This Is Tomorrow

Earlier today I sat down with West of Memphis director Amy Berg, former West Memphis 3 defendant and currently free-as-a-bird Damien Echols and wife Lorri Davis. We sat at an outdoor table behind Santa Barbara’s Lobero Theatre for a little more than 20 minutes. Echols and I talked mostly about right now and what’s coming, and only a little bit about the past. I’ve posted five or six riffs about Berg’s film since Sundance so I’ll let the mp3 speak for itself.


(l. to r.) West of Memphis director Amy Berg, Damien Echols, Lorri Davis.

Cowboy Strikes Again

I wrote a few hours ago that during the q & a portion of today’s SBIFF Directors Panel “three enterprising and obnoxious assholes (one wearing a black cowboy hat) took the mike together and basically asked the panel for help with their filmmaking careers.” They were booed and shouted down. Three hours later the same cowboy asshat tried the same routine during the Movers and Shakers panel. Watch the sudden reaction of moderator Patrick Goldstein as the guy goes into his schpiel.

Directors Disappoint

The just-concluded Santa Barbara Film Festival directors’ panel discussion was a dud for the most part. The only directors I found likable and interesting were BridesmaidsPaul Feig, a clever, well-spoken, fast-on-his feet fellow, and Terry George, helmer of a currently-playing short called The Shore. Moderator Peter Bart did what he could, but the panelists included three helmers of animated film (including the ogre-ish Gore Verbinski, the paycheck-driven director of Rango, two Pirates movies and the forthcoming Lone Ranger) so it was almost an animation panel, which are always boring if you’re not an animation fan.

The exception to the boredom came during the q & a portion when three enterprising and obnoxious assholes (one wearing a cowboy hat) took the mike together and asked the panel for help with their filmmaking careers. This despite Bart having specifically stated that such questions were unwelcome and wouldn’t be allowed. Some people are shameless and some are unreachable — this trio was both. They were hissed and booed down and all but thrown out of the theatre.

Contentment

During last night’s post-Virtuoso Awards after-party West of Memphis director Amy Berg showed me a mock magazine-cover illustration recently drawn by former West Memphis 3 defendant Damien Echols. It depicts himself and partner Lorri Davis. Echols and Davis arrived here last night to do interviews and take part in a post-screening q & a this evening.

Virituoso Rundown

Young Adult‘s Patton Oswalt was the absolute star and the life of the party during last night’s Virtuosos Awards presentation at Santa Barbara’s Arlington theatre. Rise of the Planet of the ApesAndy Serkis took a close second for apperaring on-stage shirtless, and A Better Life‘s Demian Bichir was charming and affable. Dragon Tattoo‘s Rooney Mara seemed politely subdued. The DescendantsShailene Woodley was fine. And moderator Dave Karger was typically smooth and engaging.

Google Hate

My favorite photo-editing app isn’t an app — it’s a website called Picnik. It’s clean and efficient and dumb enough for the likes of myself. Cropping, resizing, sharpening, tinting, contrasting and red-eye fixes are a snap. And yet Google, the fascist insect that bought Picnic a year or so ago, is closing it down on 4.19. I’m guessing it’ll still be available for Google Plus users, but many people are furious. I’m now looking for an app that’s comparable in terms of ease and simplicity.

At the very least Google should offer a purchasable Picnik app. I would happily shell out. It’s unconscionable to remove a popular photo-editing software without offering some kind of replacement option. Here’s a petition form protesting the Picnik shutdown.

Take Or Leave

A Criterion Bluray containing a slash-and-crop 1.85 to 1 version of Otto Preminger‘s Anatomy of a Murder will be out on 2.21. DVD Beaver has posted a review with screen captures comparing Sony Home Video’s exquisitely boxy 1.33 to 1 DVD version to the Criterion Bluray. I’m not saying the Criterion (which I haven’t yet seen) won’t have value. A Bluray of an excellent courtroom drama that shows 2/3 of what dp Sam Leavitt originally shot is better than nothing.


A visually compressed, jail-cell cropping, captured from Criterion Bluray.

I’ll allow that the Criterion Bluray seems to offer more visual information on the sides than the Sony Home Video 2000 DVD version. This is a good thing, but there’s still no excuse for whacking off a third of the originally photographed version — one that was seen during who-knows-how-many hundreds of TV airings during the ’60s, ’70s, ’80s and ’90s, and which was contained in the NTSC DVD version.


From the ample-head-space version provided by Sony Home Video in 2000.

Congregation

I was walking up to the Arlington last night to catch the Virtuosos Tribute when I noticed a long line outside the Fiesta Five. “Is this for Chronicle?” I asked a woman near the end of it. “It’s a general line for everything,” she said. I asked what she was seeing. “The Woman in Black.” Something was obviously up. It was a cool Friday night and a certain hunger among a younger, less cultured Santa Barbara crowd (i.e., SBIFF-averse for whatever reason) had made itself known.

Chronicle and Woman in Black were neck-and-neck, as it turned out. At 10 pm last night Deadline had The Woman in Black earning $8.8 million in 2,855 theaters for a $3082 average, and Chronicle with $8.6 million in 2907 situations for a per-screen average of $2958.

I’m out of this personally. I missed last Tuesday night’s Chronicle screening at the Fox lot when I was down in LA and nobody invited me to a Woman in Black screening so I don’t know anything.