Cox-Gomyl  Skyscraper posters - sale!  
HomeDiagramsCitiesForumSkyscraper PostersStore
     
--> Welcome to the SkyscraperPage Forum.

Since 1999, SkyscraperPage.com's forum has been one of the most active skyscraper enthusiast communities on the web. The global membership discusses development news and construction activity on projects from around the world, alongside discussions on urban design, architecture, transportation and many other topics. SkyscraperPage.com also features unique skyscraper diagrams, a database of construction activity, and publishes popular skyscraper posters.

You are currently browsing as a guest. Register with the SkyscraperPage Forum and join this growing community of skyscraper enthusiasts. Registering has benefits such as fewer ad banners, the ability to post messages, private messaging and more.

Go Back   SkyscraperPage Forum > Regional Sections > United States > Northeast

Reply

 
Thread Tools Display Modes
     
     
  #21  
Old 06-27-2006, 01:41 AM
Evergrey's Avatar
Evergrey Evergrey is offline
Who loves ya baby?
 
Join Date: Apr 2003
Location: Banished to the land of wind and ghosts
Posts: 20,730

http://www.cinematical.com/2006/06/2...to-pittsburgh/

Miller, Sarsgaard Head to Pittsburgh
Posted Jun 24th 2006 12:01PM by Martha Fischer
Filed under: Drama, Casting, Newsstand

Michael Chabon is in the news again. Last week, Erik reported that Natalie Portman was considering a role in the screen version of Chabon's mindblowingly wonderful The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay (for fans of the book, Chabon himself offers a great update on the movie over at his blog, including what elements of his work will be included, and which have been cut from the screenplay), and now Production Weekly is reporting that the cast is in place for The Mysteries of Pittsburgh, which is based on Chabon's first novel. Set to star in the film, a coming-of-age story set in 1980s Pittsburgh, are Sienna Miller, Peter Sarsgaard, and Max Minghella. The novel focuses on Art Bechstein (to be played by Minghella), and the group of friends he meets during "the last summer of [his] youth." Among the group are "the witty and beautiful Arthur Lecomte [uncast], "the equally stunning Jane (Miller), her boyfriend, the legendary Cleveland (Sarsgaard), and worldly, exotic, and slightly eccentric Phlox [also uncast]." Whoa. So, if nothing else, this is going to be a damn pretty movie.

One of the main concerns of the novel seems to be sexual identity; it'll be interesting to see in what direction screenwriter-director Rawson Marshall Thurber takes the film. (Personally, I'm immediately prejudiced against him because he's wearing a Manchester United jersey in his IMDb photo.) Production begins next month in Pittsburgh; the film is due out in 2007.




http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0768218/

Sienna Miller


Max Minghella


Peter Sarsgaard



Last edited by Evergrey : 06-27-2006 at 01:49 AM.
Reply With Quote
     
     
  #22  
Old 06-29-2006, 12:01 AM
AaronPGH's Avatar
AaronPGH AaronPGH is online now
Registered User
 
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Pittsburgh
Posts: 995

Hello Max, I'm Aaron.


Reply With Quote
     
     
  #23  
Old 08-11-2006, 03:22 PM
Evergrey's Avatar
Evergrey Evergrey is offline
Who loves ya baby?
 
Join Date: Apr 2003
Location: Banished to the land of wind and ghosts
Posts: 20,730

http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/06223/712694-254.stm

Film Notes: 'Mysteries of Pittsburgh' will film here next month
Friday, August 11, 2006


Jon Foster will star in "The Mysteries of Pittsburgh."

By Barbara Vancheri, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

"The Mysteries of Pittsburgh," starring Jon Foster, Peter Sarsgaard, Sienna Miller and Mena Suvari, is scheduled to start filming here after Labor Day.

Foster, cast earlier this year as a violent teen in "Tenderness" opposite Russell Crowe, is stepping in the lead role once linked to Max Minghella. His other credits include the movies "Stay Alive" and "The Door in the Floor" and the TV series "Windfall" and "Life As We Know It."

Rawson Thurber is directing and writing the screenplay, based on Michael Chabon's novel. It's about a character named Art Bechstein, a University of Pittsburgh economics graduate spending the summer working in a bookstore.

Khristina Kravas, vice president of Groundswell Productions, and others have set up shop in Pittsburgh. She said the shoot will start just after Labor Day and stretch to mid- to late October. The book is set in the 1980s and the movie will be, too.

Asked what locations will factor into the $7 million film, she said, "It's a little bit premature to say that. We haven't locked in our location deals. We're really excited about some of our locations. Pittsburgh is beautiful."

Donna Belajac, whose Belajac Casting is handling local casting, is still looking for a very overweight actress, 20 to 25 years old, and a man in his 20s or 30s with a Mohawk haircut. These are speaking roles so experience is desired, Belajac says.

If you fit either part, go to www.donnabelajaccasting.com and e-mail her. Auditions will be Monday.

Mosser Casting is looking for 700 extras. For information: www.mossercasting.com or 412-434-1666.


Roping in Romero


The Hollywood Reporter says George Romero will write and direct a thriller called "Solitary Isle."

It's based on a short story by Koji Suzuki, who wrote the novels inspiring "The Ring" and "Dark Water." The story chronicles an expedition to a deserted island that turns deadly as the explorers face an unknown force, the trade publication reports.


Fest honors


Two made-in-Pittsburgh movies were honored at the Indie Gathering Film Festival this month in Cleveland.

"Dumpster," a Three Rivers Film Festival selection written by Jim Daniels, won first prize for drama/comedy while "Doing Therapy" was the top film in the comedy/romantic category.

"Dumpster" stars David Conrad as a long-in-the-tooth frat boy and Jeffrey Carpenter as a college maintenance worker. It was shot for roughly $10,000 in five days on Carnegie Mellon University's campus.

Joe Giacobello wrote and directed the lighthearted "Doing Therapy" and also appears in it alongside actress Barbara Winters. Set in present-day Pittsburgh, it tells the story of a Hollywood actress who develops a problem with panic attacks.


Counter culture


"Mysteries" may be coming to town but criticism of the Pittsburgh Film Office, its board and director hasn't gone away.

A newly chosen spokeswoman for a group trying to reinvent the office says plans are in the works for a rally before summer's end to draw attention to its campaign and to raise operating funds.

Adrienne Wehr, producer of "The Bread, My Sweet," has been picked as the chair and spokeswoman for a committee that emerged from a July 31 meeting at Pittsburgh Filmmakers that drew roughly 70 people.

A smaller group of 27 has been charged with hammering out details on how to expand, reshape and fund a film office that can lure the big projects from Hollywood and yet foster the smaller ones at home.

They insist a regional executive director must be based in Pittsburgh, and they also propose changes in who would sit on the office board and how the overseers would operate. In addition to crafting mission and position statements, the group is in the process of picking a name for itself.


Remembering 9/11


Robert Morris University will mark the fifth anniversary of 9/11 with a special DVD edition of its student-produced documentary, "America Talks." It will include interviews with RMU students who worked on the 45-minute video plus a behind-the-scenes look at its creation.

Originally intended as a student project for professor James Seguin's television production course, "America Talks" eventually represented the work of two dozen students. They spent 25 days filming and conducting interviews outside the White House gates, on the streets of New York and near the Shanksville crash site and elsewhere in Western Pennsylvania, and 40-plus days editing.

The documentary examines the sentiments of Americans in the weeks after the attacks. Seguin calls the documentary a life-altering experience for him and his students and a snapshot of America at the time.

To order, send a $12 check payable to Robert Morris University to: RMU, Center for Documentary Production and Study, 6001 University Blvd., Moon Township PA 15108. Allow two weeks for delivery.


Convenient donation


"An Inconvenient Truth" has grossed more than $20 million, which makes it the fourth highest documentary of all time. Paramount Classics promised it would donate 5 percent of box-office receipts to the Alliance for Climate Protection, so that has spelled a $1 million donation. Al Gore already had promised to turn over any proceeds he made from the movie and a companion book, "An Inconvenient Truth," published by Rodale and priced at $21.95 on its Web site.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

(Post-Gazette movie editor Barbara Vancheri can be reached at bvancheri@post-gazette.com or 412-263-1632. )


Reply With Quote
     
     
  #24  
Old 08-13-2006, 04:45 PM
SteelCity15's Avatar
SteelCity15 SteelCity15 is offline
Shred Guitar Expert
 
Join Date: Jan 2003
Location: Pittsburgh
Posts: 1,060

Quote:
Originally Posted by PhillyNation
I don't understand why there is so much filming done down in Philly that it's cost prohibitive in Pittsburgh? Sounds like a flimsy excuse to me by the producer. Louisiana? How in the hell can you make any place in Louisiana look like Pittsburgh? Hell....the one thing about "Queer As Folk" was that Toronto doesn't look a thing like Pittsburgh and it always bothered me seeing a flat city posing for Pittsburgh. How many cities have a 500 foot hill looming across from it's downtown?

who knows. Where the hell are they gonna film in Louisiana anyways?


Reply With Quote
     
     
  #25  
Old 08-14-2006, 04:07 PM
Brandon716 Brandon716 is offline
North American
 
Join Date: Jun 2000
Location: Buffalo, Niagara Region
Posts: 13,845

I think "cost of production" is a LAME excuse for not wanting to film in Pittsburgh. Its one of the lowest cost cities to do business in. If they aren't going to film it here, where? Toronto? Where average hotels are considerably higher?

Right... I think its an excuse used to get more tax incentives.

At least they decided to film it here.


Reply With Quote
     
     
  #26  
Old 08-14-2006, 05:58 PM
EventHorizon's Avatar
EventHorizon EventHorizon is offline
Registered User
 
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: metro pittsburgh
Posts: 471

A shame that Max Minghella won't be in the film -- though I'm sure Jon Foster will be brilliant.

Great that they're going to film here!


Reply With Quote
     
     
  #27  
Old 08-14-2006, 11:06 PM
Evergrey's Avatar
Evergrey Evergrey is offline
Who loves ya baby?
 
Join Date: Apr 2003
Location: Banished to the land of wind and ghosts
Posts: 20,730

Wouldn't it be cool if we could get an SSPer into the movie?

http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/06226/713301-254.stm

Casting call set for 'Mysteries of Pittsburgh'
Monday, August 14, 2006

Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Filmmakers for "The Mysteries of Pittsburgh," based on the best-selling novel by Michael Chabon, starring Peter Sarsgaard and Sienna Miller, are holding an open casting call on Friday.

Nancy Mosser Casting is looking for people between the ages of 6 and 75. Specific groups include college-age students for a punk club scene and patrons for an upscale restaurant and hotel scene. "Mysteries" will shoot in and around the Pittsburgh area from Sept. 5 to Oct. 20.

Auditioners are asked, if possible, to outfit themselves as they might have in the early 1980s, when the film takes place (they suggest that you reference munkeysocks.tripod.com for '80s fashion trends). Bring a snapshot of yourself and a pen to Nancy Mosser Casting, 239 4th Avenue, Suite 1217, Downtown, between 10 a.m. and 7 p.m.

More information: 412-434-1666 or www.mossercasting.com.


Reply With Quote
     
     
  #28  
Old 08-15-2006, 12:58 AM
AaronPGH's Avatar
AaronPGH AaronPGH is online now
Registered User
 
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Pittsburgh
Posts: 995

hmmm, I do have some slammin 80's garb. hmmmm again. I could try to swing by after work since I'll be downtown anyway.


Reply With Quote
     
     
  #29  
Old 08-19-2006, 03:23 PM
Evergrey's Avatar
Evergrey Evergrey is offline
Who loves ya baby?
 
Join Date: Apr 2003
Location: Banished to the land of wind and ghosts
Posts: 20,730

http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/06231/714796-254.stm

'Mysteries' casting call transports city to '80s
Saturday, August 19, 2006



Alyssa Cwanger, Post-Gazette
Casting director Katie Shenot, 25, of Green Tree, takes measurements for Cody Lebo, 19, of Polish Hill, at Nancy Mosser Casting, Downtown, during an open casting call yesterday for the filming of "The Mysteries of Pittsburgh," based on the best-selling novel by Michael Chabon.

By Diana Nelson Jones, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette


Melissa Moraes was born one year after Michael Chabon's first novel, "The Mysteries of Pittsburgh," was released in 1988, but at yesterday's casting call for the movie, she had the '80s nailed.

Think Madonna -- but 17, dark-haired and tan, with the little skirt over the leggings, the arm bangles, the loppy hair and an ingenious use of a pair of cutoff pink-and-black striped tights.

"I cut out the feet," she said, wiggling her fingers from the holes and grinning. "I call it an arm warmer."

Throughout the day, dozens and dozens of girls and women eager to be in the movie's punk club scene waited in cutoff jeans over fishnet tights under scrunch socks and Converse All-Stars, or leg warmers and scrunch socks and heels, layers of little tops, long gloves with the fingers cut out, plastic bracelets, blue eye shadow, sinister eye liner and teased and towering hair.

Earlier this week, Nancy Mosser Casting, Downtown, put out a call for extras for "The Mysteries of Pittsburgh," which will be filmed here from Sept. 5 to Oct. 20.

Set here in 1983, the story -- without giving too much away -- takes us through a summer in the life of a college student who falls into a love triangle with a man and a woman.

One hour into the daylong collecting of photos, measurements and bios, Ms. Mosser's assistant, Katie Shenot, said, "It's 11 o'clock and we're 52 people in already. Lots of hours left."

About that time, Ellen Harlow and Frank Colaizzi waltzed in, effortlessly affecting the look of two people you might see at a party of museum patrons -- the scene they were aiming for. Before having her photo shot, she jammed her sunglasses into a mass of lush, silver-blond hair and smiled like a pro.

Asked if they have been in show business before, Mr. Colaizzi said, "I never have, she has."

"I've been in amateur productions," she said.

They read the casting call and thought, "Why not?" she said.

"Something to do," he said.

Renata McCormish and her daughters, Heather, 13, and Emma, 9, showed up to be extras. Ms. McCormish is a commercial model whose agent alerted her to the opportunity.


Alyssa Cwanger, Post-Gazette
Kasie Fiano, 21, of Mount Pleasant, has her picture taken at Nancy Mosser Casting during yesterday's open casting call for filming of "The Mysteries of Pittsburgh."

"I asked them if they'd like to try it," she said, nodding at the girls, who, like their mother, wore colorful halter-top dresses with glittery designs.

Ms. Mosser took two pictures of each person. Those who didn't know their measurements stood like Frankenstein to be tape measured, then went on their way with the promise, "We'll be in touch."

"We probably will use almost everybody," said Ms. Mosser. "We need 700 [extras]."

The same extras need to appear three days in a row for the continuity of one scene, she said. That's a demand that makes casting people antsy. "A huge part of our job is hoping people will roll out of bed and show up," she said, explaining, "It's minimum wage."

The real payoff, of course, will come next year -- sitting in the theater with their friends when their scene comes on.

"He could be our minister," said Ms. Shenot, shooting a look at a stately, bearded man who appeared in the doorway. He wore an elegant black jacket over a pearl-colored silk shirt with a tab-free collar. A retired fireman, John Agnole, roared when she repeated the suggestion to him. He said he has "always" had acting aspirations and worked as an extra in "Striking Distance," a 1993 movie that was filmed locally starring Bruce Willis and Sarah Jessica Parker.

It was easy to tell the veterans of casting calls. They popped in confidently, calling Ms. Mosser by name, and knew where to stand and had their measurements on the form. They had their poses practiced, too. One tall blonde slumped one shoulder, hooked her thumb at her hip and pursed her lips like a fish.

Walt Myal walked in with his hair sticking up in a mohawk. "Hi, Walt," Ms. Shenot said brightly to the young man who served as her assistant on a public TV docudrama. He has been in advertisements and worked as an extra before.

"You know the Kennywood billboards?" he asked, waiting a moment for effect. "I'm the 'Night Rider.'"

With his hair-raising experience, he recommends molding wax for mohawks. "It's the best product I've tried."

The "Mysteries" costume department is advising extras to "remember" that in 1983, "everything was worn tighter," so no baggy jeans, loose T-shirts, pants or skirts on hips and no bulky tennis shoes. It also eschews "huge shoulder pads" for those playing the rich people.

Like many who turned out yesterday, Ms. Moraes wasn't born in time to remember the 1980s or have any '80s clothing. She achieved the look of a material girl with help from the Web and her own ingenuity. "Plus my favorite movie of all time is 'The Wedding Singer,'" a 1998 movie set in 1985.

Several little girls came in with their mothers looking like miniature "Flashdance" understudies -- in big off-the-shoulder sweaters cinched with wide belts.

Ms. Mosser said few children will be needed. "There's a bookstore scene where we need some little kids. There's a pickup soccer game where college-age boys join in with little kids."

That's about it for kids. But some needs remain: "We need to find a real string quartet," she said, "and we're looking for a man with a missing leg."


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

(Diana Nelson Jones can be reached at djones@post-gazette.com or 412-263-1626. )


Reply With Quote
     
     
  #30  
Old 08-23-2006, 07:29 PM
Evergrey's Avatar
Evergrey Evergrey is offline
Who loves ya baby?
 
Join Date: Apr 2003
Location: Banished to the land of wind and ghosts
Posts: 20,730

http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/06235/715444-254.stm

Nick Nolte to join 'Mysteries' movie cast
Wednesday, August 23, 2006

Nick Nolte has been added to "The Mysteries of Pittsburgh" cast as the gangster father of the lead character, being played by Jon Foster.

Although the movie could easily open in a different manner, the book's first sentence describes a lunch between Art Bechstein and his father, "in town for the weekend to transact some of his vague business." Art is nervous and drinks more than he eats while his father carefully consumes a steak.

As previously announced, "Mysteries" will star Foster, Peter Sarsgaard, Sienna Miller and Mena Suvari. It will shoot here from Sept. 5 to Oct. 21. Rawson Thurber ("Dodgeball: A True Underdog Story") is adapting the Michael Chabon novel and directing the movie, set in the 1980s.

Nolte recently was among the voices cast in the animated "Over the Hedge" and will be seen in "Peaceful Warrior," scheduled to open here Sept. 1.


-- Barbara Vancheri, Post-Gazette movie editor



Reply With Quote
     
     
  #31  
Old 08-25-2006, 01:59 PM
themaguffin themaguffin is online now
Registered User
 
Join Date: Mar 2005
Posts: 1,275

This is an update on the film office in general, but seemed appropriate to post in in the default film thread......

Quote:
New film alliance wants to see office reinvented
Friday, August 25, 2006

By Barbara Vancheri, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette



A group that wants to change the way the entertainment industry is nurtured, courted and served in Pittsburgh is talking about reinventing the Pittsburgh Film Office rather than starting an alternative agency.

However, leaders of the newly named Pittsburgh Film and Media Alliance insist the director must be based in Pittsburgh rather than Los Angeles, and they want an updated, expanded mission and a board that includes more government, labor and industry representatives.

They will make that case Sept. 7 at a meeting called by Allegheny County Chief Executive Dan Onorato to thrash out the direction of the 16-year-old office.

"The Pittsburgh Film and Media Alliance is proposing that the Pittsburgh Film Office must be reconfigured from the ground up," spokeswoman and "The Bread, My Sweet" producer Adrienne Wehr said yesterday.

"It is not about its executive director, it is not about disputed facts and figures, it is about the very charter of the initiative itself. Whether or not a brand-new film office would be formed or just the current one would be reconfigured, that remains to be seen. But we are asking and proposing change."

While the film office's mission worked for much of the 1990s, bringing Hollywood production here and keeping people employed, it doesn't any longer, Wehr suggested. "We are proposing that a new model is warranted, and the time for change is now," she said.

She and Christopher Lacey, assistant executive director of Pittsburgh's AFTRA chapter, met with the Post-Gazette's editorial board to talk about better serving everyone from first-time directors to Hollywood veterans. While they still want to see the big fish land here, they want more attention paid to the little projects no less dear to their cast and crew.

"What we're looking toward is a broader umbrella, something more inclusive," Lacey said.

"This region needs more: more diversity, more inclusion, more hard work. And the best part about that is, it's being done, but it's being done piecemeal. Adrienne does a movie; when someone else wants to do a 'Bread, My Sweet,' they have to reinvent the wheel, rather than having a knowledge base or a resource base to foster production."

They pointed to the Greater Philadelphia Film Office as a model, although it's an older, bigger and better-funded operation that enjoys free office space courtesy of the city. Now a nonprofit corporation, the Philadelphia office employs nine people instead of three, as in Pittsburgh.

Philadelphia gets the lion's share of applications for the $10 million in grant money the state offers TV and film producers. Wehr, Lacey and others would like to see the total tripled, with Pittsburgh dipping deeper into that pool.

"This is not so much a grant as an investment in the economy of the state," Lacey said, along with an effort to tap into the trillion-dollar entertainment business that stretches around the world.

The alliance is also talking to the Allegheny Conference and state Sen. Jim Ferlo, D.-Highland Park, about supporting a study, possibly with a total of $50,000, on an entertainment incubator and how to better present what Pittsburgh can offer the industry.
I don't think that a $50,000 study is necessary. Appropriate leaders need to come up with their strategies and then put their heads together to create a new mission statement and structure, complete with state funding.

this should be a top notch operation, not some half assed group, relying on a fundraiser to stay afloat.

Staying afloat should not have to be a concern of the office.

The office should be able to match any offer - any - from another location.


Reply With Quote
     
     
  #32  
Old 09-01-2006, 03:12 AM
Evergrey's Avatar
Evergrey Evergrey is offline
Who loves ya baby?
 
Join Date: Apr 2003
Location: Banished to the land of wind and ghosts
Posts: 20,730

Yinz might wanna check out the trailer for the new CBS crime thriller "Smith". The premiere episode, airing Sept. 26, was filmed in Pittsburgh. In the trailer you can see extensive shots of the Mellon Institute and some downtown scenes. It stars Ray Liotta.

http://www.tv.com/smith/show/58081/summary.html

http://www.cbs.com/primetime/smith/


Reply With Quote
     
     
  #33  
Old 09-25-2006, 04:19 AM
Evergrey's Avatar
Evergrey Evergrey is offline
Who loves ya baby?
 
Join Date: Apr 2003
Location: Banished to the land of wind and ghosts
Posts: 20,730

from the Biz Times Sept. 22

"Mysteries" production company plans to shoot second film here
"Smart People" would begin filming in November

by Tim Schooley

A new production company is calling for a Pittsburgh movie-making encore.

Beverly Hills, CA-based Groundswell Productions is looking to piggyback on its current production of a film adaptation of Michael Chabon novel "The Mysteries of Pittsburgh" with a second film to be set in Pittsburgh.

Called "Smart People", the new film is scheduled to start shooting in Pittsburgh in early November, not long after "Mysteries" wraps up production in late October.

Expected to star Dennis Quaid, Rachel Weisz and Thomas Haden Church, "Smart People" involves a professor's challenges dealing with a new love and failing career.

In a city that has faced years of slumping film production, the decision by Groundswell could bring two back-to-back productions valued at between $8 and $10 million.

"One company doing two productions in one location one after the other is quite rare", said Emma Cooper, a publicist for Groundswell who confirmed the company's plans. "The wouldn't be doing another production if they weren't really happy."

Groundswell began shooting "Mysteries" here this month under the direction of Rawson Thurber and starring Jon Foster, Peter Sarsgaard, Sienna Miller and Mena Suvari.

Cooper said Groundswell has "fallen in love" with the location enough to shift the university setting of "Smart People" from Cleveland as it was written to Pittsburgh.

Groundswell also hopes to tap a $10 million state program that provides grants of up to $2 million for major national motion picture productions, which are required to incur a majority of their expenses within Pennsylvania.

Mickey Rowley, deputy secretary for tourism within the Pennsylvania Dept. of Community and Economic Development, confirmed the state is in discussions with Groundswell, though an incentive package had not been finalized by press time.

"I think we're going to have a deal in the end," said Rowley. "We're working real hard to bring state support that will lock them in." He added that support for Groundswell may come from local and county levels as well.

In addition to the possibility of state grants that would make filming here more financially appealing, Groundswell likely would save time and money by not having to relocate its office, crew and equipment, which already are on location for "Mysteries".

"They obviously want to put as much money on the screen as possible," Cooper said.

...


How exciting!

Groundswell was started by Michael London, who produced "Sideways" (also starring Thomas Haden Church!



Dennis Quaid


Rachel Weisz


Thomas Haden Church


Reply With Quote
     
     
  #34  
Old 09-25-2006, 02:22 PM
themaguffin themaguffin is online now
Registered User
 
Join Date: Mar 2005
Posts: 1,275

Rachel Weisz in Pittsburgh...

There some other film news, though less significant, it's important for the long term for these projects to happen....


Quote:
Headwater Films hopes to make headway in seeding local films
Pittsburgh Business Times - September 22, 2006by Patty Tascarella


The CEO of a local film company is raising $1.5 million to back production of a documentary on Florida State University football coach Bobby Bowden.

While the film is an out-of-state project, Headwater Films LLC's Henry Simonds believes the fundraising effort could help create a crop of angel investors who could eventually seed local films.

Simonds started raising $500,000 for director George Butler's Bowden documentary, "Bound for Glory," in late 2005. He was close to his goal by midsummer this year when he decided to triple the original goal -- increasing the field of investors and defraying their individual risk in the film, expected to debut next fall. Butler

directed the 1976 body-building epic "Pumping Iron" that introduced Arnold Schwarzenegger to American audiences.

"I'm lucky to be associated with artists of his caliber," Simonds said. "It looks good on my resume to have a producer credit."

The Headwater Films Fund I is currently at $425,000. In addition to the $1.5 million Simonds is raising, the remainder of the film's $3 million budget will come from corporate sponsorships, resulting in an earlier payback for individual investors, who have each taken a $10,000 stake.

"I'm trying to ensure that anyone involved in the process is as assured as they would be in a traditional investment like real estate," he said. "After all, this is someone's money."

Simonds has raised money for two other largely locally funded projects -- $3.5 million toward "Romance and Cigarettes," an independent film by actor John Turturro, as well as $100,000 for Ric Burns' "Andy Warhol: A Documentary Film," which was scheduled to air on PBS Sept. 20-21.

Jeffrey Letwin, managing partner of law firm Schnader Harrison Segal & Lewis LLP, Downtown, and a former board member of Filmmakers and the Pittsburgh Film Office, said Pittsburgh needs to have the ability to seed some independent film projects.

"We have funds to support manufacturing, life sciences and tech, so why not also support film making?" he said.


Reply With Quote
     
     
  #35  
Old 09-26-2006, 01:49 AM
AaronPGH's Avatar
AaronPGH AaronPGH is online now
Registered User
 
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Pittsburgh
Posts: 995

Booya. Take that, Cleveland. Sorry....I couldn't resist. lol.


Reply With Quote
     
     
  #36  
Old 09-26-2006, 07:41 PM
DeBaliviere's Avatar
DeBaliviere DeBaliviere is offline
Just win, Billikens.
 
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: St. Louis, MO
Posts: 2,440

After reading The Mysteries of Pittsburgh this weekend, I couldn't imagine the film being shot anywhere but Pittsburgh - the city is an essential part of the story.

I look forward to seeing the sites and neighborhoods described in the book brought to life in the movie! (Nick Nolte was a bit of an odd casting decision though)


Reply With Quote
     
     
  #37  
Old 10-06-2006, 11:33 PM
Evergrey's Avatar
Evergrey Evergrey is offline
Who loves ya baby?
 
Join Date: Apr 2003
Location: Banished to the land of wind and ghosts
Posts: 20,730

more info on "Smart People"



http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/06279/727785-254.stm

Movie to start filming here Nov. 6
Friday, October 06, 2006

By John Hayes, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette



The Hollywood production company that's in town filming "Mysteries of Pittsburgh" has opened another office here and is already scouting locations for its next movie.

"Smart People," a comic drama starring Dennis Quaid, Thomas Haden Church and Rachel Weisz, will begin filming Nov. 6. The first screenplay by novelist Mark Poirier will be filmed by commercial director Noam Murro in his feature film debut.

The story follows a grumpy Carnegie Mellon University professor (Quaid) who's still mourning the death of his wife eight years earlier when his adopted brother (Church) moves into his Pittsburgh home. The prof is hurt in a fall but falls head over heels for his emergency room doctor (Weisz), his former student who hated him as a teacher because he was so darned grumpy.

Screenwriter Poirier was raised in Arizona, the fifth of 11 children. He's a graduate of the Writing Seminars at Johns Hopkins University, studied at the Iowa Writers' Workshop, and was awarded a James Michener fellowship. His novels "Modern Ranch Living" and "Goats" were published by Miramax Books, and he lives in Portland, Ore.

Location manager Kathy McCurdy of Pittsburgh has been knocking on doors in Squirrel Hill, Edgewood and Oakmont, searching for what her assistant Alex Mary Hamilton calls "a typical Pittsburgh house" to serve as the movie's central location.

"The producers liked the [Pittsburgh-filmed] 'Wonder Boys' house but want one that's bigger," said Hamilton, also from Pittsburgh. "We're looking for a three-story house. [Quaid's character] is depressed. His wife died, so it has to look like he hasn't kept up with it for eight years -- no new kitchen or recent improvements like that. We're still looking all over the city."

Groundswell Productions plans 25 days of filming from Nov. 6 through mid-December. CMU scenes will be shot at the Oakland school, and producers hope to shoot the hospital scenes at Allegheny General Hospital.

Dawn Keezer of the Pittsburgh Film Office said Groundswell was able to tap into Pennsylvania's $10 million-per-year film production grant program when other projects dropped off the waiting list.

Groundswell is responsible for 2003's "House of Sand and Fog," 2003's "Thirteen" and 2004 Oscar winner "Sideways," which collectively have grossed more than $100 million worldwide. "Mysteries of Pittsburgh," adapted from the Michael Chabon novel by screenwriter Rawson Marshall Thurber, is still filming at locations throughout the region and will wrap on Oct. 17.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

(John Hayes can be reached at jhayes@post-gazette.com or 412-263-1991. )





...

I didn't realize Groundswell also did "The House of Sand and Fog"... another one of my favorites. I have high hopes for these two new Pittsburgh-filmed movies.

btw, the "Mysteries of Pittsburgh" film has a website: http://www.mysteriesofpittsburgh.com/

[IMG][/img]



Last edited by Evergrey : 10-07-2006 at 12:17 AM.
Reply With Quote
     
     
  #38  
Old 10-16-2006, 05:21 AM
themaguffin themaguffin is online now
Registered User
 
Join Date: Mar 2005
Posts: 1,275

Quote:
MTV picks Pittsburgh scene for cutting-edge drama series
Network envisions new show in two-minute installments
Pittsburgh Business Times - October 13, 2006by Tim Schooley


MTV is bringing its brand of short attention span programming to Pittsburgh for a new experimental drama.

This week, the cable music channel began production here of "Chloe," a short-form soap opera depicting a young woman starting her adult life after college. Written by Pittsburgh native Terry McCluskey, a founder of East Liberty-based advertising firm, The Idea Mill, and directed by local film production professional Steven Parys, Chloe will be produced in short episodes of only a minute and a half to two minutes long.

Kevin Mackall, senior vice president of promotions for MTV, expects between 25 and 30 episodes will be produced at a total cost of about $200,000.

Mackall said he's still unsure how MTV will broadcast and schedule Chloe, a concept he has been discussing with McCluskey for nearly six years. He hopes to air the show on MTV's two cable channels, as well as on its Web site, www.mtv.com, and perhaps for viewing on mobile phones, as podcasts or in other new media formats.

"It feels like success that we're going to do it. We're doing scripted drama. That's a new paradigm for MTV," Mackall said, noting the cable network is still best known for music videos and reality-based programming. "I'm proud of that."

MTV chose Pittsburgh for its quality of locations and crew and to avoid the kind of big cities on the coasts the network has typically chosen for shows, Mackall said.

The shoot includes a production crew and cast of between 30 and 40 people and stars Eryn Joslyn, a Carnegie Mellon University graduate, as Chloe.

With production scheduled for two weeks, Chloe will be shot on location throughout the city, using a variety of local landmarks, including Allegheny Cemetery in Lawrenceville, Diamond Gym in Oakland and Club Cafe on the South Side.

Chloe is part of a new initiative by MTV, a business unit of Viacom, the international media conglomerate, to develop a variety of short-form content that it can cross-promote in a variety of media.

"This to me should be a game-changing effort on MTV's part in terms of short form. If we could have some degree of success with this, there should be some notice in the industry," said Mackall, a graduate of North Allegheny High School. "Every chance I get, I'll talk about Pittsburgh."

To Chris Ivey, a local independent filmmaker, the news of MTV's shoot here suggests Pittsburgh's film-making scene can attract smaller productions, as well as major studio films.

Currently, Beverly Hills, Calif.-based Groundswell Productions is shooting its film adaptation of the Michael Chabon novel, "The Mysteries of Pittsburgh" here and will begin production of a second film, called "Smart People," in November.

"I think it's a really big boost for independent productions," Ivey said.

Todd Eckert, a North Side-based film financing consultant and producer of a new biopic of punk rock legend Ian Curtis, saw great promise in the fact that MTV is working to create a new kind of content here.

"The idea that something that genuinely changes the way people view content is being explored here is probably as exciting as anything we could possibly get," he said.
---


Reply With Quote
     
     
  #39  
Old 10-17-2006, 03:29 PM
Evergrey's Avatar
Evergrey Evergrey is offline
Who loves ya baby?
 
Join Date: Apr 2003
Location: Banished to the land of wind and ghosts
Posts: 20,730

http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/06290/730527-254.stm

Soon to be filming in Pittsburgh ...
Tuesday, October 17, 2006

Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

"Don't Think About It," a direct-to-DVD movie starring Emily Osment from Disney Channel's "Hannah Montana," will shoot in Pittsburgh Oct. 25 to Nov. 19. The movie will land on store shelves in time for Halloween 2007.

The sister of actor Haley Joel Osment plays a 13-year-old who feels like an outsider in her new school and neighborhood. She cooks up pranks on her classmates, but a mysterious stranger has a plan for her, as well.

The $3 million movie, written by Dan Angel and Billy Brown and directed by Alex Zamm ("Inspector Gadget 2"), will be filmed under the banner of "R.L. Stine Presents."

Universal Studios Home Entertainment and The Hatchery LLC, a specialist in original family entertainment, will market and distribute it and future installments, which will be based on Stine's "The Haunting Hour."

The project found its way to Pittsburgh through Steeltown Entertainment, which has been working with The Hatchery and a long list of backers, financial and otherwise, to bring the work here. Steeltown raised $975,000, with the largest contributors the state Department of Community and Economic Development ($300,000) and Colcom Foundation ($200,000).

Nancy Mosser Casting is looking for extras age 4 to 17 (with a particular need for 12- to 14-year-olds). Go to www.mossercasting.com for details.

--Barbara Vancheri, Post-Gazette movie editor


MTV filming Web series here


As part of its short-form development slate for MTV.com, the music network is shooting an online series of 20-to-30 two-to-five-minute episodes of "Chloe" in Pittsburgh this week.

Created and written by Pittsburgh native Terry McCluskey and overseen by Pittsburgh native Kevin Mackall, senior vice president of on-air promos for MTV and MTV2, "Chloe" will be a soap that follows the life of an "adorably likable teen girl and her circle of friends," according to an MTV release.

All of MTV's short-form programs are intended to play on its broadband site, but some could also find their way onto the cable channel.

"Chloe" does not have an air date, but it's likely to premiere in early 2007.

--Rob Owen, Post-Gazette TV editor



...

http://pittsburgh.bizjournals.com/pi...ml?t=printable

Series of made-for-DVD movies to be shot in Pittsburgh
Pittsburgh Business Times - 4:21 PM EDT Mondayby Tim Schooley
The Hatchery, a film production company, has finalized plans to shoot the first in a series of made-for-DVD movies in Pittsburgh under the banner "R.L. Stine Presents."

The first production, starting next week, will be called "Don't Think About It" and will star Emily Osment, co-star of the hit Disney Channel television series "Hannah Montana."

With Universal Studios the partner to market and distribute the series, the Hatchery's first production here represents the first major production recruitment for the Steeltown Entertainment Project, a nonprofit initiative established to draw on the influence of Pittsburgh natives working in the entertainment industry to bring projects to the region.

"Don't Think About It" is expected to generate an estimated $4.2 million to $4.9 million in economic benefits in the Pittsburgh region, said Ellen Weiss Kander, Steeltown's executive director. "This project also provides an opportunity to build on Fred Rogers' legacy and once again make Pittsburgh a center for quality family entertainment production," she said.

It's also expected to be the first of many movies based on the works of popular children's author R.L. Stine and his "The Haunting Hour" series.

Stine has sold more than 300 million books worldwide, many as part of the wildly popular "Goosebumps" series.

According to Kander, executives from Los Angeles-based The Hatchery were introduced to Steeltown Co-founder Carl Kurlander, a Hollywood scriptwriter originally from Squirrel Hill, by Pittsburgh native Greg Nicotero, a special effects artist.

After more than a year of negotiations, the Hatchery chose to shoot in Pittsburgh with a broad range of financial support from the state Department of Community and Economic Development, Allegheny County, the office of late Mayor Bob O'Connor and $200,000 from the local ColCom Foundation, among other support.

The new project from the Hatchery comes during a time of both surging production activity in the region as well as conflict within the local film community.

Currently, MTV is shooting a short-form soap opera in Pittsburgh. At the same time, Beverly Hills-based Groundswell Productions continues its shooting of an adaptation of the popular coming-of-age novel, "The Mysteries of Pittsburgh," written by University of Pittsburgh graduate Michael Chabon.

Groundswell will also begin shooting a second production called "Smart People" next month.

Kander is hopeful the Hatchery project will bring more production work here, as funding from the production is paid into a revolving fund intended to spur a continuing slate of projects.

"That, to me, is what's so exciting about this," she said.

tschooley@bizjournals.com | (412) 481-6397 x244



Last edited by Evergrey : 10-17-2006 at 08:26 PM.
Reply With Quote
     
     
  #40  
Old 10-17-2006, 08:33 PM
Evergrey's Avatar
Evergrey Evergrey is offline
Who loves ya baby?
 
Join Date: Apr 2003
Location: Banished to the land of wind and ghosts
Posts: 20,730

http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/06290/730530-254.stm


No mystery: Writer-director knew he was the one to bring Chabon novel to the screen
Tuesday, October 17, 2006


Bruce Birmelin, "The Mysteries of Pittsburgh"
Rawson Marshall Thurber directs Sienna Miller in a scene from "The Mysteries of Pittsburgh."




By Barbara Vancheri
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Rawson Marshall Thurber doesn't fake it. He's either in love with the idea of a movie or he isn't.

"It's too hard to pretend to be in love for that long. It's too hard, it really is, the actual act of writing and directing something, unless you are 1,000 percent desperately, dopey-eyed in love with it."

That way you can deal with working till 5 a.m., with shooting a swimming pool scene in frosty October, with gladly rearranging a schedule to accommodate the birth of an actor's baby, with reshoots caused by X-ray damage to film, with a brouhaha that blows up around one of your stars and with other developments.

Thurber was smitten with Michael Chabon's novel "The Mysteries of Pittsburgh" when he read it in the summer of 1995.

"I kind of knew I wanted to make the movie of the book pretty much before I knew I wanted to make movies," writer-director Thurber said one recent afternoon at the Omni William Penn before heading to the "Mysteries" set.

The grand hotel doubled as movie location and home for the 31-year-old, who stayed there long enough that a waitress recognized him, came over to say hello and offered to brew fresh coffee. Thurber may be making a $10 million movie, but he is anonymous to everyone else this day, just another patron in jeans and a neat olive shirt needing lots of caffeine refills.


He lived at the Omni for a month before renting a house in Shadyside. His girlfriend, a screenwriter, is visiting with her dogs, and Thurber says, "I get to walk around the neighborhood a lot. It's just beautiful; I can't get over it."


Bill Wade, Post-Gazette
Rawson Marshall Thurber, outside the Omni William Penn Hotel, Downtown, his home away from home for a month before renting a house.

The California native, who bought a home in the Hollywood Hills in December, was taken by the city the first time he visited, long before the project found a home at Groundswell Productions. He stayed at the Hilton, Downtown, and took the bus -- surely the anti-Hollywood means of conveyance -- around town.

Thurber had told Chabon he was coming here to do research, and the Pulitzer Prize winner e-mailed him a must-visit list that included the Original Hot Dog shop and Jay's Book Stall. Friends who went to Carnegie Mellon University suggested "pancakes at Pamela's," and he also rode the "funicular," as Chabon always calls the incline, to Mount Washington and did other touristy stuff.

"I was blown away by how beautiful it is. I didn't realize it's as hilly as it is, as green as it is, and in the film, I've been hoping or trying to go for this Edward Hopper vibe, both from a compositional standpoint and a color palette standpoint, and Pittsburgh just lends itself to that," with its brick buildings and many bridges.

Hopper was famous for his poetic portraits, as with his lonely all-night diner in "Nighthawks," and Thurber spent one evening and early morning last week in the rain, wind and chill at a Tarentum diner where a scene between stars Jon Foster and Sienna Miller takes place.


Bruce Birmelin, "The Mysteries of Pittsburgh"
Michael Chabon, left, and director Rawson Marshall Thurber discuss filming at the fake book store in Richland Mall.

"Mysteries" stars Foster as Art Bechstein, spending the summer in suspension between college graduation and real life and caught in a romantic triangle with Peter Sarsgaard as a hoodlum named Cleveland and Miller as Jane, his debutante girlfriend.

The cast also includes Mena Suvari as Phlox, Art's sometime girlfriend, and Nick Nolte as his gangster father. Three father-son dinners form the spine of the screenplay, set in the early 1980s.

Noticeably absent is a key character from the book named Arthur Lecomte. "It always seemed to me a more efficient cinematic engine to employ a love triangle versus what exists in the book, which is a four-pointed rhombus, for lack of a better term," Thurber explains.

While Thurber has made other changes -- he's shooting the famous "Cloud Factory" in Rankin and eliminated the Hillman Library location -- he says the movie captures the novel's heart and spirit.

"There's a sense of beauty to the novel, a sense of fun, an overwhelming sense of nostalgia at play, of memory, and it's a great summertime novel in the same way that 'The Great Gatsby' was a great summertime novel. So I think it's a classic American story, it's a coming-of-age story, it's the story about that last true summer of your life."

Thurber then ticks off more themes: love, friendship, memory, adventure. "And the novel's really funny. I think a lot of people forget it, because it's so beautifully written," thanks to Chabon's enviable descriptive powers -- "he's a superhero."

"I think if fans of the novel go to see the film expecting to see a direct kind of translation or transcription of the novel, they'll either be surprised or disappointed or both, but if they go to see the movie that feels like the novel they love, I think they'll be deeply pleased."

It was Thurber's success writing and directing "Dodgeball: A True Underdog Story" that paved the way for "Mysteries." His agent advised him to "capture the essence of the moment," which meant pitching another project along the same lines, a romantic comedy about darts or curling or competitive eating. All good advice, if your goal is to make money, he says.

Thurber, who holds a bachelor's in English and Theater Arts from Union College in Schenectady, N.Y., and an MFA in producing from the University of Southern California, instead decided to test the "Mysteries" water. He wrote Chabon a fan letter.

"I love your novels. I love your writing. I love 'Mysteries of Pittsburgh.' I'd love to buy you breakfast and talk about it."

Chabon agreed, and they met over coffee and eggs at a local haunt near Chabon's home in Berkeley, Calif., and Thurber offered to write a six-page treatment with his "pretty radical take." He later sent the outline and, much to his shock, Chabon said yes.

The novelist also read Thurber's first draft of the script, made suggestions and then gave his blessing to a revised draft. If that weren't proof enough of his endorsement, Chabon recently shot a cameo at The Book Barn, the store where Art and Phlox work.

The Book Barn, a Richland Mall set so convincing that the crew had to shoo away potential customers, is a store where books come to die and where the calendars are 6 months old. "It's a pretty grim affair, frankly, but it looks fantastic."

Chabon approaches a store employee and says, "Excuse me, do you know where I could find the new Clive Cussler?" And the clerk replies, "Pal, do I look like I [expletive] read?"

The mall location is just one of many Thurber has used, along with Downtown, the South Side, Fox Chapel, Edgeworth, Mount Washington and Rankin. The movie wraps on Friday, and Thurber, who will be editing it in his Los Angeles guest house, hopes to have it completed by late March or April.

If all goes well, he wants to submit "Mysteries" for the Cannes Film Festival and aim for a commercial release in fall 2007. That's also when he may be shooting a big-screen "Magnum, P.I" movie in Hawaii, with a star to be named later and a mantra of "No short shorts, no mustaches, no cameos."

By that point, the Miller controversy about her unkind remark in Rolling Stone and attempt to patronize a South Side bar without proof of ID (the details of which have turned into a he said-she said kerfuffle) should be long over.

"I know Sienna feels awful about it, she's embarrassed about it, from what she's told me." She had been logging 16-hour days in the first two weeks of the shoot, sleeping during the day and working most of the night, Thurber says.

"She's sweet and beautiful and incredibly talented but has a funny sense of humor, a goofy sense of humor, and sometimes those jokes don't play when they're typed up," without the tone, delivery and context vital to comedy.

Producer Michael London calls the movie a "love poem to Pittsburgh" and says the publicity surrounding Miller has been unfortunate since, "We've had a wonderful experience shooting in Pittsburgh, so much so that we decided to shoot a second film here."

Dennis Quaid and Rachel Weisz will star in "Smart People," scheduled to start filming next month.

As for Miller attempting to pursue the cherished Pittsburgh tradition of grabbing a drink on the South Side and the media storm that followed, London says he believes her account that "she left quietly with her parents and friends and went elsewhere. Sienna is actually one of the most down-to-earth actresses I've ever worked with. So what's happening right now is especially painful for her."

All of this will blow over, he says, but it could make other productions, especially those with prominent stars, hesitant to shoot here. "That's a shame for those movies and a shame for Pittsburgh."

Thurber, meanwhile, can appreciate the crush of a shooting schedule. When he's not directing or sleeping, he's watching dailies, working in the editing room or rewriting.

Before the movie wraps on Friday, he wants to tour three places: Fallingwater, The Andy Warhol Museum and the Mattress Factory. He made it as far as the Warhol lobby, to drop off his mother when she was visiting, but no farther.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

(John Hayes contributed to this report. Movie editor Barbara Vancheri can be reached at bvancheri@post-gazette.com or 412-263-1632. )


Reply With Quote
     
     
Reply

Go Back   SkyscraperPage Forum > Regional Sections > United States > Northeast
Forum Jump



 

Thread Tools
Display Modes



All times are GMT. The time now is 04:29 PM.

     

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2010, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Forums Directory