FirstGlance Short Online Contest: Juice It

Christina's latest short film "Juice It," was selected to participate in FirstGlance Film Festival's Online Contest, marking this the temporary online premiere of the film! It's up against 14 other truly unique, creative and some excellent shorts.

 

We're honored to be included. If you want to watch the film and support us, register as a fan of the contest with the promo 'fest' and then pay the one-time fee of $2. It gives you access to the 15 films through November 8th. You can watch all the films an as many times as you want and vote once every 24 hours. The winner will screen at their prestigious festival in LA and win a cash prize! 

We hope you like it & thanks for the support!

Coney Island Film Festival "Juice It" Recap

Three Saturdays ago "Juice It" premiered at the 14th annual Coney Island Film Festival. I was hoping to do this update earlier, but held off in hopes of getting copies of their professional photos from my screening and Q&A. Unfortunately, they haven't released them and may not anytime soon. So, in the meantime, I post this with my terribly out of focus camera phone pictures and will simply reshare it when the good ones go live! (BTW, there are some nice ones not of me, but of the festival overall on their Facebook page). 

 

As for how the festival went, it was a ton of fun! The thing about public screenings is that, while they're of course what we live for as filmmakers and are incredibly exhilarating, they're painfully nerve-wracking (at least for me) when it's the first time a piece is being seen publicly, as was the case here. I was terrified no one would laugh. To my delight though, the screening was filled with non-stop laughs, and rumbling, belly laughs at that. Some jokes were missed because people were still laughing at the one before. It felt pretty amazing. What was nice to hear, though I feel bad admitting so, was that they weren't polite, equal opportunity laughers. Most of the films that screened with mine were exceptionally funny, funnier than mine even, and a few had way higher production values. They got just as much laughter from the room. It was an honor to screen with them. However, there was one that was pretty weak. I wont specify which, but it wasn't very well done and it dragged on a lot. It just wasn't quite hitting the comedic beats, and didn't know when to let an attempt at a running joke die. So, to hear the audience not laugh at that one, while did make me feel bad for that filmmaker, felt validating in the sincerity of their amusement over "Juice It." People may tell you "I liked it" or even "I loved it," and if you're lucky they'll specify details that stood out to them and why, or explain actual emotions it provoked in them. For the most part though, you never truly know if people are just being polite to your face. What you can gauge though is the energy in the room and, in the case of comedy, the laughter from the audience. I'll stop rambling now, but needless to say, it was a successful screening and made me feel great (even in spite of the annoying cold I had)! 

As for what's next for "Juice it," well I'm eager to get it online for more people to see. I shot it over a year ago, and finished it about 9 months ago. I had hoped for a much earlier premiere for the film, especially considering it was a somewhat last minute project, shot in 2 days, on less than $500. My dream festival was the NBCU Short Film Festival (formally NBC Short Cuts), which happened in the early summer. It was a long-shot, of course, especially since my actors were non-union and no one involved was commercially known. However, I took a shot and set up my submissions to allow for that to be the potential premiere; and it was rejected. At the end of the day, I'm glad the premiere was at Coney Island because they were so welcoming and warm, the audience reaction was priceless, and the festival just has such character (we watched my film on bleachers in a rusted old sideshow). But since I was crossing my fingers for an NBC premiere, two local festivals I could have submitted to last year, I've only just submitted to this month. So it'll be a while before the film is public on vimeo; I'm thinking by the Spring.

HOWEVER, with that said, there has been some other good news for the film. One being that it was invited to screen in LA at the HollyShorts Screening Series late this month or next (they're still settling on a date for me). And more timely, it was chosen to participate in FirstGlance Film Festival's Online Shorts Contest, which launches tomorrow! The contest is hosted by itsashort.com. The way it works is that people register for the site for $2 and they can watch "Juice It" and the other 14 shorts in the contest as many times as they'd like for a month. The film that gets the most votes will screen at their 15th annual festival in LA, and the filmmaker gets a prize valuing $2,500 on top of an additional TBD cash prize (a percentage of the $2 fee everyone pays) based on how many daily votes they get. What's really cool about this is that over 90,000 people have participated in watching the films in past years, so I'll have increased exposure. What's not so cool is that the cash prize is not based on total votes, but daily votes, meaning it resets everyday. So if I want to win, I have to nag everyone I know to not just vote once but vote once a day for 30 days straight. I'm just not inclined to do that. However, please brace yourself for a lot of tweets from me about it for the next month (starting tomorrow). No worries, I wont be nearly as annoying as during my crowdfunding campaigns ;)

But in all honesty, if you enjoy the film and have the time and desire to be super supportive, a vote a day or every other day or once a week would be greatly appreciated. Regardless, I hope you're able to watch it during the contest. Or if not, see it at a festival; or worst case, see it when it goes live on the CongestedCat site in the Spring. 

I can't wait to share it with more people & get further feedback. Thanks for reading & supporting!

-Christina 

BTS Photos from Shooting CongestedCat Shorts

Check out these behind the scenes photos from shooting our 2 new short films just a few weekends ago! See TWO galleries below!

Not Our Living Room was shot on day 1 with Alyssa Meadows doing on-set photography. 


We Had Plans was shot on day 2 with our resident photographer Chris Carroll doing on-set photography. 

 

We're hoping to have rough cuts of both films from our awesome editor Jordan Roberts by the end of this month. We're also hoping we'll be able to put out teasers for both films by November! We'll keep you updated as more progress is made. 

Want to know who all the talented people in these photos are? Check out the IMDb pages for NOLR & WHP!

IndieWorks: September 2014 Recap

Last week was Webseries month at IndieWorks, and it was such a success! Webseries month is pretty special to us because we came up with the idea last year when Christina & Kelsey's webseries 'Kelsey' was premiering online in September. We decided to devote that month of IndieWorks to webseries' and we ended up realizing how much of a community exists around webseries, and how much they allow indie filmmakers to have a gradual and substantial build around their work. So we decided to make every September Webseries month at IndieWorks! This year we had our biggest turn out of Year Two with 70 people in house! 

Thank you everyone who came out to support the filmmakers and spend the evening with us. We had a great time. We hope you enjoyed all the episodes and the opportunity to network with other filmmakers and film enthusiasts. 

See our photos from the evening:

The series' of the night:

Docket 32357 - Pilot
Lois and Valerie have a chance meeting in a courtroom hallway and discover their meeting is anything, but chance.

NYC Raw Episode 2
NYC RAW documents outspoken voices within the five Burroughs of New York City. This episode features Michael Day, an Iraq War Veteran, who speaks about the difficulties of engaging in a meaningful relationship while struggling with the exacerbation of PTSD symptoms.

Anthology - Episode 3
"Anthology" follows six 20-somethings trying to function as adults living in New York Ctiy. In Episode 3 of the pilot season, meet Ashley R.

Henry - Pilot
When meeting with an old high school friend, Henry finds himself roped into a sticky situation and is reminded of why he stopped hanging out with him in the first place.

Just Sayin' - Episode 1
A web series about what it is to live with roommates. Thin walls and passive aggression included.

No Method - Episode 2
No Method is a semi-autobiographical dark comedy about the unraveling of aspiring actress and native Brooklynite Caitlin as she skids toward rock bottom. In this episode, Caitlin contemplates quitting her mind-numbing day job and meets a troubled musician. 

Stay at Home - Episode 2
Stay at Home is a character based comedy web-series that follows main character Ben through his day to day routine as he tries to make a living, be creative, and keep his sanity, all while raising two small children in one of the most expensive and competitive places in America. 

8 for Vegas - Pilot
A pool team in NYC is followed by a documentary crew as they try and reverse 10 years of bad luck. 

Hey Yun - Episode 1
In the first episode of Hey Yun - this angry yet whimsical Korean woman gets a side of hipster racism at a brunch party. 

The awards go to...

At the end of the evening, we announced our winning filmmakers for both Audience Choice Award & Silver Whiskers Award. The Audience Choice Award is voted upon by all those in attendance, and the Silver Whiskers is judged by the CongestedCat Team based on a system rating 8 categories of Story, Dialogue/Writing, Direction, Acting, Cinematography, Sound, Editing, and Production Value. The Silver Whiskers winner goes on to screen at our end of year Best of Fest event in April, while both winning filmmakers will be featured in our Insider Series

For the September 2014 lineup, our winning filmmakers were:
    Audience Choice Award:  "Docket 32357" Created by Randy Wilkins & Eljon Wardally.
    Silver Whiskers Award:  "Hey Yun" Created by Hye Yun Park.

Check out the following videos below for both of the winning episodes.

We have two screenings next month, one with our usual diverse monthly line-up on October 8th, and another special Halloween themed screening on the 29th! Both line-ups are already full, but you can always submit your film for future screenings through our submission form.

We hope to see you at the next IndieWorks!