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The Hollywood Reporter, February 10, 2005
"WE Picks Documentaries
Out of Orchard"
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Variety, March 18, 2004
"Assembling a Select
Company"
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The Associated Press, March 16, 2004
"Documentary Shows Changing
Role of Women"
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The Hollywood Reporter, March 4, 2004
"Who is Alan Smithee?"
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TV Guide, January 28, 2002
"The Roush Review"
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People Weekly January 28, 2002
"Picks and Pans"
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WE Picks Docus Out of Orchard
The Hollywood Reporter, February 10, 2005
By Kimberly Speight
WE: Women's Entertainment is going deep into the worlds of love and
beauty pageants with two new documentary specials from Orchard Films.
"Love Files," premiering Sunday on the cable network, takes
a look at the nature of love and how it shapes our lives. It includes
interviews with relationship experts along with verite footage of couples."Chasing
the Crown," set to debut April 11, goes behind the scenes of American
beauty pageants, examining both the humor and drama of what goes on
at the local level of competition. It's hosted by actress and former
Miss America Kate Shindle.
" 'Love Files' is a fun, lighthearted show that's so appropriate
for WE because relationship (shows) are a big part of what we do at
WE it's a natural part of life for women," WE general manager
Kim Martin said. " 'Chasing the Crown' looks at real women in all
shapes, sizes and colors
who are typical of the WE woman
confident, smart and proud of their accomplishments."
Over the past few years, Orchard Films, a New York-based production
company founded by Lisa Ades and Lesli Klainberg that focuses on nonfiction
programming, has formed a relationship with WE and its sister cable
networks IFC and AMC under the Rainbow Media Holdings banner.
Credits include the docus "In the Company of Women," which
premiered at Sundance last year and aired on IFC; "Who Is Alan
Smithee?" which premiered on AMC in 2002; and "Indie Sex:
Taboos," which debuted on IFC in 2001.
"Lesli and Lisa are collaborative, flexible and versatile,"
said IFC vp original programming Alison Bourke, adding that IFC is in
development on a couple of Orchard projects without providing details.Added
AMC vp documentary programming Jessica Shreeve: "Women who have
a successful production company that are able to go between passion
projects and works for hire at multiple networks are pretty unusual
in the cable world in terms of documentary."
While many of Orchard's docus have focused on women-themed subjects,
Ades and Klainberg said they don't set out to appeal just to women.
"As women filmmakers, we're conscious of subjects that resonate
with women," Klainberg said. "But we're naturally drawn to
issues that aren't explored much, and those are often stories relating
to women."Moreover, Ades said, a project like "Love Files"
appeals to both sexes."Both men and women want to watch television
that's about relationships it's a universal topic," she
said.
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Variety, March 18, 2004
"Assembling a Select Company" |
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The Associated Press, March 16, 2004
By Colleen Long
"Documentary Shows Changing Role of Women"
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Nancy Savoca's movies pick up where Martin Scorsese's and Francis Ford
Coppola's films leave off, according to film historian Emanuel Levy.
They portray immigrant life on a grand scale, while Savoca whose 1989
debut "True Love" about a skittish young Italian-American
couple getting married made a splash at the Sundance Film Festival offers
"a view from the kitchen," Levy says in IFC's "In the
Company of Women." Savoca is one of several directors profiled
in the cable network's new 90-minute documentary airing 8 p.m. EST Thursday.
It's part history lesson, part movie montage and part dialogue about
women's roles in front of and behind the camera, told from the perspective
of women in the business including Jodie Foster and Susan Sarandon.
"It's a very rare holiday still for men to be given the opportunity
to go into a woman's psyche and see the world and the existential experience
of life through her eyes," actress Tilda Swinton says during the
documentary.
Directors Gini Reticker and Lesli Klainberg focus specifically on independent
films, but didn't make a documentary that bashes Hollywood even though
few female directors get to make mainstream, big-budget films. "We
focused on independent films essentially by default. In doing our research,
it's where most women's careers were fostered and developed. Also, it's
where women were greeted on an open playing field," Klainberg said.
Klainberg and Reticker's film takes a comprehensive and interesting
look at women in the film business, though sometimes the documentary
seems to be taking on too much and the directors would be better served
by a narrower focus. If they came to any conclusions, Reticker said,
"It's that we want more. More, more, more from women."
Klainberg and Reticker begin with the 1970s, when the women's movement
coincided with a film boom, and more women attended film school. Those
graduates burst onto the scene in the 1980s with character-driven stories
and an alternative viewpoint. "With the advent of `Jaws' and `Star
Wars' Hollywood was moving toward these big blockbuster films, and there
was suddenly this space in the independent film world to create these
stories," Reticker said. They point to Susan Seidelman's "Desperately
Seeking Susan." The 1985 film starred Madonna in all her 1980s
black-lace glory, and showed that a story centered on two female protagonists
could appeal to the masses. It's one of the most successful independent
films to date, grossing $27.4 million. Several "indie queens"
are featured, including Lili Taylor, Parker Posey and Maggie Gyllenhaal.
Sexuality is easily the most discussed topic in the documentary. The
film "Go Fish" featuring lesbian couples in everyday life
complete with graphic sex scenes is juxtaposed with Gyllenhaal's performance
as the submissive half of an S&M relationship in "Secretary."
Using sexuality as a tool is tricky and confusing for women, and the
documentary captures that. Rosie Perez offers an anecdote about how
refreshing it was to work with a female director because there was no
sexual tension. The idea of beauty, intrinsically tied to sexuality,
is also discussed, peppered with scenes from Nicole Holofcener's 2001
film "Lovely and Amazing," and Savoca's 1991 film "Dogfight."
Directors and actresses speak candidly about body image, nude scenes,
age and the tendency to glorify sex scenes.
Copyright 2004, AP News All Rights Reserved
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The Hollywood Reporter, March 4, 2004
By Marilyn Moss
"Who is Alan Smithee?"
Alan Smithee is all of these things: the ultimate fiction, an industry
scapegoat, a mere convenience. Smithee, the man who never was, is the
subject of this informative docu from Orchard Films for Wellspring Media.
Smithee, as all insiders know, is the equivalent of a front; he is the
name used in a film's credits when the director no longer wants his
or her name associated with a project. He exists in name only and is
a great cover, a good way into a lengthy discussion of all the fighting
that can occur among producers and directors and very often actors when
reputations are on the line. This docu covers in good detail the ins
and outs of Hollywood tugs of war that, even with television entertainment
magazines, the public doesn't often see.
Smithee was born on the set of 1948's "Death of a Gunfighter"
after star Richard Widmark complained about the way director Robert
Totten was handling the production. When Totten was replaced by Donald
Siegel, Siegel thought he hadn't been on the set long enough (nine days)
to get a director's credit. So the name Alan Smithee came into being.
Since that time, his name has appeared on numerous films, most of which
haven't made it into the public lexicon. For example, who remembers
such titles as the airline version of "Meet Joe Black" (1998)
or 1993's "Solar Crisis"? How about the severely cut version
of 1992's "Scent of a Woman"? There is also 1990's "The
Shrimp on the Barbie," which might fare better in public memory,
though it's doubtful.
What this docu really wants to do is focus on some infamous (and some
not) bouts behind the scenes of some better-known films -- just in case
we've forgotten. Much time (some of which might have been edited) is
devoted to director Tony Kaye's clash with star Edward Norton and New
Line Cinema on and off the set of 1998's "American History X."
Kaye tried, though the Directors Guild of America decided it was too
late by that time, to get an Alan Smithee credit.
There are interviews with such directors as Martha Coolidge, Arthur
Hiller and John Singleton, along with a good view of just how studios,
directors, producers and actors (Norton and Tom Cruise, for example)
clash and battle it out behind the scenes.
Smithee's name was abolished following the controversy over "Burn
Hollywood Burn," a satire written in 1997 by Joe Eszterhas on the
misadventures of Smithee himself. Arthur Hiller directed, but the studio
recut his film. The rest, as this very entertaining docu recounts, is
history.
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TV Guide, January 28,
2002
"The Roush Review" |
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People Weekly January
28, 2002
"Section name TK" |
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