Blog

  • SIX OF THE BEST: Erin Cronican

    SIX OF THE BEST: Erin Cronican

    Welcome to another edition of SIX OF THE BEST, the semi regular part of BRWC where we fire six questions at lovely people.  This time, we talk to actor, and all round fun gal Erin Cronican.

    Hello! What you up to today?
    Why, thank you for asking! A bunch of little things. First, I’m producing and starring in a show (THREE SISTERS, with my theater company, The Seeing Place Theater) – I spent the morning firing off emails to patrons encouraging them to come out to the show for our last week. I then went to Mount Sinai Medical School to do a live improv industrial gig, playing a standardized patient so medical students can get tested on their clinical skills. Tonight, I go off to the theater to open up box office and train my volunteer. Then at 7pm I finally get a chance to get into makeup and costume to prepare myself for a 7pm curtain. After the show, I’ll mingle with patrons to develop strong bonds, get their feedback, and unwind a bit. I’ll finish the day doing design work for my day job (as a career coach and marketing designer for actors, through my company, The Actors’ Enterprise) Somewhere in there, I’ll try to eat, sleep and have a beer.

    What films/people have influenced your work?
    I grew up idolizing dramatic movie musicals, most notably “West Side Story.” It made me want to be an actor, and helped me discover my favorite activity: singing. It also handed me my first real world disappointment — I would not ever play the role of Maria. (cue trumpet cries, wah wah waaaahhhhhhh…)

    What are you working on now?
    I’m working to balance my day job (coaching/designing), with my two loves:Acting (finishing up a production of “Three Sisters,” singing in a cabaret in May, doing a play in July and shooting a film in August) and Producing (plays with The Seeing Place, musicals with my ACTOR-OWN Musical Theater Collective, and networking with the most awesome networking event in NYC- the NY Actors Tweetup, for which I’m the co-founder.)
    I think, though, that one of the things I’m most proud of working on right now is finding a way to be a human being in a city (and industry ) that asks so much of you to work, work, work. I get out to see as much theater and film as I can. I try to support the hobbies and interests of my friends & colleagues, and do the best I can to nurture my relationships on and off the social networks. This might be why Klout feels like I’m influential in Tequila.  🙂

    What were you doing before acting?
    I’ve been acting since the age of nine, so I don’t quite remember doing anything else. But I do know that, as a young person, the professions that inspired me outside of acting were teaching and psychology. I count myself very lucky that I found a way to incorporate these into my daily life as a coach. Let’s see – what else… I was a tennis player with a modicum of talent – I had the opportunity to play at a Top Ten school but opted to stay in the arts instead, much to the chagrin of my mother who was a tennis coach. Oh, and in 7th grade I ran (unsuccessfully) for class president with the slogan, “If anyone can, Croni-can.” (crickets.) You see why being in the arts was really my only choice.

    Any advice for any aspiring actors?
    Equally balance your acting life with three things: The study of the craft, the study of the business, and the development of your voice as an artist. Too many times, and actor focuses on just one aspect, which makes it very difficult to find peace, passion or success in this industry. Also understand that lasting success is built over time, and one cannot do it alone. You need a strong team of mentors, coaches, and colleagues to help you navigate the waters, and a strong base of friends and family to keep you centered when things get crazy. And if you’re doing your job correctly, things WILL get crazy.  🙂

    Anything you want to get off your chest right now?
    I like Jeanne Bowerman’s idea of listing her pet peeves and inspiring quotes. I’ll do some of that too:
    • No, sir… no matter how much you push me from behind, I’m not getting on the subway until all of the passengers have exited.
    • “Talk does not cook rice.” – Ancient Chinese Proverb. ‘Nuff said.
    • I don’t like the fact that when I drink red wine, everyone knows it. (lip/teeth stains.) Just say yes to white.
    • I am NOT a morning person, but if you give me eggs and bacon and potatoes and sausage and french toast and syrup and butter and tater tots and toast… I might be ok.

  • 10 Inspirational Movies To Get You Off The Couch

    10 Inspirational Movies To Get You Off The Couch

    Here’s one…

    Still Bill

    This 2009 documentary traces the career of singer-songwriter Bill Withers, who composed and recorded such timeless classics as “Lean On Me” and “Ain’t No Sunshine When She’s Gone.” In 1985, Withers more or less walked away from the music industry, grateful for the degree of success he had achieved, and content to enjoy life with his family, away from the spotlight. In one scene, at a special event, Withers meets a group of children who, like he did as a child, stutter. Withers dropped out of ninth grade in part because of his stuttering, and eventually received speech therapy while he was in the Navy. The children sing Withers a song, and he’s moved to tears, reminded of how far he has come. It’s one of many powerful yet understated moments in movies that tells the story of a great American songwriter who happens to be still Bill.

    The rest are here.

  • The Hunger Games – Review

    The Hunger Games – Review

    The Hunger Games, based on the trilogy of books by Suzanne Collins, is the latest instalment in this years run of blockbuster movies, indeed the big Hollywood Marketron 5000 has been ramped up to full power with a complete carpet bombing of promotion in the run up to it’s release with hundreds of thousands of tween’s and young adults frothing at the mouth to unconditionally lavish it with a level of adoration that would make even Lady Gaga blush.

    Set in the future dystopia of Panam, whose socio-political landscape has been completely remapped by apocalyptic-style war, the Capitol choose one boy and one girl from each of its 12 subservient districts (facsimile’s of labour camps) to have the dubious honour of fighting to the death in an annual ritual from which the movie takes its name. Pitted against each other in a game of survival watched by the entire populous, replete with a vast array of weaponry, only one can survive and be crowned the victor. If this all sounds a bit familiar that’s because it’s also the premise of Battle Royale and there’s been a lot of internet chatter regarding this, with some media outlets describing The Hunger Games as “Battle Royale for the Twilight generation”. I’d like to take a second to deconstruct and disprove that nonsense before moving on: firstly to compare this movie, which is very good, to Twilight, a set of books and movie’s so insipid and overblown that I’d rather remove my own skin with a blunt knife than turn to them for entertainment, is an irritating marketing gimmick whose sole goal is to capitalise on the aforementioned frothing teen’s who are currently lacking a focus for their obsessive, asinine, internet trolling whilst they wait for the release of the next teaser trailer for the teaser trailer of Breaking Dawn: Part 2. What gets marketeers so wet between the thighs is the fact that they don’t have to do anything with this type of demographic as they’re perfectly capable of whipping up a storm of rabid, and frankly alarming, frenzy of neurosis all on their own at the mere sight of a possible love story, in effect it’s lazy marketing to appeal to this audience – and of course it works.

    But, I digress, whilst The Hunger Games does indeed share a remarkable resemblance to the seminal Japanese classic Battle Royale Suzanne Collins, if she’s to be believed, had apparently never heard of either the book or movie before turning in the manuscript for The Hunger Games (it should be noted she had previously heavily borrowed from Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland so there’s precedent to simply take her as a plagiaristic liar). However, for as many similarities as there are between the two works there exists almost an equal amount of differences – at least on the fundamental narrative level. Battle Royale is a short, well contained, brutal story and if anything The Hunger Games represents an expansion on a similar theme rather than a rip off. As a trilogy of books there is a lot more going on here and the ideas are actually more developed, it’s more focused on the future dystopian world that predicates the barbaric return to colosseum style games as well as being focussed specifically on the character development of the two district 12 tributes. This is not to say that The Hunger Games is better than Battle Royale by any means, merely that the comparison is unnecessary as both films stand up as independently great without pedantic squabbles over originality – two sets of physicist’s independently discovered equations that would become integral to the Copenhagen interpretation of quantum mechanics, why then can’t these two movies be simultaneously great?

    Love them or hate them (and I suspect there’ll be equal camps) the two main stars are Jennifer Lawrence, as Katniss Everdeen, and Josh Hutcherson, as Peeta Mellark, and they do a remarkable job of bringing the story to life. Two teenagers from the bottom of the rung, the poor coal mining district 12, catapulted into the flashy, decadent world of the Capitol to perform for the perverse pleasure of the cultural elite in a brutal killing game. The characters come across as quite likeable as they struggle to work out what to do, how to act, and ultimately what sort of game they will play in order to try and stay alive. Jennifer Lawrence in particular shines with a strong performance that builds on her success in X-Men: First Class. The closest the Twilight metaphor comes to being a reality is the love story forced on the two (or at least on Katniss, for it seems Peeta has conveniently felt this way for some time) in order to manipulate the pretentious, effete audience for sponsorship. But even as it develops this relationship is far removed from the kind of sickly pseudo-emotion on display in Twilight as Katniss is a strong, conflicted character who is handy with a bow and arrow rather than the weeping open wound that is Bella. Both Katniss and Peeta are down to earth, tangible characters and even though this is science fiction there’s no ludicrous supernatural element. Here love is used as a marketing tool, rather than the kitschy, all consuming, monotonous tedium of Twilight, and whether it is ultimately real is I suspect going to be a topic for the sequels.

    Stylistically The Hunger Games is very well thought out, it’s design is eclectic but constant, it has a futurism without being too flashy – although it has a laughably gaudy sense of fashion for the upper classes, this serves to highlight their shallow painted nature. It’s very considered in it’s camera work and framing with scenes often highly detailed with subtle matching colour themes. The violence, and there’s quite a bit of it considering the 12a rating, is well done although it’s lacks the balls to go too far with it. What’s far more barbaric is the mindset of the people who watch, cheer, and revel in the sadism of forcing people to battle to the death. The true vulgarity comes out in the reality TV style coverage and the ghastly audience reaction, all of which is mirrored in the tawdry get up of the decadent elite.

    Stanley Tucci is marvellous as Ceasar Flickerman the host of this brutal Big Brother reality show, he’s a mix between Davina McCall and The Joker, with electric blue hair and a smile that goes far beyond disturbing he provides commentary and interviews with fervent revelry in the death and destruction. I loved Elizabeth Bank’s Effie Trinket with her eccentric couture outfits she channelled a ghoulish Simon Cowell figure overseeing the tribute selections. Much like Charlie Brooker’s recent second episode of Black Mirror, there’s a real condemnation of the reality TV culture that we’ve engendered, the reduction of the value of human worth to a tradable marketing commodity, and a palpable (albeit exaggerated) social commentary as an analogous satire of existing western culture. The games are ultimately a form of control, a way for the feudal autocracy of Panam to control the hope of the masses in order to prevent a future uprising and a repeat of the all out war that decimated the world.

    I don’t want to spoil the ending, but it’s one of the only real flaws that I can come up with (except the frankly awful chariot visual effects sequence, and the needless inclusion of CGI hounds) and yet even that isn’t bad. People who’ve seen the movie or are unconcerned can highlight the text hidden below, those wanting to avoid spoilers can skip over it:

    With this being a trilogy of books it’s not surprising that the two main characters survive, and lets face it this is Hollywood, but I can’t help feeling that the movie would have been more satisfying if one of the two had killed the other at the end, it would have been more brutal and powerful. There were hints that Peeta had been playing her all along and I would have found that a more real and harsh ending, similarly if Katniss had been forced to kill Peeta it would have led to some serious emotional tension. But maybe that’s just me, being cynical and seeking a more unharmonious ending. 

    The Hunger Games surprised me, I wasn’t expecting to enjoy it as much as I did. It’s brutal, well thought out, entertaining, and given the levels of shallow drivel that get thrown out by the movie machine it’s refreshing to watch something that is a little bit more than the average candy coated twaddle. Even if you don’t think it will be your thing I’d recommend seeing it. If you’re a Battle Royale fan go and see it but try not to sit there picking apart how it’s not as good – it is a different movie, and it’s a good one to boot. Get used to hearing about it as this is the latest book-to-film franchise that will be with us for some years yet.

  • Red Light Revolution Review

    Red Light Revolution Review

    It’s usually fun to watch a movie that you have no idea what it could be about. When I started up Red Light Revolution, within the first minute it was made perfectly clear what the focus of the movie was. Sex. Or, at least, how people need sex. Directed and written by Sam Voutas, Red Light Revolution is a lighthearted comedy and an easy going indie film that can be pretty enjoyable, even for those who aren’t too into independent films. It may be in Mandarin, but it’s got a very western feel to it and as long as you don’t mind subtitles, it’s a pleasure to watch.

    The film starts out with the main character Shunzi, played by Jun Zhao, explaining that sex is a primal instinct that everyone wants and needs whether they want to admit it or not. The story then begins with Shunzi’s life heading for the gutter. He loses his job as a cab driver, finds out his wife has been cheating on him, and gets kicked out of his own home. He eventually gets a pretty degrading job as an energy drink seller where he meets Lili, played by Vivid Wang, a girl down on her luck and fed up of office work. Thanks to an old friend of Shunzi, he’s given the opportunity to open up a shop and start making money. The only problem is that the shop is for selling sex toys, and the investor wants money within a week, or Shunzi is going to have plenty more problems to deal with.

    Jun Zhao plays Shunzi, the protagonist with too many problems.

    Shunzi’s character is a very relatable one. At heart, he’s a nice guy who has just fallen on hard times. He can be a bit brash, but he tries his best with what he has. With Lili, we have someone playing it straight, but also understands what Shunzi is going through. She’s sympathetic to Shunzi, but at the same time she knows when to snap him back to reality and get him working again. Jun and Vivid both had good chemistry on screen and it helped these two main characters be fun and interesting.

    The side characters in the film are also fun to watch. While they may not be focused on too much, they’ve all got personalities of their own. Some are simple and realistic, like Shunzi’s parents. They let Shunzi stay while he’s looking for a job, and he soon (uncomfortably) discovers that his parents’ love life is still quite active. Then there are the customers of the sex shop. You’d expect them to be all sorts of weird, but in this film they’re just common people. Maybe a bit quirky, but still realistic. Then there is the villain of the film, Iggy. He’s the man who supplied Shunzi with the stock, and expects profits within a week. Iggy is the typical eccentric, and while sometimes he seems like he can be a fun person to hang out with, on the inside you know he’s a wacko.

    As I stated before, the film definitely has a western feel. It makes the story feel universal, as if it can be a story that can happen in any city. If this were made in a US setting, I can imagine it as a pilot for an interesting TV series, but I like it better the way it is. The only think I didn’t enjoy too much was the music. It didn’t blend well with the film. As best as I could describe it, it was a bit of ska music, and maybe some light rock. For a film like this, I think the type of music you would hear in the show Curb Your Enthusiasm, or the Italian film Johnny Stecchino would have made this film perfect. That sort of music that works with a mild goofy and clumsy character. Other than that one miss, the rest of the film works well. The cinematography is alright for an indie film, and the story didn’t require settings other than what it had. There may have been a few clichés that have been done before, but luckily it avoided some major ones that I was expecting to happen.

    I do wish I could keep seeing more of Shunzi and Lili, two great characters that worked perfectly together. If you don’t have a problem with subtitles (or you understand Mandarin) then go watch Red Light Revolution. It’s easy to get into and it doesn’t get boring. There are a few good laughs but I like to think that this film was more about the characters, and that’s what I enjoyed most of all.

    Shunzi and Lili develop a friendship that helps add life to the film.
  • Mimefield – Comedy Short

    Mimefield – Comedy Short

    The guys over at Two Trick Pony Productions sent over their latest short comedy film saying ‘if you find some free time, and are looking for a quick laugh’ to check it out. Well I had some free time and I was looking for a laugh – and laugh I did.

    I do love a bit of comedy wordplay and the premise is simple, take a fairly serious topic and switch out a word to make it ludicrous and therefore hilarious. It’s well produced, succinct and doesn’t labour the point.

    Check it out below: