William Mapother

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My, How You’ve Grown

Posted on: September 20th, 2013 by wmapother No Comments

Business First of Louisville today ran a nice piece on the growth of Slated.  Business First
Until I saw it, I hadn’t realized how much we’ve grown.  When Business First previously ran piece on Slated, we had 44 films listed, and now we have 230.  And before we had probably about 2,000 users in our network, and now we have 5,000.  Who doesn’t appreciate a little perspective?

Posted in Louisville & KY, Press, Slated

Flyover Film Fest Flies Once More

Posted on: June 4th, 2013 by wmapother 2 Comments

Five years ago I started a June film festival with a few friends in Louisville, KY, my hometown.  cropped-flyover2013-header3Taking our cue from how the coasts view the Midwest, we called it the Flyover Film Festival.

It’s been a terrific success.  We’ve hosted a number of great films and filmmakers, and this year will be no different.  The 5th Annual Flyover Film Festival is scheduled for the Clifton Center in Louisville from June 12th-16th, and the schedule has just been posted.  I’ll be back in town for it, and I’m due to moderate the Q&A after the Sunday 1pm screening of City Strays.  We all hope to see you there.

Posted in Film, Film Festival, In Person (or, like, Live), Louisville & KY

Crowdfunding Panel

Posted on: March 7th, 2013 by wmapother 1 Comment

On March 20 at the WGA West in Los Angeles, I’ll be on a panel for new film financing models (eg, crowdfunding).  Others on the panel include actor-director Mark Duplass, and Brad Wyman of crowdfunding site IndieGogo.

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Here’s the description from the WGA calendar page:  7-9 p.m.– WGAW 2nd Floor. RSVP by 3/18: MemberServices/Organizing or (323) 782-4567. Writers and filmmakers are taking advantage of “crowdfunding” and other emerging entertainment finance models; will you be next? Panel discussion includes writer/director/actor Mark Duplass (Kickstarter projects), William Mapother (Slated), and Brad Wyman (IndieGoGo). Moderator: Josh Welsh (Film Independent Co-President). Open to WGA members in active status (no guests) and Film Independent Fellows. Hors d’oeuvres and drinks.

And here’s a great NYT piece on crowdfunding clean energy (and just about anything else, too).

 

 

Posted in Film, In Person (or, like, Live), Interviews and Q&A's, Los Angeles, News & Events, Slated, Tech

Valentine’s Day Movies

Posted on: February 13th, 2013 by wmapother 4 Comments

One of the best parts of various holidays is the favorites movies we associate with them.  Unknown

Random sidebar: I just thought of a fun parlor game:  Pick three of your favorite movies that aren’t associated with a holiday, then invent a holiday that incorporates aspects of all three.  Fun for the whole family!  Or at least, some friends who are over for drinks..

Anyway, the film section of Leo Magazine (in my hometown of Louisville) asked me for some of my favorite films for Valentine’s Day (they supplied the various categories below).  I was happy to oblige, partly of course as a selfless public service, and partly because I’ll use any opportunity to push my favorite films on people.   The full article with others’ recs, too, is here.  The envelopes, please (with Netflix links):

Funniest Sex Scene?  Monty Python’s Meaning of Life, the ‘Sex Education’ skit.  It’s exactly the way Americans imagine a literal British sex ed class would be run.

Most Romantic Moment?     Tie:  The conclusions of Chaplin’s “City Lights” and, of course, ‘Casablanca.’  In the former Chaplin reveals his true self to the woman he’s loved but has never seen him, and in the latter Bogart sacrifices his love for Bergman for the sake of her happiness and the free world.  They’re very different, but very romantic.

Best Kiss?    Tie again:
(1)  Cary Grant and Ingrid Bergman, ‘Notorious.’  [The photo above.]  For two and a half minutes they kiss, pull slightly apart, then kiss again.  Repeat, please.  Trivia:  Hitchcock devised this to get around the prohibition against kisses lasting more than three seconds.  Repeat, please.
(2) Buster Keaton’s ‘The General‘.  Keaton’s beloved fuels the train’s fire with just twigs, as they’re escaping the enemy. He strangles her for half a second, then kisses her.  It’s a beautiful and hysterical summation of love.

Best Non-Hook-Up?  “There’s Something About Mary.”  Poor Ben Stiller suffers and suffers.

Best Break-Up?   The end of ‘Superbad,’ one of my all-time favorites.  Jonah Hill and Michael Cera head off with their new squeezes, looking back over their shoulders at one another and the end of their adolescent friendship that dare not speak its name.

Favorite Anti-Love Story?  “War of the Roses” (Michael Douglas, Kathleen Turner and Danny DeVito), or “The Break-up,” in which Vaughn and Aniston have to share an apartment post-break-up.

Favorite Overall Romantic Comedy or Love Story?  “Shop Around the Corner,” with Jimmy Stewart and Margaret Sullavan.  They work together and detest one another, but they fall in love as each other’s anonymous pen pal.  Funny, sophisticated, and fantastic.

Here’s to a Valentine’s Day that’s sweet or spicy, however you like it.

 

 

Posted in Favorites, Film, Funny Like Ha-Ha, Interviews and Q&A's, Louisville & KY, News & Events, Other Photos, Press, Video (Online & Home)

Bad Words on ‘Tape’

Posted on: January 21st, 2013 by wmapother No Comments

LA Theatre Works is a terrific theatre series of ‘radio theatre.’  latw 'tape'

Actors read a play aloud on stage, but in front of  a live audience. The performance is also taped, and LA Theatre Works offers the performances either on CDs or via download. Some of our greatest actors have participated over the years: John Lithgow, Alfred Molina, Marsha Mason, David Straithairn, Paul Giamatti, Laurence Fishburne, etc.

Actors love the series, because the entire process – rehearse, run through, several performances – takes only an entire week. Which spares the actors some of the self-imposed pressure to be amazing.

In 2003 I did a performance there of Stephen Belber’s ‘Tape.’  This week only it is streamable for free.  After that you can buy it through their site.

 

 

Posted in Acting Projects, Los Angeles, News & Events, Voice