برچسب: WriterDirector

  • An Interview With Writer/Director Adam Finberg


    Introduction

    On March 13, 1997, thousands of people in Arizona witnessed the largest mass UFO sighting in U.S. history—now famously known as The Phoenix Lights. Among them was 10-year-old Claire, who felt as if the lights called to her. In Star People, years later, Claire (Kat Cunning), now a photographer, is still chasing that moment, hoping to capture the lights on camera and finally make sense of what she saw. 

    When a mysterious tip leads her deep into the Arizona desert during a deadly heatwave with her UFO streamer boyfriend (Connor Paolo) and troubled brother (McCabe Slye)  in tow, they encounter a vulnerable immigrant family whose plight complicates her mission. As tensions rise, Claire searches for the answers she seeks on terra firma and among the stars.

    Star People
    Kat Cunning stars in “Star People” (2025). Photo courtesy of Blue Harbor Entertainment.

    Meet Adam Finberg

    Filmmaker Adam Finberg grew up in Phoenix, Arizona, and moved to Southern California to attend the American Film Institute’s directing program. He has worked as a writer, director, and editor for the past 20 years. Star People is his first feature-length narrative film.

    Adam began his career directing music videos (for artists such as Armin van Buuren, Malbec, and Otis) before transitioning to commercial work (for clients including Napoleon Perdis and GoDaddy). His first documentary, After Katrina: Rebuilding St. Bernard Parish, shined a light on the perils and pains of post-Hurricane Katrina New Orleans.

    His first feature documentary, The Business of Recovery, dove into the secret lucrative world of the American addiction treatment industry. The film was featured on Last Week Tonight With John Oliver as it sparked conversations about the rehab industry and was even showcased at the International Drug Policy Reform Conference in Washington, DC to help guide policy decisions.

    Interview

    Cinema Scholars’ own Glen Dower recently interviewed writer and director Adam Finberg about his new sci-fi/thriller Star People, starring Kat Cunning. Star People will open in theaters July 25, with a VOD release to follow nationwide on all major platforms on August 12, and is being distributed by Blue Harbor Entertainment.

    Lightly edited for content and clarity.

    Glen Dower:

    Hi Mr. Finberg. Star People, not a singing competition on Saturday night television, but your new heartfelt sci-fi drama, of which you are writer and director, which I enjoyed. You grew up in Phoenix, and for those people who don’t know, can you explain what the Phoenix Lights were and how they partly influenced the story?

    Adam Finberg:

    Sure. Well, the Phoenix Lights were a mass UFO sighting in Arizona in 1997. On March 13th, 1997, thousands of people saw a strange formation of lights flying across the state. And it’s been talked about for years, investigated. There have been many TV shows about it and a lot of speculation about what it is and what it isn’t. And at the time I was in high school, I didn’t see them, but I do know several people who did see them that night. And in fact, some people who worked on the film told me that they had seen the lights. They were very excited to work on this film.

    And for me, it was always an interesting jumping off point for storytelling because I was always intrigued by them. I also have a personal friend who had seen them, and I just wanted to write about characters who had experienced that. That was kind of how that started. This was in a time, too, when the idea of shared experiences was a little different than it is now because, you know, there wasn’t social media yet. You know, when a lot of people saw the same thing, there were only so many ways to talk about it at the time. It’s still mysterious to this day about what happened.

    Glen Dower:

    That is so cool. So like you say, you created a great ensemble of characters that have run the gamut of those who may be involved in a story like this: the believer, the non-believer, the cynic, the people just along for the ride, etc. So how did you come about those characters?

    Adam Finberg:

    My influence for the writing, a lot of it came from my experience directing a documentary in 2015 called The Business of Recovery, which was about the addiction treatment industry. And a lot of the people I met during that time were experiencing trauma of one sort or another. I found that my experiences in talking to people firsthand in the making of that film really influenced my writing years later because it is something that is a common thread in the human experience about how we process terrible events or how we process holes in our lives.

    That experience fed into, I guess you could say, my imagination as I was building these characters. A lot was influenced from that because, for me, at the end of the day, this had to be a very good human. There had to be a very good story behind the science fiction elements. I didn’t want to tell a story just about the science, the lights, or just about the science in it, because that wasn’t enough storytelling. I had to have characters that you would be interested in learning about and going on a journey with.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4JnaAHawOKo

    Glen Dower:

    Absolutely. So, when we go into films like this, we can either go into it with the concept of Close Encounters Of The Third Kind or War of the Worlds. We’re just waiting, waiting, waiting, and here comes the ship! Oh, there they are. Or there’s a film I saw like last year called Acid Man. I don’t know if you saw that, starring Thomas Hayden-Church, directed by Alex Lehman, the director, and he and I had a really interesting conversation about how UFO experiences really bring people together. And it doesn’t matter if you’re a cynic or not, it’s about how it reveals or deepens relationships. With your film, do you think the brother-sister relationship was the central hook?

    Adam Finberg:

    As I developed the characters, yeah. It started with the main character and building out, you know? Building out that character’s life. I had to have opposing elements with a good story. So there had to be, you know, her and her brother, Claire and Taylor. They were sort of two sides of the same coin, and they both had to share trauma, and the way that they sort of dealt with it was just different. You know, one hooked into this experience to try to find answers. The other sort of found help in self-medicating, you could say, with substance abuse.

    From there, I just had to just kind of expand it. I mean, the writing process is a lot of throwing things in the wastebasket. For me, it’s like, you think you’re gonna keep, you gotta keep digging so that it just took a lot, a lot of digging and just building it more and more until it felt, you know, as real as I could, I could get it.

    Glen Dower:

    And the film is beautiful to look at as well. Filmed in Arizona, right. Locations like these always make me think of John Carpenter’s The Thing, because, as a director, you have to find that it looks remote enough…but also accessible, because you’re making a film, you have to walk that fine line. How did you come up with those locations?

    Adam Finberg:

    Well, that was a big adventure in itself! I worked very closely with this wonderful guy, Brian Bukovic, who was my location manager, and we did our road trips around Phoenix. I mean, because yeah, we needed to find a place that felt remote, yet it was accessible to shoot, that we could be close enough and not put our crew up far, far away. Most of the remote-looking stuff is in the Superstition Mountains, which is a range southeast of Phoenix, kind of southeast of Mesa. There’s a wonderful ranch out there called Quarter Circle U Ranch that we ended up filming at.

    It’s deep in this canyon. You take this dirt road about eight miles off the grid, no cell service, you know, got all the trucks out there, and we were able to just shoot out on that property. One of those scouting days on my own, when I was driving around, I got a flat tire out there, and I had to deal with it because it was off the grid. But it wasn’t that far off the grid. And we also shot some in South Mountain Park, which is this huge park south of downtown Phoenix, which has this paved road that we were able to shoot on, that looks very remote, because you can’t, you know, you can’t see, but you aren’t that far from the city, right there. That’s good.

    Glen Dower:

    So an adventure in itself to find an adventure.

    Adam Finberg:

    Oh yeah, all over.

    Glen Dower:

    I also want to talk about your take on the influence of shows and movies like The X-Files. I was in high school when the show was at its peak. It was always the thing we talked about in the yard the day after the episode aired. And I was also lucky enough to talk to Dr. Erin McDonald recently, and she’s the science advisor for the current Star Trek universe. And we talked about the Scully Effect on female careers in the STEM arena. So looking back, just at that show, The X-Files, do you think films like yours could have been made without shows like that, all those decades ago, that have inspired and intrigued generations for years?

    Adam Finberg:

    Well, there’s a lot. The X-Files has colored our popular consciousness, which is fine. It’s just like Twilight Zone or Close Encounters. I mean, all these things. Any art is sort of built on the art that came before it. What would it be? I don’t know. I mean, I think the Phoenix Lights would have still happened, and we still wouldn’t know what they are. But you would just have less TV bits using The X-Files music and talking about the Phoenix Lights. I feel like I’ve seen bits where they play The X-Files theme song. There are so many shows about searching for answers, because that’s what we all want. We want to know meaning, we want to know why. And sometimes it’s not so clear cut, though, unfortunately. That’s ‘the’ truth.

    Star People
    Eddie Martinez and Adriana Aluna Martinez star in “Star People” (2025). Photo courtesy of Blue Harbor Entertainment.
    Glen Dower:

    And what’s great about your film is that it very much leads a lot to the audience to form their interpretations. And one thing I wanted to say, there was one line, I just wrote it down with great laughter. “My stomach is baking an evil pie!” I loved this line – was it scripted or improvised?

    Adam Finberg:

    No, that was the line I wrote! To have a character, and McCabe did an incredible job portraying a guy who had recently OD’d, because you had to make it all believable. So we had had him digging into that, you know, the physicality of, what would the day after having a bender be like? But yes, that was in the script originally. But to his credit, he brought the pain in that scene in a way that only he could do!

    Glen Dower:

    And just one last word about the casting. How did you find your leads? Because obviously, they’re great together. Was it just luck or a bit of magic?

    Adam Finberg:

    It’s a lot of searching! No, my casting directors, Helen Geer and Kendra Clark, who were a casting team in LA to cast our leads, were amazing. They knew kind of what I was looking for to help bring auditions in for me to find, to eventually find Cat, who was very talented and also a musician. And, you know, I remember Cat’s first audition. I was like, this is Claire. And it came through a Zoom audition, because nowadays, a lot of these auditions are video, you know, on Zoom. I just imagined, in person, that I was going to get a great performance.

    But once we had Cat, then we had to line Cat up with who would be the brother. And, you know, we did. We did chemistry reads to make sure that we had the right brother and sister. Do I believe it? And once I knew Cat was a musician, I knew I had to involve Cat’s music, because the music, the track in the credits, Cat collaborated with my composer, Reza, to produce and write. Well, he produced the track, but they both wrote and performed on Constellation, at the end.

    Glen Dower:

    And they’re the heart and soul. Well, it has been a pleasure. Thanks so much for your time, Mr. Finberg.

    Adam Finberg:

    Thank you, Glen. Great chatting with you.

    Adam Finberg’s Star People, starring actor and recording artist Kat Cunning, McCabe Slye, Connor Paolo, Eddie Martinez, Bradley Fisher, and Adriana Aluna Martinez, will open in theaters July 25, with a VOD release to follow nationwide on all major platforms on August 12.

    Read more Cinema Scholar interviews!

    Sundance 2024! An Interview With Filmmaker Daniel Barosa

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    Keep up with Cinema Scholars on social media. Like us on Facebook, subscribe on YouTube, and follow us on Threads and Instagram.





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  • We Chat With Writer/Director Brendan Devane About His New High-Altitude Horror!


    Introduction

    In the terrifying horror thriller The Sound, a world-class group of climbers is granted access to the Forbidden Wall, a mysterious rock face that has been closed for decades. Among the climbers is Sean (Marc Hills), whose grandfather made an ill-fated attempt sixty-three years earlier. During the group’s ascent, they come face-to-face with a malevolent force that quickly turns their expedition into a harrowing battle for survival, hundreds of feet above the ground.

    Interview

    Cinema Scholars’ own Glen Dower recently interviewed writer and director Brendan Devane about his new horror/thriller, The Sound, starring William Fichtner and Jocelyn Hudon. The film is slated for limited release across the United States on June 27, 2025.

    Lightly edited for content and clarity.

    Glen Dower:

    Mr. Devane. How are you, Sir?

    Brendan Devane:

    I’m good, Glen, how are you? 

    Glen Dower:

    I’m really good, thanks. We are talking about The Sound, ‘Evil Dead Meets Cliffhanger’, what do you think?

    Brendan Devane:

    Yeah, there are a bunch of comparisons you can make. In my mind, I am a really big The Thing fan, you know, Carpenter’s great film from the early 80s? I was trying to play a little bit along with those kinds of themes of unseen alien jumps into people’s heads for that kind of psychological thriller, horror feeling that Carpenter had going on there.

    Glen Dower:

    Growing up, you spent a lot of time in Colorado after you finished college. And how did your experience there, plus Native American culture, come together for the story of The Sound? 

    Brendan Devane:

    I moved to Colorado right after college. I made my parents extra happy to be a ski bum after that, and just learned how to operate in the mountains and got really into ice climbing and rock climbing, and all the other stuff that happens out there. And never really was thinking about filmmaking, I was just into live music production after that in Colorado, and started working my way into production.

    And so it’s always been in the back of my mind to have something kind of exciting that I’d liked in the past, like Cliffhanger or Vertical Limit, which I think are entertaining films, but are not very authentic as far as the climbing and how it portrays the climbing. I mean, who doesn’t love Cliffhanger? But the climbing community doesn’t like it as far as what they did. Of course, they got sued by Black Diamond big time for what they did in that opening sequence. So that’s always been part of my, not plan per se, but to make something that is a little bit more authentic to the climbing community.

    As far as Native American goes, as you can tell, I’m a big white Irish guy from upstate New York. But I did grow up in a town that is named after Iroquois words. And growing up in the 80s, we did a lot of studying about the Native American aspects of where I grew up in upstate New York, from a town called Saratoga Springs, which is Iroquois for land of the running water.

    The Sound
    Rachel Finninger stars in “The Sound” (2025). Photo courtesy of Blue Harbor Entertainment.
    Brendan Devane (cont):

    So I’ve always had an interest in Native Americans. And I played lacrosse, which is their sport, since I was a little kid, and played in a lot of leagues with the Iroquois Nationals and stuff like that, and got to know them. When you’re like me, i.e,. Not Native American, you have to tread carefully, as it’s not my story to tell. So I brought the Native Americans in to bolster that storyline.

    Glen Dower:

    You mentioned Cliffhanger you mentioned Vertical Limit, which are the two films I noted. How did you maintain a level of authenticity that perhaps those filmed lacked in favor of entertainment?

    Brendan Devane:

    It’s the reality of big wall rock climbing. That’s kind of boring! It takes hours and hours, right? Even Free Solo, one of the most exciting documentaries I’ve ever seen, took him five hours or something to do that climb. They show what 10 minutes of it, maybe, right? So you have to look for little moments in this, trying to make it authentic, because an authentic climbing movie is kind of boring, except for little spots where they may be exposed to a fall or something like that.

    It was a challenge to keep it authentic, while still providing scares or tension, or thrills like that, by involving little things where the lead characters are off rope, and he slips and he might, and he might fall or something like that, which is in the realm of possibility.

    When Chris O’Donnell jumps from one peak to the other in Vertical Limit with his two ice axes, it’s fun and exciting, but it’s not real, right? What happens is he falls to his death, right? That’s what’s going to happen in real life. So it takes a balance to try to make things exciting, as far as a Hollywood movie can, while still also trying to be authentic to rock climbing. And that’s why I decided, you know, pretty early on in the process that I couldn’t film this with, like, necessarily a regular production crew, or with actors.

    Turns out SAG doesn’t want you to put people a thousand feet in the air! So we made two separate movies. One was a straight rock climbing film with professional rock climbers and a professional rock climbing shoot team, and the other with actors and a professional production crew, and then kind of tried to meld them in post.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GfnNnuZQUs4

    Glen Dower:

    We see during the credits at the very end of the movie, we see scenes with the actors. So was that to imply these guys are legit, they work hard, as opposed to just name scrolling, to actually show them in action? 

    Brendan Devane:

    I’m always thinking of doing cool things for credits that make it a little bit interesting than just a scroll. And those were all pictures of their personal lives. It wasn’t even having to do with the film. Most of the people who were cast in this as rock climbers are rock climbers in their personal lives, maybe not professional, but Mark, the lead, who plays Sean, is an accomplished rock climber. All of them are. And so I wanted to kind of like, add a little bit to the authenticity of showing them, you know, doing this sport where typically, you know, it’s an actor who doesn’t, that’s one of my favorite parts of the Truman Show where they tell the bus driver can’t drive away in the bus because he’s an actor, right?

    And this particular movie, I wanted to make sure the actors were a part of the skills, like the original Point Break when Catherine cast those surfers, she looked for surfers with SAG cards, instead of teaching actors how to surf, those background ones, obviously not Swayze or Keanu, but so I approached it the same way. I was looking for rock climbers who were also actors.

    Glen Dower:

    Let’s talk about some of the supporting actors as well. You’ve got William Fichtner, who is one of those actors who just brings the gravitas with the undercurrent of menace or mystery, and Kyle Gass as well! How did those two guys come to be involved?

    Brendan Devane:

    Well, when you’re talking about a film like this, you’re always looking for angles to be able to promote and market the film, right? If you’re not building a film in pre-production that you can market later, you’re probably doing something wrong as a filmmaker because, without the business, there’s no show, right, as the old saying goes. So that role was always earmarked for maybe a more ‘visible’ actor. And it turned out that the actor Gabe Greenspan, who’s Jason Alexander’s son, did an amazing job, was represented by the same agent who represents Bill.

    And after I booked Gabe, I’m a big fan of ‘What’s the worst that can happen. They can say no,’ right? It’s like, ‘hey, I see you represent Bill.  Would Bill be interested in this part?’ And he read the script and was in it. And so we got him into the film. And what an amazing actor and person to work with, and just an all-around great guy outside of the business.

    Really, it was an absolute pleasure to work with Bill, and I feel very fortunate that he joined the project. As far as Kyle, I’ve always been a big Tenacious D fan. I worked with them when I was a roadie 25 years ago, back when they were first starting. And who doesn’t love Elf and Kyle’s turn as Eugene Dupree? So that was another serendipitous thing where I was working with Kyle’s agent, who at the time represented David Clennon, and Jocelyn Hudon, who also makes an appearance in the film.

    The Sound
    William Fichtner stars in “The Sound” (2025). Photo courtesy of Blue Harbor Entertainment.
    Brendan Devane (cont):

    And so I kind of bundled those three actors, like a disc, ‘hey, if I cast these two people, I get a discount on Kyle?’ So, a lot of times that’s how this casting goes when you’re not necessarily looking for auditions and your normal casting director is going through all the tapes and stuff, and I’m just looking to fill roles. You know, a lot of it just kind of comes together. And it’s about working relationships with people in the business, the agents who are getting these people to work. So that was very helpful to be able to kind of one-stop shop those casting decisions.

    Glen Dower:

    I’m also a big fan of what’s the worst they can say, apart from ‘no’.  And we just have to talk about David Clennon. I’m so glad you brought up John Carpenter’s The Thing at the very start. I saw his name in press release, and if people are reading, if I just say, “You gotta be fucking kidding…” Yes, Palmer is in this movie! I like to think this is Palmer had he not died in The Thing. So it must have been a thrill for you. Because for me, The Thing is up there in my top two favorite, perfect movies, along with Predator.

    Brendan Devane:

    Absolutely. When I saw The Thing, I think I was 10, and it scared the shit out of me! It just stuck. It’s one of those films that just sticks with you. I don’t throw around words like ‘invent’, but Carpenter kind of started the ‘contained horror’ before that was a thing. Nobody was talking about contained horror, but there it is. 12 people are stuck in a base in Antarctica. And that’s where, for me, the tension is derived from. They can’t escape each other. And they don’t know who’s infected.

    There’s a lot of gore and blood and disgusting stuff in The Thing that we don’t necessarily get into. But I tried to bring a little bit of that tension of the unknown. It’s difficult when you’re on a big wall rock climb because the people are in proximity to each other, like they are in The Thing. When you’ve got five people sitting around a little room, and they’re testing the blood, one of my favorite scenes of all time, when they’re testing the blood to see who’s infected. I tried to do a little throwback to that, where they’re testing on the radio to see what it is.

    I combined The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly, and that standoff there at the end between Angel Eyes, Blondie, and Tuco with that test. Hopefully, people catch it when Dave says, ‘It’s not like Antarctica down there’, because I did want to give him a little bit of a throwback to Palmer there. I can’t say enough great things about Dave. He became a good friend, and we still text. He’s coming to the premiere in Vegas. He’s an all-around stand-up person and a tremendous actor who I’m extremely grateful to for joining the project.

    Glen Dower:

    I just want to ask about that line. Was that line in the script before he was on board, or written for him?

    Brendan Devane:

    That was written for him. I had to sneak that one in for him. The character’s name is Kurt Carpenter. Now, that never really comes out, he’s called Kurt. And I combined Kurt Russell with John Carpenter there to give him a little thing. I think he’s called Kurt once in the film. But yeah, that’s just one of those little details, right, that make me chuckle that no one else will hear.

    Glen Dower:

    There we go, that’s the exclusive. I love that. Now, we don’t want to give too much away, but there are possibilities for a follow-up? Do we have plans for More of The Sound?

    Brendan Devane:

    Well, you always like to think so, right? But a lot of times this is determined on, you know, like somebody gives you a bag of money to go film a sequel, right? We’ll see how people respond to this and whether I do have a script written and an idea that just basically picks up from the ending of this. It goes a little bit bigger, filming in Norway and Italy and around the world as a higher kind of a higher budget thing. Part of this doing the sound is that we had to learn how to shoot a rock climbing feature horror, which I’m sure someone out there has done something.

    The Sound
    Alex Honnold stars in “The Sound” (2025). Photo courtesy of Blue Harbor Entertainment.

    I firmly believe that every movie has ever made in the 1950s was made by some French person, right? We’ve all got recycled ideas here. So, we had to learn how to do this at our budget level. It’s a little bit different from a hundred million dollars. Then you can use digi-doubles, you can green screen everything, right?

    You can make it look like Mission Impossible, but on our budget, you know, it takes a little bit more ingenuity to pull some of this off. Hopefully, we can continue the story. You never know. I’m a big fan who isn’t of Christopher Nolan and the way that he kind of likes to leaves some of his films that little up in the air of like, is the top still spinning, or is he still in the dream, or is he not in the dream? I kind of like to leave things a little open-ended at the end so that people can imagine if there’s no more, if there isn’t a sequel, people can at least imagine that the story continues in whatever way that they think that it might go.

    Glen Dower:

    Perfect. The Sound is in theaters and on digital on the 27th of June. Brendan, thank you very much for your time. It’s been a pleasure. 

    Brendan Devane:

    Thanks so much, Glen.

    The Sound is in theaters and on VOD from June 27, from Blue Harbor Entertainment.

    Read more Cinema Scholar interviews!

    Sundance 2024! An Interview With Filmmaker Daniel Barosa

    SHOWDOWN AT THE GRAND: An Interview With Writer/Director Orson Oblowitz

    Keep up with Cinema Scholars on social media. Like us on Facebook, subscribe on YouTube, and follow us on Threads and Instagram.





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