Showing posts with label Over the Edge Productions. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Over the Edge Productions. Show all posts

Friday, April 29, 2011

Metal Insider interviews Mike Leonard about the New Dream Theater Movie

Chances are that by now you’ve been caught up with everything going on with Dream Theater. This past week, the band debuted The Spirit Carries On, which chronicles the audition process behind the band’s search for drummer Mike Portnoy’s replacement. While we certainly felt teased and annoyed by the trailer debut last week, we’d be lying if we said we haven’t been following the web series. Hell, like most of you, we want to find out who the new drummer is, and it’s been pretty cool to get an inside look into the audition process.

So as we wait patiently for tomorrow’s third and final episode of The Spirit Carries On, we decided to catch up with the people behind the making of the documentary. Director Mike Leonard and Over The Edge Productions were brought in by Roadrunner Record’s director of video production Rick Ernst to document Dream Theater’s search for a new drummer. Leonard and crew went in not knowing what the outcome was going to be, but in the end came out with what we now have been glued to for the past week.

Leonard took the time to talk with us about how the project came to be, initial worries about the fans’ response, and what could be the future outcome of The Spirit Carries On.

We all know what’s been happening with Dream Theater regarding their search for a new drummer, but how did you and Over the Edge Productions first get involved? Who approached who first about documenting the audition process?

ML: I think I was in LA doing a music video when Rick Ernst, director of video production at Roadrunner Records, called me up and gave me the scoop on what was happening with the band. My company, Over the Edge Productions, has been doing work for Roadrunner for a while. Rick and I worked at MTV together and when he went to Roadrunner, he recruited OTE for a bunch of label work.

When we first watched the trailer and the episodes following it, we couldn’t help but feel that the documentary had a bit of a reality TV vibe. Did the band and management approach you about filming it like that, or did you pitch them on it?

ML: It was very much thrown together last minute, we went into our first day of filming knowing it would be a documentary of some kind but didn’t really know how it would all pan out. The reality TV style wasn’t our intention, but given the nature of what we were filming (7 drummers competing for 1 dream job) well, let’s face it, it automatically feels like a reality show. However, I think after most fans watched the first two episodes, they realized, it’s not that at all. Maybe docu-reality, but it’s not like we were trying to make “Dream Theater Idol” here.

Fans have been waiting for a while now to find out who Dream Theater’s new drummer. Were you afraid of there being any backlash from fans upset with how the trailer and episodes extend the suspense?

ML: Yes, this has been a huge issue that the label and the band wrestled with. The band really wanted to let people know right away, but soon after the filming was complete there was a lot of interest by television networks to air this documentary. So due to a potential broadcast deal it was delayed and so was the announcement. Regardless of that, after seeing the first few cuts of the movie, I think the band realized that this would be the best way to announce everything to the fans. They were so genuine about how much they wanted to introduce their fans to the new drummer and I know they felt terrible that they kept it from them for so long.

Out of the seven drummers that auditioned, was there one that particularly stood out to you?

ML: We filmed with Mike Mangini the night before his audition and both as a person and as a drummer, he impressed me the most. Mike is such an incredibly genuine and nice guy, just like all the members of Dream Theater. He’s also incredibly meticulous about making sure he does his part and gets all the details right. All of the drummers that we filmed with were incredibly nice and professional, but Mike really made a great impression on me. Then watching him play in real life blew me away – he’s a monster. He plays the most complicated things like they’re nothing, just incredible. I’ll never forget it.

Are there any plans to release a physical copy of this documentary, maybe along with extra footage?

ML: Yes, I believe there is going to be a DVD release this summer with the new album. We have talked about many different options and I have no idea what is actually going to happen, but I’m sure it will be released at some point and there’s tons of potential for bonus footage.

It all comes to an end (or at least we presume it will) tomorrow as the third and final episode of The Spirit Carries On will hit Roadrunner Records’ YouTube channel tomorrow (April 29) at 11am. In case you’ve been behind, you can still catch up and watch episode 1 and episode 2 online. You can check out other projects Over The Edge Productions are working on their website or Facebook.From metalinsider.net

http://www.metalinsider.net/interviews/exclusive-director-mike-leonard-talks-about-filming-dream-theaters-the-spirit-carries-on-documentary

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

OTE Films Music Video for Tiffany Giardina

Over the Edge Productions recently produced a music video for Tiffany Giardina's new song "I'm Not Crazy" which is currently on Radio Disney's top 30 countdown and a featured video on radiodisney.com.  The music video's director, Mike Leonard brought Tiffany Giardina's story of a high school crush to life with various scenes that contrasted real life and imagination.Mike also recently directed several music videos for CJ Baran, formerly of Push Play. 


A dance team of Tiffany's peers from the Pulse Performing Arts Center in Bedford Hills, NY choreographed dance routines that were added throughout the video.  


Check out the official video at www.otenyc.com

Friday, January 14, 2011

OTE Returns to Africa

Who would have ever thought that coffee could change the world? Pull an entire country's economy out of disrepair, thousands of people out of poverty and teach people to forgive those who slaughtered their loved ones in cold blood?

In May, Over the Edge Productions returned to central Africa to again visit the remote coffee plantation of Cyimbili in western Rwanda. The first trip, a year and a half prior, was with the initial scouting team that visited this place to see if it was possible to restore it to working conditions.  With cameras rolling, we began a story that would change thousands of lives while the people of Cymbili saw white people again for the first time in twenty-five years.

Hope for a Thousand Hills is a documentary about the snowball effect of restoring the Cymbili coffee plantation in western Rwanda; the second largest coffee plantation in the country. It's also about the impact it has on a people and economy struggling from the reconstruction and reconciliation of the 1994 genocide that slaughtered almost a million people. It's the story of a community that is about to change the face of Rwanda by something as simple as coffee, create hope for thousands of families living in poverty, and capture the personal struggles of a people learning to forgive and work alongside the people who, not long ago, tried to exterminate them.

We rolled cameras on this trip to capture a dream coming to life as the first harvest of a now working coffee plantation was being farmed. We also explored the immediate and amazing effects of this project and it's impact the surrounding community.