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Kaffeine Buzz
reviews independent and foreign films,
in addition to reporting the latest buzz behind
Colorado's film festivals.
DIRECTOR Ronald Bronstein
creates a stir in the theater with his film "frownland"
Ahhh yes, the Starz Film Festival,
Denver’s cock in the culturally aware city
ring, our attempt to stake our claim as artistically
relevant as other cities like Austin, Texas, and
Portland, Oregon.
As I sauntered in this year, popping Adderall
like sour patch kids, to ascertain whether it
was the twelve mimosas I had for breakfast or
the lack of interest that caused me to fall asleep
during “The Red Elvis,” I realized
that the motivation to go to this event says a
lot about our interest and what one gets out of
festivals such as this. People participate in
events like these for different reasons: the parties,
to be seen, or to get turned on to something new
and exciting. But often we are just looking to
attend an event, not participate in art.
Why we go to the movies and why filmmakers create
movies have a direct correlation to the films
one enjoys. This year at the Starz Film Festival
I was afforded an interview with a filmmaker that
believes one should walk into a film ready for
a fight.
“Frownland” is a film by Ronald
Bronstein, an NYU film school drop out
who has spent over five years writing and creating
the story for the film. He is one of a few new,
break-through filmmakers that are leading the
avant-garde into a new American film revival.
His technique is to cast the actors before writing
the script. He does hours of rehearsals and records
them all, later transcribing the hours of dialogue,
using the actors’ own words to tell his
preconceived story.
As Bronstein says, “If you are married
to the words in a script, and then you suddenly
cast somebody that has no personal relationship
to the words, you essentially try to squeegee
those words out of their mouths. So I backed up
and found people who weren’t actors but
had very large personalities. Most of them are
very eccentric people or unstable people. Every
once in a while you run into these brains that
just blow you away. You can’t understand
how they can function because they are so much
more extreme than you are…it’s like
writing with somebody’s brain rather than
writing with a pencil.”
That is the essence of "Frownland."
It is a film about a weak, slobbering, self-loathing
character that sells coupon book door-to-door.
His roommate abuses him, and the only person he
thinks is his friend wants nothing to do with
him.
This is not a film you rent on a second date.
This is not a film you watch with the whole family
at Christmas time. This may not even be a film
you watch with anyone. The experience is solely
yours.
The film creates an almost narcissistic connection
between how you deal with the awkward the obtuse
and the ugly aspects of our culture, and what
that says about you as an artistic purveyor and
person. There is no out, no side door to understanding.
As the viewer you are solely responsible for what
you take away from the film. It is a 104 minutes
of grading antipathy, and guilty humor that leaves
the audience with a incendiary feeling of self
doubt about how to react to the film and their
own reaction to the lead character Keith.
Bronstein believes that it was this performance
that induces these feelings. “The lead performance
in the movie is the one I think is the strongest,
and he expended himself, he turned himself inside
out for this film.”
While filming on a budget most films use just
on catering, Bronstein paid all expenses out of
pocket. The actual amount was not specified; however
he did say he got $50,000 from insurance after
his apartment burned down. That is when he decided
to start filming, while still working as a projectionist
during the day.
This has not affected the recognition however.
The film won a Special Jury Award at the 2007
SXSW Film Festival, had been an official selection
at Maryland Film Festival, and there won the cognizance
of film maker Lodge Kerrigan who in Bronstein’s
words, “Became the patron saint of the project.”
As a result “Frownland” is getting
theatrical distribution in France slated for the
spring of ’08. From there the film was shown
at the CineVegas Film Festival where it met its
most reactionary audiences.
“It wasn’t like people yelling ‘your
movie sucked’ or ‘the acting is terrible.’
It was more like people saying ‘why did
you do what to me? Why did you make me spend time
with that guy? I don’t like how I feel right
now.’ What was cool about that is that one
guy booed, and he would boo many times, he actual
booed, empted the air from his lungs, then refilled
and booed again. Then another guy got up and yelled
at the booer and then third guy got up and defended
the booer's right to boo. It was this melee, and
I really thought someone was going to get punched.
It turned out the guy that defended the booer's
right to boo was a critic for Variety and wrote
a killer review of the film.”
After the fight in Vegas the film went to the
Harvard Film Archives in a program co-curatted
by Ray Carney, the leading John Cassavetes scholar
who is described by Bronstein as a person “whose
staunch commitment to film making that is not
sucking off the teat of Hollywood or commercial
concerns is staggering” (if you don’t
know who John Cassavetes is Google him, rent his
films be instantly cool).
This led to a showing at the IFC Center hosted
by Filmmakers Magazine, which sold out. This including
a nomination for the Gotham Award for best unreleased
Feature rounds out the Films run so far. There
is this little business of a showing at the MOMA,
but that’s nothing compared to our sultry
little festival here in Denver.
At the showing that I viewed only a little over
half the theater was filled. No one left during
the showing, however there where many who did
not stay for the Q&A after the show. Bronstein’s
view of the festival circuit is one of casual
indifference.
“I found that the movie views better when
people go in with boxing gloves on…the festival
circuit is a party circuit and often the films
come second… its seems like people enter
a movie theater and hang up there intuitive faculties.”
Four out of five festivals reject his film, including
those that requested his submission, but he still
continues to fulfill those requests. This negative
reaction does not seem to discourage the avant-garde
film community from bestowing hype on his work.
Even though Bronstein does seem to have a dark
streak in him, he does not want to write off mankind
just yet.
“Friction and antipathy are part of every
relationship. There are no easy relationships…I
don’t want to be a misanthrope, or and anti-humanist,
I am trying to keep that in check. But if it is
not in me right now to make a humanist work that
is really about caring for someone, then at least
I’ve made a movie about feeling bad about
not caring for some one.”
The future is exceptionally wide open for Bronstein.
He does not want to climb the indie film latter,
or go to the next level. He would rather make
films that are compelling, even if that means
he’s fronting all the costs out of his own
pocket. He would rather have the freedom of creative
control than work with a multi-million dollar
budget. So what is next?
“This messed up, fucked up theater troupe
that is led by this guy, you can’t tell,
he is so full of ideas and so willing to rape
his practices from the medical world. Is he making
this stuff up or is there a master plan for this
crazy, cult, hippy group trying to put on this
psychedelic play? It is not as theoretical and
heady as that sounds. It’s going to be a
very visceral, ugly movie about these people bashing
against one another in the making of this mess
of a play…that is sort of what I am working
on…ya and its going to be funny.”
It already is.
myspace.com/frownland16mm
frownlandinc.com
-Aaron Collins, November 28, 2007
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