Tuesday, July 17, 2007

New-ish



one of the 25 NEW FACES OF INDEPENDENT FILM in the August issue of FILMMAKER MAGAZINE

Azazel Jacobs

When he bought a one-way ticket to New York City in January, Azazel Jacobs was determined to shoot his third feature no matter what. The story of a young man who travels home to New York for the holidays, leaving his wife and baby — and is then unable to leave the sanctuary of his parents’ apartment — Mommas Man was meant for a winter shoot, so Jacobs had to work fast. Collaborating with producer Alex Orlovsky (Half Nelson), Jacobs found financing from Artists Public Domain and a free location — his parents’ own NYC loft — and was shooting just a few weeks later.

Jacobs’s moviemaking boasts a punk-minimalist sensibility that mines multiple influences, from naturalism to Chaplin to Jarmusch to the avant-garde. His debut feature, Nobody Needs to Know, was one of the pioneers of the free-download terrain, available online in late 2004. His second feature, shot in his hometown of L.A. in 2005, The GoodTimesKid, is a beautifully framed, freewheeling and deadpan comedy about two men with the same name and the woman that comes between them. Jacobs starred in the film alongside girlfriend Sara Diaz and co-writer Gerardo Naranjo (director of the upcoming Drama/Mex). He also co-shot the film with Naranjo and Eric Curtis. The film is, in his own words, “kind of like a home movie we shot on 35mm.”

Extending the home movie metaphor, Jacobs allowed his own parents — including avant-garde filmmaker father Ken — to play themselves in his latest feature. Their loft — crammed with 40 years worth of stuff — was shot exactly as is. “If you can document the people and places that are close to you,” Jacobs says of his filmmaking philosophy, “you wind up winning no matter what. The coolest thing for me is just to realize that film is something you can get better at as you go on.” — Durier Ryan


Saturday, July 14, 2007

Best of 2007 so far


The GoodTimesKid made it as #2 on the
NY Post's best of 2007 so far by critic V.A. Musetto!

Tuesday, July 10, 2007

an interview with Depresso

Gerardo Naranjo (Rodolfo in The GoodTimesKid) interview with Indiewire for the release of his film "Drama/Mex"

Monday, July 02, 2007

Screenings

Screenings of the GoodTimesKid are coming up in Calgary, Canada and London England
dates to be posted soon

a review from The Cinematheque:

"Azazel Jacobs could very well be called heir to the Ken Jacobs throne of avant-garde cinema - though with the exception of a small gaggle of dedicated cinephiles who hang out regularly at New York's Anthology Archives, and possibly a handful of critics as well, it may be rather too Lilliputian a kingdom to even worry about - but here I am anyway, praising the forthright crowning of a new, possibly clown, prince of counter-culture cinema.

A royal chip of the ole block perhaps, but in actuality, the Jacobs fils is less like pop than more. Shying away from the experimental, this piper's son goes instead for the hip, somewhat grungy, indie look and feel for his debut feature about a slacker who is emotionally awakened by a carefree, Max Fleischer-esque heroine. Now with having never been all that enamored with the slacker generation American indie scene (all thos Linklater wannabes) it came as quite a shock when I realized how much I was enjoying this film. With the sub pop integrity of the sire Jacobs and his ilk, Azazel has managed to infuse early Nouvelle Vague aesthetic - complete with seemingly impromptu and equally amateurish dance number - into his film, creating something unusual even by his father's standards. Bravo indeed." [03/03/07]