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The music drama From The Realm Of The Shadow fired the imaginations of several major directors and producers around the world even before its release on Naxos Records. Other artists will no doubt emerge now that the work is getting international exposure. So far, there are three people actively interested in producing Shadow. Micha Hendel is a director at the Washington National Opera and has been promoting the idea of staging Shadow with major opera companies worldwide since 1998. David Taylor is the founder and principal choreographer of the David Taylor Dance Theatre, Colorado's premiere contemporary dance company. Emmerich Oross is a Hungarian film director who has developed an extensive proposal for making Shadow a feature-length film. More information on all three of them appear below. As more creative directors take an interest in producing Shadow, their proposals will appear in this section as well. If anyone reading their material is interested in developing grants or investing in any of these projects, the directors themselves can be reached directly at the website and e-mail addresses at the end of each of their sections.
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January 16, 2001
I first had the privilege of hearing Chris Mohr’s
composition From The Realm Of The Shadow in a sound studio in
1998. I was struck by the power of the work. The battles between the light and dark forces inherent in the
spirit world are approached in an appealing, unique and unusual way. Because of
the rhythmic force and power of the music, the work lends itself to a comparably
powerful dance, music and multi-media production. As a choreographer I have
always been attracted to music and subject matter fo this kind. Because of the
powerful nature of the composition,
I’m hoping that some time in the future the opportunity will present itself for
my talents to combine with those of the composer to create something very
special in the performing arts. Choreographing this work, or part of this work,
would be a very exciting project. I am more than happy to lend my full support,
artistically and otherwise, to From The Realm Of The Shadow.
-- David Taylor, Artistic
director of the David Taylor Dance Theater, Colorado
If you are interested in offering support for
David Taylor and a possible dance production of
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August 1, 2000
Chris Mohr’s life-long confrontation with his own
“shadow” has taken the form of a grand multi-media event. For all its
new-age and psychological content, both dramatically and musically, it falls
into the category of the classical Rite of Passage. As in mythology, the hero’s
journey represents the experience of society, while the soul struggles to accept
the brutal nature of the human experience. In this case the hero is on a journey
of self-exploration following a traumatic gang-rape. Thus, From The Realm
of The Shadow is a timeless ritual seen from a contemporary perspective.
It is rare nowadays to encounter a new drama that dares to deal with taboo
issues. I am amazed by the amount of courage displayed in its creation.
As a director I am fascinated by the abstract
“shadowscape” Chris Mohr has depicted. His music rises beyond the forms and
styles he employs and strikes true originality. It takes the listener on a
journey from the most primitive to the sublime. The lack of words, but the
unfolding of riveting drama challenges the listener’s imagination to envision
his own fantasy “staging.” My own preoccupation with the emotional effects of
light, shadow, color, movement and sound responds to Chris’s magical hints on an
instinctive level using stage technology that points towards the future.
Micha Hendel, Assistant Director, Washington
National Opera
If you are interested in offering support for
Micha Hendel's proposal to stage ______________________________________________________________________
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Hollywood has become a victim of its own greed,
says Ismail Merchant, who produced the Academy Award-nominated Howard's End.
Merchant complained that Hollywood focuses too much on violence and sex because
of concerns over profits. "If we make a film for $2 million, it doesn't have to
make $100 million. If it makes $4 million or $2.5 million or $2 million, I'm
happy,'' Merchant said at a recent screening. Introduction Raising money for a feature film version of From The Realm Of The Shadow has been a lifelong dream of its composer. Hungarian film director Emmerich Oross has had a lifelong dream of a feature-length film where not a single word is uttered or sung. Together they hope to see such a project come to fruition. A formal Private Placement Memorandum has been developed, with details about a budget, etc., and the possibility of selling shares to investors. Another possibility, not fully explored here, is receiving grants and donations to bring this project to light. Below are excerpts from the Private Placement Memorandum. For more information contact the composer at chrismohr@msn.com
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About the Investment
Feature films are widely held
to be a high-risk investment, and it is common knowledge in the film industry
that nine of ten of the feature films produced by major studios lose money. How,
then, can a small, independent production company expect to compete with the
likes of Universal and Paramount Studios?
With the production and distribution
of
From The Realm Of The Shadow, Classical Guide Inc. will employ
several methods to ensure the film's profitability. Most importantly, we will
contain the production budget at $1,712,000, primarily using talent from Riga,
Latvia, and shooting most scenes in Colorado, Utah and Central America, where
location expenses will be minimized. This proposed budget is enough to guarantee
the quality of the film and to fully capitalize efforts to market it. At the
same time, it represents a mere 6% of the typical feature film production budget
for a major studio, which in 1992 averaged $29 million (Variety, 3/13/93).
Herein lies the key to profitability: high quality, low budget films can
definitely make money, though they may not be the blockbusters the studios need
to subsidize enormous losses. Movies such as The Graduate, Easy
Rider and Friday the 13th have all successfully employed this
concept, earning up to 100 times their production budgets from theater rentals
alone (Russo, 1989).
The only remaining issue, given a low
budget, will be the quality of the film--which in this case is largely a
function of the quality of the script and music and the expertise of the
director. These are three aspects of the proposed project which we find
especially promising. The music and dramatic outline for From The Realm Of
The Shadow have been created by Christopher Mohr, a former editor at a
major theater publishing house, publisher of a major classical music magazine,
and author of two highly successful musicals. He has conducted excerpts from
Shadow
with several orchestras including the Colorado Symphony, and has already
recorded the entire work with the internationally acclaimed and extensively
recorded National Symphony Orchestra and National Choir of Ukraine. Naxos
Records has released the entire recording on two CDs (Naxos American
Classics 8.559089-90). Director Emmerich Oross has produced and/or directed
dozens of feature and documentary films in Hungary and Hollywood. Listed in the
International Guide to Film Directors, he was dubbed a true ``Soldier of the
Cinema'' by the Rocky Mountain News in November 1992. Further, adequate funds
have been budgeted to secure the services of a talented cinematographer and film
editor.
We are seeking to raise $1.712
million in capital. We intend to complete the film within twelve months of the
receipt of start-up funds; to complete distribution agreements within 18 to 24
months of the receipt of funds, and to fully reimburse investors within 36
months of the receipt of funds.
Thereafter, Classical Guide Inc. and investors shall share the net profits from
the film and related products, including a documentary of ``The Making of
Shadow''.
Up to 49% of the interest in the film
and related products will be sold under the auspices of this $1.712 million
solicitation, so that each percentage point of ownership is ascribed at a value
of $35,150. Initially, 100% of net revenues from the film and related products
will be used to reimburse investors for their capital expenditures. Once this
has been accomplished, profits will be split as follows: 49% to investors and
51% to Classical Guide Inc. and its contractors. Estimates of projected return
on investment during to 48 months from project start-up are anywhere from
$750,000 to $3.49 million, depending on the success of the film in domestic and
foreign markets. Additional returns could be realized from the documentary;
however, any estimates were deemed too speculative to include in our
projections). These figures represent rates of return from 58% at the low end to
203% at the top of the scale. A fully realistic goal is to generate $800,000 in
net revenue to investors, after repayment of capital, or a 46.5% return on
investment in 42 to 48 months from the film alone. Break-even is estimated at
$7,735,000 in domestic box office gross. While these rates may seem modest for a high risk investment, we contend that our strategy of containing costs and aggressively pursuing various markets has greatly lessened the degree of risk traditionally associated with filmmaking, so that investors appear unlikely to suffer any losses. Further, given the success of the film in theatrical markets, additional profits should be realized from the soundtrack, documentary and video markets.
The primary objectives of the proposed film
project are:
Plot Description
From The Realm Of The Shadow
is a two-hour-and-ten-minute long film based on the music drama of the same
title by Christopher Mohr. When the composer was nineteen years old, he was
invited to join six other men in a gang-rape. Unable to directly resist them, he
blurted out, ``Hold on, you guys. Before we do this, she needs a drink of water
first.'' Amazingly, the other men allowed him to walk her out of the room to the
safety of the drinking fountain down the hall. As the composer recalls,
``Afterwards, I was very confused. I had done the right thing, but it took a
supreme effort of will not to join in. I confronted for the first time my own `shadow.'
Then I had recurring dreams of violent tribal rituals, all fully staged,
orchestrated and sung. I swore that if I were to go ahead with composing such an
opera, I would find out the truth about what I had experienced--or I would give
up and throw the entire project away. That was the beginning of a long journey
of inner exploration.''
From The Realm Of The Shadow
has a rape scene in it, but it is not ``about'' rape and its aftermath. It is
about the truth of who we are, which can reveal itself even in our darkest
despair, our bitterest cynicism, our deepest wounds. It is the unfolding journey
of healing and the discovery of that peace which lies at the heart of even the
most reprehensible acts.
The are many characters in
From The Realm Of The Shadow, but a single consciousness pervades
all of them. The shadowscape is populated with many warring factions, but all of
them are partial, and all of them eventually die into that which ius always
whole. Where is The Realm Of The Shadow? It is the hiding place of any
experience we reject, any part of ourselves we are afraid to look at. What a
glorious surprise to discover that in The Realm Of The Shadow we hide
not only our darkest impulses but a Love which surpasses all understanding.
From The Realm Of The Shadow
has profound philosophical and metaphysical underpinnings, but its message is
communicated in the simple language of pure emotion. None of the characters
speaks a single word; all sing in ``vocalise'' style, conveying their story
through facial expressions and movement. The scenes, set in the vast open spaces
of mountains, deserts and perhaps the ruins of an ancient jungle civilization,
will be a blend of the natural and the surrealistic, but always visually
gripping.
The story line is very simple. The
movie opens in almost total darkness and quiet, amid a sea of stars. A single
star descends from the firmament, breaking into seven rays of light, bringing to
life two choruses of dancers. At first they dance in perfect harmony together,
but then one chorus, afraid of the intensity of the others' dancing, pushes
their partners into the shadows. Then, the first chorus sings of their sense of
isolation. A rigid Patriarch emerges, forcing them into lock-step dance
movements. Outraged, the second chorus bursts from the shadows, attacking the
members of the first chorus. An especially violent male dancer, Jabez, emerges
from this chorus, and leads the others in a gang rape of one of the first chorus
members, Camilla.
Alone onstage, Camilla is in shock.
Her friends regroup and return to her, but instead of offering her help or
compassion, they angrily reject her. Only her best friend Angela remains with
her. In the comforting arms of her friend, Camilla screams in anguish. Looking
down at her belly, she feels the stirring of life.
The camera fades into the womb, where
three radiantly smiling angels (all young, and floating through clouds on ice
skates) dance around an attractive red light. One of the three is particularly
drawn to this energy, and begins to incarnate inside Camilla's womb. We see him
growing to full term as the visuals alternate between literal pictures of
fetuses and symbolic imagery of the Eden-like womb environment.
Finally, it's time for Matthew to be
born. His loving angelic friends wave goodbye and fade away. What begins as
ecstatic contractions amid images of rushing water and traveling down
magnificent desert canyons soon becomes a battle with his mother Camilla. She
does not want this child, and is fighting the contractions of labor with all her
might. The imagery becomes nightmarish, even hellish, as memories of the rape
haunt Camilla and the violent chorus members descend on Matthew dressed as
demons. Camilla and Matthew nearly die during the birth, but at last Matthew
emerges, screaming his lungs out. Camilla turns her head away as Angels lifts
the newborn into the polluted air.
In the second act, Matthew is a
thirteen year old boy. In his sleep, the angelic beings return to him, skating
and dancing around him, showering him with love and blessings. He wakes up and
tries to play with his miserably depressed mother, who eventually slaps him and
sends him away. Matthew can't understand why his mother always rejects him.
Alone with her thoughts, Camilla feels a deep sadness at her inability to love
her son. Her friend Angela returns, and in the safety of abiding friendship she
is finally able to experience love. Matthew, however, feels completely abandoned
by the world. He cries out in despair, and his angel friends return to him,
revealing to him his mother's unhappy history, and his own origins. He learns
compassion, and in an all-embracing vision dissolves into the white light of
pure divine love.
In the final act, we return to the
two choruses. The repressive first chorus is now trapped by the elaborate
defenses it has erected against their enemies; the Patriarch is old, weary,
despairing and almost immobile. Matthew enters in answer to their plea for help,
and invites his angel friends among them. They shower the Patriarch with
healing. Matthew reaches out his hand; the Patriarch can walk freely again. The
entire first chorus bursts into celebration at their new-found freedom, and
before long they even welcome Camilla and Angela back into their company. Their
activities eventually rouse their enemies--the second chorus--to life.
An aging Jabez, now elaborately
costumed with a mask, feathers and totemic symbols, makes threatening gestures
to Matthew, but Matthew laughingly imitates him. Jabez decides to join in the
fun, and soon the second chorus leaps into several wildly celebratory dances.
Matthew is beloved by both choruses now, but they still hate each other. Jealous
of Matthew's attentions to the second chorus, the Patriarch rearms the first
chorus, and an all-out war erupts. As Matthew looks on from the sidelines, Jabez
and the Patriarch are locked in mortal combat. The angel of death appears before
Matthew, calmly singing above the fray. Matthew walks in between the two men
just as both of them are lunging at each other with their spears.
As Matthew dies, his angels return
one last time. But rather than carrying him to heaven, they walk into his heart
and die with him. His mother Camilla holds Matthew's dead body and sings a brief
song of pure grief. One of the young women who had danced for Matthew dances
wildly around the funeral pyre, alternating between burning grief, ecstasy and
denial. Images of the Hindu flames of purification merge with the Christian
vision of the flames of hell, as the music combines Indian raga styles with
European Renaissance polyphony. When Matthew's body is reduced to ashes, Angela
steps forward, now as radiant as an angel. A solo flute intones a variation of
Camilla's song of grief, transforming it into a melody of compassion. The two
choruses shared only their love of Matthew. Now, in their grief at his loss,
nothing separates them. Angela begins to sing a divine lullaby and farewell, and
other grieving women join in. The solo flute returns one last time, now
transforming Camilla's melody into one of purest love.
The members of the first chorus
enfold the members of the second chorus in their robes. A mist rolls in, and the
bodies disappear beneath it. Seven rays of light rise from the mists, merging
into a single point of white light. The stars come out, and the point of light
rises slowly into the firmament as the solo soprano and chorus sing an
all-embracing five-octave chord. The music fades into silence. Eternal Rest |
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Notes On The Music
The music drama
From The Realm Of The Shadow took 20 years to compose, from 1975
to 1995. The music is highly melodious, rhythmically invigorating and
emotionally evocative throughout, and composed in styles inspired by traditions
including Medieval, Renaissance, Baroque, Classical, Romantic, post-Romantic,
early 20th century, microtonal, Middle Eastern, Eastern Indian, Balinese, folk,
rock and jazz. Some of these styles appear simultaneously, in a kind of
cross-cultural counterpoint.
The music was scored for an enormous array of
instruments from around the world: symphony orchestra, symphonic choir, Balinese
monkey-chanters, solo singers, oud, sitar, tamboura, Tibetan bells, Haitian
voodoo drums, Brazilian percussion instruments, viola da gamba, piano, celesta,
classical and folk harps, Ukrainian folk instruments, pipe organ, electric and
acoustic guitars, and a bank of synthesizers.
There is not a single word in this music drama;
the universal language of pure emotion is sung in ``vocalise'' style throughout.
The three choirs: rigidly classical, violently percussive, and etherically
angelic, present radically different modes of singing.
Much of the original musical inspiration,
especially the angelic choirs, are simply transcriptions of music first heard in
the dream state. Over the years, other sections of the music were composed on
Italian trains and in Paris subways, in India and Nepal, in the Florida Keys,
atop cliffs and mountains in Colorado and Sedona, Arizona, while washing dishes,
and even in the same Venetian cafe where Wagner composed some of Tristan und
Isolde.
Most of the recording was done with the National
Symphony Orchestra and Choir of Ukraine in Kiev during -30o weather from
December 21-25, 1997. Conductor Theodore Kuchar has recorded dozens of CDs with
this orchestra, and even won the Record of the Year Award for his recording of
Lyatoshynsky symphonies with this orchestra. Ukrainians also have an abundance
of classically trained folk musicians. This is where I found the sopilkas
(wooden flutes), tsymbaly (hammered dulcimer), accordion and bandura (folk
harp). Two members of an internationally respected jazz saxophone quartet and
Ukraine's best-known jazz singer are also to be found on this recording. The
recording process was completed in America, with members of the New York
Festival of Microtonal Music playing cello and bassoon, Neil Haverstick playing
34-note-to-the-octave oud (a middle Eastern guitar-like instrument), a bank of
synthesizers, Indian tambouras (drone instruments), sitar, Tibetan bells,
Mexican rainstick, Brazilian and Haitian percussion instruments, and more solo
singers. Many listeners have commented on the extraordinary ranges of the singers. The entire bass section of the National Choir of Ukraine routinely drops to a low C and even the B below low C, a feat unattainable by any other choir I know of. The solo sopranos regularly inhabit the realm above high C; one soprano manages to sing the B above high C, soaring above the final chord of the final act. To our knowledge, this is the highest note ever sung in any opera or oratorio, yet it is sung tastefully and is barely audible in the final mix. The extreme vocal highs and lows greatly widen the embrace of the music, and the stratospheric soprano notes almost have the effect of leaving the physical realm behind entirely. After all, Mozart's last words were, ``Silence! Silence! Now Hofer is taking her high B-flat.'' Josepha Hofer, who created the role of the Queen of the Night in Mozart's The Magic Flute only months earlier, was indeed capable of singing the B-flat above high C. The final moment of From The Realm Of The Shadow takes our soprano a half-step higher still, while the basses sing the B five octaves below her. Like Mozart, Shadow leaves this earth on a very, very high note.
From The Realm Of The Shadow
tells the story of a woman's rape and the long journey of healing which is
undergone by her and everyone around her. More broadly, it is a multitextured
work with many levels of political, psychological and spiritual implications.
Politically, the rape occurs in the context of a rigid, repressive patriarchy.
Though the two choruses are at war with one another and exhibit drastically
different behaviors, both the repressive, respectable society and the violent
gang are dominated by strong men, and both are deaf to the women who are a part
of the respective groups. Part of the healing process is a breakdown of the
male-dominated political systems which made the rape possible in the first
place.
Psychologically, the rape can be seen as a
consequence of repressed libido, a desperate attempt to make contact in a world
where violence is the only way to be seen. The rape is an expression of rage as
much as it is a sexual outlet. The healing begins when consciousness allows its
own pain and anguish to surface. Thus, the ``shadow,'' that which we
reject in ourselves, is allowed to be seen. As Carl Jung says, to confront one's
own shadow is to see the light. Shadow's psychological exploration takes
us to what many consider the bedrock of a host of psychological ailments: the
birth trauma itself.
All of these observations and processes occur in
the broadest spiritual context. In the beginning there is stillness and peace,
represented by silence and a vast field of stars. This peace reveals itself
between acts; it is reflected in the angelic singing which permeates much of the
music; it is into this peace that everything resolves itself in the end. The
polarities of desire and aversion and all the battling parts of a shattered
spirit all die into this all-embracing peace. Thus, the subconscious and the
conscious, the worlds of metaphor and literal reality, the shadow and the light,
are all healed as they are brought into pure stillness. No single religious
tradition can claim a monopoly on this peace. The Catholics begin their funeral
services with the words, ``Requiem Aeternam'' (Eternal Rest). In the Book of
Colossians it says, ``Let the peace of God rule in your hearts, and be
thankful.'' In the Hindu tradition, the Bhagavad-G exhorts, ``He whose mind is
perfectly tranquil, to such a one comes supreme bliss.'' The Buddhist tradition
of meditation offers a path away from suffering and into nirvana. The Hebrew
psalms sing, ``Be still and know that I am God,'' and ``In peace is My dwelling
place.'' The great Muslim teacher yaz al-Bist wrote, ``All this turmoil and
noise and movement and desire is outside the veil; within the veil is silence
and calm and rest.''
Imagery and symbology from many major religions
will no doubt be woven into the visual fabric of the film, all in support of the
recognition of this indescribable peace. But more important than religious
symbols will be the vastness of the stage itself. Outdoor film sequences will
provide the backdrop for most of the movie, with the action of the characters
skillfully merged in a studio. The first act will take place in a tangled jungle
clearing near the ocean, with the ruins of a shattered ancient civilization as
the setting. The birth scene will begin by the ocean and then go into vast caves
and float through the dramatic, narrow canyons of Utah. The second act will take
place in the Colorado Rockies; as the characters deepen in their emotional
connection to one another, they will find themselves in meadows surrounded by
wildflowers in riotous bloom; as Matthew has his awakening, he soars with his
angel friends to the rocky summits. The third act takes place in the deserts of
Utah and Arizona, beginning with bleak sand dunes and ending with magnificent
red rock formations of all kinds. There will be a vastness and openness to all
of these landscapes that will greatly enhance the spiritual underpinnings of the
work, while at the same time keeping the audience's eyes fascinated with the
sheer splendor of the settings.
The scouting of locations has already begun.
Composer Chris Mohr has hiked up 450 mountains in his life, most in Colorado; he
has also hiked through an incredible variety of desert terrains over the years,
and can recommend countless possible locales. Principal photography of the
outdoor settings can take place almost any time in the desert and jungles; the
mountain scenery will have to be photographed in early to mid-July to capture
the beauty of acres of wildflowers in full bloom.
Once the outdoor settings are shot, the next step
is to fly to Riga, Latvia, to work with the cast in the studio there. Shooting
will span eight weeks' time. Post-production (editing, dubbing, synchronizing
sound to film, etc.) will require 12 weeks.
Concurrent with the production of
From The Realm Of The Shadow will be the shooting of a video
documentary, The Making of From The Realm OF The Shadow, which
will detail the process of independent film production from preproduction and
financing through distribution and opening night reactions.
In the meantime, Christopher Mohr has not only
composed the music but has already recorded and mastered the soundtrack with the
world-renowned National Symphony Orchestra of Ukraine and National Choir of
Ukraine, an ensemble which has made over 40 international commercial recordings
in the 1990s alone. Naxos Records now has From The Realm Of The Shadow
in its American Classics series (8.559089-90).
Director and Co-Producer Emmerich Oross has in
excess of 30 years' experience in international documentary, television and
motion picture direction, as well as screenplay writing. In his native Hungary,
he served as assistant director in 30 feature films at Mafilm, Hungary's major
film production studio, and freelanced for the Hungarian TV Studios, where he
directed 17 feature and documentary films. An artistic and political refugee, he
fled Hungary and arrived in Los Angeles under political asylum. There he was a
writer and script doctor for fifteen years. During this period, he also directed
the Puccini opera Madama Butterfly, for worldwide television release,
and wrote the original screenplay for To Kill A Stranger, a major motion
picture starring Donald Pleasance, Dean Stockwell and Aldo Ray. He was awarded
and completed a one-year fellowship as an observer at the director's unit of the
Actor's Studio in Los Angeles. Since relocating to Denver in 1987, he has worked
as the Owner and President of 920
Enterprises, writing, producing and directing TV commercials and industrial and
educational films. In 1994, he completed the documentary film Vance
Kirkland's Visual Language, a one-hour overview of the life and art of
mid-twentieth century painter Vance Kirkland. Presently, he is working on a
series of documentary films on the operas of Richard Wagner.
Composer and Storywriter Christopher Mohr
published the musical Orphans in Candyland in 1977 and the musical
Ducktails and Bobbysox in 1979. His plays have been produced
in all 50 states, all ten Canadian provinces, and dozens of foreign countries,
including Iran months before the fall of the Shah. In 1980, a collection of his
solo piano music was published, and in 1987, his first album, August Light, was
broadcast on dozens of classical radio stations nationwide to rave reviews. He
has been working on From The Realm Of The Shadow
since 1975, completing the recording in July of 1998 and seeing its release in
March of 2001. He conducted excerpts of this work in 1991 with the Colorado
Symphony Orchestra in one of their scheduled concerts, and in 1994 was chosen by
the CSO's composer-in-residence Jon Deak to have other excerpts featured in a
CSO-sponsored chamber concert. Choral and instrumental excerpts from this work
have already been performed by groups in Denver, Montana and Toronto. Mohr was
the editor and co-publisher of On The Air Magazine, a classical music
radio magazine serving twelve classical stations nationwide, from 1988 to 1997.
He was the opera host on KVOD Radio in Denver for twelve years.
The principal personnel on the film (Oross and
Mohr) bring an array of management credentials to the project. In particular,
Oross has produced films with budgets in excess of $1 million. Mohr's two
musical plays (Orphans in Candyland and Ducktails and Bobbysox
) have been produced over 1000 times; the total budgets of these productions
have by now gone into the tens of millions of dollars. In spite of the massive
variety of sounds and instruments involved in the recording of Shadow,
Mohr managed to keep the total recording costs, including scoring, writing out
of parts, travel, musicians' salaries, the services of an internationally
renowned conductor, singers who have graced the Met stage in New York as
soloists, famous jazz musicians, some of New York's top musicians, and hundreds
of hours in one of Colorado's state-of-the-art recording studios, under $30,000,
a feat considered impossible by everyone who first looked at this project.
Director Emmerich Oross has similar abilities to
stretch budgets. While the total budget for this film is under $2 million, it
will be possible to make a film that looks like it cost $10 million. Oross's
connections in Eastern Europe make this possible. He has already met with the
Mayor of Riga in Latvia, as well as choreographers, skaters, film studio
managers and others, and all are ready to put their world-class talent and
equipment behind this project, all at a small fraction of the cost of a similar
production in the U.S. or western Europe.
If you are interested in offering grants or in
investing in Emmerich Oross's proposal to make a feature film of From
The Realm of The Shadow, contact him in Hungary at
epoross@matavnet.hu
For the past decade, the motion picture industry
has experienced an increasing demand for feature films which is not being fully
satisfied. According to Jack Valenti, President of the Motion Pictures
Association of America, in 1992, the film industry generated $4.87 billion in
sales from domestic theatrical releases alone (Variety, 3/13/93). The position
of filmmakers, producers and distributors has been further strengthened by
active competition for films by new methods of distribution (home video of
[prerecorded videocassettes and discs), and by way of worldwide syndicated
television, pay television, and other ancillary markets. A whole new market is
about to be created to films, especially those with sweeping,
classically-oriented soundtracks, with the advent of digital television. The
digital television revolution will be well underway as Shadow
enters the marketplace. In the early and mid-80s, the arrival of compact discs
gave a strong, if temporary, boost to classical music sales from people wanting
big symphonic sounds to show off with their new CD players. We predict that
From The Realm Of The Shadow will be of similar interest to people with
new digital TV units.
Rising box office prices and the increasing share
of the worldwide market being captured by American films also have contributed
to a favorable market for new productions. According to John Nasbitt (1990) in
Megatrends, American films capture about 50% of the French, Danish, Dutch
and Italian markets, 60% of the German and 80% of the British market. The
largest market for Hollywood movies outside of the United States is Japan.
In this climate, independent filmmakers have
emerged as the pre-eminent makers of films worldwide, with the big Hollywood
studios concentrating on ``blockbuster'' films with budgets of $35 million or
more. (Independent filmmakers, once viewed as high-risk outsiders, now see their
share of the film market increasing dramatically. In the first three months of
1993, independent features accounted for 50 of 74 film starts in the U.S.
(Variety, 3/13/93).
Generally, the markets which will be most
aggressively pursued in the case of Shadow and its related products are
theatrical release, home video sales, syndicated and pay television. To the
extent possible, the film and television rights will be fractionalized, or sold
independently, a strategy commonly used to maximize revenues. While some
distributors offer package deals, these inevitably end up costing the producer
more than the fractionalization of rights. Potential revenues from these sources
is discussed in the ensuing sections.
John Russo (1989) states in Making Movies that
...``theatrical rentals are only one source of movie income and may turn out to
be the least important source. Many movies earn many times more from ancillary
markets, such as foreign sales, TV network sales, pay TV and home video.''
Nevertheless, theatrical rentals provide a good
general index of a film's fiscal success. According to Variety (March 22, 1993),
the five "art house'' heavyweights of the late eighties and early nineties
were:
The Crying Game
(Miramax, 1992). Domestic box office sales of this film--which had a $5
million budget Marketing Strategy
We will use
three major marketing strategies:
If you are interested in offering support for
Emmerich Oross'
proposal to stage
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[Liner Notes] [Credits/Production] [About The Artists] [Reviews] [Producers' Dreams] [Audio & Video Clips]
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