Filming in Michigan

Cast change, call for extras for ‘What’s Wrong with Virginia’

August 11th, 2009 at 3:21 pm by Laff at the Movies under Entertainment

Ed Harris replaces Liam Neeson, open casting call for “What’s Wrong With Virginia”

Ed Harris interview 10/1/08jennifer-connelly

 

 

 

 

 

“What’s Wrong With Virginia” Casting Changes

TicTock Studios announces that Academy Award Nominee Ed Harris (“Appaloosa” (2009), “Gone Baby Gone” (2007), “A Beautiful Mind” (2001), “The Truman Show” (1998), “The Rock” (1996), “Apollo 13″ (1995)) is joining the cast.  Harris is replacing Liam Neeson as a sheriff that sees his state senate bid slide away from him when his daughter begins to date the son of a woman (Academy Award Winner Jennifer Connelly) with whom the sheriff has engaged in a 20-year affair.

Check out my interview with Ed Harris for “Appaloosa”

Academy Award-Winning screenwriter of “Milk”, Dustin Lance Black, wrote the story and will also direct.  Academy Award Nominee Gus Van Sant will executive produce.

The movie is expected to start shooting in September.

Here’s the details on the open casting call, from a press release: (more…)


Cast and Crew call in Kalamazoo

June 25th, 2009 at 7:12 am by Laff at the Movies under Entertainment

UPDATE!!!  There is also a casting call with this movie and its this weekend Saturday, June 27th and Sunday, June 28th !!!

“Shaken Daddy Syndrome” Crewing Up in Kalamazoo
Filming scheduled July 25th-August 23rd

“Shaken Daddy Syndrome” is a full length comedy written by Joshua Martin and produced by Kevin Park.   The film does contain language and subject matter that may not be suitable for those under 18.

Casting call: Saturday June 27th and Sunday June 28th
11:00-5:00 pm
Where: Holiday Inn West
2747 11th Street
Kalamazoo, MI

The production is casting 4 males 18-28, 2 males late 40s-50s, 1 male 30s, 6 females 18-28, and 2 females late 40s.   Rehearsals will be July 13th-23rd with filming scheduled for July 25th-August 23rd.

If you have questions or need to set up an audtition, contact campaignpictures@gmail.com.

Crew call: Crew Positions Still Available.   Send your resume and contact information to campaignpictures@gmail.com.

Plot synopsis:  With an unclear path for life after college, Tristan Williams journey takes some interesting twists. Shortly after being disowned by his estranged father, the two are forced to live together. To make the situation worse, he has to deal with roommates that refuse to grow up, a deadbeat sister and an overly religious mother all while falling for the girl of his dreams.

GOOD LUCK !!

:)

(more…)


50 Cent film close to a wrap in Grand Rapids

June 9th, 2009 at 7:55 am by Laff at the Movies under Entertainment

“Caught in the Crossfire” wraps shooting on Tuesday

(Originally posted June 9, 12:28am)

"Caught in the Crossfire" R.D. Miller Producer, Brian Miller Director, Scott Robinson Line Producer"Caught in the Crossfire" Michael Matthias, Producer R.D. Miller"Caught in the Crossfire" Richard T. Jones"Caught in the Crossfire" Richard T. Jones talks to Laff at the Movies 

 

 

 

 

After two weeks of shooting in Grand Rapids, “Caught in the Crossfire” is close to a wrap.

The crime drama stars Curtis “50 Cent” Jackson, Chris Klein, Adam Rodriguez, Richard T. Jones, and Michael Matthias.

Monday night, crews were shooting a pivotal interrogation scene at Deano’s Production Facilities in Grand Rapids.   Producer R.D. Miller says the movie is a cross between “L.A. Confidential” and “The Usual Suspects” and they will be cutting back and forth between this interrogation scene and the action throughout the movie.

Producer R.D. Miller was hesitant to tell me that the police Captain (Jones) and police Lieutenant (Matthias) are “interrogating the detectives” (Klein and Rodriguez).

Director Brian Miller and Producer R.D. Miller plan to come back with future projects, and we know from our last visit to the set that 50 Cent would like to bring his next project that he’s producing with Forest Whitaker called “Jekyll and Hyde” to Grand Rapids (in August).

The filmmakers say Michigan’s tax incentives (up to 42%) were (more…)


Big stars coming to Michigan with ‘What’s Wrong with Virginia’

May 18th, 2009 at 8:26 am by Laff at the Movies under Entertainment

Connelly and Neeson will shoot “What’s Wrong with Virginia” in Michigan

jennifer-connellyliam-neesondustin-lance-blackNews straight out of Cannes Film Festival… Jennifer Connelly and Liam Neeson will shoot the movie “What’s Wrong with Virginia” in Michigan.

Oscar winning writer Dustin Lance Black (”Milk”) wrote the screenplay and will also make his directorial debut.

Gus Van Sant, Jay Froberg, and Greg Suess will be Executive Producers.

Holland’s TicTock Studios’ CEO Hopwood DePree and Scott Brooks of West Michigan based private investment firm Brooks Capital Management, LLC will finance the picture and will produce along with Christine Vachon and Eric Watson of Killer Films. 

Production is planning for a late summer start date in Michigan.

CinemaBlend gives this synopsis: Connelly will play a psychologically disturbed woman who’s been having a 20-year love affair with the local sheriff (Neeson). Things get even more complicated when her teenage son starts dating his daughter.

Variety gives this synopsis: Connelly will play the charming but psychologically disturbed mother of a 16-year-old son. Her 20-year clandestine love with a sheriff (Neeson), who is running for the state senate, is tested when her son begins a relationship with his daughter.

(more…)


GR in the running for ‘Tribes of October’

May 8th, 2009 at 2:16 pm by Laff at the Movies under Entertainment

Update: Grand Rapids is in the running for “Tribes of October”

"Tribes of October" pre-production photo1 courtesy Cinepro Pictures"Tribes of October" pre-production photo2 courtesy Cinepro Pictures"Tribes of October" pre-production photo3 courtesy Cinepro Pictures"Tribes of October" pre-production photo4 courtesy Cinepro Pictures"Tribes of October" pre-production photo5 courtesy Cinepro Pictures"Tribes of October" pre-production photo6 courtesy Cinepro PicturesBetween comments from folks at Cinepro Pictures, director Phillipe Martinez’ recorded comments at the “Chaos” premiere, and a few of my sources, I can tell you that Grand Rapids is being scouted for Martinez’ next movie “Tribes of October”.

The $25 million budget CGI heavy post-apocalyptic sci-fi thriller needs big open spaces to shoot, and I’ve learned that DeVos Place and some big warehouse-size buildings around Grand Rapids are also being considered for possible shooting locations.

Also today, new pre-production images (above) from Cinepro Pictures.

:)

Originally posted May 5, 2009: (more…)


Review: ‘Chaos’ is good for GR, but….

May 8th, 2009 at 12:02 am by Laff at the Movies under Entertainment

Its great to see Grand Rapids and its local talent looking so good on the big screen.   There were numerous spatterings of applause and cheers during the premiere of “The Chaos Experiment”, a movie that shot in Grand Rapids for 16 days in September 2008, the first since Michigan’s generous tax incentives were passed.

Too bad the applause and cheers were limited to noticing local landmarks like the Amway Grand Plaza Hotel, the Grand Rapids Police Department, the carousel at the Van Andel Museum Center, the Bull’s Head Restaurant, the Grand Rapids Press and local actors (like Doug Alchin and Michael Travis) getting their few minutes of screentime and delivering their handful of lines… because the movie itself hovers around average.   Anyone who wasn’t involved or isn’t somehow connected to Grand Rapids, or a fan of Val Kilmer should wait on seeing this movie.

Warning to parents: this movie is rated R for its violence, nudity, and language.

"The Chaos Experiment" poster courtesy Cinepro Pictures 

Its sad to say, but this movie had the potential to be so much better, in the end its appeal will be limited to Grand Rapidians, the people involved with or interested in this project, and die hard Kilmer and Armand Assante fans.

Director Philippe Martinez told us on set that this was going to be a Hitchcock-like thiller, but somewhere along the way, it lost its connection to the famed director that set up many of our modern suspense thrillers.

The pacing is off… the violence is more graphic than implied… the movie drifts in and out of being serious… the plot doesn’t have a building climax that gets more and more intense… and I was never on the edge of my seat.  I cringed a couple times at the violence, but not from suspense.

This is the second time in less than a year I’ve said this, but this movie felt like a director’s cut… you know, when you’ve seen a movie and loved it, and get to see the slightly longer versions of scenes or different scenes than you saw before.    But this is the opposite… here a vasy majority of scenes needed to be tightened up, moving to the next scene and move the story along.

The Steam Experiment courtesy CinePro PicturesI can appreciate the dark, twisted nature of the movie, and the cinematography was good, with a eerie and ominous mix of music weaved through the film.  I like the fact that the first two minutes or so of the movie has no dialogue and that the scenes in the steam bath used a lot of close-ups to convey emotions, while the outside scenes used a lot of wider shots.

The six subjects inside the ’steam bath’, a set constructed at a soundstage in Grand Rapids are: Eric Roberts, Megan Brown, Patrick Muldoon, Cordelia Reynolds, Eve Mauro, and Quinn Duffy.

The movie’s flashes between Kilmer and Assante’s tense interrogation and the subjects in the steam bath tied to establish pacing, but this is one case when more would have been better.   If Kilmer would have explained each stage of the ’steam experiment’, then cut to the ’subjects’ going through his theory, it wouldn’t have been so scattered.   That change would stengthen his theory that in this enclosed, warming environment, people will begin to de-evolve into basic instincts of survival while others go crazy.  Its implied and later referenced, but too late in the film.

The Steam Experiment courtesy CinePro Pictures

Kilmer carries this movie with his portrayal of a crazy, delusional scientist with theories that are radically beyond the believable.  His moments without dialogue or limited lines are strong as he conveys lines of screenplay without opening his mouth.  When he does, he’s often quick witted and intelligent compared to Assante’s character of the bruting police detective.   Assante’s acting is polished and solid, with the audience easily sold that he is a transplanted policeman from New York.   He’s got a sense of humor, he’s tough, and a ladies man all in one movie.

Unfortunately the strength of Kilmer and Assante’s scenes are not enough to lift this movie’s rating up.

Doug Alchin talks to Laff at the Movies 5-5-09Michael Travis talks to Laff at the Movies 5-5-09Michigan actors Doug Alchin and Michael Travis should be happy with their performances in their first big movie.   Alchin, from Okemos, Michigan plays Assante’s Lt. Clark at the Grand Rapids Police Department, delivering several convincing lines of dialougue as Assante’s antagonist in a couple scenes.   Travis, from Grand Rapids, Michigan plays Sam, a security guard, at a hotel, sharing screen time with both Kilmer and Assante and despite just a few lines, he holds his own with the two pros in the one scene he’s in.

THE BOTTOM LINE:

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Closer look at The Steam Experiment trailer

March 3rd, 2009 at 7:50 am by Laff at the Movies under Entertainment

After all these months, we now get our first look at the trailer for “The Steam Experiment”, click here to watch it, the first video we’ve seen from the first movie shot in Grand Rapids after Michigan’s film incentives were signed into law.

Here’s a closer look at some of the images in the trailer (click on thumbnail to see larger image):

Val Kilmer as “Jimmy Pettis” (a disgraced former university professor) outside the Grand Rapids Press Office as he prepares to approach the newspaper about printing his fatal theories on Global Warming.

Jimmy (Kilmer) telling Grand Rapids Press Editor “Walter Grubbs” (played by Ricky Wayne/Robinson Jr.) that he could have gone to a bigger paper, but he chose to bring his theories to the Grand Rapids Press.

Grand Rapids Police Department cruiser outside a building with its lights on (a cruiser we assume is the one we later see Armand Assante driving with Kilmer in the back seat).

Armand Assante as “Detective Jack Mancini” talking to “Jimmy” (Kilmer) in the office of Grand Rapids Press Editor “Walter Hobbs”. (more…)


“HIGH School” set to film in Howell

October 9th, 2008 at 2:47 am by Laff at the Movies under Entertainment

Looks like Hollywood is coming to a Howell School… apparently producers hope William H. Macy will join the cast… the deal means thousands of dollars for the school district, but the subject matter has at least one parent concerned

Parker High School in Howell courtesy B&J Painting Inc.CLOSED SCHOOL OPEN FOR MOVIE MAKERS

Last week, word coming from Howell Public Schools that they reached a deal and the school board approved to lease a school – Parker High School that has been closed for months - for the filming of a medium-budget/ independent movie called “High School”.

Parallel Media of Studio City, California is the production company making the movie.

Filming of the $9.5 million budget movie could begin in late October… and is expected to last three Artist Rendering of Parker High School in Howell courtesy Howell Public Schoolsmonths.

The Livingston Community News reports: “The Howell School District estimates its budget will get a revenue boost of about $120,000 from the film production company that will spend three months creating a movie in the district’s unused Parker High School…. the district will receive $15,000 a week for the 12 weeks the production company will use the facility.”

Parker High School was built after voters approved a 2003 bond issue but was used for just the 2007-2008 school year and closed because the district couldn’t afford to run both it and Howell High School.

SOUND FAMILIAR?

You may remember a deal that fell through for Grand Rapids (more…)