Supporting Characters

Not to be confused with Supporting character.
Supporting Characters

Promotional Poster
Directed by Daniel Schechter
Produced by Alex A. Ginzburg
Tim Duff
Adam Der Aris
Written by Daniel Schechter
Tarik Lowe
Starring Alex Karpovsky
Tarik Lowe
Melonie Diaz
Arielle Kebbel
Sophia Takal
Music by Jordan Galland
Cinematography Richard P. Ulivella
Edited by Daniel Schechter
Production
company
Let It Play
Distributed by Tribeca Film
Release dates
  • April 20, 2012 (2012-04-20) (Tribeca Film Festival)
Country United States
Language English
Box office $4,917[1]

Supporting Characters is a film directed by Daniel Schechter. It was written by Schechter and Tarik Lowe. It had its world premiere at the Tribeca Film Festival on April 20, 2012.[2] The film follows two New York film editors trying to balance their personal lives while reworking a film.

Production

Film development

Dan Schechter: "When I started, I just wanted to make a film, a really good film, for under $50,000, and that was the main goal (and we ended up incredibly close to that number). The editing thing was an arbitrary choice at first. This film was about two best buds and their respective relationships, and we just needed to give them some career to do together so they could bitch at work to one another. So I chose editing because I had some good experiences I could draw from, and perhaps we could get away with not being a "film about making films” because, really, that storyline is about specifically being an editor and what that day job is like."[3]

Schechter and Lowe based the semi-autobiographical film on incidents from their personal lives, crafting a simultaneously offbeat and naturalistic New York story. Schechter's own experience as an editor is evident in the script, which blends intimate relationships with humorous details of life in an editing room.

Schechter had a number of his indie movie associates perform in this movie, such as Melonie Diaz. Lena Dunham and Alex Karpovsky, both of Girls fame also starred.

Reception

Critical response

The film opened to positive reviews. Rotten Tomatoes gives a score of 86% based on seven reviews.[4]

Jason Bailey of DVD Talk had the following evaluation to make: Lowe and director Daniel Schechter's script is fast and witty--the Nick/Darryl duets (which make up a good chunk of the picture) have a sharp, conversational style and tempo, as well as the sense of a long-time friendship, articulated by ball-busting and one-upsmanship--and it got an insider's knowledge of the business, what with the metaphorical act of partioning drives and labeling bins, or the escalating flirtations at an ADR session. (Between this and the hot foley recording scene in Nobody Walks, it's a big year for sexy sound nerds.)"[5]

Vanessa Martinez, a critic with Indie Wire discusses the powerful rapport of the main characters of the film: "you will enjoy witnessing this duo’s connection, and even co-dependence to a degree, as they find a way to remain loyal to each other through life's highs and lows aside from their very different personalities, thanks to naturalistic and engaging performances. Also, the twists and turns of the film’s plot prevent the film from becoming predictable and ordinary, much like life itself."[6]

Brandon Harris a reporter with Filmmaker (magazine) said:" Daniel Schechter’s Supporting Characters surprised me. I was prepared to hate it. Excited to, even. It charmed the pants right off me. It might as well be TV, the way it’s shot (of course that means a lot less than it did ten years ago since TV is art now), and it couldn’t be more built to play Tribeca, but it’s genuinely written with feeling, humor and friendship that feels true and complicated."[7]

"Supporting Characters -- Part bromance, part ode to '70s comedies like Modern Romance, director Daniel Schechter has a witty sense of humor that's delivered perfectly by leads Alex Karpovsky and Tarik Lowe. Its honest and smart look at relationships and friendship inside the bubble of NYC would work as a perfect double-feature with Lena Dunham's Tiny Furniture (who also makes a cameo in Characters)."—Jason Guerrasio of Fandango.[8]

Soundtrack

Again drawing on his friends in the Indie movie business, the soundtrack is by friend Indie director and musician Jordan Galland[9] In exchange for doing the soundtrack for this movie, Schecter did the trailer for Alter Egos, a Jordan Galland movie.[10]

Coincidentally, Galland provided a song to Lena Dunham's movie Tiny Furniture for free.

Track listing

(Available on iTunes Store)[11]

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/22/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.