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Film and Video
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Featured
We Can Get Them For You Wholesale
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Featured
You will likely recognize Jude Prest from his acting work. What you might not know about him is that he is also a director and producer. What stands out about Jude's directing work is his sense of humor. If you are a fan of Neil Gaiman as we are from The Sandman series and many books including Smoke and Mirrors where you will find the short story, We Can Get Them For You Wholesale, you will love watching Jude's presentation of the story with Neil Gaiman's narration. Brian Howe and Daniel Roebuck are the right casting move for this and carry it well. We love the scene with Catherine Gaffney as the receptionist. Truly a great comedic moment in the film.
& A Film by Geefwee Boedoe
Archive treasures
Feel free to leave your car and visit the refreshment stand for "the finest snacks in all the land." This intermission reel was made for drive-in theaters back when snack bars were called refreshment stands and advertising was sweet and simple and minds unsophisticated and vulnerable to cheap persuasion. No doubt the makers of the Your Name Here Story saw through it all and understood that the true game changer was branding. Like the featured films above, the makers of the Your Name Here Story handled their subject with tongue firmly in cheek.
Drive-in Theater Intermission Reel
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The Your Name Here Story
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Countrockula's Theater for the Insane!
Warning: Watching Theater for the Insane may induce seizures
Some may recall a bygone analogue era when anybody with two decks could create tape mixes they could share with others. Audio mix then led to video mix and some very interesting experimental programs. They were mostly of the public access variety and low tech but that is their appeal and why they were so original. Theater for the Insane! was an independent series of video mixes "conceived on VHS, developed on cable access and later adapted to the internet," according to Countrockula. "Theater for the Insane! is an attempt to apply conceptual continuity to the fragments of pop culture. Film clips, Coming Attractions, Music Videos, and various other slices of time get mixed in with my own hyper accelerated Barrage Edits (not for the epileptic)." You can check out what Countrockula is up to these days here: http://rockulaproductions.com/
Some may recall a bygone analogue era when anybody with two decks could create tape mixes they could share with others. Audio mix then led to video mix and some very interesting experimental programs. They were mostly of the public access variety and low tech but that is their appeal and why they were so original. Theater for the Insane! was an independent series of video mixes "conceived on VHS, developed on cable access and later adapted to the internet," according to Countrockula. "Theater for the Insane! is an attempt to apply conceptual continuity to the fragments of pop culture. Film clips, Coming Attractions, Music Videos, and various other slices of time get mixed in with my own hyper accelerated Barrage Edits (not for the epileptic)." You can check out what Countrockula is up to these days here: http://rockulaproductions.com/
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