Public Access

This article is about the 1993 film. For the mass media, see public-access television.
Public Access

Film poster
Directed by Bryan Singer
Produced by Kenneth Kokin
Written by Bryan Singer
Christopher McQuarrie
Michael Feit Dougan
Music by John Ottman
Cinematography Bruce Douglas Johnson
Edited by John Ottman
Production
company
Occidental Studios
Cinemabeam
Release dates
January 1993 (1993-01)
Running time
90 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Budget US$250,000

Public Access is a 1993 American drama film directed by Bryan Singer in his feature film debut. Singer also wrote the screenplay with Christopher McQuarrie and Michael Feit Dougan. The film was shot in 18 days for US$250,000. It was screened at the 1993 Sundance Film Festival, where it was a joint winner of the Grand Jury Prize. Critics praised the technical direction of Public Access but did not lend similar praise to the film's story and the characters.

Plot

A clean-cut drifter ends up in a small town called Brewster. Getting wind of the local public-access television cable TV station, the man decides to host his own show called Our Town, which becomes a focal point for town citizens to call in and voice their problems anonymously. However, things start to get ugly and tensions rise for the show, which begins to elevate the man's signature catchphrase "What's wrong with Brewster?" into an entirely new subject for the people of Brewster, when the town becomes embroiled in a mess it has created, driven by a man whose intentions might be far more sinister than he appears to be.[1]

Cast

Ron Marquette  … Whiley Pritcher
Dina Brooks  … Rachel
Burt Williams  … Bob Hodges
Larry Maxwell  … Jeff Abernathy
Charles Kavanaugh  … Mayor Breyer
Brandon Boyce  … Kevin Havey
         
Margaret Kerry  … Marge
Randall Slavin  … Pudd
Liz Dilts  … Lisa
Mark Norling  … Lyle Macintosh
Jason Varlance  … Tray

Production

Bryan Singer, Christopher McQuarrie, and Michael Feit Dougan wrote the screenplay for Public Access. Singer directed the screenplay in 1992 on a budget of $250,000 and with a schedule of 18 days.[2] The crew used leftover film stock from Dracula and Hoffa.[3] The director recalled the production experience, "Chris and I look at that film and wince a little. Part of our reaction is, 'Wow, look what we did then. It was so small and undeveloped.' Part of it is reliving the circumstances of the days we filmed each scene. This production was fraught with 100 times more turmoil than Usual Suspects—every day was a crisis. And then we also feel very nostalgic about it." Singer compared Public Access's themes to his follow-up film The Usual Suspects, "The two films are similar in the notion of things not always being what they seem. They're also about audiences' projections on a stranger. In many ways, Verbal in The Usual Suspects is an extension of Whiley, by being a foil for our projections. Both films are about telling stories and provoking, which segues into my style—using sound and images and music to create tension."[2]

Reception

When Public Access screened at the 1993 Sundance Film Festival, it was one of the two films to win the Grand Jury Prize in dramatic competition, sharing the award with Ruby in Paradise.[4] It also screened at the 1993 Florida Film Festival and won the Audience Award for best feature film.[5] Despite the recognition, the film did not secure a theatrical distributor.[6]

Variety called Public Access a "technically proficient" film considering its small budget and schedule. The trade paper observed, "What Singer and his co-scenarists seem to be getting at is a critique of Reagan-era greed, hypocrisy and antihumanism, as well as a commentary on the power of the media and its ability to distract the public from issues with attractive surfaces." It summarized, "This very low-budget study of malaise lurking beneath the tranquil surface of a typical small American town is serious-minded and bounces around some provocative ideas, but is vague about important matters as key story points, motivation and overriding theme."[7] Newsweek wrote, "The 27-year-old Singer's a real talent, but the moody 'Public Access' needed a stronger script. After an intriguing buildup, in which a mysterious stranger enters a small town and stirs up trouble on public-access TV, the story self-destructs."[8]

Time Out Film Guide described Public Access as "this chilly little parable [that] taps into the poisonous well-springs of the middle-American psyche". The magazine reviewed, "The film is overly measured, with lots of slow zooms and slow motion (even the actors seem to be on go-slow), but it's engrossing, and Marquette [who plays Whiley Pritcher] is a genuinely scary customer, a dry-cleaned all-American sociopath."[9] In contrast, The Hollywood Reporter's Henry Sheehan wrote of Public Access as "a virtuosically stylish independent feature that is as full of flourishes as it is devoid of meaning". Sheehan found the film "visually... ingenious" and that the soundtrack had "an inventive sophistication". Despite the highlights, he felt that Public Access's characters were "mere exigencies" and that the film could be "in the service of a more coherent or articulate story".[10]

References

  1. Singer, Bryan (Director) (1993). Public Access (Motion picture). United States: Cinemabeam.
  2. 1 2 Hornaday, Ann (November 17, 1995). "From small films to big time: Bryan Singer is latest fast-track director". Austin American-Statesman.
  3. Turan, Kenneth (February 1, 1993). "Spreading the Wealth at Sundance Movies". Los Angeles Times.
  4. "Festival History Part 1 (1985–1996)" (PDF). sundance.org. Sundance Film Festival. p. 17.
  5. Holsten, Christine M. (June 30, 1993). "Florida Film Festival awards are presented". St. Petersburg Times.
  6. Stax (December 9, 2002). "Featured Filmmaker: Bryan Singer". IGN. Retrieved March 28, 2010.
  7. "Public Access Review". Variety. January 1, 1993.
  8. Ansen, David (February 15, 1993). "The Talent Bazaar". Newsweek.
  9. "Public Access (1993)". Time Out Film Guide. Time Out.
  10. Sheehan, Harry (March 10, 1993). "Public Access". The Hollywood Reporter.

Further reading

Awards
Preceded by
In the Soup
Sundance Grand Jury Prize: U.S. Dramatic
1993
tied with Ruby in Paradise
Succeeded by
What Happened Was
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