| Able Edwards | |
| | Directed by | Graham Robertson | | Produced by | Scott Bailey Graham Robertson | | Written by | Graham Robertson (Final Draft) | | Starring | Scott Kelly Galbreath Keri Bruno David Ury Steve Beaumont Jones Michael Shamus Wiles | | Music by | Michael Suby | | Cinematography | Ricardo Palavecino (Canon XL1) | | Editing by | Graham Robertson (Final Cut Pro, Discreet's Combustion 2.0 for CGI and digital compositing, Maya for 3D modeling.) | | Distributed by | US, Heretic Films Indie | | Release date(s) | March, 2004 | | Running time | 85 min. | | Country |
United States | | Language | English | | Budget | $30,000 | | Official website | | IMDb profile | Able Edwards is a 2004 film directed by Graham Robertson and produced by Steven Soderbergh. It is the winner of numerous festival awards, in addition to holding the Guinness World Record for first feature film shot entirely without sets against a green screen beating out such big budgeted films as Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow and Immortel (Ad Vitam). Image File history File links No higher resolution available. ...
Graham Robertson is an American filmmaker and author. ...
Scott Bailey can refer to more than one person: Scott Bailey (hockey player) - Professional ice hockey player. ...
Graham Robertson is an American filmmaker and author. ...
March is the third month of the year in the Gregorian Calendar and one of seven Gregorian months with the length of 31 days. ...
// Please note that these are the top grossing films that were first released in 2004; because they may have made most of their income in a later year, they may not be the top-grossing films for calendar year 2004. ...
Image File history File links No higher resolution available. ...
The English language is a West Germanic language that originates in England. ...
// Please note that these are the top grossing films that were first released in 2004; because they may have made most of their income in a later year, they may not be the top-grossing films for calendar year 2004. ...
Graham Robertson is an American filmmaker and author. ...
Steven Andrew Soderbergh (born January 14, 1963 in Atlanta, Georgia) is an American film producer, screenwriter, cinematographer, editor, and Oscar-winning director. ...
The Guinness Book of Records (or in recent editions Guinness World Records, and in previous US editions Guinness Book of World Records) is a book published annually, containing an internationally recognized collection of superlatives: both in terms of human achievement and the extrema of the natural world. ...
Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow is a film released on September 17, 2004 in the United States. ...
Immortel (Ad vitam) is a 2004 English language, but French-produced science fiction film, directed by cartoonist Enki Bilal and based upon his graphic novel La Foire aux immortels (The Carnival of Immortals). ...
A retro sci-fi story, Able Edwards follows the clone of a Walt Disneyesque entertainment mogul created to revive the glory days of his deceased predecessor's corporation. In the process of restoring reality entertainment to a synthetic, virtual world, the clone realizes he has yet to live as his own man. For the company founded by Disney, see The Walt Disney Company. ...
Synposis
The Board of Directors of the Edwards Corporation, the leading manufacturer of androids, is faced with stagnant market performance. In response, they elect to reinvigorate the company by genetically replicating their dead genius founder, Abel Edwards. The clone’s mission will be to blaze the trail to new markets, broadening their manufacturing base and increasing corporate earnings potential. But a clone is a person. What does this mean for the man whose shoulders bear this responsibility? Is Abel Edwards the reincarnation of the media tycoon he was cloned from and whose life experiences he has been conditioned to repeat, or is he a wholly different individual whose life was stolen by a greedy corporate machine lacking sympathy for his plight beyond the promise of his creation?
Plot This article or section contains a plot summary that is too long or excessively detailed. Please edit the article to both contextualise the fictional nature of the work and focus on discussing the work rather than simply reiterating the plot. You may also discuss changes on the talk page. See Wikipedia's guide to writing better articles for suggestions. Spoiler warning: Plot or ending details follow. In the not so distant future, the world is faced with a global catastrophe. A biological contaminant is released into the atmosphere and over the following years, decimates nearly ninety percent of the world’s population. Fleeing the poisoned planet, humanity relocates to a space station orbiting the Earth. It is there that life continues with the hope of one day returning to the planet’s surface. The film unfolds during the probate hearing determining the disposition of assets of the estate of Abel Edwards beta, the clone of the founder of the Edwards Corporation (EC), the most successful entertainment conglomerate of the 20th Century. The EC included not only an enormously successful film and television studio, but also the Abel Edwards’ Fantastic Wonderlands Theme Parks based on the characters populating Abel Edwards’ animated films. Due to their extensive animatronic background, the EC has morphed into a manufacturer whose primary products are humanoid robots. But their market share has fallen sharply and sales have softened. They understand the need to develop a new market, but after several failed attempts, recognize they lack the intuition and imagination necessary for the success of such a bold course change. As a last-ditch effort, their marketing department develops a plan to clone their dead genius founder, Abel Edwards. They will not only grow a genetic replica, but they will infuse him with the same life altering experiences that shaped the original man. Nature plus nurture, or something like it. The present CEO of the EC, Warren Hastings, serves as young Edwards’ father and caretaker. Young Edwards is manipulated not only by viewing files about his predecessor, but also by other more extreme methods. Upon his twenty-fifth birthday, Edwards takes the reigns of the company and immediately hurls it headlong on a wild gambit. His goal is to give the public something they yearn for but don’t even know they want yet. His grand idea is to re-invent the theme park, which he envisions will pry the masses out of their virtual existence and their reliance on androids and give them a reason to gather; to experience things that are absolutely real, not just holographic projections. His concept is to take the virtual out of reality! Opening day of the NEW EDWARDS FANTASTIC WONDERLAND is an unqualified success. The mass transit system is so backed up the trains are late for the first time in history. Wave after wave of excited people line up to experience physical rides and live animal exhibits. Edwards rides a twenty-year wave of success with every passing day. When the potential rival of the status quo career politician abruptly drops out of the race, Edwards sees his chance to expand beyond his defined boundaries and bring the ‘Edwards Standard of Living’ directly into people’s living rooms, rather than maintaining a park to give them a transitory experience. When Edwards moves from a ‘Celebrity Politician’ to a front-running candidate, the power struggle reaches it’s breaking point. Days before Edwards imminent Senatorial victory, a malfunctioning reality ride causes a catastrophic accident which claims the lives of hundreds, including Edwards’ own seven-year-old son. The Anti-Reality Organizations finally have their scapegoat. Needless to say, he loses the Senate race in a landslide. In one fell swoop, Edwards has lost his son, the Senate seat and his position as CEO of the company. His struggle for answers raises questions he’s had for as long as he can remember; who am I, what makes you your own person and what is the nature of identity? Is ‘free will’ pre-determined? Edwards commandeers a space shuttle and heads for the site of the original Able Edwards Fantastic Wonderland. A journey of no return. Walking through the overgrown ruins of the theme park, Edwards comes face to face with a statue of his predecessor, the original Abel Edwards. During his last dying breath, he has comes face to face with his father, face to face with himself.
Process Able Edwards was shot on mini DV at a small green screen stage in Hollywood, CA. No physical sets were used, no film was exposed, nobody got paid. While Director Graham Robertson and Producer Scott Bailey worked on the hundred million dollar action movies Pirates of the Caribbean and Swordfish, Able Edwards was written, shot and edited on weekends for less than the weekly craft service budgets of the blockbusters. "I had always been intrigued with the idea of adapting old films to new settings. As literature has stories that have been retold with modern views, the cinema has classics that are ripe for revisiting. Able Edwards revisits the spirit and structure of Citizen Kane." "But we didn’t have a lot of money to spend, so using consumer technologies and truckloads of resourcefulness, we managed to shoot the entire feature in 15 days with a budget of $30,000. The plan was this; get a green wall, get some actors, scan some photographs to use as backgrounds (sets) and shoot a “big budget” looking film for no dollars." "For starters, I spent a good chunk of time at the downtown branch of the L.A. library going through piles of architecture books; collecting and scanning the images. Elements of the existing photographs were photoshopped and composited to create new, unique environments- the futuristic world of Able Edwards. Twenty-three dollars in late fees and a month later, we had our sets." "After getting the footage in the can, I began the long process of importing the green footage and editing it. About this time, a friend told me that she had spoken to Steven Soderbergh about the project and he was interested in our process. Next thing I knew, he was at my house in my office, watching EXTREMELY rough-cut sequences and test composites. Forty-five minutes later, we had a new executive producer." "I spent the following year chained to my office chair assembling, editing and compositing the film. There were many days where I felt like Dick Van Dyke’s one-man-band in Mary Poppins. It was true desktop cinema."
Desktop Cinema: Feature Filmmaking on a Home Computer Written by Able Edwards director, Graham Robertson, Desktop Cinema breaks down the entire process of making the feature film on his home computer. Image File history File links No higher resolution available. ...
Image File history File links No higher resolution available. ...
External links - Official Site
- Able Edwards at the Internet Movie Database
- Trailer
- 'Cinema News' sequence from Able Edwards
- Able Edwards at MySpace.com
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