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kanaloa
John C. Derrick
PostPosted: Thu Oct 09, 2008 5:23 pm Reply with quote

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http://www.hulu.com/watch/37906/crawford

I have to admit, that is a pretty interesting video. I thought it'd be real Pro Bush, but it's neither honestly. It's just the story of Crawford before and during Bush as President - some of it's pretty funny, and some is sad too.

I honestly had no idea Bush wasn't even from Texas until I saw this. So it's worth a watch if you have the time to do so.
 
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phileysmiley
Larry Richman
PostPosted: Thu Oct 09, 2008 5:28 pm Reply with quote

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I got this in my email:

CRAWFORD is available for free online at HULU today, along with Amazon.com VOD, itunes and other platforms. If you are planning on any political doc pieces this month, CRAWFORD is worthy of inclusion--David Modigliani's award-winning SXSW documentary about a small town thrust into big time politics when President Bush calls it home, is a prism into how so many politicians use "small town values" without concern for small towns. Let us know if you would like to speak with the Director or get a DVD of the film if you don't want to stream.


In Association with

Present

CRAWFORD

A documentary film by David Modigliani


“Poignant ...colorful!” – Variety
“Richly compelling” – Premiere Magazine
“Revelatory: a deeply committed piece of high-def storytelling!” --New York Sun
RELEASE DATE: October 7, 2008
RUNNING TIME: 74 minutes
RATING: TBD
OFFICIAL WEBSITE: www.crawfordmovie.com <http>
TRAILER: http://www.hulu.com/watch/37150/crawford-crawford-trailer


Distributor Contact: B-Side Entertainment Chris Hyams Hyams@bside.com 512.619.7040 815 Brazos St., #300 Austin, TX 78701 Producer’s Rep: Submarine Entertainment Josh Braun mail.submarine@gmail.com 212.625.1410 917-687-3111 (cell) 132 Crosby St, New York, NY 10012 Press Contacts: PR Collaborative Jody Arlington, 202.316.4316 Jamie Shor, 202.339.9598, jody@prcollaborative.com Jamie@prcollaborative.com 2900 M Street, NW Suite 200 Washington, DC 20007

Copyright Live Action Projects 2008


SYNOPSIS


When “W” Came to Town…

"Small Town Values" … big time politics' winning slogan. But does the political machine, so desirous of this wholesome image, actually value the small town itself?

In 1999, then Governor George W. Bush bought a ranch in the one-stoplight town of Crawford, Texas, calling it "home" just in time to set his sights on the White House. Having invented Bush’s "folksy image," the campaign's victory thrusts Crawford onto the world stage and an insular community of barely 700 explodes overnight.

While the high school band plays the inauguration and the Baptist pastor declares a miracle, Crawfordites sell souvenirs hand over fist, finding themselves nearly trampled under the heels of the international press corps, patriotic tourists and boomtown opportunists. Then, four and a half years into Bush's tenure, Cindy Sheehan and her peace movement arrive at the doorstep of the "Western White House." Crawford takes center stage.

As 20,000 impassioned protesters and counter-protesters battle on Crawford's tiny streets, the symbol of the "small town" begins to change. Exacerbated tensions place pressure on the community as well as on the liberties Americans take for granted. And after seven years of this political stagecraft, a President's and a community's choices have an even graver human impact. Left to deal with the aftermath, the real people of Crawford are changed forever.




Now comes CRAWFORD, an often funny, deeply human story told by unforgettable characters. As witness to one man’s (and his spin doctor’s) decision to intertwine his life with the real small town America, the film ultimately becomes a microcosm of a nation in flux -- a unique and poignant reflection on the Bush era.


LONGER SYNOPSIS:

CRAWFORD is an award-winning documentary about a small town thrust into big-time politics; the human impact of political machinations. The recent Republican Vice Presidential nomination of Alaska Governor Sarah Palin casts new light onto the long tradition of campaigns creating political narratives that use the mystique of small towns as their centerpiece.

Governor Palin’s messages, pivoting on her folksy persona, reignite the culture wars between small towns and the population centers of a more cosmopolitan America. We’ve seen this before. Ask the people of Crawford, Texas, whose town was thrust into the spotlight when George W. Bush moved in, as he announced his candidacy for President.

CRAWFORD asks the question: Does the political machine so intent on capitalizing on the notion of “small town values” actually value the small town itself? In 1999, one small town was thrown on a rollercoaster ride to find out the hard way.

Moments before setting his sights on 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, Governor George W. Bush buys a ranch in Crawford, Texas and called it “home” That moment thrusts Crawford onto the world stage. An insular community, our living breathing “small town” finds itself trampled under the heels of the international press corps. They set up their satellites, frame their shots around bale of hay and a political narrative is born. Tourists flock. Souvenir vendors see business boom overnight. Diners overflow with politicians, and Crawford gets caught up in its fifteen minutes of fame.

Suddenly fame isn’t all it’s cracked up to be. Local tensions begin to flare, the residents speak out – and CRAWFORD’s characters open up on camera.
We follow a freethinking high school teacher, her students, a shop owner, and a cowboy, -- as well as other Crawford locals -- as their town – and their lives begin to change. When the town newspaper endorses the “other” candidate tensions grow. Will these individual lives and more importantly their relationships with one another be irreversibly altered by this single decision of a presidential candidate? And when the Bush Ranch becomes the “Western White House” will there be any going back?

Just as the town is starting to feel the heat of the national spotlight the stakes suddenly get higher. Cindy Sheehan and her peace movement arrive at Crawford’s doorstep. The tiny town takes center stage.

An encampment starts to form as the fallen soldier’s mother calls out the President on the eve of his vacation. 20,000 impassioned protestors and counter-protestors battle in Crawford's backyards.. And Crawford’s “small town” image begins to change. Exacerbated tensions place pressure on the community and the liberties Americans take for granted. Our most cherished freedoms of speech and the press – not to mention this small town’s actual values – all are called into question.

Horse-breaker Ricky Smith must protect his town from the “low-lifes” pouring in; teacher Misti Turbeville must confront the school’s administration to protect a lone progressive student; while the town’s elders fight to maintain a sense of normalcy.

Seven years of political drama ultimately take their toll leaving the real people of Crawford to deal with the aftermath.

CRAWFORD tells an often funny and deeply human story about’ real “real people” in small town America whose lives are altered by the lone choice of a soon to be President.


DIRECTOR’S STATEMENT


I was duped. I didn’t know George W. Bush wasn’t from Crawford, Texas.

When I learned Bush moved to Crawford in ’99, just before announcing his candidacy for President, I realized how well his political stagecraft had worked; I’d bought the folksy narrative -- the origin myth -- completely. I wanted to see this town he’d made into a symbol. And I wanted to make a film indicting him for it. Thankfully, I found something far more compelling—the 705 people of Crawford, Texas.

On our first shoot, we were told that if we went to the Fina Gas Station before dawn we could find some of Crawford’s farmers drinking their morning coffee. We walked in, groggy, at 5:30am. Six men sitting around a table stopped mid-conversation and looked up. Their faces read: “who the hell are these kids and what are they doing here?”

I eventually screwed up the courage to break the ice. I said “good morning,” introduced myself and sat down to drink a coffee. At the table, they’d rigged up a little red mailbox-like flag with “B.S” written on it, which they’d pull on each other about every five minutes. They asked me “what brings you to Crawford?” I said “I’m not really sure.” One of them pulled the flag; we all laughed. Pug Meyers, Bill Holmes and their friends were friendly, shy, funny, wily—skeptical of the media, but willing to give us the benefit of the doubt. Two hours later, we took out the camera. By the end of the day, we’d met several people who would become our main subjects. And in three years we had a movie.

We arrived in Crawford before Cindy Sheehan and the subsequent massive protests. This made a huge difference in the relationships that we formed with the people of Crawford and the way in which they let us into their lives. And when things exploded in town, they were willing to let us follow them behind the scenes of the drama.

I’m proud of the film and I think the people of Crawford are, too. For some eight years, Bush and the White House press corps made Crawford part of a story. Now the people of Crawford tell their own.

As elections near and we prepare to turn the page on the Bush era, we’re beginning to reflect on it. We can look back through the eyes of the media, through historians and pundits, who will write books and articles and essays. Or, we can cut through all that, step behind the scenes and get a unique take on the last seven years—people’s history of the Bush era from some of the most dynamic, colorful characters you’ll ever see on screen.

--David Modigliani


ABOUT THE SUBJECTS




Some of Our Characters:

Norma Nelson-Crow – Norma returns home to open a successful souvenir shop. She becomes a master at marketing all things “Crawford.” Business has grown in a once-dead town, but what do the protests mean for her store?

Ken Judy – Ken is Vice President of Crawford’s Bank and a hardcore Bush Supporter who doesn’t care for the media’s choice of backdrops. He churns as the small town’s valued insularity explodes. Can they get it back?

Mike Murphy – Mike is a conservative Baptist preacher who sees Bush’s arrival as an answered prayer. His witty phrases on the church marquee make international papers, but how does will deal with the film’s shattering tragedy?

Robert Murphy – Robert coaches the Division 2A state champion Crawford Pirates. A trip to the White House isn’t a bad motivational tool, but what does the teams motto -- “everybody same” – mean for the other kids in town?

Leon Smith –Leon runs Crawford’s newspaper, the Lonestar Iconoclast, which endorses Bush in 2000, but then famously endorses his opponent, John Kerry in 2004, sending reverberations with dire consequences through the town.

Ricky Smith- Ricky is a horse-breaker who remembers when you could trade guns in the school parking lot—“now there is a tourist under every rock.” It’s all novel until land values skyrocket and Cindy Sheehan , who “should be hung for treason,” comes to town. How does he protect his values and his way of life?

Misty Tubeville – Misty is a progressive-minded high school teacher who was born in Crawford and has returned to teach its kids. How does she protect freethinking in a conservative town and what does it mean for her family?

Tom Warlick – Tom is a pro-Bush 16-year-old in the Crawford High School Band. But, when the band answers Bush’s invitation to the 2000 inauguration in Washington, the crowds of protesters Warlick sees send him to the Internet with new ideas. As his political outlook changes and he gets called a “terrorist” in town, he battles to maintain his identity.



CREATIVE TEAM




ADVISORY BOARD:

TED DANSON • JAKE GYLLENHAAL • GIDEON LESTER

MARY STEENBURGEN • BRAD SILBERLING • CLAUDIA WEIL


DAVID MODIGLIANI (Producer/Director) makes film and theater at the intersection of the personal and political. Texas Monthly named him as one of four "next great Texas directors." He recently concluded his three-year fellowship at the Michener Center for Writers with the Austin production of his play, WIRELESS-LESS (nominated by the Austin Critics Table for "Best New Play.") He has a BA from Harvard University and an MFA from UT Austin. CRAWFORD is his first feature-length film.

MATT NAYLOR (Editor/Associate Producer) edits the annual five-part Students of the World documentary series, which airs at the Clinton Global Initiative. 501 Post, Austin’s premiere post-production facility, handles everything from national TV spots for CBS sports to groundbreaking films like Robert Rodriguez’ SIN CITY.

DAVID RICE (Composer/Associate Producer) has built a reputation for authentic, organic music since releasing solo albums on Justice and Columbia Records. He co-wrote the theme to ABC's hit sitcom HOPE AND FAITH and PBS’ ENDLESS FEAST and has licensed dozens of songs to TV and films including MATCHSTICK MEN and ROSWELL. His collaborations with Mandy Moore have earned him two platinum records. In partnership with Peter Gabriel’s Real World Records he scores the annual Students of the World documentary series. He is executive producer at JSM Music.

DEBORAH EVE LEWIS (Co-Director of Photography) holds documentary feature credits such as P.O.V.’s LAST MAN STANDING (Paul Stekler), First Run Features’ WITH GOD ON OUR SIDE- George W. Bush and the Rise of the Religious Right in America (David Van Taylor & Calvin Scaggs) and four ITVS-funded projects, including TROOP 1500 (Ellen Spiro and Karen Bernstein) named documentary of the year by the National Board of Review.

TANYA SCHURR (Assistant Producer) is a stage manager and producer based at the University of Texas at Austin, where she is pursuing a BA in Theatre & Business. She works in multiple areas of production, from opera & dance to film to university-wide events.

EMILY HARRISON (Designer/Associate Producer) creates the graphics for Live Action Projects and its individual productions. A former editor of the HARVARD LAMPOON, she is the photography editor and a contributing writer at SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN.

RYAN PAVELCHIK (Co-Director of Photography) has published in MUSED, RANT, SPECTRUM, THE CATALYST and PLOUGHSHARES. His photography has appeared in MUSED and American Theatre Magazine. His plays have been produced by the Studio Theatre at UCSB, The Actor’s Gang in Los Angeles, the Actors Theatre of Louisville, and the Salvage Vanguard Theatre in Austin, where STATIC won an Austin Critics’ Circle Award. He is currently a professor in the visual performing arts department at California State University San Marcos. CRAWFORD is his first feature film.

JOSH BRAUN (Producer’s Representative, Domestic) heads Submarine Entertainment, which has represented SUPER SIZE ME, CONTROL ROOM, SPELLBOUND and other major documentary films.

ANNIE RONEY (Producer’s Representative, International) heads Ro*Co Films International, LLC, which has represented NO END IN SIGHT, BORN INTO BORTHELS, JESUS CAMP, and now CRAWFORD.




Music Credits



“Crawford, Texas, 1999” “Bush Comes To Town”
Written by David Rice Written by David Rice
Performed by David Rice Performed by David Rice
Produced by David Rice Produced by David Rice

"You've Got A Long Way To Go" “The Shot”
Written by Dale Watson Composed and Performed by
Performed by Dale Watson John Egan and David Rice
Courtesy of Dale Watson Produced By David Rice

“Big Tent” “The Heat”
Written by David Rice Guitar: John Egan
Performed by David Rice Drums: Nina Singh
Produced by David Rice Lyrics and Vocals: David Modigliani
Produced By David Rice

“Mighty Good Leader” “Can’t Get Back to Town”
Original: Skip James Written by: John Egan, Matt Naylor,
Arrangement: David Rice and John Egan David Modigliani, David Rice
Guitar: David Rice Performed by: John Egan, David Rice
Guitar and Vocals: John Egan Produced by: David Rice
Produced by David Rice

''Vagabond''
Words and music by Myles Heskett,
Chris Ross, Andrew Stockdale
Copyright © 2006 Wolfmother Pty Ltd. (BMI)
Wolmother Pty Ltd. administered by
Cherry River Music Co. (BMI)
All Rights Reserved
Used By Permission
 
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kanaloa
John C. Derrick
PostPosted: Thu Oct 09, 2008 6:21 pm Reply with quote

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Joined: 09 Mar 2002
Posts: 43413
Location: Columbia, SC
Larry, isn't a lot of what you do and go to considered "Indie" material?

I thought it was interesting we're doing more and more of that kind of thing at work. I'm not directly involved in the project, but I thought I'd mention it, just in case you ever do any future Southern Flims. Maybe you could help spread the word. wink

http://southernlens.org/
 
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phileysmiley
Larry Richman
PostPosted: Thu Oct 09, 2008 7:11 pm Reply with quote

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Joined: 21 Jun 2004
Posts: 37285
Location: Philadelphia PA USA
That's a really interesting project. I particularly like the Thursday night series on South Carolina Educational Television. Anything that exposes independent films to the public is a good thing.

Some of the films I've been most involved with in the last couple of years were shot in the South. The independent film industry around Atlanta, Georgia is just exploding right now. It's turning into a little Hollywood of the South.

I've never been to any of the film festivals down there but a few are growing in stature.

One thing I'd recommend is that they set up a MySpace. Most independent films, filmmakers, and festivals have one and it's a great networking tool. I'd add them and, by definition, the word would spread among the industry friends I have.
 
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kanaloa
John C. Derrick
PostPosted: Thu Oct 09, 2008 7:49 pm Reply with quote

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Joined: 09 Mar 2002
Posts: 43413
Location: Columbia, SC
Yep, I work for ETV. I wish we could put the Southern Lens episodes online each Friday morning, but they have popular music in them, and that goes back to our discussion earlier today on music. So unfortunately we cannot encode those and put them online.
 
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phileysmiley
Larry Richman
PostPosted: Fri Oct 10, 2008 1:20 pm Reply with quote

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Joined: 21 Jun 2004
Posts: 37285
Location: Philadelphia PA USA
Just got this letter from the director --

=============


After 3 years of filmmaking, we're thrilled to say: CRAWFORD is yours!

On our new website you'll find a beautiful double-disc DVD http://crawfordmovie.com/ , replete with some truly incredible extras http://crawfordmovie.com/dvd#extras , including our screening of CRAWFORD in the town of Crawford itself and reactions from all the film's characters.

I'm also excited to say that, in a groundbreaking event, CRAWFORD premieres on Hulu.com this week. This is the first major online premiere in history and it's an easy way to share the film with friends in a high quality stream. CRAWFORD is currently the most popular movie on Hulu!

CRAWFORD will play a total of 34 festivals this year. Since it's SXSW spotlight premiere, it's won the Brooklyn FF Audience Award for Best Documentary and six other great awards; two AP stories on the film have run around the world.

Variety calls it "poignant," Premiere calls it "richly compelling" and The New York Sun calls it "revelatory." Now you can own it -- and share it.


BUY THE FILM HERE
http://crawfordmovie.com/

SEE THE FILM ON HULU HERE
http://www.hulu.com/watch/37906/crawford

IF YOU LIKE CRAWFORD, SHARE IT - FOR FREE

This isn't another video to send around - this is a feature-length film you can give to your friends and your family.

(From Hulu, click "share" and then email it to friends or post it to your Facebook page. You can also just send the Hulu link. Encoded and ready to roll, the film is yours to distribute. This still astounds me.)

JOIN THE FACEBOOK GROUP HERE
http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=7964304829

Thanks for all of your support and interest. This is an exciting day --

David and the Crawford Team

PS This is a personal email, but after signing with our distributor, B-Side Entertainment, future updates will come through them.
 
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