Loose Change Final Cut Dvd



Loose Change Final Cut Dvd

The Sundance Film Festival kicks off tomorrow, with indie film blogs and glossy TV entertainment new shows alike converging in Park City to spotlight this year’s crop of would-be Tarantinos. The narrative, of course, is that you make your independent film, get into Sundance, and wow the potential distributors, prompting a fierce bidding war, theatrical release, and rock-star treatment now and forevermore. (Though, as we discussed last week, the translation of Sundance buzz to box-office dollars isn’t always as easy as it looks).

But what of the thousands — literally, thousands, every year — of filmmakers who don’t make that brutal Sundance cut? For the filmmaker, that Sundance rejection letter can feel like nothing less than a death certificate for their labor of love. And while a spin at the ‘dance can certainly help an unknown film’s chances of breakout success (see Reservoir Dogs, The Blair Witch Project, El Mariachi, sex, lies, and videotape, and many more), there are plenty of Sundance rejects who found success anyway. Here’s just a few of them.

Few films in the bumper crop of 1990s indies have (on the surface) as prototypical a back story as Doug Liman’s Swingers, which was a minor hit in its 1996 theatrical release, but a cult smash on home video. Jon Favreau wrote the script as a showcase for himself and his actor friends (including Vince Vaughn, Ron Livingston, and Heather Graham), shot it for peanuts, sold it to Miramax, and watched their careers explode. But they hit an early bump: Sundance turned the picture down. (The filmmakers reportedly made the mistake of submitting a not-quite-complete cut to the Sundance folks.) Undeterred, the film’s producers rented out a theater in Los Angeles a few weeks after Sundance, invited distributors to a one-time only screening, and sold the picture to Miramax for $5 million. (Sundance didn’t make the same mistake again: Liman’s follow-up, Go, premiered at the 1999 Sundance Film Festival.)

Dvd

Background To Loose Change Final Cut “Loose Change I” and “Loose Change II” have been seen by millions, online, on TV and on DVD. In the words of Vanity Fair ‘Loose Change 2 is the world’s first internet blockbuster, and if it were released theatrically would pack out Movie Houses’.

Presentation 'Truth about 911 September 11th' - World trade center twin towers 'Truth about 911 September 11th' - World trade center twin towers. LOOSE CHANGE FINAL CUT on DVD. With CASE and FULL ARTWORK. It should have the credibility it deserves. We want to help spread the word. With full color artwork and insert! That is in a hard dvd case with insert and artwork. LOOSE CHANGE FINAL CUT on DVD. With CASE and FULL ARTWORK. Loose Change Final Cut is the third installment of the documentary that asks the tough questions about the 9/11 attacks and related events. This movie hopes to be the catalyst for a new independent investigation, in which the family members receive answers to their questions, and the TRUE PERPETRATORS of this horrendous crime are PROSECUTED and PUNISHED.

David Gordon Green’s debut feature was exactly the kind of low-key, no-star, lyrical drama that Sundance used to love, back in the late ’80s when they were operating under their original name, the Utah/US Film Festival. But the festival was a whole different ballgame by the time Green submitted George Washington for the 2000 festival. Luckily, his film made the cut at the Toronto Film Festival, the Los Angeles Independent Film Festival, the New York Film Festival, and the Chicago International Film Festival; Roger Ebert, Time Magazine, and the New York Times‘ Elvis Mitchell selected it as one of the year’s ten best films. Green went on to direct several similarly striking indies (like All the Real Girls and Snow Angels) before going mainstream with comedies like Pineapple Express and the forthcoming Your Highness.

We’re gonna tread lightly here, because hew boy, do we not wanna open this can of worms. Loose Change, a documentary examination of the events of September 11th, 2001, was first released as a streaming Internet feature in 2005. Writer/director Dylan Avery treated the film as a kind of work-in-progress, revising and recutting the film several times over the years that followed, with a “second edition” later that year, a “recut” version in 2006, a “final cut” in 2007, and a DVD release titled Loose Change 9/11: An American Coup in 2009. In its various iterations, the film has been (to say the least) controversial, serving as a rallying cry and centerpiece of conspiracy theories for “9/11 truth” advocates, while critics from the U.S. Department of State to the BBC to the editors of Popular Mechanics have stepped forward to debunk claims in the film. According to Avery himself (on the “Loose Change Forum”), the “final cut” version was submitted for Sundance 2007. “We didnt make it into sundance,” Avery reported. “(B)ut we’re working hard on the final cut, regardless.” Critics of the film may assume that Sundance passed due to the film’s questionable scholarship and stretching of fair use copyright laws. Supporters surely surmised that the film was kept out by a mass conspiracy to suppress the truth. (See you in the comments!)

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Trey Parker directed this oddball black comedy/musical in 1993 while attending the University of Colorado at Boulder. He submitted the film for the 1994 Sundance Film Festival, but it didn’t get in; according to producer Jason McHugh, they didn’t even get a rejection letter. They decided to go anyway. The filmmakers rented a conference room and a video projector at a local hotel and papered the town with flyers. They ended up selling the film to Troma, who put it out on VHS and later on DVD; when Parker and the film’s co-star Matt Stone broke big with South Park, it became one of Troma’s most profitable titles and a genuine cult phenomenon.

British documentarian and provocateur Nick Broomfield’s probing, witty exposé of the suspicious characters surrounding the suicide of Nirvana frontman Kurt Cobain was a magnet for trouble, most of it generated by Cobain’s widow Courtney Love, who was (to put it mildly) unhappy with the film’s portrayal of her (and its investigations of theories that she might have had Cobain murdered). Kurt and Courtney was actually scheduled to play at the 1998 Sundance Film Festival, but Love threatened to sue the powers-that-be at the fest if they ran it, citing copyright concerns (the original cut included Nirvana and Hole songs). Broomfield ended up showing it at rival festival Slamdunk; it went on to limited but successful theatrical screenings. In all fairness, Sundance wasn’t the only festival afraid to incur the wrath of Courtney; Slamdance passed on it as well. Wait a minute, Slam who?

A year after Parker said to hell with Sundance and screened his film in Park City anyway, four other Sundance-rejected entrepreneurs started up the rival Slamdance Film Festival, which ran simultaneously as Sundance and quickly established a reputation as a scrappier, less-hyped film fest (and frequent go-to festival for films that Sundance passed over). Among their first big gets was The Daytrippers, a wryly comic drama directed by Greg Mottola and produced by Steven Soderbergh, whose sex, lies, and videotape helped put Sundance on the map. But Soderbergh was in a slump by the mid-90s, and his heft couldn’t help get The Daytrippers into his alma mater. They ended up taking the picture “across the street” to Slamdance, where it won the Grand Jury Prize; it ended up going to Cannes, playing five months in New York, and grossing over $2 million. Soderbergh, of course, came out of his slump with Out of Sight and became one of our most prolific and innovative filmmakers. Mottola directed several episodes of Arrested Development and Undeclared before helming Superbad, Adventureland, and the forthcoming Paul.

Marilyn Argrelo’s documentary on the New York public school system’s ballroom dancing program got the thumbs-down from the Sundance folks in 2004; it ended up playing Slamdance, where Paramount Classics and Nickelodeon Films picked it up for domestic distribution. Released as a summer sleeper in 2005, it quietly grossed over $8 million, placing it in the top 15 highest-grossing documentaries of all time.

Even Slamdance initially passed on this dark, low-budget British noir, but they gave it a second look when the filmmakers resubmitted it the following year and ran it in the 1999 festival. It was picked up for domestic distribution by Zeitgeist Films, and the dismal $48,000 gross might have made Following a forgotten castoff if director Christopher Nolan hadn’t followed it up with Memento. Sundance wisely grabbed Memento, which exploded out of the 2001 Sundance fest, and Nolan (of course) went on to direct Insomnia, Batman Begins, The Prestige, The Dark Knight, and Inception.

January, 2007. Sundance screens the documentary Chasing Ghosts: Beyond the Arcade, a look at 1980s video game culture. Meanwhile, Slamdance runs The King of Kong: A Fistful of Quarters, Seth Gordon’s jazzy, entertaining, hysterically funny documentary account of two men and their epic struggle for the all-time Donkey Kong high score. Chasing Ghosts may have had the more prestigious pedigree (and the preference of some critics), but King of Kong scored the distribution deal and became a quiet summer hit in arthouses and on DVD.

The Blair Witch Project was one of the most financially successful of all Sundance alums, but the festival passed on Oren Peli’s Blair Witch-esque low-budget thriller Paranormal Activity, which wound up playing Slamdance in January 2008. DreamWorks ended up buying the film — initially not for release, but to remake with a bigger budget. However, test scores were through the roof, and the company (through Paramount Vantage) ended up revising the ending and releasing the film near Halloween 2009, accompanied by a carefully-cultivated Internet buzz campaign. It worked; the $15,000 film grossed an astonishing $193 million worldwide, a figure nearly matched by its sequel (rushed out a mere year later).

So what do you think? Which of these movies would Sundance have been wise to hang on to?


Looking for a turkey-day screening alternative to football? How about the most widely debated and downloaded of 9/11 conspiracy documentaries, now available in a special two-hour edition? Holiday fun for the whole family, right?

“Loose Change: Final Cut,” for sale on DVD and via streaming video from the film’s website, premiered last Sunday to a near-sellout crowd at the Riverview Theater, where 27-year-old co-producer Jason Bermas modestly suggested to the crowd that Thanksgiving Day viewings of his guerrilla media counterattack could help keep the home fires burning.

Why not? Sniffing around everything from a hijacker’s porno-movie rental on Sept. 10, 2001, to the U.S. war games allegedly in progress when the first plane hit, “Loose Change”—”writen” [sic], as per the opening credits, by 24-year-old Dylan Avery, who also directed — makes skepticism at least as tasty as anything else being dished out this season.

Previous cuts downloaded 50 million times
A bona fide new-media phenomenon in its two previous editions, which have apparently been downloaded some 50 million times, “Loose Change” works by panhandling for our outrage. The viewer can direct his frustration at the filmmakers themselves for suggesting, not always persuasively, that 9/11 was an “inside job” complete with controlled demolition of the Twin Towers, or at the government and mainstream media for taking the “9/11 Commission Report” as the definitive word on the subject.

Naturally, both varieties of irritation were on display at the Riverview. Outside the theater, one middle-aged gent held a placard reading, “Dylan Avery is a Bad Filmmaker” (harsh!), while other dissenters distributed pamphlets characteristic of the sizable anti-“Change” contingent (e.g., “Do not let ‘Final Cut’ be the final word”). Inside, the paying audience, much of which was outfitted in truth-movement T-shirts, gave the movie a standing ovation. Several scenes were met with loud applause — particularly footage of President George W. Bush and Vice President Richard B. Cheney unconvincingly addressing cable news reporters’ questions with stammered speech and darting eyes.

Toe-tapping music, too
Combining speculative reenactments, talking-head testimony and copious archival footage to refute the official version of an historical tragedy, “Loose Change” operates vaguely in the tradition of Emile de Antonio’s classic Warren Commission rebuttal “Rush to Judgment.” But of course that 1967 doc doesn’t feature anything like the Casio keyboard-style “Change” score, much of which, with its electronic synth-blasts and handclaps, is downright funky.

It’s plenty odd indeed to catch yourself tapping your toes to a movie that insinuates thousands of Americans were murdered by members of their own government. Yet perverse gratification seems among the intended responses to “Loose Change,” a movie that allows disbelievers of all sorts to fumble and fume their way toward catharsis. Personally, I’m neither qualified nor inclined to evaluate the film’s veracity relative to other 9/11 stories, official and otherwise. Yet this purportedly final cut does strike me as being impressively assembled on a minuscule budget, as well as both enjoyable and disturbing.

Suspicions rewarded
Like a lot of recent docs, including more conventionally accomplished ones such as “No End in Sight,” “Loose Change” rewards one’s suspicions of the current administration in general and its handling of the terror war in particular. So, too, the movie at once hails and condemns the mainstream media’s coverage of 9/11. Along with interviewed survivors speaking of lower-floor “explosions” in the towers just before they fell, the wealth of TV news clips from the first week after the attacks features establishment anchors spouting off the cuff about the similarity of the buildings’ swift collapses to “demolition.” Seen today, even CNN broadcasts from that chaotic period convey a startling degree of honesty — though it’s not so easy to find a newscaster on any network poking around the official story now.

At the Riverview, Bermas appeared at least as charismatic and articulate as, say, Anderson Cooper. Appearing in a bright red hoodie emblazoned with “Investigate 9/11” (his own trendsetting design), answering viewers coolly and to their satisfaction, the independent producer also took the liberty of endorsing Republican presidential candidate Ron Paul, calling for a subpoena of Cheney’s 9/11 bunker-mate Norman Minetta, and, yes, asking for donations.

The movie isn’t called “Loose Change” for nothing.

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