some of that, but the film is primarily a cancer drama.

WW: I think maybe we all thought the film would have more of a geek element than it did in the end. However I do feel that we nailed what we set out for in that these people are real, they live in the real world, and have real world problems. They aren’t a complete fabrication, like some of Kevin Smith’s characters can be, or like the guys on The Big Bang Theory. I know we’ve talked about taking this film to Comic-Con and places like that, but I don’t think that’s the film we have now. I think there are fan-boys who will appreciate the references, or at the very least this will be the first “cancer drama” that fan boys will enjoy!

WAMG: This is Jason Contini’s story. Did he have experience with cancer in his family?

WW: Perhaps not cancer, but health scares within his family. The story is a combination of Jason wanting to do certain dramatic things and John’s concept to do a one-act play set in a bar, I believe. Jason and John melded their concepts and came up with the story that now drives the script. Jason did a couple of drafts on his own and then he started working with me and Nick Hearne. So this really is a balance of three or four different writers. Typically, I don’t like to work that way, but I thought it worked really well for this project. Everybody had strengths. Jason had strength in drama, Nick had strength in comedy, and I had strength in structure. No egos, no protectiveness – just whatever was best for the script.

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WAMG: I think one of your films greatest strengths is the acting. John is superb. I think when we talked several months ago you were going to go with a movie star. I believe you had talked to Dee Wallace. I assume that was for the role of Carol?

WW: Yes we talked to Dee and to her agent. She was asking for a very reasonable sum and we really wanted her, but it was tough enough raising $15,000 and at that point we all voted to just get the movie done and not worry about a name. I think Jason originally wrote the park with Amy Loui in mind, and we auditioned a half a dozen actresses, but Amy really was the best and she’s the one who finally got the part. The irony was that she has known John as long as her character has in the film. There are actually photos on the wall in the background of the film that show Amy holding a baby Jason, so this has been a most incestuous acting troop. Jessica Laney had been in plays with John. Taylor Pietz had been in plays with John as had some of the other supporting players like Dean Christopher and Whit Reichert, who play the drunks. It was a real community of theater actors who had all worked together or knew of each other.

WAMG: I remember Whit Reichert from local TV commercials 40 years ago.

WW: He was really great. EVERYONE was really great. As a director, I did less directing of the actors than I ever have because they were so good and so prepared. For me it was more about blocking the scenes, making sure everything was going where I wanted it to go and then pretty much leaving the actors alone. Occasionally I would dial a reaction or line reading in a different direction but it’s amazing to me how little I had to adjust the actor’s performances.

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WAMG: If you had more time and money, what would you have done differently?

WW: It would’ve been nice to have a bigger crew and more specific equipment. We shot with the same camera we used for SHADOWLAND which is a great, venerable camera but HD standard is now 1920 x 1080, and we’re still shooting 1280 x 720. It looks fine, kind of filmy and grainy, but it would’ve been nice to step up to a higher end camera. It would’ve been nice to get a better set of lenses more suited to the widescreen cinematography style that we were shooting. We had dolly track with us and a doorway dolly for the duration but a doorway dolly is a far cry from a real dolly that has a boom on it and steerable wheels. Gayle, one of our producers, doubled up as a sound person, but it would have been nice to have a dedicated sound person so she could concentrate on putting out fires, as we say. But in all honesty, we rarely shot outside the range of what we could do. We didn’t write a script that was beyond us…other than maybe that rain scene! We wrote to the equipment and locations we were sure we could get

WAMG: Who did the songs?

WW: Taylor Pietz, who plays Katie the bartender, wrote and performed the opening song ‘Color Me’. That was an original song for the film. Then we had songs from the bands Manitoba Rock N Rolla and Clockwork, and from artists Patrick Conway, Rhyan Sprague, and Abby Stahlschmidt, who also appears in the film.

WAMG: Were these songs original to the film?

WW: No, these were songs by local performers that we were given permission to use. It should be mentioned that we are currently using some stock score from the great Kevin MacLeod. He is a very prolific composer who allows his music to be used for free, if you give him credit. There has been interest from local composers to add their music to the film, but for the SLIFF screening, it will be Kevin’s score, in addition to all of the songs.

WAMG: What about the comic book art in the film such as the old pages of art with Captain Arabia and Prince Lancer?

WW: John Contini was an aspiring comic book artist back in his youth, and those are actual pages of comic book art that he drew as a young man. For the new stuff, we worked with a company called Lion Forge. Lorenzo Lizana did the “Kota” and “Conquerors” covers, and Aaron Allen contributed posters and new comic pages for scenes where Arabia and Lancer are being revived. When we were filming in the comic store, we worried that when we panned around, we’d see a bunch of DC and Marvel stuff and potentially get in trouble. So there were a lot of times where we would put a SHADOWLAND poster over a Marvel poster or put Jason’s artwork over someone else’s artwork. There are scenes with the comic book racks in the background where we just laid issues of Lion Forge comics on top of the Marvel and DC titles. We didn’t want to get in trouble if Batman or Ironman ended up making an unauthorized appearance.

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Be sure to FOUR COLOR EULOGY on the big screen in St. Louis starting April 8th at The Ronnies Cinema.

This interview was conducted by Tom Stockman November 7th 2014 when FOUR COLOR EULOGY was set to premiere at the St. Louis International Film Festival.

St. Louis-Lensed FOUR COLOR EULOGY Plays at Ronnie’s Beginning April 8th

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Read my interview with Wyatt Weed, director and co-writer of FOUR COLOR EULOGY  HERE

The St. Louis theater community gets a chance to shine on the silver screen thanks to Hollywood veteran Wyatt Weed, Pirate Pictures and St. Louis’ Archlight Studios. A red-carpet event with cast and crew will kick off FOUR COLOR EULOGY’s one-week run at Wehrenberg Ronnie’s 20 Cine on April 8th. Tickets are currently available online or at Ronnie’s 20 box office.

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Shot in the St. Louis area by the team behind SHADOWLAND, FOUR COLOR EULOGY is a dramatic comedy that shows it’s never too late to let go of the past or to create a new future. Growing up the only child of a single mother, aspiring comic-book creator Chris (Jason Contini) escaped St. Louis 10 years ago and moved to Portland, Ore., with girlfriend Anne to forge a new life. But when Chris learns that his mother is ill, he and Anne have no choice but to pack up their lives and move back home. Uprooted, his life completely disrupted, Chris is forced to face both his mother’s mortality and a nagging childhood question: Who was his father and why wasn’t he around? With the help of longtime buddy Brian, a pop-culture geek, and family friend Rich, a bartender with a secret, Chris will have to determine what’s ultimately more important: the hero’s origins or his ongoing journey.

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FOUR COLOR EULOGY features a cast of familiar faces from the stages of St. Louis theaters representing over 30 metro area production companies. Prominent local actors Jason Contini and his father John developed the concept together and both star in the film. John plays a bartender and mentor to Jason’s character. “The opportunity to create this film with my Dad has been such a rewarding experience, from writing the film via Skype…to watching these characters come to life …to the release of the film,” reflects Jason. “And then to include people like Nicholas J. Hearne, who has been a surrogate brother of mine for 15 years, and Wyatt Weed, the older brother I never had, into the process made this a giant ‘family’ experience in every aspect.”

Coupling 18 years of Hollywood experience with a love of all things comic-related, director, co-writer and cinematographer Wyatt Weed assembled a final product that puts geek culture into the main-stream. Weed feels that “FOUR COLOR EULOGY has been an opportunity to really mash things up – the look of the film is straight out of Close Encounters, but the mood is somewhere between a classic 50’s melodrama and an 80’s comedy. Yes, there are some in-depth geek references, but you don’t have to get them in order to understand the film. [Overall the film] is about family, friendship, and love and when it’s over…it will make you appreciate your family and your crazy friends.”

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FOUR COLOR EULOGY is Weed’s second St. Louis-based feature film project with his producing partner Gayle Gallagher and second collaboration between Weed and Jason Contini. Weed praises Jason as a very experienced and studied actor, and states “I can always call on him for anything, behind the camera or in front of it. Through all of this we’ve become really good friends.”

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St. Louis stage actors aren’t the only ones who get to shine in this feature, the soundtrack features songs from popular local bands and musicians such as Clockwork, Taylor Pietz and Abby Stahlschmidt.

Shot exclusively in the St. Louis area during the summer of 2014, local businesses and institutions such as Uncle Bill’s Pancake House on South Kingshighway, Melrose Club on The Hill, Newcastle Comics in Maryland Heights and Saints Mary and Joseph Catholic Church feature prominently in the film.

Tickets are available now and after a sold out preview at the 2014 St. Louis International Film Festival (including scalpers out front), filmmakers strongly recommend getting tickets early!

Check out the trailer for FOUR COLOR EULOGY:

A Facebook invite for the red carpet premiere can be found HERE

https://www.facebook.com/events/1687851254819562/

SLIFF 2014 Interview: Wyatt Weed – Director of FOUR COLOR EULOGY

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FOUR COLOR EULOGY will screen at 3:00pm Sunday, November 23rd at the Tivoli Theater as part of the St. Louis International Film Festival. Ticket information can be found HERE

Shot in the St. Louis area by the  team behind SHADOWLAND, FOUR COLOR EULOGY is a dramatic comedy that shows it’s never too late to let go of the past or to create a new future. Growing up the only child of a single mother, aspiring comic-book creator Chris (Jason Contini) escaped St. Louis 10 years ago and moved to Portland, Ore., with girlfriend Anne to forge a new life. But when Chris learns that his mother is ill, he and Anne have no choice but to pack up their lives and move back home. Uprooted, his life completely disrupted, Chris is forced to face both his mother’s mortality and a nagging childhood question: Who was his father and why wasn’t he around? With the help of longtime buddy Brian, a pop-culture geek, and family friend Rich, a bartender with a secret, Chris will have to determine what’s ultimately more important: the hero’s origins or his ongoing journey.

Wyatt Weed, the director of both SHADOWLAND and FOUR COLOR EULOGY, took the time to talk with We Are Movie Geeks about his upcoming film.

Interview conducted by Tom Stockman November 7th 2014

We Are Movie Geeks: The version of FOUR COLOR EULOGY I previewed was two hours and 13 minutes – is that the final cut?

Wyatt Weed: No, We’re continuing to whittle it down. Our first cut came in at 139 minutes, but we’re going to get it as close to two hours as we possibly can. It’s a long movie, but it’s not like it just sits there for long interminable moments where nothing’s happening. There’s constantly some drama or comedy taking place. I feel like we have a Judd Apatow-style film on our hands, a film where there’s a lot going on.

WAMG: I liked the film. In fact I was going to go to the premier on the 23rd and was just going to watch half of it and let the other half unspool before me at the screening but I ended up watching the whole thing because I wanted to see where it went. What locations did you use for FOUR COLOR EULOGY?

WW: I would say a third of the movie took place in the South city home of a woman named Michele Bolen. We shot there for about eight or nine days and that was the majority of the film. Another major location was Melrose bar over on Southwest Avenue.

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WAMG: So that ‘Sassetti’s’ sign was a digital overlay I assume?

WW: Yes. FOUR COLOR EULOGY is not the kind of special effects film that our last film SHADOWLAND was, but it still has a lot of subtle visual effects. For example, we could never get the pretty thunderstorm over the tops of the buildings that we wanted so we got a thunderstorm someplace else and then put it over the top of the buildings ourselves, in the computer. Also, there’s a scene where the main characters travel from Portland to St. Louis. Obviously we never went to Portland. We went to the Larson Park area of Webster Groves, then out to Wentzville and shot the countryside and dropped Mt. Hood into the background along with some freeway signs, making it look like Portland. There were many other locations. We shot at a great comic book store out in Maryland Heights called Newcastle Comics. That was one of the few locations that was not in South city. It is supposed to be a South city film but we never found a comic book store that was big enough and would let us take it over for the required amount of time. Newcastle Comics was big and they had periods of time where they could let us come in and shoot, so we turned it into “South City Comics”. We were originally going to do something elaborate with the sign outside, make something really cool, but we realized that no local comic book store has that kind of big expensive sign. That would have screamed “digital effect” so we just painted out the Newcastle logo in the white box over the store and replaced it with a plain “South City Comics” text. It couldn’t have been more simple, but that’s the type of effects in the film – simple, but very effective and money-saving.

WAMG: So you shot in South City and Maryland Heights, where else did you shoot?

WW: All over the place. We shot at SSM St. Joseph Hospital in Lake St. Louis. There are a couple of hospital scenes near the end of the film but if we’d had to pay for that, we wouldn’t have been able to do it. St. Joseph provided a room and some equipment for us and it turned out fantastic, really great production value. We also filmed at Crane’s Country Store which is way out in Williamsburg. They were so cooperative and friendly, really willing to bend over backwards for us. Then there was U-Gas, that big gas station that looked like it was out in the middle of nowhere, which we made look like it was out in the desert. That was in Wentzville. They were really great, too. They were a little concerned at first, wanting to know if we needed to block their whole parking lot. But we just needed to film at one pump for 45 minutes and they were fine with that. We also shot at Uncle Bill’s Pancake House, which I’ve wanted to do for years, so I was really excited about that. In addition to the cooperative locations, I have to say that the in-kind donations and the equipment that we were able to arrange from places like Bad Dog Pictures and Avatar Studios really helped us out. I’m not exaggerating when I say there are parts of the film we couldn’t have done without their help. I know other film productions are chasing the money, chasing the tax credits, but this was a $15,000 film. It wasn’t worth our time or energy to leave the city – we wouldn’t have even qualified for a tax credit in Illinois. But once again, St. Louis really came through for us. All of the locations that we took over and all of the food and donations we received was really just stunning.

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WAMG: There are scenes all throughout the film in a church. Was that the same church you’ve used in SHADOWLAND?

WW: No, it was a church called St. Mary and Joseph Chapel and that was also in South city. There was the main church that was a couple of blocks away, then there was the chapel, which was only used for certain functions. They handed us the keys on a Monday morning, we went over there, lit, redressed, and shot all day. Then we moved outside in the early evening to shoot a short scene and got rained out. That was the scene at the end of the film where two characters exit the church and are talking to each other about the service. The chapel was nice enough to let us come back for a pickup day to shoot that.

WAMG: You said the budget was $15,000. What was the shooting schedule?

WW: It ended up being a total of about 23 days. We had 21 principal days and two days of pickups. We shot over the course of two months. We started shooting in early June and we didn’t finish until late July. With so little money, we could afford to pay people something, but most of the actors had to maintain their day jobs. So we’d find a five day block where everyone was available and go and shoot in the house. Then we’d find a four day block and go shoot at the bar. The comic book store we broke up a bit. We would go there at 8 o’clock at night after they closed and we didn’t have to be out of there until noon the following day. But we didn’t push a lot of super-long hours either. I think most of our days were just 10 to 12 hours. There was one time that we got rained out on a night scene, and the schedule was getting tight so we pulled everyone aside and told them that we really needed to pick up this night scene that we had lost and the only time to do it was on a certain day, which meant they were looking at a 16 or 17 hour day, but everyone was cool and agreed so we pulled the long day and got caught up.

WAMG: Speaking of rain, there’s a big dramatic scene that takes place in the rain. I assume that was scripted to take place in the rain. How did you film that?

WW: It was scripted to take place in the rain and we thought it would be great if it was raining that day, but of course it was not. Jason Contini wrote the scene to take place in a rainstorm. I was originally hesitant because rain is tough. A couple of days before we were scheduled to shoot that, we were really exhausted. We were pushing the boundaries on a couple of things; pushing our technical limits as we had so little resources. I tried to talk Jason out of it, but he really wanted to do it, so all we got garden hoses with those adjustable spray nozzles and rigged them to light stands. We had a couple of stagehands off screen and had them adjust those nozzles from about 20 feet away, spraying them up and into the air so a light rain would come down. The shots you see in the film, there was no rain to the left or the right of frame – we had just enough rain to cover the main area in any shot. Rain is hard to photograph so we kept adjusting the lights and we ended up back-lighting very heavily so the rain would pop out. The big master shot where they bust out the front door and argue we did in one take. We knew that if we had to do that more than once it would be a problem because everyone would have to re-dry their hair and their clothes, and we didn’t have a wardrobe truck or mobile homes standing by. So we rehearsed it and blocked it for lighting and sound and camera, really got it down, then fired up the rain and did it just one time. After that the actors were already established as wet, so the scene where Jason and Jessica come out and argue could be shot more than once. We did the lightning with photo strobe units. Bob Clark had some big flash units that could be manually operated, so he would hit the strobes and create lightning on cue.

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WAMG: One thing that surprised me about the script, after reading about it the past few months was that I was expecting more comic book culture and trivia. There is some of that, but the film is primarily a cancer drama.

WW: I think maybe we all thought the film would have more of a geek element than it did in the end. However I do feel that we nailed what we set out for in that these people are real, they live in the real world, and have real world problems. They aren’t a complete fabrication, like some of Kevin Smith’s characters can be, or like the guys on The Big Bang Theory. I know we’ve talked about taking this film to Comic-Con and places like that, but I don’t think that’s the film we have now. I think there are fan-boys who will appreciate the references, or at the very least this will be the first “cancer drama” that fan boys will enjoy!

WAMG: This is Jason Contini’s story. Did he have experience with cancer in his family?

WW: Perhaps not cancer, but health scares within his family. The story is a combination of Jason wanting to do certain dramatic things and John’s concept to do a one-act play set in a bar, I believe. Jason and John melded their concepts and came up with the story that now drives the script. Jason did a couple of drafts on his own and then he started working with me and Nick Hearne. So this really is a balance of three or four different writers. Typically, I don’t like to work that way, but I thought it worked really well for this project. Everybody had strengths. Jason had strength in drama, Nick had strength in comedy, and I had strength in structure. No egos, no protectiveness – just whatever was best for the script.

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WAMG: I think one of your films greatest strengths is the acting. John is superb. I think when we talked several months ago you were going to go with a movie star. I believe you had talked to Dee Wallace. I assume that was for the role of Carol?

WW: Yes we talked to Dee and to her agent. She was asking for a very reasonable sum and we really wanted her, but it was tough enough raising $15,000 and at that point we all voted to just get the movie done and not worry about a name. I think Jason originally wrote the park with Amy Loui in mind, and we auditioned a half a dozen actresses, but Amy really was the best and she’s the one who finally got the part. The irony was that she has known John as long as her character has in the film. There are actually photos on the wall in the background of the film that show Amy holding a baby Jason, so this has been a most incestuous acting troop. Jessica Laney had been in plays with John. Taylor Pietz had been in plays with John as had some of the other supporting players like Dean Christopher and Whit Reichert, who play the drunks. It was a real community of theater actors who had all worked together or knew of each other.

WAMG: I remember Whit Reichert from local TV commercials 40 years ago.

WW: He was really great. EVERYONE was really great. As a director, I did less directing of the actors than I ever have because they were so good and so prepared. For me it was more about blocking the scenes, making sure everything was going where I wanted it to go and then pretty much leaving the actors alone. Occasionally I would dial a reaction or line reading in a different direction but it’s amazing to me how little I had to adjust the actor’s performances.

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WAMG: If you had more time and money, what would you have done differently?

WW: It would’ve been nice to have a bigger crew and more specific equipment. We shot with the same camera we used for SHADOWLAND which is a great, venerable camera but HD standard is now 1920 x 1080, and we’re still shooting 1280 x 720. It looks fine, kind of filmy and grainy, but it would’ve been nice to step up to a higher end camera. It would’ve been nice to get a better set of lenses more suited to the widescreen cinematography style that we were shooting. We had dolly track with us and a doorway dolly for the duration but a doorway dolly is a far cry from a real dolly that has a boom on it and steerable wheels. Gayle, one of our producers, doubled up as a sound person, but it would have been nice to have a dedicated sound person so she could concentrate on putting out fires, as we say. But in all honesty, we rarely shot outside the range of what we could do. We didn’t write a script that was beyond us…other than maybe that rain scene! We wrote to the equipment and locations we were sure we could get

WAMG: Who did the songs?

WW: Taylor Pietz, who plays Katie the bartender, wrote and performed the opening song ‘Color Me’. That was an original song for the film. Then we had songs from the bands Manitoba Rock N Rolla and Clockwork, and from artists Patrick Conway, Rhyan Sprague, and Abby Stahlschmidt, who also appears in the film.

WAMG: Were these songs original to the film?

WW: No, these were songs by local performers that we were given permission to use. It should be mentioned that we are currently using some stock score from the great Kevin MacLeod. He is a very prolific composer who allows his music to be used for free, if you give him credit. There has been interest from local composers to add their music to the film, but for the SLIFF screening, it will be Kevin’s score, in addition to all of the songs.

WAMG: What about the comic book art in the film such as the old pages of art with Captain Arabia and Prince Lancer?

WW: John Contini was an aspiring comic book artist back in his youth, and those are actual pages of comic book art that he drew as a young man. For the new stuff, we worked with a company called Lion Forge. Lorenzo Lizana did the “Kota” and “Conquerors” covers, and Aaron Allen contributed posters and new comic pages for scenes where Arabia and Lancer are being revived. When we were filming in the comic store, we worried that when we panned around, we’d see a bunch of DC and Marvel stuff and potentially get in trouble. So there were a lot of times where we would put a SHADOWLAND poster over a Marvel poster or put Jason’s artwork over someone else’s artwork. There are scenes with the comic book racks in the background where we just laid issues of Lion Forge comics on top of the Marvel and DC titles. We didn’t want to get in trouble if Batman or Ironman ended up making an unauthorized appearance.

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WAMG: What’s next for Wyatt Weed?

WW: Right now, we just want to get FOUR COLOR EULOGY out on VOD, DVD and digital download, probably within the first quarter of next year. We’ve learned enough through our struggles with distribution that we can do that much ourselves. We don’t have to sit around chasing our tails for a year trying to get somebody to help us out. It would be nice if we can get Four Color into a local theater for a couple of general public screenings. After that I have a couple of personal projects I’d like to do that are kind of geeky and fan-boy related. I have been wanting to do a Batman “fan film” for years, maybe 20 minutes long and I think the time has come for me to do it. My goal is to make the Batman fan film to end all Batman fan films. Then we’d like to continue this string of smaller, low-budget projects that we can make fairly quickly. We’d like to continue the relationship with Archlight Studios, which is Jason and Nick. We’ve talked to a couple of other local filmmakers about getting some things started. We’ve got plenty of scripts, science-fiction and western and drama scripts, so count on us doing another feature in the next year or so. And then we have the ongoing corporate and commercial work to pay the bills in the meantime, but hopefully when we get a couple more features under our belt we will have to do less of that.

WAMG: Good luck with FOUR COLOR EULOGY and I’ll see you at the premiere at the St. Louis international film Festival on November 23, 3pm at the Tivoli.

WW: Sounds good. Thank you

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24th Annual ST. LOUIS INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL Nov. 13-23 – The Schedule Has Been Announced!

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Oscar bait performances by Reese Witherspoon, Benedict Cumberbatch, and Timothy Spall, a Tenacious Eats “Movies for Foodies” event, and a tribute to the St. Louis-born silent film star King Baggot are some of the many highlights of this year’s St. Louis International Film Festival. Cinema St. Louis announced the 2014 line-up today and it’s the usual hi-quality mix of independent films, foreign films, locally-made films, end-of-year studio awards product, and retro programming.

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The 23rd Annual Whitaker St. Louis International Film Festival (SLIFF) will be held Nov. 13-23. SLIFF will screen 389 films: 89 narrative features, 76 documentary features, and 224 shorts. This year’s festival has 239 screenings/programs, with 69 countries represented. The fest will host more than 125 filmmakers and related guests, including honorees Doug Pray (Contemporary Cinema Award), Katie Mustard (Women in Film Award), and Timothy J. Sexton (Charles Guggenheim Cinema St. Louis Award).

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The festival will open on Thursday, Nov. 13, with the premiere of THE MAKINGS OF YOU, a St. Louis- set and -shot drama by Matt Amato. Amato, an award-winning director of music videos and commercials, returned to his hometown of St. Louis to shoot his feature debut. The film stars Jay R. Ferguson (of “Mad Men”) and Sheryl Lee and Grace Zabriskie (both of “Twin Peaks”).

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Here are just some of the many, many highlights of the 23rd Annual Whitaker St. Louis International Film Festival:

  • Jonathan Demme’s 1974 Women’s prison opus CAGED HEAT – Barbara Steele, Erica Gavin, Rainbeaux Smith, Roberta Collins !?! – I’m so there!
  •  A Tenacious Eats ‘Movie for Foodies’ event featuring a gourmet meal prepared around a screening of the 1964 Beatles movie A HARD DAYS NIGHT
  • The King Baggot Tribute – Honoring the St. Louis-born silent screen legend with a 35mm print of the 1913 version of IVANHOE and hosted by We Are Movie Geeks own Tom  Stockman
  • Oscar Bait! Oscar Bait! Oscar Bait! – Reese Witherspoon in THE WILD, Timothy Spall in Mike Leigh’s acclaimed MR. TURNER and Benedict Cumberbatch in THE IMITATION GAME
  • The world premiere of Pirate Pictures new feature FOUR COLOR EULOGY directed by Wyatt Weed of SHADOWLAND fame
  • An appearance by cult actress Grace Zabriskie, best known for her role as Sarah Palmer in David Lynch’s Twin Peaks
  • Documentaries Galore! – from Cheerleaders to William S. Burroughs – if there’s a great documentary produced this year, chances are it’s showing at SLIFF
  • A pair of ‘Master Classes’ – one on interviewing techniques by Documentarian Doug Pray and another on ‘Women in Film ‘ by Documentarian Mary Dore who will screen her new film SHE’S BEAUTIFUL WHEN SHE’S ANGRY
  • A tribute to the Nicholas Brothers, two of the greatest dancers of the 20th century to be presented by Bruce Goldstein, director of repertory programming at New York’s Film Forum, a friend of the brothers and writer and co-producer of a 1991 documentary on the team.
  • A screening of MEET ME IN ST. LOUIS, which takes place at the 1904 World’s Fair in St. Louis at the St. Louis Art Museum which was built for the 1904 World’s Fair! How cool is that!?!
  • BOB REUTER’S LAST TAPE with a Concert by Bob Reuter’s Alley Ghost – an intimate portrait of the late Bob Reuter, an iconic local musician.

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And of course there’s more, more, much more! The St. Louis International Film Festival is always an incredibly well-run and well-attended fest. There will be much more coverage of it here at We Are Movie Geeks so stay tuned!

In the meantime, visit Cinema St. Louis site where the entire schedule is posted and start marking your calendars

http://www.cinemastlouis.org/about-festival

 

FOUR COLOR EULOGY – Fundraising Meet and Greet Party This Saturday in St. Louis

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The gang at Pirate Pictures, producers of the St. Louis-lensed vampire opus SHADOWLAND, are gearing up for their next feature length production, FOUR COLOR EULOGY. This time, they are teaming up with Archlight Studios and the two production companies will be throwing a ‘Meet and Greet’ party this Saturday, March 8 to help raise funds and to give St. Louisans a chance to meet the filmmakers and schmooze with some of the award-winning actors that have already been cast. FOUR COLOR EULOGY will be filmed in St. Louis this summer and they are raising money to bring a Hollywood actress to town to star (if you want to be among the first to find out who she is, you must attend Saturday’s shindig).

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The Meet and Greet Fundraising party will be Saturday, March 8, 2014 from 7pm – 10pm at MX Theatres – 618 Washington Ave, Suite 200 in Downtown St. Louis. In addition to the opportunity to meet the cast and crew, there will be a raffle, an auction, and drink specials. The event is free and all ages are welcome.

The Facebook invite for this event can be found HERE

https://www.facebook.com/events/670951762967706/

The FOUR COLOR EULOGY indiego page can be found HERE

http://www.indiegogo.com/projects/four-color-eulogy

We Are Movie Geeks hopes to see you there!

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