Black Metal
Black Metal
Black Metal
BL AC K METAL
Synopsis
After a career spent mining his music from the shadows, the actions of one fan create a chain reaction for the lead singer of a black metal band.
Te c h n i c a l
Genre: Drama Running Time: 9 minutes Shooting Format: Hi-Def Aspect Ratio: 2:35 Sound: Stereo Production Company: Candler Productions, LLC Producers: Kat Candler, Johnny Mars, Kelly Williams Writer/Director: Kat Candler Director of Photography: Andrew Droz Palermo Editor: Duane Graves Cast: Johnny Mars, Heather Kafka, Lowell Bartholomee
Inquiries
For Screenings, Kelly Williams KellyGWilliams@gmail.com 512.296.8209 For Filmmaker, Kat Candler KatCandler@gmail.com 512.771.5863
Contents
D i r e c t o r s S t a t e m e n t Cast & Crew Screenings & Awards Articles & Interviews Additional Photos 9 11 23 31 45
D i r e c t o r s S t a t e m e n t
Making movies youre always looking for characters and stories you havent seen on screen. For some time now, Ive been intrigued by the metal world. In 2011 I started writing a film called Death Metal that explored a death metal guitarist dealing with the guilt of a teen who murders his teacher in the name of their band. I was curious about how what we put out in the world as artists comes back to us through audience interpretation and reaction. I spent months researching everyone from Judas Priest and Slipknot to Stanley Kubrick. Im always interested in the aftermath of tragedy, the idea of responsibility and the notion of artists guilt. Even if an artist wasnt holding the gun, is he or she still responsible? And even if they arent, how heavy does that inevitable guilt weigh? And for how long? With Black Metal, I was intrigued by the theatrics of a band on stage versus their reality off-stage especially in older musicians who have families and children. How do they want to be represented getting older? When they become parents? What kind of conversations do they have with their kids about what they do? In researching and producing the short film, Black Metal, Im grateful to the musicians and enthusiasts in the Texas metal scene. Dont let the tattoos, piercings or leather fool you--despite appearances, theyre some of the warmest, kindest people youll ever meet. Hail Texas metal!
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Kat Candler
Writer/Director/Producer Kat Candlers award winning films have screened at Sundance, SXSW, Slamdance, San Francisco International Film Festival, Los Angeles Film Festival, The National Institutes of Health and on PBS. Shes been a participant in the Tribeca All Access and IFP Emerging Narratives and Rough Cuts Lab. Candlers screenplay Love Me was produced by Dolphin Entertainment and Anchor Bay Films or a 2013 release. Shes in development on two features, Nikki is a Punk Rocker and Hellion. Kat is a film lecturer at the University of Texas and founded the Women in Cinema student organization at the University of Texas.
Filmograph y
2013 Black Metal, 9 min., (Writer/Director, Sundance) 2012 Love Me, Produced by Dolphin Entertainment (Screenwriter) 2012 Hellion, 7 min., (Writer/Director, Sundance, SXSW, LA Film Festival) 2012 Saturday Morning Massacre, (Story by, Los Angeles Film Festival) 2009 Love Bug, 6 min., (Writer/Director, Chicago Intl Childrens Festival) 2008 Quarter to Noon, 14 min., (Writer, Director, Producer, PBS) 2006 Jumping Off Bridges, 90 min., (Writer/Director/Producer, SXSW, PBS) 2003 Roberta Wells, 7 min., (Writer, Director, Slamdance, PBS)
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Ke l l y Wi l l i a m s
Producer Kelly Williams is a producer and film programmer. He is the Director of Programming for the Lone Star International Film Festival and the former Film Program Director at the Austin Film Festival, where he was awarded the International Film Festival Summit Excellence Award in 2007. He has produced numerous award-winning short films, including Kat Candlers Hellion (Sundance 2012). Recently, he produced the feature films Holiday Road, Cinema Six and Pictures of Superheroes. He is currently producing Candlers latest short film Black Metal and the feature film Pit Stop directed by Yen Tan, both of which will be world premiering at the 2013 Sundance Film Festival. He is a 2012 Sundance Creative Producing Fellow.
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Jonny Mars
Producer/Actor, Ian Jonny co-starred and co-produced Paul Gordons 2010 SXSW hit, The Happy Poet, which went on to be the only American independent film at the 2010 Venice Film Festival. He recently premiered his directorial debut, the feature documentary, Americas Parking Lot at SXSW. He produced and stars in Spencer Parsons Saturday Morning Massacre, which premiered at the 2012 Los Angeles Film Festival this summer. As an actor, he recently appeared in Kat Candlers Hellion, Hannah Fidells A Teacher, Yen Tans Pit Stop and Andrew Bujalskis Computer Chess.
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Heather Kaf ka
Actress, Rose Heather Kafka began what would become a career in acting, in 1978 at the age of 6. Since then she played Chloe on MTVs Austin Stories, Leatherfaces sister Henrietta in the Michael Bay remake of the Texas Chainsaw Massacre and starred as Diana in Bryan Poysers Lovers of Hate which competed for Best Narrative at Sundance 2010 and was nominated for an Independent Spirit Award. Most recently, she can be seen in Spencer Parsons Saturday Morning Massacre, the Zellner Brothers Kid Thing, David Lowerys Aint Them Bodies Saints, Yen Tans PIT STOP and Kat Candlers Black Metal, all three of which will be in Sundance 2012. She is currently in production on Cameron Nelsons Some Beasts, in preproduction on Dylan Pastures Prove It All Night, and just wrapped on Terence Malicks Untitled Project V and David Gordon Greens Joe starring Nicholas Cage.
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Duane Graves
Editor Duane Graves was born and raised in San Antonio, Texas. After receiving a degree in TV/Film from Texas A&M in Corpus Christi, he directed the critically-acclaimed documentary Up Syndrome, an intimate portrait of his childhood friend born with Down Syndrome. The film won several awards at festivals across the country including Slamdance, and is currently available through Hulu. Teaming with college peer Justin Meeks, Graves then co-wrote, directed, and edited their debut feature The Wild Man of the Navidad, a shoestring drive-in horror that premiered at the 2008 Tribeca Film Festival and later released internationally by IFC Films. The pairs sophomore effort, the Kim Henkel-scripted Boneboys, premiered at the 2012 Fantasia Film Festival. Graves is currently in post production on their third feature film, the dark western Red on Yell a, Kill a Fella.
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Past Screenings
Sundance, Park City, 2013 Cinema East Film Festival, 2013 Dallas Intl Film Festival, 2013 Cinema East Film Festival, 2013 Sundance, London, 2013 Little Rock Film Festival, 2013 Calgary Underground, 2013 Chicago Movies & Music, 2013 SXSW Film Festival, Austin, 2013 Rooftop Films Summer Series, 2013 DeadCenter Film Festival, 2013 Omaha Film Festival, 2013 Maryland Film Festival, 2013 Independent Film Fest., Boston, 2013 Sarasota Film Festival, 2013 Chicago Underground, 2013 Lighthouse Film Festival, NJ, 2013 Free State Film Festival, 2013 San Francisco IFF, 2013
Future Screenings
Northside Film Festival, Brooklyn, June 1920, 2014 Cool Connections Summer Shorts, Moscow, July 10, 2014 Guanajuato International Film Festival, July 2026th, 2014
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A r t i c l e s & I n t e r v i ews
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P a r k C i t y s Harmonic Convergence Va r i e t y M a g az i n e
Deborah Sprague, January 10, 2013 One of the more intriguing entries in the short film category is Black Metal, a crowd-funded, nine-minute foray into the extreme genre that gives the work its title. Director Kat Candler, who earned kudos in the same category last year for Hellion (which she is in the process of expanding to feature length), explores the extreme music scene from the p.o.v. of a singer trying to balance his family-man existence with the dark artsan effort made more difficult when a teenager shoots and kills a teacher, invoking his band as the motivation. I wasnt really a part of the black metal scene by any means, the Austin, Texas-based Candler says of the project. But I got to be fascinated by it, and by the dual existence people lead on and offstage. What mainstream attention it does get is negative and really off-base. The image thats out there just doesnt jive with reality. These are regular guys with families, kids, jobs theyre just sincerely committed to this music that outsiders find really scary.
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Direc tor Kat Candler on Her Sundance Selec ted Shor t Film, Black Metal Revolver Magazine
J. Bennett, January 15, 2013 The 2013 edition of the annual Sundance Film Festival, which is going down in Park City, Utah, starting on Thursday, will be extra grim and frostbitten this year with the inclusion of Black Metal, a 9-minute short directed by University of Texas film lecturer Kat Candler. The flick features music from Pallbearer, Horned Almighty, and Vesperian Sorrow, and follows the leader of a black metal band as he copes with a murder committed by one of his fans. We recently had a chance to chat with Candler. Read what she had to say below, and check out the trailer for Black Metal. Revolver: What was the inspiration for the Black Metal short? Kat Candler: I became pretty fascinated with this idea of artists guilt a few years ago: How an audience reacts to something an
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artist puts out into the world and how that reaction can come back to haunt them. I looked at A Clockwork Orange a lot and how it was pulled from theaters in England after a series of copy cats. The whole Judas Priest case. I did a bunch of research into bands, movies My stance is that responsibility lies with whoever holds the gun or the knife, but inevitably as a human being its hard to shake a feeling of guilt. I also felt like I hadnt seen the metal scene on screen in a more humanistic light. I wanted to see the theatrics onstage and then more importantly the reality offstage. Im much more interested in the human element of a metal scene thats very fear-based and horror-based and what those musicians look like at home, with their families, their children, going to the grocery store. I wrote a feature film that dealt with both of these ideas. It went through a bunch of drafts and will continue to go through a bunch more. With the short, I knew I wanted to make something last summer on the heels of our other short film, Hellion, and so I pulled the first act of the feature and whittled it down to a 13-page script. Thats where it started. Hopefully well have a bigger film later on when I get back to writing. Revolver: How closely does the finished film resemble your initial idea? Kat Candler: That 13-page script got shaved down to a 9-minute film. So we lost a few scenes that ultimately werent necessary. I have to say for the most part its definitely what was in my head. We were pretty detailed with how to shoot the show, the house I had a style and look I was going for. Luckily, I had a fantastic cinematographer, Andrew Droz Palermo, whos mostly shot music videos and a few horror films and a really great Production Designer, Yvonne Boudreaux. We all talked
a lot about the look early on. I sent them a bunch of videos of live shows. I loved that red drenched look. They pulled it off beautifully. I tried pretty hard to do my research and talk to a bunch of folks in the scene and go to black metal shows. I discovered some pretty fantastic bands in Austin and in Texas. Ultimately, I wanted to be pretty respectful and honest about how I put things on screen. I completely understand how guarded and cautious folks can be about their world. I get it. Id be the same way. Revolver: How were you first exposed to black metal as a music genre? Kat Candler: I was never a metal fan growing up. Even though I worked at the college radio station, was friends with the boys who ran the metal show, and went to support all my friends in bands every weekend. But it I was working at Book People in Austin when Lords of Chaos hit the bookshelves in the late 90s. People started passing it around and talking about the Norwegian Black Metal scene. At the time I was really into true crime reading Helter Skelter, In Cold Blood, Bully so my ears definitely perked up. With that said, I was aware of the Norwegian scene for a while. But not until several years ago did I really get into metal. My husband, whos a total music nerd, started buying all kinds of records, books and pushed it all on me. I finally fell in love with heavy metal. The more I got into it, the more the idea of bringing it to a screen materialized. But to be perfectly honest, Im more of a death-metal, thrash-metal kind of girl.
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about a year. I wanted to shoot something last summer so decided to create a short out of the first act of the feature script. I wrote many drafts of that little 13-page short. Then in July of 2012 we shot for five days. Post-production lasted up until about mid-December. Indie Filmmaking: How did you finance your film? Kat Candler: We financed through crowd funding, private equity and grants. Indie Filmmaking: What was the most challenging part of the filmmaking process and how did you overcome it? Kat Candler: I think the most challenging part (which was also the most fun part) was the research in trying to get the world right-- especially one thats pretty foreign to me. Its a lot of time having coffee with folks in the metal community, interviewing them, watching concert footage, reading interviews, books, going to rock shows trying to immerse yourself in a world so you can be as authentic and respectful on screen as possible. Indie Filmmaking: Tell us about your experience getting into Sundance. Kat Candler: We played our short film, Hellion, at Sundance in 2012. We werent expecting to get in at all so it was a complete and utter surprise and really out of the blue when we got the call. This year, we knew when the calls came and so for about a week or two leading up I was physically ill with anticipation. No lie. My husband almost made me go to the doctor he was so worried. Its crazy the pressure we put on ourselves. I had just gotten off a plane to head to my folks house when I got the call. I screamed. I cried. My dad was sitting next to me and I could tell how proud he was. Thats gold. Indie Filmmaking: If you had to make the film all over again, would you do anything different?
Kat Candler: Nope. I had an amazing crew and a fantastic cast. I wouldnt have gained all the little lessons and mistakes and knowledge I learned without going through the process the way we did. With warts, flaws and all, it was magical. Indie Filmmaking: Whats next for your film? Kat Candler: Well do the festival circuit and Ill go back to the feature script with fresh eyes. I hope to make that after we make the feature version of Hellion this year. Indie Filmmaking: Do you have distribution? If so, when and how can people see it and if not, what are your hopes for the film? Kat Candler: We dont have distribution at this point. But itll be available during the ten days of Sundance through Sundances Screening Room on Youtube. Indie Filmmaking: Can you provide any advice to other filmmakers who dream of getting their films made and into Sundance? Kat Candler: Tell unique stories and create characters weve never seen on screen before.
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Additional Photos
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