No More Rejections!
Reap Will Publish Your Writing and Post Your Video/Images




REAP wants you to be published!  Are you tired of receiving rejections?  Doors being slammed in your face?  People unfairly passing judgment on your writing skills? Well, REAP can transform all that negativity in your lives into POSITIVITY and give you a platform to express yourself through thoughtful writing.  We will PUBLISH your articles, reviews, blogs, essays, commentaries, poems, short stories, plays, flash fiction, novels, screenplays, humorous musings, etc.  However, we will not publish hate speech, cruel rantings, or arbitrary trashings.  REAP is all about wanting to help change the world in positive ways - not add to the inhumanity that already abundantly exists on our planet. UR SAY is a powerful tool to open minds, inspire creativity, and illuminate social injustices.  In addition to using the written word - REAP will also post user-generated videos, artwork, photos, and music. CLICK HERE TO GET INVOLVED!


 

From Michael Danse - Greed - A Short Story

Jeff rushed into the master bedroom suite. It was spacious and airy, with a canopy-covered king-sized bed, and a palatial bathroom with a tub large enough to seat six. For dinner. The bedroom balcony overlooks the pool and the marble hot tub. Jeff bolted to the dresser and opened the jewelry box. He emptied all of the rings, bracelets and necklaces into a bag, occasionally taking time to celebrate a diamond necklace or emerald earrings. Then he went to the man’s dresser and took the rings and watches. He was thrilled to see a Rolex Submariner, knowing it would bring thousands.

Gary quickly entered the room and said, “I have a MacBook Pro and an iPad.” They fist- bumped and headed to the back door where they had entered a few minutes earlier. Even though they tripped the alarm, they knew they were out in plenty of time.

They climbed into Gary’s red Ford pickup and sped off. Soon they were melded into the local traffic.

Gary dropped off Jeff at his house and then headed for home. He parked in the driveway slipped into bed next to Janet. She turned to him and hugged him. “Everything go ok?” she asked.

“Fine, uneventful, just the way we like it.” He replied. “Good. I still get nervous when you work security jobs.” she said. “I know dear, but the money is great, and we don’t take any risks. It just ain’t worth it.” he said. Read on


 


From Kyle Schiffert

We have some great news! All our hard work has paid off! Like There's No Tomorrow has been accepted into the Front House Philm Fest in Philadelphia on Feb. 19th. It's a little confusing because they're having the fest at 2 separate locations. You can see our film at the PRIME STACHE in Philadelphia on Feb. 19th at 10:30 pm. It's on a Wed night, but come on out anyway its going to be a good time. Admission is free and the writer/director (Kyle Schiffert aka myself) will be there as well as some of the cast including Owen McCuen and Kendy Schiffert. 

A short film produced by Time to Back Out Productions. Head over to http://www.TTBOP.com for more information or to buy a copy of this film. Digital download for only $5!

If you need some convincing check out the trailer:


 

From Adele Portnoy - Purgatory - A Short Story 

I was born Maria Antonia Gomez, but in the mid-80s, I legally changed my name to Eve. I shed my family name and my ethnicity as easily as a snake sheds its skin. I became Eve–Earth Mother, searching for my own Garden of Eden in this chaotic world. My only companion was my darling daughter, Janey.

Having escaped my smothering family and abusive husband, my child and I traveled as nomads, aimlessly drifting from one place to another, living off the generosity of my dwindling number of friends.

The weather had turned cold, and a blustering November wind ripped through our insufficient clothing. We sought refuge in a decaying building. Following the sound of voices, we discovered a dimly lit room filled with angry, shouting people. Holding Janey firmly by her hand, we made our way to an empty seat. Janey sat on my lap. Hungry and cold, my 3-year-old promptly fell asleep. I buried my face in her hair to avoid the hostile stares of the strangers seated near me. Read on



From Trevor Ziegler -
Happy And You Know It - A Short Story 

It had been almost two months since Tommy left his job as a call-center representative at a local bank. He spent his days aimlessly trolling the Internet, searching for the “perfect” job, something that he slowly began to realize might not even exist. It’s not that Tommy was particularly picky, either. He just had no idea what he wanted to do. At three years out of college, his biggest achievements as a self-proclaimed adult had been moving out of his parents’ basement and accumulating credit-card debt. He was hardly living up to the standards set by the rousing keynote speech of the young-entrepreneur-turned-billionaire at their commencement ceremony.

He woke up Tuesday morning around 11 a.m.; earlier than usual. It took all the strength he could just to roll out bed and check his email for any prospective job contacts. None. He was used to the rejection at this point. It was almost as if he went through the motion just so he wouldn’t feel guilty in the event he told someone he had been productive that day. Tommy sighed and checked his Facebook page. He made a mental tally: six friends engaged, three promoted at work, seven on vacation at some sort of tropical paradise, and 39 had made their own dinners and felt compelled to share them with the world. Read On


 
From Alex Cima  - Videos

"LA Visions" was inspired by life in Los Angeles, the video creates a series of dream like sequences which feature LA themes such as vampire movies and its car culture. The electronic look was reached by rotoscoping video

"Summer Dreams" is the Amsterdam counterpart, another series of dream like sequences featuring its bike culture and canal party boats, similarly rotoscoped for an electronic effect.

Visit Alex's website here.



From One West Media

One West Media in association with One West Music present: Big Coyote performing "Knockin' On Heaven's Door" Live @ Vincent Hill Station.


 

Like Tweet

Find And Build Your Audience
U Can Promote & Publicize Your Own Projects On Reap




INDIE EYE is like having your own PR department - and it's FREE!  It doesn't get much better than that!

Once you have finished your project  [and this can be for virtually any kind of creative or tech project] - INDIE EYE gives you the ability to PROMOTE AND PUBLICIZE  your accomplishments by posting their current and future status.  FOR EXAMPLE:  You just finished producing a film and have been accepted into several film festivals - INDIE EYE provides the perfect platform for you to inform the audience you have built and the audience you will continue to build on REAP about all of your latest achievements. You can post screenings, album release dates, fashion shows, theatre productions, YouTube videos, book publishing launches and signings, restaurant and club openings, gallery exhibits, pop-up store events, DJ gigs, concert schedules, performance venues, TV/WEB/FILM/RADIO appearances, etc.

It's easy to get INVOLVED and GET THE ATTENTION YOU DESERVE.  GET INVOLVED!



From Ilhame Paris - Girls & Boys


Watch this sensational new video by French singer, Ilhame Paris.  Like her on Facebook and Follow her on Twitter or visit her website 

 


 

From Stinson McClendon & Rodney Thompson - Still Jammin'

 

STILL JAMMIN POSTER PS

Kansas City, along with New Orleans, Chicago, and New York is considered one of the four cradles where America’s only indigenous music, Jazz, developed. Before becoming renowned throughout the world, it was in Kansas City that local 627, one of a handful of Black unions across the nation, was formed in 1917 facilitating the dynamic growth of a style of jazz that would have a far-reaching influence on the evolution of music in America.

From the roster of Local 627 would come legends in American Jazz history like Andy Kirk, Mary Lou Williams, Coleman Hawkins, Jay “Hootie” McShann, “Big” Joe Turner, Count Basie, Charlie “Yard Bird” Parker and Claude “Fiddler” Williams to name a few.  “Still Jammin” contains rare interviews and performances by many of the above-mentioned artists including a remarkable musical exchange between the extraordinary Charlie “Yard Bird” Parker and the legendary Coleman Hawkins.

The film follows the struggles of union officials to maintain possession of their identity and historic building during the era of forced mergers.   See how Local 627 survived to become the Mutual Musicians Foundation and the building designated a National Historic Landmark.

“Still Jammin” is a film that reinforces the reason Kansas City was called “the Paris of the Plains” by many jazz historians.

“Still Jammin” will premiere at 5:00 PM, Saturday February 1, 2014 at the San Diego Black Film Festival.  The screening will take place at the Reading Gaslamp 15 Theatre located at 701 5th Avenue, San Diego, CA 92101.  CLICK HERE TO WATCH TRAILER 


 

From Jean Pierre (JP) Durrand, Liza Carbe and Incendio

Screen Shot 2014-01-13 at 1.16.29 PMAn exotic melody accompanies a desert caravan moving beneath a blazing sun. The sound of waves wash against a pristine South American beach. A lone flamenco guitar echoes through the cobbled streets of old Sevilla. And a lilting three quarter time rhythm conjures images of the rolling green hills of Ireland. The music is cinema. It is sound given shape and color. This is the music of Incendio.

If you are in California, try to catch them. They are playing in Temecula, Altadena, Ridgecrest and Culver City. For more information and dates check out their website here.



From Stanley Dyrector 


Marilyn Monroe and Phil (a one-act play) by Joyce Dyrector and Stanley Dyrector. Based on true events. Marilyn Monroe went to New York to study with Lee Strasberg at the Actors Studio, and on her first day in class, she was assigned to do a scene with Phil, a short, 20ish struggling character actor. He is skeptical that she will call, but she does. When she comes over to his apartment to rehearse, she looks around at the way he is living and begins to clean his apartment. As they talk and rehearse, we get to know the real Marilyn Monroe and not the image. Published by Brooklyn Publishers. Available for purchase as a stand alone play at this link or as part of the anthology, Chew On This, here.

Like Tweet

5 Reasons To Try Windows 8 Phone

By Kia Dargahi



the new windows-phone-8-start-screens

5. Full integration with Windows software

If you live in the 21st century, chances are that you have had a computer running Windows. Although some of you may have a Mac, this could be your reason to switch. Microsoft has boasted time and again about its homogenous ecosystem, and with the iteration of Windows 8, Windows 8 RT, and Windows Phone 8; it has proven its worth. Although some say that there is no reason and that it is in fact counterintuitive to have an identical user interface across the board, the automatic syncing and familiar working environment make for a fantastic combination.

4. Live tiles

Notifications. You get them on Android, and you get them on iOS. In fact, notifications have evolved so similarly on the two operating systems that at first glance they look like carbon copies of each other. They differ by what seems to be an idiosyncrasy: On  iOS, in order to find out which app has notified you, there’s a badge with a number. On Android, however, there are symbols for each app that appear at the top of the notification bar. Microsoft has taken what appears to be a leap of faith with the concept of live tiles. These ever-active tiles constantly refresh and pull new information from each app. Why should you try this? Well, instead of having a cluster of notifications, it’s much easier to go to the app that you want and find all of the updates waiting right in front of you.

3. Clean interface

Windows 8 Phone’s metro UI is quite possibly the only unanimously agreed-upon software that can claim a sleek and clean interface. This modern approach to software is a refreshing change. When comparing Samsung’s Touchwiz and Apple’s iOS, the overall look is similar, with apps organized onto a grid, a dock with the most-used apps, a background, and a notification bar. Windows 8 Phone has a certain element of new to it, and if nothing else is an eye-catcher to those who have never seen the system before. Furthermore, Microsoft is so stringent about keeping this metro look that all applications have to keep the same design elements that mark the Redmond interface. This design language has a professional and matured aspect to it that renders the user experience more coherent and satisfying.

2. Optimization

As many people with Windows phones will tell you, their battery life is great: on par, if not better, than some of the most popular and best smartphones on the market. But the focus here isn’t battery life. Phones running Microsoft’s software do not have to have the highest-end specs in order to feel just as fluid, if not more so, than Android, iOS, and Blackberry 10. How does this reflect on the user’s end? In fact, there are two positive effects of this optimization: Windows phones don’t start to lag after a couple of major software updates, and they generally cost less than other phones on the market. There are even some phones, such as the Nokia Lumia 521, that cost less than $150 off contract. I speak from experience after playing with a friend’s that this does not feel like a cheap phone. It’s quick and has a great feel in hand that just cannot be matched at this price point.

1. Nokia

Nokia-Lumia-1520Whether you agree or not, Nokia is perhaps the manufacturer with the best overall products on the market. Have you seen the new Lumia 1520? The phone has one of the nicest screens on the market, an excellent Pureview camera, a fantastic feel in hand and top-of-the-line specs. The catch? Other than being a tad big for most (6-inch screen), I can’t find any flaws with the phone. And it’s not just this specific phone; Nokia has had a history of excellence for as long as I can remember. Ever heard of the unbreakable phone? Yup, that’s a Nokia (3310). One of the first phones to run Linux, has an infrared blaster, stand, front and back cameras, stylus, and LED flash that came out in 2009? That’s right: a Nokia (N900). As far as I’m concerned, Nokia is the most well-rounded manufacturer on the market. The fact that Microsoft has bought out Nokia and is implementing its technology directly into products starting January is a hope for the somewhat stagnant OS.

Have I convinced you to try out the Redmond ecosystem? Let us know in the comments!

Like Tweet

Becoming Human
The Evolution Of Female Characters In Media

By Amber Topping



From the perception of female characters as sex objects (albeit with great power) in Greek mythology, the amalgamation of the ideal angelic figure mixed with the sexual deviant of medieval, the inferior representation of women in the Elizabethan Period, the layered characters of Victorian and the turn of the century (notwithstanding their oppression in society) to many of the independent female characters seen now, the representation of women in media has continuously evolved and will continue to do so. So where then do we stand today?

1280px-Sandro Botticelli - La nascita di Venere - Google Art Project - edited

In the world of media, whether it is in literature, film, or television, female characterization is nowhere near the level it should be in a modern world where equality should no longer be an issue. Male characters have always come in a variety of types with no limits. With women, that’s still not always the case. Oftentimes, women play the girlfriends, the best friends, the exposition roles, the femme fatales, etc…But how often do we see female versions of the un-ambitious Vince Vaughn character types for instance? Not to mention the gender bias still permeating media, particularly in film.

What we often see are cute-as-a-button funny women, female characters who are merely sex objects, the outdated damsel in distress with no actual personality, or even women who can kick butt and never need a man to rescue them. Unfortunately, many of these female characters, unlike the male ones, do not always feel "real." Sure, I love a feisty, powerful woman who throws out witty one-liners as much as the next person but these shouldn’t be the "only" independent female characters we find in media. In real life, women come in all shapes and sizes, all careers, religions, and personalities. It would be ideal to finally see a greater representation of real women of every type in every aspect of media.

Gender Inequality In Film

NYFA-Film-Gender InequalityRecently, the New York Film Academy presented statistics on “Gender Inequality in Film” based on the top 500 films between 2007 and 2012. The stats are more than a little discouraging. For instance, only 30.8% of speaking characters are women with a third of those characters wearing sexually revealing clothing. Shockingly, only 10.7% of the featured movies included a cast of an equal ratio between male and female characters. In all, there is nearly a 3:1 ratio of male to female actors.

Examples Of Great Female Characters

sandra-bullock-gravity-film.nominatedYet despite the female stereotypes and gender inequality seen in media, no doubt there are great female characters out there. Consider the recent portrayal of Sandra Bullock as Dr. Ryan Stone in the science fiction film Gravity. Bullock’s character is depicted as an intelligent, real human being who is vulnerable and even depressed, but also tough without possessing superhuman strength.

Or take a look at the character of Donna Noble in the BBC’s TV SeriesDonna-Noble-doctor-who-for-whovians Doctor Who. An unlikely heroine, she’s a loud-mouthed woman with average looks in her 30s who desperately wants to get married, yet still lives at home with her overbearing mother because she hasn’t been able to figure out what she wants to do with her life. From the world’s perspective, she's a failure and feels like it. But as her character progresses and transforms, Donna finds herself along with inner strength, courage, and compassion for others. Again, she’s portrayed as very real: just plain human, flaws and all. Then of course, there’s Hermione Granger of the Harry Potter series who is smart, loyal, and brave. She falls in love with Harry’s best friend, Ron Weasley, but isn’t defined by it. Oftentimes, however, these examples of layered female characterizations aren’t as common as they should be.

Classic Literature

Surprisingly, when it comes to the world of female characterization, much of literature in the late 18th century to the early 20th century was ahead of the game, though this is certainly not true for all. Pride  Prejudice book coverMany female characters were layered and diverse despite societal oppression. Just read Jane Austen or Charlotte Bronte. Elizabeth Bennett and Jane Eyre remain some of the best female characters ever written, despite being created a couple hundred years ago. However, these characters are not great because they are strong physically; they’re great because they are real. They fit into their time period, yes, and can’t necessarily be understood with a modern lens (for instance, you can’t really expect a character by the Bronte sisters to think like we do in the 21st century). But that doesn’t make these characters any less authentic or any less developed as female characters.

Film History: The Damsel In Distress

barneyoldfieldAs the film medium began to make traction in the early 20th century, female characterization took a step backward. In a time when women in America were finally getting the right to vote in 1920, women were regrettably being portrayed as objects on the big screen. In the early history of films, the woman was frequently portrayed as the literal stock character of the damsel in distress. They didn't have any real characterization behind them or depth. They were tied to train tracks if you will (though the literal image of the woman on the tracks wasn't as common as you might think), rescued by the hero at the last second and then rewarded with a marriage in the end. When the talkies were introduced, the damsel still remained (just look at Disney’s Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs), but intelligent women also began to appear more and more seen for example in characters played by Katherine Hepburn or Bette Davis.

As the feminist movement progressed throughout the 20th century, the portrayal of female characters on the big screen also changed. By carrie-fisher-as-princess-leia-in-star-wars-the-empire-strikes-backthe 1970s, the presentation of many female characters began to transform the image of the damsel in distress into something else entirely. Carrie Fisher said about her Star Wars character Princess Leia that, “I was not a damsel in distress. I was a distressing damsel.” This undermining of the damsel in distress became more and more popular through the ’80s till present day where it’s now become rampant. Today it’s quite common to find in media the model of the damsel in distress subverted into a distressed damsel who often does the rescuing (for example, in Ever After, when Danielle carries the prince away from danger). While this is a giant leap forward, it has also created another emerging dilemma of the modern female character.

Strong Female Characters

Buffy-the-Vampire-SlayerInstead of the damsel in distress, the representation of women went in the complete opposite direction. What started to happen in the 20th century was the creation of physically strong females. Writers seemed to assume that by making these women physically strong, the rest didn’t always matter. Does that mean there can’t be supernaturally tough women who are also three dimensional? Of course not. Buffy the Vampire Slayer is a fantastic example of onscreen women who could be both strong and vulnerable. Unfortunately, it’s more common to find this other, one-dimensional representation of feisty female characters scantily clad than otherwise. This warrior woman has become another stock character just like the damsel in distress. And part of the issue is that we now have too many of these warrior women (three dimensional or not) and not enough regular ones. There needs to be a better balance.

Recently in an interview with Elle, Natalie Portman turned her thoughts on feminism to that of the natalie-portman-03characterization of female characters in Hollywood. She said, “I want every version of a woman and a man to be possible. I want women and men to be able to be full-time parents, or full-time working people, or any combination of the two. I want both to be able to do whatever they want sexually without being called names. I want them to be allowed to be weak and strong and happy and sad – human, basically. The fallacy in Hollywood is that if you’re making a ‘feminist’ story: The woman kicks ass and wins. That’s not feminist, that’s macho. A movie about a weak, vulnerable woman can be feminist if it shows a real person that we can empathize with.”

Portman hits the nail on the head. There’s nothing wrong with writing a “weak” female character because some women are in fact weak. Or shy, murderous, lonely, an underachiever, or an overachiever. There should be every version of women presented in every form of media, whether written for literature, film, or television. 

Equal-Opportunity Rescuing

Felicity Smoak.1Which then brings me to my next point: It’s simply not realistic to portray ALL women as never needing to be saved because women must be strong wonder women who can do everything. Sometimes, it’s okay to be defenseless. There were some complaints for instance in the CW’s Arrow  when Felicity Smoake (an intelligent female character who assists Oliver Queen on missions) was rescued by Oliver in the recent season two episode "State Vs Queen." But is it sexist to write a female character who gets rescued every once in a while when she herself also does some of the rescuing?

The X FilesThe evolution of the damsel in distress evolved into the distressed damsel, which then evolved into the damsel who always rescues herself, which leads to where “rescuing” in media actually works. And that’s equal-opportunity rescuing. Dana Scully and Fox Mulder from The X Files are the perfect example of what I mean by "equal-opportunity rescuing." As much as Mulder rescues Scully, Scully also rescues Mulder. What makes them modern is that they EQUALLY need each other. It's about equality rather than one being stronger or superior over the other. Not to mention that both characters were written brilliantly and above all else equally. Both Mulder and Scully felt real because they were both fully developed. Likewise, today it shouldn’t be about whether or not a man saves a woman in distress or vice versa, but about what happens with the character outside of said rescuing. Who are they as characters? Who are they as people?

Phryne FisherA lovely example of a three-dimensional, modern-day female character is Miss Phryne Fisher from the Australian TV Series Miss Fisher’s Murder Mysteries. In many ways, she gets to play the role usually given to a man. She’s smart, witty, and can solve just about any case like a female Sherlock Holmes rather than the stereotypical warrior woman. But she is also a flawed individual who makes mistakes. Moreover, while Miss Phryne Fisher does most of the rescuing during her murder investigations, every once in a while she finds herself in a scrape that requires her companion and best friend Dot or love interest Detective Jack Robinson to come to the rescue. She’s a woman who is talented and resourceful, but she’s also a character with many sides, secrets, and demons. Above all, she feels human. Still, while the evolution of female characters in many ways has come a long way from the days of the silent film character of the damsel in distress, we haven’t come far enough.

The Greek Slave and Media Objectification

The Greek Slave by Hiram Powers-1.Females in the mediaTake a look at "The Greek Slave" by Hiram Powers: a striking statue of a young, nude woman enslaved in chains with downcast eyes, a cross revealing her faith, and her hand attempting to cover herself to protect her dignity. The statue became one of the most popular works of art in the mid-19th century. In 1851, suffragist Lucy Stone came upon this statue in Boston and broke into tears. She saw it as a symbol of female oppression, and later that evening at an antislavery convention, she spoke out. In a way, this image inspired a revolution for women’s rights.

The power of this same enslaved woman as an image and symbol still works today. When women are presented as objects in media, just as the Greek woman is depicted to be by those selling her, they remain enslaved. Jessica Alba in an interview with Marie Claire said: “I had a show that premiered when I was 19 … And right away, everyone formed a strong opinion about me because of the way I was marketed. I was supposed to be sexy, this tough action girl. That's what people expected.” This objectification and these marketing tactics do not empower women. Women can own their sexuality without becoming the objects the suffragists fought against.

Taking Female Characters Forward

From NewStatesman, writer Sophia McDougal wrote an insightful piece titled "I Hate Strong Female Characters." She ends her article by answering the question of what she wants besides strong female characters. She states:

“I want a male:female character ratio of 1:1 instead of 3:1 on our screens. I want a wealth of complex female protagonists who can be either strong or weak or both or neither, because they are more than strength or weakness. Badass gunslingers and martial artists sure, but also interesting women who are shy and quiet and do, sometimes, put up with others’ shit because in real life there’s often no practical alternative. And besides heroines, I want to see women in as many and varied secondary and character roles as men: female sidekicks, mentors, comic relief, rivals, villains … I want her to be free to express herself … I want her to have meaningful, emotional relationships with other women … I want her to be weak sometimes … I want her to be strong in a way that isn’t about physical dominance or power … I want her to cry if she feels like crying … I want her to ask for help … I want her to be who she is … Write a Strong Female Character? No.”

When it comes to the evolution of female characters, as far as they’ve come, they still have a long way to go. How female characters should evolve next is straightforward. Let them be real, always real. Don’t make it be about a message or even about feminism (by writing characters we empathize with feminism will naturally be addressed), because that takes away what’s real. Female characters have evolved to the point of becoming human. The next step is to allow them to actually BE human. So let’s continue to take female characters forward, not backward.

Like Tweet

Rise Of The Fellowship

By Leo Ziegler



MV5BMTEzNzcyMjkwNjBeQTJeQWpwZ15BbWU4MDc5MjE3NTAx. V1 SX640 SY720

It’s been nearly 20 years since a young Peter Jackson gathered his friends on the weekends to film Bad Taste, creating an instant cult classic with nothing more than a 16-mm camera and homemade special effects. Now, he has professional actors and his own special-effects company (along with most of New Zealand’s population acting as extras) to help him bring the epic Lord of the Rings films to the screen.

This legend of Jackson has been an inspiration to young filmmakers throughout the world. Ron Newcomb is a D.C. filmmaker who has taken that inspiration to direct and co-write Rise of the Fellowship. Homage to Jackson’s LOTR films, Rise follows four high-school kids as they make their way to compete in the Lord of the Rings Online Gaming Championship.

rotf-wallpaper1Akin to World of Warcraft, the LOTR online game has its roots in the card and dice games of the  ‘80s. Dungeons & Dragons and Magic: The Gathering were the pastimes that lead a young Newcomb to J.R.R. Tolkien’s books. The Shire and its surrounding worlds came to life in New Zealand, where Jackson filmed the LOTR and Hobbit trilogies. Ron Newcomb was one of the many pilgrims to make his way to Middle-earth. Rise of the Fellowship is as much a love letter to the Jackson films as it is to the world of gaming. Many of the actors were thrown full-on into this world by their director that way they would fully embody their characters.

After being a director for hire on the 2009 romantic comedy Wait Your Turn, Newcomb gained the confidence and met the right people to make a film as personal as it is ambitious to stand alongside the ode to Star Wars 2009 fan-based film, Fanboys. Rise of the Fellowship’s lead teenage gaming-nerd character’s life grows more and more into Jackson’s Hobbit world the farther he gets to Orlando to compete in the championship. Brian Pennington’s cinematography deftly blends common scenes into perfect recreations of scenes from LOTR, and Dale Clay’s score exactly mimics Howard Shore’s epic music. With all of these nods to Jackson, the film never loses sight of the story of a young boy growing into adulthood.

Rise of the Fellowship is available for download through Phase Four on iTunes, Amazon, Netflx and Walmart. For more information, check out the film's website here.

Like Tweet

Subcategories


Back To Top