MG Kids gives two thumbs up to MorristownGreen.com Film Festival

By Carl Hausman, MG Kids correspondent

On Sept. 17, I went to my second annual MorristownGreen.com
Film Festival.
There were 15 movies. My favorites were: 9 Matches,
Introduction to Special Effects and Domino Tracks. The theme was
Sustainability.

Morristown Green Editor Kevin Coughlin introduces this year's film festival lineup. Sharon Sheridan photo

Now, I can describe some of the best movies.

Ben Hur Revisited: Bang! The starting gun was off. At this
school, they study Greek the old way: By chariot racing! Team Golden
wanted to be the first women to win and looked invincible in the first parts.
In the final, it was them against another group, and they lost.

9 Matches: Ding! The elevator goes and two people, husband
and wife, get in. It starts to run and –bam! Lights go off, and it stops
running. It turns into a whole thing of how they make it all the way through to the next day using, in that time, nine matches.

Maya Ruhalter, 9, eats a little of Chef Melody's popcorn as she prepares to watch her brother Crosby's movie "Domino Tracks" and dad Eric's film "9 Matches." Sharon Sheridan photo

Domino Tracks: Crosby likes to build domino tracks, and so
he had an entire movie of making them and then crashing them. It was a whole
lineup. One falls, it pushed the next one over, which pushed the next one over.
He had this one where he was trying to make it hit a ball on a string that
would knock into a tower of dominoes. The ball only shifted a little and,
smash, down goes the tower.

Introduction to Special Effects: In this fun movie,
there’s a puppet who is used as the demonstration model for several special effects. It has a life of its own, and then effects happen to it. Every time they say something like, “OK,” it acts like it thinks everything is over and it starts cheering. And then they’ll say something like, “Now, let’s add …” and the puppet hangs its head in disappointment.

Crosby Ruhalter, center, star of "Domino Tracks," casts his ballot. Sharon Sheridan photo

Then we voted. I counted four ballot boxes. The one that won was Reduce, Reuse Recycle. It’s a sort of a rap song. It was okay, but I voted for 9 Matches.

So, you can see why I thought this film festival was fun.

Carl Hausman chooses a relaxing pose for viewing the film festival entries. Sharon Sheridan photo

John and Jennifer Dyer watch this year's films. "The Bells of St. Peter's" featured John Dyer playing, describing and giving the history of the carillon at St. Peter's Episcopal Church in Morristown. Sharon Sheridan photo

From left, MG Kids correspondent Alyse Jefferson, Cathy Veit and MG Kids correspondent Carl Hausman count the ballots. Sharon Sheridan photo

Carl Hausman, 11, is a regular correspondent for MorristownGreen’s MG Kids. We welcome junior reporters for our staff. We also encourage kids of all ages to submit artwork, poetry and fiction for publication on our site. Click here for more information.

And the winner is…’Good for the Earth,’ as voted by spectators at the Third Annual MorristownGreen.com Film Festival

It’s hunting season for Litterbugs! 

We saved the best for last–on the program, and online.

Good for the Earth was the overwhelming spectator choice for Best Picture at last week’s Third Annual MorristownGreen.com Film Fest.  This short comedy by Eric Ruhalter made everyone laugh with its riotous sendup of overzealous environmentalists.

We’re not sure if all the prescriptions in this film are good for the earth. But they’re certainly good for the funny bone, and that’s a start.

Congratulations to Eric and his cast for an inspired bit of whimsy that delivered food for thought in a tasty serving.

READ MORE:

Eric Ruhalter’s ‘Good for the Earth’ wins Best Picture at Third Annual MorristownGreen.com Film Fest

Morristown native Eric Ruhalter makes a serious message fun for Friday’s Morristown Film Fest

Complete coverage of the Third Annual MorristownGreen.com Film Fest

Playlist of all the videos from the Third Annual MorristownGreen.com Film Fest

good for the earth

A scene from Eric Ruhalter's 'Good for the Earth,' voted Best Picture at the Third Annual MorristownGreen.com Film Fest, Aug. 20, 2010. Photo by Kevin Coughlin

‘Elegiac Dance’ remembers a fallen friend; from the MorristownGreen.com Film Fest

Today we post the final two entries from the Third Annual MorristownGreen.com Film Festival.

Elegiac Dance was conceived as a tribute to Lauren Failla, a lovely young woman who left us too soon.

For this year’s festival theme, I asked filmmakers to incorporate music from local artists. When I heard composer Jim Hicks’ hauntingly beautiful submission, Elegiac Dance, it instantly reminded me of a dance piece by Daniel Knapp.

Danny now is famous for his Morristown High School rap valedictory.  But he also is a champion ballroom dancer. At a scholarship presentation earlier this spring, the Arts Council of the Morris Area showed video of Danny and his instructor, Adriana Chessa, performing an original waltz routine.

They were elegant and lyrical–just like Jim’s piano piece.

When I matched rough video of the dance routine with a fuzzy 1993 cassette recording of Jim’s composition, it was eerie how well they matched.

On a muggy July day, Jim patiently re-recorded several takes of Elegiac Dance inside the Morristown Presbyterian Church on the Green, where he will celebrate 25 years as music director next month.

The next stop was the Nash Dancenter in Randolph. Brian and Jennie Nash generously allowed use of their pristine studio on a Friday night/Saturday morning.

brett glassberg

Brett Glassberg composes a shot in 'Elegiac Dance,' with dancers Adriana Chessa and Daniel Knapp. Photo by Kevin Coughlin

I was fortunate to collaborate for the second straight year with Brett Glassberg, a Chester resident who is studying film at the University of Texas at Austin. (Watch for his transition sequence between the ballerina and ballroom segments.)

The Nash Dancenter is a busy place, and our shooting time was limited. So Brett and I set up two cameras to capture multiple angles as quickly as possible.

A couple of experiments–notably, a hastily rigged wheeled contraption for a rolling “trucking” shot–ended comically. (Look for the blooper outtakes in a subsequent posting.)

Our dancers were a dream to work with.

Ballerina Alice Nemecek, who was recommended by MorristownGreen.com contributor Diego Ortiz, choreographed her routine and performed it for our cameras several times, on a steamy evening (even with air conditioning), after a long week at her day gig.

The following morning–another sweltering day–Danny and Adriana donned costumes and cheerfully repeated their three-minute routine for an hour as Brett and I repositioned cameras.

Archival footage was shot last September at St. Peter’s Episcopal Church in Morristown.

Our thanks to everyone who helped us on this project.

elegiac dance

A scene from 'Elegiac Dance,' from the Third Annual MorristownGreen.com Film Festival. Photo by Kevin Coughlin

Kapow! Superhero rap video ‘Way Too Young’ takes third-place at MorristownGreen.com Film Fest

You’re only young once, so make it good. Sounds like a serious message, but it’s delivered with comic book flair in Kevin Ruth’s Way Too Young, a music video featuring Jesse James and Universal Rebel.

The video’s catchy melodies and fun graphics earned Kevin third place–good for tickets to “An Evening with Kevin Smith” at the Community Theatre–at last week’s Third Annual MorristownGreen.com Film Fest.

The 19-year-old Morris Plains resident plans to mix some film courses with his engineering studies at the University of Maryland this fall. We hear he may minor in crime fighting.

way too young

A scene from Kevin Ruth's 'Way Too Young,' third-prize winner at the Third Annual MorristownGreen.com Film Fest. Photo by Kevin Coughlin

‘Time Has Flown’ celebrates longboarding at MorristownGreen.com Film Fest

Yes, they should wear helmets. Putting that aside, Time Has Flown is really fun to watch. We didn’t know anything about longboarding before seeing this video at the Third Annual MorristownGreen.com Film Fest.

Actually, we still don’t know much about it, except that it’s like surfing on pavement and Morristown’s Connor Bosworth & friends seem quite good at it.

E.J. Enright provides the music, and some of the footage, as a member of the longboard team.

time has flown

A scene from 'Time Has Flown,' by Connor Bosworth, from the Third Annual MorristownGreen.com Film Fest. Photo by Kevin Coughlin

‘Quaking Fourth Graders,’ from the MorristownGreen.com Film Fest

Who knew earthquakes could be educational?  Morristown teacher Jeff Brown always seems to find a way to motivate his students, as he demonstrates in Quaking Fourth Graders.

The movie was shot at the Thomas Jefferson School, and it was screened last week at the Third Annual MorristownGreen.com Film Festival.

The soundtrack is by The Community and the Blaire Reinhard Band.

quaking fourth graders

A scene from 'Quaking Fourth Graders,' from the Third Annual MorristownGreen.com Film Festival. Photo by Kevin Coughlin

No speed traps here: ‘Scenes from an MG’ races through the MorristownGreen.com Film Fest

Nial McCabe and Linda Lower live in the fast lane.

Scenes from an MG offered proof at last week’s Third Annual MorristownGreen.com Film Festival. And if ever a movie was made for Busterman’s song Home Team, it’s this one. Like peanut butter-and-jelly…wolfed down at 100 mph.

scenes from an MG

'Scenes from an MG' by Nial McCabe and Linda Lower roared onscreen at the Third Annual MorristownGreen.com Film Fest. Photo by Kevin Coughlin

Video: Getting to the bottom of Morristown’s Lake Pocahontas legend, from the MorristownGreen.com Film Fest

A study last year suggested passive recreational uses for Morristown’s Lake Pocahontas.

Lake what?

I knew about Speedwell Lake. But where was this Lake Pocahontas?

Some investigation uncovered a secluded splash of nature about three minutes from the bustling Morristown Green.  I dug deeper and learned a dark secret that has haunted this urban oasis since… long before the dawn of urban.

That mystery forms the core of The Legend of Lake Pocahontas, set to the music of No Use for Humans, Universal Rebel and Christine DeLeon. The movie premiered last week at the Third Annual MorristownGreen.com Film Fest.

Someday, perhaps, a “Director’s Cut” will be released. The back story of this movie has many twists and turns, including a startling encounter with police.

I was filming on the shores of Lake Pocahontas with my cinematic sidekick, college film student Brett Glassberg, when not one, not two, but three patrol cars came roaring down the dirt path. Through a speaker, an officer ordered us to move our parked vehicle to let them pass–NOW!

Moments later, one of the officers returned on foot.

The patrolman said he did not want to alarm anyone, but cautioned us to stay alert. Someone had reported seeing a man with a gun walking through these woods.

One of our actors had brought along his two little girls. They looked scared. We tried to conceal our fright.

Needless to say, we shot our scenes very quickly and got out of there!

Later, it occurred to us that we probably had seen the gunman, too.  We think he may have looked something like this:

legend of lake pocahontas

A scene from 'The Legend of Lake Pocahontas,' which premiered at the Third Annual MorristownGreen.com Film Fest. Photo by Kevin Coughlin

Video: ‘Glutenfolk’ finds static in Hollywood-on-the-Hudson, from the MorristownGreen.com Film Fest

Glutenfolk, by Maxwell Rudd, was among the more unusual entries in last week’s Third Annual MorristownGreen.com Film Fest.

As he explains, this movie explores the dark side of young Hollywood-in-Jersey: Struggling actors, sketchy writers and self-destructive directors. Max, who is 20, told MG correspondent Nayna Shah that he aspires to break through all that and make his mark in the movie industry.

The film’s soundtrack includes Runnin’ and Hidin’, written by local jazz wizard Grover Kemble and performed by his up-and-coming kids band, The Members.

glutenfolk

A scene from 'Glutenfolk' by Maxwell Rudd of Oakland, NJ. The film premiered at the Third Annual MorristownGreen.com Film Fest. Photo by Kevin Coughlin

Video: ‘A New Day,’ second-place winner in the MorristownGreen.com Film Fest

For last week’s Third Annual MorristownGreen.com Film Fest, we asked aspiring filmmakers to use songs contributed by great local musicians.

The second-place entry, as voted by the audience, was a splendid marriage of music and imagery. A New Day by Diana Wilcox, an Episcopal seminarian, chronicles the Morristown Church of the Redeemer youth mission trip to Louisiana, set to Christine DeLeon’s shimmering New Days.

Diana won a tripod from Sandrian Camera and tickets to a great show at the Community Theatre.

We’re posting movies in the order that we showed them last week. This was the third short film on the bill. Congratulations to Diana and her youth group for a lovely video, and for a week well spent down south.

a new day

'A New Day,' by Episcopal seminarian Diana Wilcox, won second prize at the Third Annual MorristownGreen.com Film Fest. Photo by Kevin Coughlin

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