PICTURE PARIS heads to TRIBECA

Picture Paris will screen next at the TriBeCa Film Festival.  Click here for tickets and information.  The festival runs April 18 thru 29.

 

And for more info about ALL UPCOMING SCREENINGS click here.

 

Julia Louis-Dreyfus in PICTURE PARIS (Trailer)

Did you spot the typo in the trailer? eMail us at pictureparisfilm@Gmail.com

A Short Film by Brad Hall coming in 2012.

An ordinary suburban mom (Julia Louis-Dreyfus) dreams of a life changing trip to France with her husband, only to discover that Paris isn't exactly what she pictured...

 

...all stills from the film are shot by BRANDON COX, the spectacularest cinematographer in the whole wide world!

PICTURE PARIS features Golden Globe and Emmy Award winner Julia Louis-Dreyfus and France's César Award winner Eric Elmosnino.  Shot in Los Angeles and Paris, PICTURE PARIS was written and directed by Brad Hall.

PICTURE PARIS BLOG

Sat

28

Apr

2012

HUFFINGTON POST features PICTURE PARIS

Either I'm huffing or Picture Paris gets a lovely little interview on the Huffington Post, written by the adorable Cynthia Ellis.  She touches on all things Paris, and Veep and Seinfeld too.  Check it all out right HERE.

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Tue

24

Apr

2012

TWEETING ! @ThePictureParis

Picture Paris Peeps is tweeting a little bit...  FOLLOW us @thepictureparis  for current news and stuff.

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Tue

24

Apr

2012

CRITIC'S CHOICE at TRIBECA

PICTURE PARIS has received a lovely nod as critic's choice in the Independent. Read the review here.  

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Mon

16

Apr

2012

PHOTOGRAPHIC PROOF!

If you wondered whether or not Paris was TRULY coming to TrBeCa, here's your photographic proof!

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Mon

16

Apr

2012

EW.COM Writes Up PICTURE PARIS AND CLIP!

Entertainment Weekly Online  has posted a nice blurb-ette on Picture Paris, with an EXCLUSIVE CLIP from the movie. 

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Mon

09

Apr

2012

More Laurels!

TriBeca is next week, and PICTURE PARIS has jusst been selected for Krakow International Film Festival in Krakow, Poland.  This 52 year old festival is a real honor as they selected only 16 short fiction films from all over the world. Very cool Festival, so check it out!  And, if you happen to be in Poland this summer, please attend.

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Wed

21

Mar

2012

TRIBECA!

Cast and crew of Pictrue Paris are excited to have been selected for the TriBeca Film Festival in NY.  Tons of fun starting April 18th.  We'll be posting screening dates and such as we learn 'em.  

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Mon

13

Feb

2012

So long Santa Barbara!

Picture Paris ended end a fabulous week at the Santa Barbara International Film Festival screening at the Third Weekend 'best in fest' event Saturday Feb 11 to a wildly enthusiastic, standing room only house at the beautiful Riviera Theatre in Santa Barbara.  It was a truly great night.  Thanks to Roger Durling and all of the Santa Barbara Film Festival staff for giving us a wonderful week!

 

Santa Barbara's Riviera Theatre

The Riviera is a great place to see a movie -- it's harder than hell to find, but well worth it, and it is always showing the most interesting movies in town.  It's in a beautiful spot on Santa Barbara's Riviera. The theatre and surrounding buildings used to be a part of the old UCSB campus, it was then home to Brooks Institute of Photography, and is now Riviera Park. Like much of Santa Barbara, it's a hidden gem.

 

Picture Paris played before a screening of audience favorite Starbuck.  This wonderful French Canadian film which had its debut at the Toronto Film Festival, is about a down on his luck butcher's delivery man in Montreal, who discovers that he is, by way of his frequent sperm donations, the father of 533 children.

It'sa a fantastic film and orth seeking out!

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Mon

13

Feb

2012

SHHHH! ANOTHER FEST for PIC PARIS

Picture Paris has been selected for another great "Academy Rated" international film festival, but we can't say where or when until the festival makes their public announcement.  We'll just say, "Yay!"

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Sun

05

Feb

2012

INDIE WIRE Picture Paris Story!

http://www.indiewire.com/article/when-tv-vets-make-an-indie-short-julia-louis-dreyfus-and-brad-hall-talk-picture-paris

 

February 3, 2012 | by Steve Greene

When TV Vets Make an Indie Short: Julia Louis-Dreyfus and Brad Hall Talk "Picture Paris"

 

Brad Hall (second from left) and Julia Louis-Dreyfus (right) on the set of "Picture Paris."

Last year, after decades of television experience between them, husband-wife duo Brad Hall and Julia Louis-Dreyfus set out to make their way through a different medium: short film. With a crew of peers working on two continents, the fruit of their labor is the new 30-minute short, “Picture Paris.”

 

Written and directed by Hall and starring Louis-Dreyfus, the story follows a woman who, after her husband leaves her, resolves to take the trip to Paris she always dreamed of. Along the way, she meets some friendly Parisians and reconnects with a fellow traveler, all the while immersing herself in the city which she has long idealized.

 

Louis-Dreyfus and Hall spoke with Indiewire shortly before the film's premiere at the Santa Barbara International Film Festival about the challenges of making a short film, some that were familiar and others welcome surprises:

 

So when did this process start?

 

Brad Hall: Our son went off to college, so in dealing with that, which is a huge event, I was middling around with things and started showing it to people last fall. Then, we thought, why don’t we just go and do it?

 

Julia Louis-Dreyfus: It wasn’t quite as easy as he just described it, but yeah, we did it. We shot this in May and June of 2011.

 

It must be exciting to have that quick of a turnaround on this kind of project.

 

JLD: It’s kind of dreamy. It’s particularly dreamy because Brad was born and raised in Santa Barbara. The film is very personal to us, and for it to be premiering here, it’s a double dip of personal feelings.

 

Were there any factors that made this a short film as opposed to a feature?

 

BH: The story could probably exist in multiple forms because it’s about transitions in life and those could definitely fuel a bigger story. The particular events just appealed to me to do it very short and to make it have little exposition. Because we’d never gone out and made our own movie, we thought, “Let’s do a short, so that the favors we call in will be shorter favors.” Now, looking forward, we’re thinking that we could do a feature.

 

JLD: Having said that, it’s a longer short, as shorts go. It certainly does have a first, second and third act. Since we were doing this really guerilla-style, the idea of making a short versus a feature felt more manageable, testing the waters. We really did love it. It felt like our old theater days in Chicago. In fact, we called on a lot of theater actors from Chicago who appear in the film.

 

BH: It feels like a tiny, tiny feature more than it does a clip. It’s got a full story. Julia and I are used to working in television and half-hour arcs, so that was familiar to us, which probably helped.

 

Were there tangible differences between a TV set and one for an independent short?

 

BH: It was much more like our old days in Chicago when we had our own theater company than it was like doing television in a studio atmosphere. It was very much “get what you can, when you can.” We’re used to movie sets, but having a leaner set that could run really turned out to be fun. We got to go to France, which was challenging because we’d never shot anything there before. We were on new ground in every way.

 

Did those playful aspects outweigh the difficulties of having to juggle two crews at once, one in LA and one in Paris?

 

BH: The French guys and girls were so fantastic. Here, we worked with a lot of people we knew, but also people we’ve never worked with before. Brandon Cox, the guy who shot it in both places, was a guy that I had never met before.mThe vocabulary of filmmaking is different in France. It was hysterical because we had all kinds of horrible problems, but for some reason we didn’t care. When there were communication problems, we just overcame them. Considering how difficult it was, it was amazingly stress-free in both places.

On the set, the crew is not used to being as collegial as American crews are. So, when we were palling around with them, they were sort of surprised that’s how we worked. But boy, they were knowledgable about movies. It was a young crew and everyone was very happy to pitch in and work longer hours. Once you get down to making the movie, it was very collaborative. I’m not sure how that’s how it works most of the time there.

 

JLD: It was nice to take those long, leisurely lunch and dinner breaks with three courses. Everyone was used to it. But now I’m used to it, which is a problem now that I’m home. From a production value, just forget about it. Setting up a camera, do we shoot in front of Notre Dame or over there next to the Arc de Triomphe? It was just a delicious display of set design.

 

Did you do extensive location scouting or did everything go out the window once you got there?

 

BH: We went there and scouted a little bit before. When we scheduled the movie, we had a couple days where we just thought that we’d go out and get what we could on the street because there’s a lot of permitting things that are complicated. We wound up saying that if they kicked us out, they kicked us out. We got a van and just ran around as much as we could. In June, it’s crowded with tourists, so there were a lot of logistical things to overcome, but none of that matters once you start rolling.

 

JLD: We were working with a very capable French producer while we were there. That was incredibly beneficial. She had done due diligence before we arrived. We caught stuff on the fly in the subway or wherever we happened to be.

 

Were there places where you felt you had to cut back, working with a limited budget?

 

BH: It wasn’t a big-budget movie, so we didn’t have a Steadicam all day every day, so there were a few little equipment things. Also, we were limited in terms of the schedule because France is such an expensive place. But really, we got what we needed. We were ambitious, but realistic. Julie Snyder, our producer was great. She was very careful to say, “You won’t get that, so let’s make a different plan.” Sometimes we’d even get the things we never thought we’d get.

We had a hilarious day of not knowing what we could shoot. We were shooting in the Luxembourg Garden, an unbelievably beautiful place, but very strictly controlled. In the end, we ended up with my two favorite shots in the movie. We were told we couldn’t film in front of the Federal Senate. We stumbled into it and the police said, “Put your camera right here. You can shoot here.”

 

JLD: They said, “You have 10 minutes.” It was all very strange because we didn’t quite know what the rules were.

 

Were there any surprises that you discovered about shooting in LA, even though you both have plenty of experience working there in the past?

 

JLD: We had friends who let us take over their house in Woodland Hills. What was endearing and gratifying to me was how many different people we knew who were ready to take this leap with us. Redesigning that house or making sets in the house on a dime or for nothing. There were people that I’ve worked with on big-budget movies and television who were all of a sudden intrigued by the script and the adventure of this nutty short film that was going to France. Everyone leapt on board this train from a creative point of view. I wouldn’t say it was surprising, but it was very lovely. At the risk of sounding pollyannaish, it was a great reminder of why we do what we do.

 

If you were to do something longer with a bigger commitment, do you think you’d get the same reaction?

 

JLD: I’ll let you know. [chuckles]

 

BH: I suspect we would because we all had a better time than we thought we would. I hope that all the people who worked on this would be happy to do it again. The truth of the matter is that it’s not much less work to do a short than it is to do a feature. Particularly when you’re running around different countries. I think the next time out, we’ll do a feature, but if we came across an idea that was better served as a short, we would make a short.

 

JLD: Maybe we’d have a little bit more money to pay everyone.

 

BH: Yeah. Got any money on you?

 

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Wed

01

Feb

2012

Pic Paris an official selection for CLEVELAND INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL!

We're thrilled to report that Picture Paris has been selected as an offical selection for the Cleveland international film festival!!

Cleveland, like the Santa Barbara International Film Festival, is an "Academy Rated" festival -- meaning winners at the festival are automatically on the Oscar Short List.  Last year's animated winner, "The Fantastic Flying Books of Mr. Morris Lessmore" is an oscar nominee this year.  Cleveland is also Paul Barrosse and Paula Kaplan Goldberg's home town,home base for Ma Barr Mary Barrosse,  and the site of the Riffmaster and the Rockme Foundation's 1983 World Tour of Cleveland, so it HAS to be good!

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Wed

01

Feb

2012

REPORT FROM SANTA BARBARA!

The Santa Barbara International Film Festival has been FANTASTIC -- highlights include, of course, the PICTURE PARIS PREMIERE in a prime-time packed screening on Saturday night and a second screening last night, incredible special events honoring MARTIN SCORSESE, VIOLA DAVIS, and CHRISTOPHER PLUMMER, and dozens of screenings of film ranging from the merely interesting to the remarkable.

 

In a sure sign that they know what the heck they are doing, honorees VIola Davis and Christopher Plummer went from the stage at the Santa Barbara Film Festival directly to winning Sceen Actors Guild awards in Los Angeles on Sunday night.  Perhaps the Santa Barbara good-luck will take Martin Scorsese to the stage for an Oscar in February.



In a sweet Picture Paris coincidence, French actors

Jean Dujardin and Bérénice Bejo from Michael Hazanavicius's THE ARTIST

will also be honored this week at SBIFF.  The Festical draws to a close on Sunday February 5.

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Wed

01

Feb

2012

PICTURE PARIS plays to packed house for PREMIERE!

PICTURE PARIS played to a packed and enthusiastic crowd at the Santa Barbara International Film Festival last night. In the crowd were several key Picture Paris folks -- Julia Louis-Dreyfus, D.W. Moffett, Rachael Harris and Matthew Fahey from the cast, director Brad Hall, producer Julie Snyder, Composer Steve Rashid, DP Brandon Cox and editor Shon Hedges were ALL there, and Raphaelle Gassot came all the way from Paris to see the film and party with the cast and fans afterward.  She brought along a GREAT photo from the shoot.

That's the lovely Raphaelle sitting on the dolly in Paris with Director of Photography Brandon Cox in the camoflague hat!

 

The premiere of the film was SO well received, and it truly was a great evening by any measure!

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Sat

14

Jan

2012

Q and A with director Brad Hall

On location in Paris

Q and A with PICTURE PARIS Filmmaker Brad Hall


How would you describe
Picture Paris to someone who doesn’t know anything about it?

 

PICTURE PARIS is a short film about the difficulty of life’s transitions. It’s full of little surprises that I don’t want to spoil, but it’s the story of an ordinary mom who, when her son goes off to college, is terrified by the question, “What now?” So, she puts all of her emotional energy into a romantic trip-of-a-lifetime to Paris with her husband. She becomes consumed with cheese, and wine, and croissant. It’s all Paris, all the time. Then things go a little haywire and Paris isn’t at all what she pictured, because nothing ever is quite what we picture it will be, is it? We all desire what Paris promises -- transcendent passion and beauty -- but do we get these things in real life? More important, it was a hell of a good excuse to work with my wife and go to France.

Why did you decide to tackle this subject in a short film?

I like the compressed nature of the story telling. There aren’t any subplots, and the story is very compact. Because it’s only a half an hour long, the plot’s twists and turns fall all over each other, which is just a ton of fun.

What’s it like to work with your wife Julia Louis-Dreyfus in the lead role?

It’s dreamy, of course. Because people are so used to Julia being funny on TV, I think they’ll be amazed to see her play this character who has a very complicated inner life. She’s still funny, but she’s also completely authentic and establishes a believably vulnerable character fast. Also, I believe a director should always be sleeping with the leading actress because then, when you have a good idea in the middle of the night, you can wake her up and tell her right there in bed before you forget it.

Was it fun to shoot in Paris?

A blast. Our American and French crews got along famously, and every day in Paris was thrilling. We shot at the Louvre, on the Seine, in the Metro, in secret spots and at famous landmarks. Our French crew really love the cinema. For example, our driver Jean-Paul is real film scholar and a talented filmmaker in his own right. We miss them all and can’t wait to go back. And it’s easy to make pretty pictures in Paris.

The film has some very good French actors. How did you cast the film?

We started with Julia, then casting director Linda Lowy, who is also a great pal, helped us put together a cast of old friends like D.W Moffett and Rachael Harris and Tom Virtue, and new friends like Grégory Fitoussi who is a rising star in France and such a thoughtful, wonderful actor. The biggest coup was when our superb producer Julie Snyder got us in touch with Éric Elmosnino who had just won the César award in France for his performance in Gainsbourg, vie héroïque. When he came on board we really couldn’t believe our bonne chance.

 

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Sat

14

Jan

2012

TWO SCREENINGS at Santa B Film Fest!

PICTURE PARIS actually has TWO screening times for the SBIFF. CLICK HERE for tickets and passes and more infor about the Santa Barbara International Film Festival

SCREENING 1  7:30 PM Saturday, January 28

SCREENING 2  10:00 PM Monday, January 30

 

Both screenings will be at the METRO FOUR 618 State Street, Santa Barbara, CA.

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Fri

13

Jan

2012

POSTER released into the wild!

CLICK on Poster for FULL SCREEN

The loverly Picture Paris poster featuring the great Doisneau photograph

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Wed

11

Jan

2012

Screening Dates And Times for PIC PARIS

We have our Premiere Screening time at the Santa Barbara International Film Festival!  We'll screen at 7:30PM Saturday January 28, 2012 at the Metro Four Theatre on State Street.  Click here for all the ticket and pass info!  Should be really fun -- several members of the cast including Julia will be there, and there's a Q and A with the filmmakers of the live action shorts following the screening.

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Tue

03

Jan

2012

PICTURE PARIS selected for Santa Barbara International Film Festival

Picture Paris will debut at the Santa Barbara International Film Festival!  The Festival runs from Jan 27 through Feb 5th and will honor all sorts of awesome folk (like Martin Scorsese). Click here for the skinny on the whole fabulous festival, and here for the Reuters story on the SBIFF line-up, and right here for the Santa Barbara International Film Festival Facebook Page!

 

This is particualry fun for director Brad Hall, cuz he's a Santa Barbara native, and a particular fan of this fest. PICTURE PARIS is one of only 13 Live Action Shorts selected for the SBIFF.

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Sun

01

Jan

2011

SNEAK PREVIEW in CHICAGO

PICTURE PARIS had a great sneak preview screening at the WILMETTE THEATRE just North of Chicago on New Year's Day.  Thanks to Nili Yellin for sneaking!  The screening was attended by friends and family of Julia Louis-Dreyfus, including members of the Fabulous Crawford family and the popular musical ensemble Riffmaster and the Rockme Foundation.

Nili had popcorn and treats o'plenty for the assmebled masses.

Big laughs and big fun all 'round.

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