Posts Tagged ‘saturday films’

Shorts spotlight: The Sparkling

Monday, July 30th, 2012

What is THE SPARKLING? Why it’s M Night Shyamalan’s new movie of course.

Synopsis: Puppets Harry and Luther somehow land jobs as caretakers to the legendary Stanley Hotel.  Upon arrival Luther is immediately overtaken by an evil spirit, while Harry learns about his new found gift of telepathy.  Adventure, excitement, and outrageous nudity awaits the pair around every corner!  Who will outlast who in this thrill-a-minute parody based on a famous Colorado legend.

Director: Artfacestudios

Laugh Track: How much time and energy did you spend making it?

Artfacestudios: “The Sparkling” was filmed on location at the Stanley Hotel in Estes Park. Some scenes were finished in our green screen room if they needed touching up or another layer of video. We spent one sleepless night rampaging through the hotel unsupervised with puppets and a bunch of liquor. Several hours were spent at the bar. Upon receiving the invite to “go ahead and cross any lines that keep you out, and have fun” from the owner and bartender we continued our evening in a drunken rage throughout the entire hotel… I would imagine we created several of the “unexplained” sounds the ghost tour might have heard.

Was it worth it? (more…)

Shorts spotlight: The Night of the Falling Star

Wednesday, July 25th, 2012

The filmmaker built a space station to make this one…helmets off to that!

Synopsis: Captain Oldelaf is an astronaut in a mission around the Earth whose plans are turned upside down by an unexpected cosmic encounter…

Lost in deep space, he will have to deploy all his ingenuity and dig deep in his bag of tricks to come back home to his loved ones.

Director: Jean-Marc Deltorn

Laugh Track: How much time and energy did you spend making the movie?

Jean-Marc: Hard to put a number on this one, but try convincing your wife/husband/partner that building a space station in the living room of your 2 bedroom flat is really a great idea… and living in it for the next two months will be such fun!… Well, that’s about how much energy/commitment that little movie required!

Do you think it was worth all that time/energy?

If living in a space station for 2 month isn’t, what is?… Honestly, some people are paying crazy money for that. (more…)

Shorts spotlight: Unfurnished

Tuesday, July 24th, 2012

Winner of the ‘11 48 hour film fest in Denver!

We present UNFURNISHED

Synopsis: ‘Unfurnished’ follows a couple excited to get into the new home they just got under contract. They are so excited in fact, they decide to break in before they are allowed to plan out a few details with this ‘fixer upper’. In going room to room, they not only find that their ideas of how the h.ouse should be changed are different but that the house itself has some real problems!

Director: Brad Stabio

Here’s a brief explanation of the film from Brad:

Brad: Unfurnished is interesting because we as filmmakers were looking for a way to make a film to showcase our skills and also fit it into the framework of the 48 Hour Film Project 2011 in Denver. We feel our efforts paid off in all aspects of the film and resulted in the film winning Best Film, Best Acting, and Best Special Effects at the Denver 48 Hour Film Project 2011. As a director, it has been amazing to see our team take a film all the way to a screening at the Cannes Film Festival last year and already see positive results from Unfurnished as well.

See the film at @ Click here to buy tickets.

Shorts spotlight: Living with Mum

Sunday, July 22nd, 2012

Laugh Track presents LIVING WITH MUM

Synopsis: Mum’s a zombie!

Director: Anton Short

Our interview with the director:

Laugh Track: How much time and energy did you spend making the movie?

Anton:
Time : 2 day shoot, 1 day pick ups, 600 re-edits
Energy : about 17,576 K/Cal

Do you think it was worth all that time/energy? (more…)

Shorts spotlight: Kitchen Sink Drama

Saturday, July 21st, 2012

Try not to ruin your marriage before it starts.

We’re proud to present KITCHEN SINK DRAMA

Synopsis: Aaron is going to propose to Stacey but in doing so discovers that by playing a joke beforehand he may have ruined the entire relationship.

Director: Nicholas Clifford

Laugh Track: How much time and energy did you spend making the movie?

Nicholas:
The screenplay was written in a couple of days.
Filmed it in one day, multicam — Like a boss.
Cut it in two days that felt like nine days.
Do you think it was worth all that time/energy? (more…)

Shorts spotlight: Growing up with Gosling

Wednesday, July 18th, 2012

Who says we don’t have starpower? Ladiiiiiees?

We’re proud to present GROWING UP WITH GOSLING.

Synopsis: Every spotlight casts a shadow.  You know Ryan, time to meet Luke.

Director: Luke Barnett

@ Click here to buy tickets.

See our full schedule here

Shorts spotlight: Cheese Shop

Monday, July 16th, 2012

For cheese-heads everywhere.

Laugh Track presents CHEESE SHOP

Synopsis: Caleb, a local cheese monger, deals with his daily dose of friendly, shady, and rude customers

We asked the director Justin Edward Lake a couple of questions about his film:

Laugh Track: How much time and energy did you spend making the movie?

Justin: Script: 20 minutes. Script Edit: 20 minutes. Shoot: 1 day. Picture Edit: FOREVER! Well not literally forever as I’d still be editing it but a gouda amount of time. Cheese jokes are always funny, always.

Do you think it was worth all that time/energy?

(more…)

Shorts spotlight: Racist Zombies

Saturday, July 14th, 2012

Saturday Films – 8:00pm @

Zombies can be judgmental assholes, too.

Laugh Track presents RACIST ZOMBIES

Synopsis: The Charlies discover the only thing worse than zombies: Racist Zombies

Director:

Laugh Track: How much time and energy did you spend making the movie?

The Charlies: The Charlies spent a full day crammed into a tiny dollar store in Sunset Park, Brooklyn for the shoot, covered in sweat, (fake) blood, and tears. The script was workshopped amongst the group for awhile before that, and post-production took a few weeks.

The hardest part, believe it or not, was renting the prop gun. New York’s tough on guns, even with fake ones, and we had to submit a letter on official letterhead to get the rental. But hey, now we have Charlies stationary!

Do you think it was worth all that time/energy?

Yes, absolutely. That said, there were some hurdles starting out: It was our first full-length sketch video. Our audience was still small. Props would be expensive. In those first moments, it may have felt a little bit like overkill for something that maybe a couple of hundred people would see.

Since we made it we’ve been genuinely surprised at how well it has done. Making the Funny or Die homepage on Halloween was our first milestone, which was something to be proud of. But since then the video has been a part of a number of film and comedy festivals (like yours, thanks!), as well as being featured on UCB Comedy and getting thousands of views online.

No, honestly. Was it?

Yes, why are you calling us liars?

What’s the funniest thing that happened on set? And by funniest we mean the most horrible thing.

The dollar store was amazing – filled with weird generic versions of name brand products that were so outlandish we almost didn’t believe it (Can’t find Sharpies? Use a Skerpie.)

The guys who owned the dollar store we shot in also owned a bodega next store. They had agreed to let us shoot there for a couple hundred bucks. We shot for probably 8 or 9 hours and made more than a few trips to the bodega for refreshments. Midway through the shoot, while we’re at the bodega getting snacks, one of us noticed that dudes in the bodega next door could see us (and were likely watching us the whole time) on secret hidden security cameras.

Convince us why your film should win our top award. Best answer wins the award (joking…or are we?)

Our film breaks with the unfairly racist convention in horror movies that the black guy always dies first. Technically our black guy dies second. Of course, in a zombie apocalypse, the definition of “die” is a bit muddled. We still believe we deserve the top award, if not the Nobel Peace Prize.

See this film plus many more at @ Click here to buy tickets.