3701 Sacramento Street, #291 San Francisco, CA 94118
415.827.3385 |
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S.F. Bay Area Filmmaker’s “The
Highway Home” slated to screen at the 2008 Berkeley
Video & Film Festival
San Francisco, California , September 1, 2008: “The
Highway Home,” a film by award-winning independent
filmmaker, Laurel Hunter, is slated to screen at the 2008 Berkeley
Video & Film Festival. The screening will take
place at the Landmark
Shattuck Cinemas, 2230 Shattuck Avenue,
Downtown Berkeley, on Sunday, September
28th, @ 5:20 pm (Box Office -510.464.5980, Festival
Info - 510.843.3699).
Following the journey of a disillusioned teen, this experimental
interpretational drama examines relationships born and secrets
brought to light in the wake of tragedy and disaster. Themes unfold
as a young runaway girl encounters a deluge of strangers whose
actions, both generous and unkind, propel her toward a harsh and
ruthless fait accompli. This charming and unconventional 16mm film
was shot on location in Colorado and transferred to digital media
for editing, color correction and special effects. In the spirit
of true independent film, it was produced under a Screen Actor’s
Guild Experimental Agreement, without the assistance or backing
of any established industry professional or movie studio. More
than 100 artists, crew members, technicians and community members volunteered
their time or worked for percentage points to bring this project
to fruition.
For more information and to view the movie trailer, CLICK
HERE.
Erika Frost:
The film introduces Erika Frost who, in addition to her acting
pursuits, currently works as a paranormal media personality and
resident psychic aboard the Queen Mary. She has been seen on such
TV shows as the Sci Fi Channel's "Ghost Hunters," the
Travel Channel's "Most Haunted," KCAL Channel 9's "Lisa's
It List" and "Tyra Banks." More recently she has
been heard on international radio on "Coast to Coast AM With
George Norry" and has been featured in various newspaper and
magazine articles. Frost has an extensive and award winning theatre
background. This is her first feature film.
Originally from Denver, Colorado, Laurel Hunter is a filmmaker,
writer, director and actor who lives in Emeryville, CA. Her second
feature film, The Highway Home, recently premiered at the 2008
California Independent Film Festival. Her first feature, “Something
Better,” has been screened at the American Film Institute
in Los Angeles (2002), The East Village Cinemas in New York City
(2003) with the New York International Film and Video Festival,
The Breckenridge Festival of Film (2004) and The Golden Film Festival
(2004) where her work was given Best Feature, Best Directors, and
Best Actress awards. Additionally, The Berkeley Film and Video
festival (2003) acknowledged the film with a Best of Festival award.
Hunter, whose roots are in live theatre, has directed numerous
stage productions on the East and West coasts, including JP Allen's
one man show, “Gambling,” at the Victory Theatre in
Burbank, which received critical acclaim in the Los Angeles Times
and the L.A. Weekly, and has since been made into a feature film
winning a Best Feature award at the Telluride Independent Film
Festival (2005). Her theatrical collaboration with New York based
actor, Bill Smartt (AUNT JACK) ran for three weeks at the 78th
Street Theatre in New York City. After developing it with Smartt
at the Marsh Theatre in San Francisco, it premiered at the Theatre
Rhinoceros Studio Theatre, also in San Francisco. Ms. Hunter received
her degree in playwriting from San Francisco State University and
has received multiple playwriting awards, including a Lawrence
and Lee Playwriting Award, a Highsmith Playwriting Award, and also
won the Bay Area Women's Playwriting Competition who produced her
play at The Studio Eremos Theatre in San Francisco.
About the Cinematographer:
Tarina Reed has directed photography on four feature films and
numerous documentaries, and has photographed notable film stars
such as Danny Glover, Elle Fanning, Michael Madison, Wes Studi
and Seymour Cassel. As a cinematography intern with the Academy
of Television Arts and Sciences and a participant in the Sixth
International Student DOP Workshop, she studied under renowned
cinematographers James Chressanthis, ASC, Laszlo Kovacs, ASC and
Vilmos Zsigmond, ASC. Before relocating to Los Angeles, Reed served
in the U.S. Army Reserve for 11 years as a combat photographer
in diverse, sometimes hostile environments, including Bosnia, Egypt
and Germany. She received a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree in Cinematography
from the North Carolina School of the Arts.
Company Background:
Formed by Laurel Hunter in early 2007, Blu Fly Productions (formerly
Lucky Dog Films) seeks productions that stretch the boundaries
of film as an art form. “The Highway Home” is Hunter’s
second film project and the first Blu Fly production. The company
currently has two films slated for production. Hunter has also
recently partnered with Nazareth born award winning filmmaker,
Shady Srour (Sense of Need). Together they have formed the production
company, World Clique Cinema, dedicated to works that enhance humanitarian
and political perspectives of America and the Middle East. Hunter
and Srour have one project in development called the Dark of Night. |
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