Holding Court
Mike Sciacca,
It was the perfect neighborhood.
On the lushly landscaped cul-de-sac, amid several beautiful
upscale homes, a few residents were outside, sprucing up their
already meticulous yards; others, meanwhile, watched as their
children played on the front lawn.
Down at the closed end of the street, another group, this one
consisting of several young girls, had gathered to play a casual
game.
But while suburbia seemed perfectly in bloom on this brilliant
fall afternoon, it was a different type of perfection they sought to
create at one home in the middle of the block.
Inside this 5,000-square-foot residence, nestled between
neighboring homes of equal size and stature, entered three young boys
-- Rex, Cosmo and Mouse -- whose rumpled street attire, piercings and
Mohawks suggested that they might be in the wrong neighborhood, not
simply the wrong house.
But they weren’t.
The whole “scene” was make-believe and caught on film.
The Huntington Beach home of August Court and Donald Foster was
serving this day as the backdrop for these fictional young men and as
the centerpiece of the student film “Irvine, a Planned Community.”
It is the senior pet film project of their son, Dain Court, 24, a
third-year student at the University of Southern California who will
graduate in December with a degree in cinema television.
Court, a 1997 graduate of Huntington Beach High School, where he
served as student body president and was homecoming king during his
senior year, is co-producing the film along with his friend Joseph
Oliver.
“I wanted to shoot in Huntington Beach because I grew up here,”
said Court, who recently moved back to his father’s home. “It’s was a
great place to live and a perfect backdrop for our film, a community
similar to that of Irvine.
“This is a really good film with a great point to it, and that is
showing that the most important things in life are family and
community.”
“Irvine, a Planned Community,” tells the story of three young men
-- two of whom are brothers, and the film’s pitch packet described
the trio as “three punk, latchkey boys” who grow up in, but don’t fit
into the well-planned Irvine community.
They are not “jocks or preppies,” Court said, and become punkers
whose wild ways include robbing a neighbor’s house.
As the story goes, their sordid ways will eventually lead them to
what they have been searching for all along: a family.
The script was written by Curnal Aulisio.
“When I first read the script I was thrilled because I had shared
some of my adolescent years growing up in a unique community,” Court
said. “My interest in this story stems from my compassion for these
characters, who remind me of friends I had brought home when I was a
teenager.”
On this day of shooting, a large, white truck parked in front of
the home indicated to a few curious onlookers that something out of
the ordinary was happening in their neighborhood.
That, and the two young men who could be seen holding a giant
reflector outside the front entrance to the home tipped them off.
Court and Oliver are among the leads of a crew who number close to
30 members working on the student-produced film that Aulisio is also
directing.
Aulisio had asked Court to help pitch the project to a school
board consisting of one student representative and six faculty
members. That board would ultimately decide which of the 10 finalists
would become one of four projects to have their film come to fruition
this semester.
Between 40 and 60 scripts were considered this semester, Court
said.
USC is home to a highly competitive film school whose alumni
include George Lucas.
Steven Spielberg was on campus recently and met with students,
Court said.
“Dain brings many aspects to this film that are invaluable,”
Aulisio said. “One important aspect is that his creativity is equal
to mine on this film. He also has a really great business sense.”
The USC crew spent six weekends shooting in Los Angeles,
Huntington Beach and Aliso Viejo. Two of those weekends -- including
last weekend -- were spent in Surf City.
Court had to secure various permits through the city for the crew
to film in Huntington Beach and noted that several, local restaurants
provided amenities to the crew.
“We assembled a crew of talented fellow students, each of whom has
worked hard to make this film,” Court said, as a large number of crew
filtered in and out of the house, each working on a different aspect
of the film.
“The City of Huntington Beach has been incredible in their
support, people like Michael Mudd, who helped us get our permits, and
local restaurants like Baci’s, who helped feed our group.”
The 16-millimeter color film is 13 1/2 minutes in length. With
credits included, it cost $40,000 to make, Court said.
Funding came from the school donations and a student “slush fund,”
for which students working on the film each contributed $200, Court
said.
Production began last May and is scheduled for completion by
month’s end.
The finished product will be seen at USC and from there, Court
said, the plan is to send the film to several festivals, including
the Sundance Film Festival in Park City, Utah.
Court also directed and did cinematography work for a network
project his parents are producing, along with Dana Miller, which can
be seen in November.
The program, celebrating the 20th anniversary of AIDS Project Los
Angeles, features tributes to and by several celebrities and will be
hosted by Tom Hanks, Court said.
It is scheduled to air on NBC on Thanksgiving weekend.
“This has been a really incredible time for me,” Court said. “I’ve
learned so much from this student project. One thing that the USC
film school does is train you for the real world by sending you out
into that world. I’ve made so many other contacts through this
project. It’s really been invaluable, and doing part of this film at
home has made the experience even greater.”
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