“Shade” DVD Goodies

Shade is now available on dvd and I thought that SZoners may like a look at some trailers if they’re still on the fence about getting a copy.

All clips are in 3 formats (WM, QT & Real) and 3 speeds (56, 100 & 300)

Shade Trailers

http://raincloud.warnerbros.com/wbol/us/whv/med/shade/shade_dom_tlr_100.asx

http://raincloud.warnerbros.com/wbol/us/whv/med/shade/shade_dom_tlr_100.ram

http://raincloud.warnerbros.com/wbol/us/whv/med/shade/shade_dom_tlr_100.rpm

http://raincloud.warnerbros.com/wbol/us/whv/med/shade/shade_dom_tlr_300.asx

http://raincloud.warnerbros.com/wbol/us/whv/med/shade/shade_dom_tlr_300.ram

http://raincloud.warnerbros.com/wbol/us/whv/med/shade/shade_dom_tlr_300.rpm

http://raincloud.warnerbros.com/wbol/us/whv/med/shade/shade_dom_tlr_56.asx

http://raincloud.warnerbros.com/wbol/us/whv/med/shade/shade_dom_tlr_56.ram

http://raincloud.warnerbros.com/wbol/us/whv/med/shade/shade_dom_tlr_56.rpm

http://raincloud.warnerbros.com/wbol/us/whv/med/shade/shade_dom_tlr_qt_100.mov

http://raincloud.warnerbros.com/wbol/us/whv/med/shade/shade_dom_tlr_qt_100.smil

http://raincloud.warnerbros.com/wbol/us/whv/med/shade/shade_dom_tlr_qt_300.mov

http://raincloud.warnerbros.com/wbol/us/whv/med/shade/shade_dom_tlr_qt_300.smil

http://raincloud.warnerbros.com/wbol/us/whv/med/shade/shade_dom_tlr_qt_56.mov

http://raincloud.warnerbros.com/wbol/us/whv/med/shade/shade_dom_tlr_qt_56.smil

If you want to purchase the dvd just click HERE!

– Craig Zablo

 

“Shade” Opens Philly Film Festival

Philadelphia, PA, March 22, 2004 – RKO Pictures has teamed with Philadelphia-area natives Joe Nicolo (Executive Producer), Carl Mazzocone (Co-Producer), Dina Merrill, and Philadelphia’s favorite son Sylvester Stallone, to bring some brotherly love-card shark style-to the Philadelphia Film Festival with the premiere of SHADE. A gritty poker picture about grifters and card mechanics in the shadowy world of the L.A. and Las Vegas underground, SHADE’s ensemble cast includes Stuart Townsend (Queen of the Damned), Gabriel Byrne (The Usual Suspects), Thandie Newton (Mission Impossible 2), Jamie Foxx (Any Given Sunday), Melanie Griffith (Working Girl), Hal Holbrook (Magnum Force), Patrick Bauchau (Carnivale) and Sylvester Stallone (Rocky, Copland). The ultra high-stakes card game thriller has been selected as the opening night film at The Philadelphia Film Festival on April 8th. SHADE is an RKO Pictures Production in association with Merv Griffin Entertainment, Hammond Entertainment, Judgment Pictures and Cobalt Media Group.

Hammond Entertainment brought Nicolo into the project after Hammond optioned SHADE from Merv Griffin Productions. RKO Pictures then joined the project as a financier, producer and distributor. The films other producers include Ted Hartley, Merv Griffin, Chris Hammond and David Schnepp.

The film is directed by first-time director, Damian Nieman, who also wrote the script. Nieman, a former card mechanic and poker player, knows this world first-hand having honed his skills at the famous Magic Castle in Los Angeles.

This is the first feature film for Nicolo, the former president and owner of Philadelphia-based Ruffhouse /Columbia Records. At Ruffhouse, he was responsible for launching the careers of Lauryn Hill, The Fugees, Cypress Hill, Wyclef Jean, and Kris/Kross. During his 10 years at Columbia Records, Nicolo also produced Billy Joel’s Grammy nominated album “River Of Dreams” and worked with such musical icons as James Taylor, Bob Dylan, Aerosmith and The Rolling Stones. In the spring of 2000, Nicolo sold Ruffhouse Records to Sony and started Judgment Pictures in Conshohocken.

“We’re excited to share this film with our family and friends,” said Nicolo. “How great to be recognized in your home town. I guess I was very fortunate because I had a great, great cast and production crew on this film. I think the quality of the movie speaks for itself”.

Carl Mazzocone is a 21-year veteran of the film business and is President of Main Line Pictures. He most recently produced Dumb & Dumberer as well as the controversial Julian Sands film, Boxing Helena.

“I love SHADE and had a great time working on the film,” said Mazzocone. “Every low-budget production is a challenge, especially when working with big stars; yet this film captured something special from the start. The material attracted an exceptional cast and crew–probably the best I’ve ever worked with. It’s a rare experience when 150 cast and crew members come together on a picture, endure long stressful hours of tedious work and in the process become as close as a family. I give Joe Nicolo a lot of credit for that. First off, it takes a lot of courage to finance an independent movie. Joe openly placed his trust in us all, which filters down and empowers everyone to do their best.”

ABOUT RKO. RKO is the oldest continuously operated entertainment company in the world, dating back to 1882, and boasting a film and script library of over 1,100 titles. Known for developing, producing, and distributing feature film and television programs for worldwide consumption, the RKO brand with its world-renowned “globe and radio tower” logo is being expanded into an array of new areas. RKO recently produced Never Gonna Dance, a Broadway musical stage adaptation of the 1936 Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers film, Swing Time. The Company also has a number of projects under development with other studios, Suspicion (Dimension), Monkey’s Paw (Dreamworks) and Every Girl Should be Married (Paramount). SHADE opens in select cities nationwide on May 7.


Craig Zablo

“Shade” Theatrical Release News

SZoner, Cindy, e-mailed me the following:

*****

Hi Craig

I thought I would follow up and let you know what’s happening with SHADE. Last time I had sent you a email from RKO Pictures stating that the movie would be coming out in the fall this year. However since then things have changed and I’m sure the fans would want to know… I emailed RKO Pictures as I did not hear any news on shade in the movie section for the fall line up. Down below is there response .

Regards Cindy
*****
Thanks for your patience and interest in Shade. Due to many different factors, the theatrical launch of Shade has been moved to the Spring of 2004. We are currently working with a major distributor to release the picture in March. However, we will not have an actual date until later this year.

Thanks again for your interest and support.

Regards,

RKO Pictures


Thanks for the news Cindy! – Craig Zablo

A Rocky Road

A Rocky Road
Sylvester Stallone is in training for another comeback
BY MARK CARO for the Chicago Tribune
Posted on Tuesday, July 29, 2003

AUSTIN, Texas — Sylvester Stallone is climbing back into the ring, figuratively in “Spy Kids 3-D: Game Over” and literally in a sixth “Rocky” movie.

Yes, he has already written “Rocky VI,” which he’s calling “Puncher’s Chance,” the title referring to the idea that once in the ring, any fighter has a chance to land a knockout punch. Stallone — with “Spy Kids 3-D” the only one of his last four movies to actually make it to theaters — is looking for that shot as well.

Rocky made his moment when he’s 29 years old,” a fit-looking Stallone, who turned 57 on July 6, said while in Austin for the “Spy Kids” premiere. “Now time has moved on, but how do you participate when your options are pretty limited? It’s not as though he’s a painter or a world traveler. He is a fixture in the neighborhood. The neighborhood is decaying. Do you decay with it? And when you try to fight back, (you’re told), ‘It’s ludicrous. Come on! Move on! Don’t be so vain.’

“It’s not about vanity,” he continued, his familiar gravelly voice turning soft. “It’s about, ‘I know I don’t feel as though I’ve hit the bottom. I haven’t dredged the bottom of my well yet, I don’t think.’ There’s a point when you sit back on your life, and you’re on your final days going, ‘You know? I did it all.’ And I don’t know if I’ve done it all. The character.”

These last two words were said as a reminder that he was talking about Rocky, not himself.

But he knows he can’t escape the parallels. Like his most famous character, Stallone has gone from top-of-the-world star to afterthought — a $20 million-per-movie action hero whose most recent efforts have bombed (“Get Carter,” “Driven,” the latter of which he wrote) or, worse yet, haven’t even received a U.S. theatrical release (“D-Tox,” also known as “Eye See You,” “Avenging Angelo,” “Shade”).

“Spy Kids 3-D,” which opened Friday, at least will get him in front of large audiences again. He plays the comical villain, the Toymaker, who has designed a video game that ultimately imprisons the minds of its players. The character’s goofiness manifests itself in multiple personalities that argue with one another: a bald, professor type, a blustery European military commander (Stallone refers to him as “Gooselini”) and a stringy-haired hippie. For good measure, Stallone also plays a TV reporter.

Like most of the movie, his scenes were shot in front of green screens so that computerized scenery and special effects could be added later. Aside from a climactic confrontation with Ricardo Montalban, who plays the Spy Kids‘ wheelchair-bound grandpa, Stallone is mostly acting with himself.

How did he feel about acting without other actors? “I’ve been doing that for the last 10 years,” he quipped, laughing.

Stallone‘s sense of humor may not be one of his better-known traits, but it’s the key reason “Spy Kids 3-D” director Robert Rodriguez said he cast him.

Stallone compared working with a green screen to “being held face down in a bowl of guacamole for three weeks” (though his part took just five days to shoot).

“Yeah, it’s strange. It’s like working without a net.”

Yet “Spy Kids 3-D” feels like a safe move compared with what Stallone has planned. First up is a ripped-from-the-headlines crime drama called “Thugz Life” (formerly “Rampart Scandal”) that Stallone has written and is preparing to direct in his first stint behind the camera since 1985’s “Rocky IV.” He’ll also star as real-life Los Angeles police detective Russell Poole, whose career crashed as he tried to get to the bottom of the Tupac Shakur and Biggie Smalls murders.

Then there’s “Puncher’s Chance,” which continues Stallone‘s exploration of counted-out guys who keep forging ahead.

He admits he goofed in giving Rocky brain damage in “Rocky V,” which ended with Rocky brawling with his ungrateful protege on the street rather than in the ring.

“It was a big mistake on my part because nobody wants to see the dark, depressing underbelly of a character they’ve had joy with,” Stallone said.

So Rocky will return to the ring for movie No. 6.

Craig Zablo

Will there be another “Rocky”?

In the July 20, 2003 Who’s News section of USA Weekend the following appeared:

Q: Is Sylvester Stallone really working on another “Rocky” movie? Angel Moll, Bellingham, Mass.

Yes. Stallone, 57, now is writing a script that will have sensitive boxer Rocky Balboa jumping into the ring for a sixth time [it’s been a while; “Rocky V” came out in 1990]. Meanwhile, Stallone can be seen as the villain in “Spy Kids 3-D: Game Over” next weekend. The role of the baddie is a switch for the actor, one that’ll no doubt tickle his three daughters with third wife Jennifer Flavin [Sophia, 6, Sistine, 5, and Scarlet, 1]. The Los Angeles-based star, who has two older children from his first marriage, also is waiting to see whether “Shade,” an independent con-man caper he filmed with Melanie Griffith will be released.


– Craig Zablo

“Shade” in Genii

Ernest “Jazzman” Resendes sent us a taste of the great coverage of “Shade” in Genii magazine:

There is a lot to the cover story / interview’s on SHADE. It includes an AWESOME interview with director Damien Neiman which is one of the best I’ve read in along time. Here is a taste…

GENIIStallone has done phenomenal work in things like COPLAND.

NEIMAN: Absolutely.

GENII: And because he became an icon so early in his career– maybe he doesn’t think it was early– but he’s been on the screen al this time, and a movie like COPLAND or SHADE must be attractive to an actor like Stallone, who is an artist.

NEIMAN: He is an artist. Most people, when you say “Stallone,” just think “Rambo,” you know, that kind of character, but he started out at the top. You can’t get any bigger than he was after the first Rocky. An Academy Awardwinning picture, he was nominated for writing it– most people forget he wrote Rocky — and he stuck by it. And he forced the studio, it wasn’t even a studio, it was UA, it was barely anything, to keep him in the lead. It was a really small independent feature. It was a small little thing that exploded. So Stallone‘s mindset is kind of back in that era. I think he’s kind of coming full circle and getting back to that, so he saw something in SHADE that appealed to him.

NEIMAN: The high concept pitch is: It’s Pulp Fiction meets The Sting….

NEIMAN: The editor was cutting while we were going. The editor’s Scott Conrda who, surprisingly enough, won his Academy Award for cutting Rocky.

NEIMAN: Yes, absolutely. And as a testament to everyone who worked on the film, from the actors on down, Gabriel , Stuart, Stallone, they all said it was the best experience they ever had on a film. They all said they dreamed of having the sequel done as soon as possible with all the same crew and all the same cast….

As Gabriel put it [ Irish brogue]: “There were angels above the set.” [Laughter]

____________________________________________

Thanks to Shai for posting the link on our StalloneZone Message Board. Special thanks to Ernest “Jazzman” Resendes for quickly ordering the mag and getting us the goods. There were many more pics and of course the rest of the interview… I’ve ordered a copy of the mag for myself!

I am so, pardon the expression, jazzed about “Shade.” I love playing poker and the description “Pulp Fiction meets The Sting”… well, deal me in!

 Craig Zablo