Revision as of 05:14, 13 December 2009 editMoehoeheehaw (talk | contribs)4 edits Undid revision 330888472 by 66.133.194.144 (talk) rv vandal, page blanking offense← Previous edit | Revision as of 19:44, 28 January 2010 edit undoMilowent (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Extended confirmed users, IP block exemptions, New page reviewers, Pending changes reviewers, Rollbackers48,701 edits revert vandalism. note that subject of article was who did the earlier blanking.Next edit → | ||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
'''Philip Scott Zlotorynski''' (born ], ]) is an ] ]. | |||
{{Infobox actor | |||
| name = Philip Zlotorynski (a.k.a. Chris Gore) | |||
| image = Chris Gore by Gage Skidmore.jpg | |||
| imagesize = 200px | |||
| caption = Philip Zlotorynski (a.k.a. Chris Gore) at the 2007 '']'' | |||
| birthname = Christian Gore | |||
| birthdate = {{birth date and age|1965|9|5}} | |||
| birthplace = {{flagicon|USA}} ] | |||
| deathdate = | |||
| deathplace = | |||
| othername = | |||
| yearsactive = | |||
| spouse = | |||
| homepage = | |||
}}'''Philip Zlotorynski''' is the pseudonym for online film critic ], the founder of the now bankrupt movie review magazine ]. The name Philip Zlotorynski is used for his amateur ] experiments. According to Gore, the joke was meant as an intentional rift on ]'s ] alter-ego, whom was meant to symbolize everything Kaufman hated about showbiz. | |||
== |
==Early career== | ||
Zlotorynski was a high school musical performer at Van Nuys Performing Arts Magnet.Zlotorynski graduated with honors from ], ] with a degree in film and television production in 1997. He spent two years as head of the Trailer Department for ]'s Concorde-New Horizons. | |||
'']'' marked his feature directorial debut. However, '']'' was a ], experiencing a very limited theatrical run in 10 markets, earning only $4,655 in box office receipts during its national run. The film was very poorly received by the public and critics, receiving a very low 23% rotten rating over at ]. | |||
==Notable accomplishments and controversy== | |||
⚫ | Chris Parry, entertainment journalist and film critic for efilmcritic.com offered the following analysis about why '' |
||
After completing the dramatic short ''Sway'' in 2001, Zlotorynski went to work on his next short project ''Walkentalk'' which has gained some notoriety on the festival circuit. '']'' marked his feature directorial debut. However, it was a ], experiencing a very limited theatrical run in 10 markets, earning only $4,655 in box office receipts. The film was poorly received by the public and critics, receiving a very low 23% rotten rating over at ]. The film was also rejected by the Sundance film festival, the Slamdance film festival and most major film festivals even though the film went on to play at some lesser known film festivals with mixed results such as Cinequest, South by Southwest, San Diego Film Festival, Sidewalk Moving Picture Festival, Newport Beach Film Festival, Worldfest Houston and the Temecula Valley Film Festival, where it won Best Feature. | |||
A firestorm of internet debate soon erupted over the film's lowbrow treatment of independent film classics and, as a result, the movie suffered a backlash from die-hard independent film fans, many of which considered the film to be blasphemous toward the genre. | |||
⚫ | Chris Parry, entertainment journalist and film critic for efilmcritic.com, offered the following analysis about why ''My Big Fat Independent Movie'' failed to catch on with the public, stating: | ||
{{cquote|''If the makers of MBFIM had chosen only awful indie films to ridicule, they might have found it easier to keep the comedy standard high. Alternately, if they decided to go way over the top and jam as many pop culture references in as possible, as a true test of the indie film fan’s knowledge, they might have carried things off on pure geek homage value. But the film as it stands is stranded in a dire middle ground, where the target audience loves the films being ridiculed too much to go along with things, and the wider audience simply won’t get what films are actually being referenced.''}} | {{cquote|''If the makers of MBFIM had chosen only awful indie films to ridicule, they might have found it easier to keep the comedy standard high. Alternately, if they decided to go way over the top and jam as many pop culture references in as possible, as a true test of the indie film fan’s knowledge, they might have carried things off on pure geek homage value. But the film as it stands is stranded in a dire middle ground, where the target audience loves the films being ridiculed too much to go along with things, and the wider audience simply won’t get what films are actually being referenced.''}} | ||
==Filmography== | ==Filmography== | ||
* |
*''Served'' (2007) - Director/Writer | ||
* |
*'']'' (2005) - Director/Editor | ||
* |
*'']'' (2003) - Director/Producer/Writer/Editor | ||
* |
*''Sway'' (2001) - Director/Producer/Writer/Editor | ||
* |
*''Thunderpoint'' (1998) - Director/Producer/Editor | ||
*''The Seventh Day'' (1997) - Director/Writer | |||
⚫ | {{DEFAULTSORT:Zlotorynski, Philip}} | ||
==External links== | |||
*{{imdb name|id=0957454|name=Philip Zlotorynski}} | |||
⚫ | {{DEFAULTSORT:Zlotorynski, Philip}} | ||
] | ] | ||
] | ] | ||
] | |||
{{ |
{{film-director-stub}} |
Revision as of 19:44, 28 January 2010
Philip Scott Zlotorynski (born February 25, 1975) is an American filmmaker.
Early career
Zlotorynski was a high school musical performer at Van Nuys Performing Arts Magnet.Zlotorynski graduated with honors from California State University, Northridge with a degree in film and television production in 1997. He spent two years as head of the Trailer Department for Roger Corman's Concorde-New Horizons.
Notable accomplishments and controversy
After completing the dramatic short Sway in 2001, Zlotorynski went to work on his next short project Walkentalk which has gained some notoriety on the festival circuit. My Big Fat Independent Movie marked his feature directorial debut. However, it was a box office bomb, experiencing a very limited theatrical run in 10 markets, earning only $4,655 in box office receipts. The film was poorly received by the public and critics, receiving a very low 23% rotten rating over at Rottentomatoes. The film was also rejected by the Sundance film festival, the Slamdance film festival and most major film festivals even though the film went on to play at some lesser known film festivals with mixed results such as Cinequest, South by Southwest, San Diego Film Festival, Sidewalk Moving Picture Festival, Newport Beach Film Festival, Worldfest Houston and the Temecula Valley Film Festival, where it won Best Feature.
A firestorm of internet debate soon erupted over the film's lowbrow treatment of independent film classics and, as a result, the movie suffered a backlash from die-hard independent film fans, many of which considered the film to be blasphemous toward the genre.
Chris Parry, entertainment journalist and film critic for efilmcritic.com, offered the following analysis about why My Big Fat Independent Movie failed to catch on with the public, stating:
If the makers of MBFIM had chosen only awful indie films to ridicule, they might have found it easier to keep the comedy standard high. Alternately, if they decided to go way over the top and jam as many pop culture references in as possible, as a true test of the indie film fan’s knowledge, they might have carried things off on pure geek homage value. But the film as it stands is stranded in a dire middle ground, where the target audience loves the films being ridiculed too much to go along with things, and the wider audience simply won’t get what films are actually being referenced.
Filmography
- Served (2007) - Director/Writer
- My Big Fat Independent Movie (2005) - Director/Editor
- Walkentalk (2003) - Director/Producer/Writer/Editor
- Sway (2001) - Director/Producer/Writer/Editor
- Thunderpoint (1998) - Director/Producer/Editor
- The Seventh Day (1997) - Director/Writer
External links
This article about a film director is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it. |