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Wednesday, April 15, 2009

Filed under: CamerasDistributionProduction

April Showers website a treasure of information

Scott Simmons | 04/15

Film’s online resources are great for those interesed in independent filmmaking

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I was looking at some of the films coming to our local film festival, the Nashville Film Festival, (which I won’t be attending much since they scheduled most of it the same week as NAB!) and I came across a film screening this Saturday called April Showers. It’s not a light little comedy but rather a drama about a Columbine-like school shooting. The synopsis from the film’s website:

From writer/director, Andrew Robinson, a survivor of the Columbine High School tragedy, comes April Showers a dramatized retelling of what it was like to be a survivor in the midst of the nation’s largest school shootings. Based largely on actual events, April Showers follows the story of Sean Ryan (Kelly Blatz, Prom Night) as he and fellow survivors attempt to make sense of the horrors they’ve just witnessed and, for Sean, coping with the loss of his friend April (Ellen Woglom, Viva Laughlin).

Besides looking like an important film with very topical subject matter, one other thing that makes this movie worth a blog post are many of the resources available on the film’s official website.

First I have to be honest and admit that one thing that intrigued me about the movie was the fact that it features Tom Arnold in a dramatic role. I don’t know why but I’ve always liked him in that capacity.

But more than that the website is chronicling the film’s MPAA rating of R - restricted. There has been a long standing debate on the MPAA, their secrecy and their ratings practices. The ratings board has received a lot of criticism over the years about what seems to be their soft on violence but hard on sex and nudity approach to film ratings. Movies stuck with an NC-17 (and often an R) rating often have less chance at the box office as it limits the audience who can see the movie, in the case of an R rating, and the theaters that will carry it, in the case of NC-17. There’s even a great documentary about the subject called This Film Is Not Yet Rated that is an “exposé about the American movie ratings board.”

Andrew Robinson, the film’s writer and director, has described why he chose to make this movie about such sensitive subject matter as the Columbine shootings. Being a survivor of that day he certainly has a unique perspective on the event. He has said that, among other things, he wants the film to “open a dialog among teens and adults alike about any of the issues touched upon in the film.” Ultimately, that’s what any good film should do; spark discussion and possibly drive someone to action. With that in mind, it would make sense that a film like April Showers should be seen by as many people as possible, especially teens in high school as they are affected by the film’s subject matter more than anyone else. Hence the director’s outrage that the movie received an R rating from the MPAA. In an instant that rating limited the audience. Not so much in that it will keep teens from seeing the movie in the theater (which it will) but it will limit how teachers and educators could show the film to students since many schools have strict policies against showing R-rated films. And I would guess that even for teachers to encourage their students to go to the theater to see an R-rated film is a slippery slope that many will not want to venture down.

This R-rating and the filmmakers’ response to that R-rating has been very well documented on the April Showers website.

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