Home Posts tagged "film school alumni"

Dreaming of an Electric City

Published on May 14, 2012

New York Film Academy MFA Filmmaking graduate Nick DeRuve is in pre-production on his first feature film, Electric City. As Nick describes it, “[It] is a gritty drama about a thirteen-year-old who attempts to keep his family intact when they receive an eviction notice. I spent my pre-teen years chasing my older brother and his friends around the city of Schenectady. They were teenagers, and I was trying my hardest to fit in with their crew. I experienced a lot of things kids that age don’t, such as violence, crime, and witnessing a lot of drug use.”

“I would say around the age of thirteen is when I started having initial thoughts about making a film about two brothers stuck in an urban setting,” he explained. “When I was thirteen my family moved, not far from Schenectady, but to the suburbs, and that’s when I realized what I had experienced was different. Over the years I knew who the film would be about, but I still didn’t know what the film would be about, so I could never get the idea out on paper.”

Nick was no novice when he began at New York Film Academy’s Universal Studios campus. “I had been a working gaffer in NYC for four years after completing my undergrad,” says Nick. “My passion was to direct, so I spent that time on set studying everything that was happening. I decided to go back for my MFA to continue after my goal of being an indie filmmaker, and experience filmmaking in LA. No matter what my experience was prior I wanted to absorb everything my teachers had to offer. I developed good relationships with my teachers, who have great knowledge and experience.”

After graduation, Nick developed the feature length script for Electric City, and reached out to his former advisor, NYFA instructor Brendan Davis, for feedback. Brendan raved about the script, saying, “He nailed the tone, the arcs, and the characters, and kept it real while keeping hope. He’s done a really exceptional job on it and has the chance to make an exceptional film. To me this is a… studio quality drama with award-worthy writing. The roles in this piece are something that serious actors would fight to play. But the material speaks for itself.”

Though they have secured some funding for the film, they have also started a crowdfunding campaign on Indiegogo. Twenty-percent of the proceeds will go to support Small Can Be Big, an organization that supports victims of domestic abuse and families in need. “It’s a social issue that we have to stare in the face everyday,” says Nick. “[W]hy not try to help people as much as we can, whenever we can, because at the end of the day, that’s the goal. Make a difference, make a change, even if it’s for just one kid who needs a reminder that even when times are hard, we can never give up on ourselves and our goals.”

When asked about future plans, Nick said, “Right now my main focus is getting Electric City in the can, and screening at festivals by 2013. I’m not really thinking about any other projects. I have a wallet full of receipts, ticket stubs, and business cards that I use to jot notes down on. When the time comes to start developing a new story, I’ll have that as my resource. For now, all I got is this script, and a pocket full of dreams.”

 

New York Film Academy Alum Aubrey Plaza in ‘Scott Pilgrim Vs. the World’

Published on August 10, 2010

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New York Film Academy alum Aubrey Plaza is really hitting her stride in the acting world right now. In 2008, Aubrey scored the part of Julie Powers in Scott Pilgrim Vs. the World, coming out this Friday, August 13th. As the film’s visually-striking action and its ground-breaking interactive trailer gather more and more attention, so has Aubrey’s presence in Hollywood. Her publicity work with the rest of the cast of Scott Pilgrim, along with her part on Amy Poehler’s NBC sitcom Parks and Recreation and her other current work in entertainment, has spurred her career into the public eye line.

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As Julie Powers, the bitter on-again off-again girlfriend of Stephen Stills, the lead guitarist in Scott Pilgrim’s band, she inadvertently hosts the party that brings Scott’s love interest, Ramona Flowers, into in his life. She is now doing a press circuit with the rest of the cast. Below is her interview with G4, she talks about preparing for the film, her trip to Comic Con with the cast and her delinquent tweeting habit.

Below is one of Aubrey’s interview’s at Comic Con. Aubrey talks about being part of the cast and what it’s like to go from having coffee with Michael Cera off-screen to screaming at him on-screen.

Aubrey got her professional start in acting as a member of Upright Citizens Brigade in Los Angeles in 2004. She performed in a number of comedy shorts for Funny or Die, Improv Everywhere, College Humor.

A graduate of our Universal Studios Teen Filmmaking Program, Aubrey grew up in Wilmington, Delaware, and is of Puerto Rican descent, (her father is Puerto Rican and her mother is Irish and English). Aubrey explains to Jimmy Fallon how she used to have fun growing up in Delaware.

Aubrey currently plays April Ludgate, a department intern, on Amy Poehler’s NBC sitcom Parks and Recreation. Her impressive resume also includes a leading role in Judd Apatow’s Funny People as Seth Rogan’s love interest.

 

Producing Alumnus A.D.-ing for Vera Farmiga Film

Published on July 2, 2010

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August ‘09 graduate of the New York Film Academy One-Year Producing for Film and TV Program Barbara Maia is currently assistant directing Academy Award-nominated actress Vera Farmiga’s directorial debut Higher Ground. The film is based on Carolyn S. Brigg’s memoir, This Dark World, about ”one woman’s immersion into Fundamentalist faith and her decision, 20 years later, to leave it all behind.” Congratulations on the gig, Barbara – we’re sure you’ll learn a lot working with an Oscar winner!

 

Alumn Film Accepted by Rhode Island Film Festival

Published on June 9, 2010

n40433419202_97271The Rhode Island International Film Festival, (RIIFF), a qualifying festival for the Academy Awards since 2002 and the biggest film festival in the northeast United States, has accepted New York Film Academy alumnus Ruchika Lalwani’s short thesis film I’m Afraid I Am Hitler for it’s 2010 event.

The 18 minute film concerns a troubled man who has spent over a year agonizing about the crimes of one the world’s most brutal political figures, crimes he believes are his. Adien, played by Bernhard Forcher, is convinced that he is Adolf Hitler and, for fear that his secret will be discovered, hides in his house and tries desperately to reconcile what he thinks is his shocking past.

The idea for the film was born during Ruchika’s time at NYFA. The enthusiasm of her teachers and classmates kick-started the project, and Lalwani employed her exceptional creativity to transform the empty rooms that were to serve as the set into scenes out of 1940s Germany and America in 1976.

Ironically, Lalwani had returned to India and put the film from her mind until her cast and crew encouraged her to submit it to festivals. In the end, the Rhode Island International Film Festival even waived her entrance fee. Rhode Island International Film Festival 2010 takes place August 10th through the 15th. Good luck at RIIF, Ruchika!

 

Interview With Film School Alumni Princeton Holt

Published on June 24, 2009

TCW’s Editor in Chief Clifford Kiyabu sits down with Cookies & Cream director Princeton HoltWay of One Way or Another Productions LLC. He wrote and directed a 20 minute short called Phish in 2006 which gained him an “Official Selection” at film festivals including the National Black Media Conference Film Festival in Philadelphia, he is the writer, producer, and director of the upcoming flick Cookies & Cream, a film that I personally had the pleasure of reviewing not so long ago, but with all that I have already said about him, there is still much more to be said from the man himself. for an exclusive interview. Princeton E. Holt has worked on several projects since graduating from the New York Film Academy in 2000 and launching his own film company…full article.

 

Christopher Golon Finds Success After NYFA Film School

Published on December 11, 2008

Dreams die hard, especially in the arts. Hole up in a cramped apartment with a pen and a pad and maybe you’ll emerge with the next Infinite Jest. Shoot your cinematic vision with a hand-held camera, and maybe you’ll end up with another Mean Streets. Or maybe not.

When it comes to the latter, there’s no better place to be than Los Angeles, where a classified ad on Craigslist will bring dozens of would-be stars running to your auditions, even if you’re not paying a dime. That’s what New Britain native Christopher Golon, 35, did this summer to make his coming-of-age drama set in Connecticut, Knock ‘Em Dead, Kid, on a budget of about $4,000. Back in Connecticut now to put the final touches on his film, Golon is returning to Los Angeles in February to try to sell it.

“I’m going back to L.A. mainly on a wing and a prayer, and that is to try to get this out there,” Golon said last week in a Starbucks near West Farms Mall. “I don’t want to be famous, I just want to make films for a living that somebody might say, ‘Yeah, that was good.’ That’s it.”

Golon completed his script while still at Central Connecticut State University in 1995. Yearning to go to film school, he never graduated from Central, and ended up working in the insurance business.

Last year, Golon enrolled in the New York Film Academy, taking the two-month course offered in Los Angeles, where he stayed in an apartment across the street from Universal Studios. Golon made five shorts for the class, the last one being his thesis. Watch the trailer for Knock ‘Em Dead, Kid.

Cick here for full article.