OUR HAPPY PLACE’s Paul Bickel talks about making a stripped down thriller in Big Bear during the pandemic
Filmmaker Paul Bickel opens up about Our Happy Place, his stripped-down thriller made in Big
Filmmaker Paul Bickel opens up about Our Happy Place, his stripped-down thriller made in Big
David Gutnik and Assol Abdullina from MATERNA interviewed at 2020 Naples International Film Festival; stories
Darby Duffin, Adam Jones, Michael Cimarusti, and Richard Burgess from FISH & MEN: FGW Interview
Mark Stafford, Writer/Producer of BASTARD’S ROAD: FGW Interview at 2020 Naples International Film Festival; a
Jack Lewars and Finnerty Steeves of BEFORE/DURING/AFTER: Interview at 2020 Naples International Film Festival; when
Let me begin by applauding lead actress Lena Papaligoura, who was awarded Vimeo’s Special Jury Prize for Acting at Sundance. Now, regarding the film – I always have great admiration for someone who makes a well-crafted short film that can lead us down a path, entertain us, and manage to have a legit beginning, middle, and end within its brief runtime. And if you can pull that off by having your camera focused on a single person for the most part, literally a head and shoulders shot for the majority of the short film and STILL keep us on the hook? Well, hat’s off to you.
My personal thoughts: I say this during the interview, but it bears repeating an emphasis: As a man watching this incredible documentary, I felt privileged to hear what I was hearing form these women, to be present in their midst as they were going through such an intimate, emotionally revealing process.
My personal thoughts: This is another film that I am currently working with as their publicist, so naturally I think it’s wonderful. This might be an odd way to compliment a documentary, but when I watched CISCO KID the first time, I kept thinking of Altman films or Malick films, because the combination of an independent, enigmatic character at the center of a story set with in a truly significant landscape is what I so often associate with that cinema when I hear those names. Allen and her camera become trusted companions to a charismatic, yet fiercely independent personality who hearkens back to a different time in their pursuit of restoring structure and life to a literal ghost town in the desert.
My personal thoughts on FANTASTIC MACHINE: This thing is so comprehensive and bombards you with photos and video since the first images were recorded to seemingly selfies and Tik Tok videos that were shot and recorded right before you watched the film. That’s what it feels like. And the effect is an overwhelming one, revealing how we are being influenced and manipulated by the photographic image and how we enthusiastically feed the beast ourselves. Like parakeets pecking at our reflection in a mirror, we can not deny the power it has over us and FANTASTIC MACHINE does an amazing job boiling it all down and focusing that conversation about what we have wrought upon ourselves with our cameras.
My personal thoughts on MASCOT: Full disclosure is that I am working on the PR for the film, so I am obviously a fan of it. And the thing that I am most a fan of, is that while it follows a long tradition of European films that have dealt with hooligan culture and toxic masculinity (before that term had been coined), MASCOT is a rarity in the unflinching manner in which it delves into the environment that created that bubbling inner turmoil and rage in one young man. Specifically, this film looks into the relationship with the boy’s mother, misguided, mistargeted and unintentionally incredibly damaging. It gives the film an additional layer and element that adds to the building dread and threat of the young man potentially losing his hold on his emotions