Falsehood (2001) is a short film written and directed by Kenneth Lui[1] starring Anne Welles, Mark Irvingsen, Marie-Noelle Marquis and Stuart Proffitt. Its style is a highly visual fusion of film noir against classic fairy tale motifs. It is written in the style of a courtroom drama with neo-noir elements.
Falsehood | |
---|---|
Directed by | Kenneth Lui |
Written by | Kenneth Lui |
Produced by | Lu Cien Hioe |
Starring | Anne Welles, Mark Irvingsen, Marie-Noelle Marquis, Stuart Proffitt |
Cinematography | Ken Glassing |
Edited by | Megan Madzeoff |
Music by | Kenneth Lui |
Production company | Mental Pictures |
Release date |
|
Running time | 34 minutes |
Language | English |
Story
editThe film opens on an idyllic pasture where a young Bo Peep awakens from an ill-timed nap to find her sheep missing. After searching for her sheep with no luck, she finds bloody wool remains and believes that The Big Bad Wolf has eaten her flock. Years later, the grown up Bo Peep (Anne Welles) is working as a public defense attorney and confronts her own prejudice when she's assigned to defend The Big Bad Wolf (Mark Irvingsen) in the infamous Red Riding Hood (Marie-Noelle Marquis) rape trial.
In the tradition of fables, the film makes use of the interactions between humans and imaginary characters to explore themes of racial discrimination and hypocrisy set in a dark fairy tale world.
Cast
edit- Anne Welles as Little Bo Peep
- Mark Irvingsen as The Big Bad Wolf
- Marie-Noelle Marquis as Little Red Riding Hood
- Stuart Proffitt as The Hunter
- Barbara Scolaro as Storybook Hand
- Troy Barron as Bailiff
- Timothy Brennen as The Prosecutor
- Erynn Dana Dalton as Rapunzel
- Allison Ehly as Young Little Bo Peep
- Kim Farris as The Cat
- Zachary Hahn as The Judge
- Adrian Hasenmayer as Reporter
- Nancy Hasenmayer as Grandma
- Cathy King as Cinderella
- Mike Kruzel as Bailiff
- Thomas Mounkes as Bailiff
- Ariadne Shaffer as Snow White Charming
Festivals and awards
editWorldfest Houston 2001 | Platinum Award, Best Experimental Drama |
Edgeworks Film Festival 2002 | Best of Show, Shorts Category |
Method Fest 2002 | Best Writer/Director, Best Actress, Best Student Film, Audience Award |
Lake Arrowhead Film Festival 2002 | |
“Fine Cut” on PBS 2002 | |
“Tight Shorts” UCLA-TV 2002 | |
International Cinematographers Guild Shortfilm Showcase 2002 | Ken Glassing - Emerging Cinematographer Award [2] |
Cannes Film Festival 2002 | |
Orinda Film Festival 2003 | |
ITVfest 2011 | Best Director |
Other Showings
editKCET Fine Cut
editOn August 16, 2002 the Sixth season of KCETs “Fine Cut – A Festival of Student Film” program aired Falsehood. Before the film began, a warning was issued for adult content, in reference to its coarse language, violence, and sexual content. An interview with writer/director Kenneth Lui was aired after the film.[3]
Web series
editIn 2011, Falsehood was re-released as a web series on StayTunedTV and blip.tv.[4] As a web series, Falsehood was nominated by StayTunedTV for five awards: Best Drama, Best Actor in a Drama (Mark Irvingsen), Best Actress in a Drama (Anne Welles), Best Director (Kenneth Lui), and Best Writer (Kenneth Lui).[5] It was awarded the Best Director award at the StayTunedTV/ITVFest Awards 2011.[6]
References
edit- ^ "Kenneth Lui on imdb". IMDb. Retrieved 2012-01-17.
- ^ "Emerging Cinematographer Awards 2002". International Cinematographers Guild. Retrieved 2012-01-17.[permanent dead link ]
- ^ "UCLA Students Featured on KCET's Fine Cut Series". UCLA TFT. Aug 7, 2002. Retrieved 2012-01-17.[permanent dead link ]
- ^ "Falsehood Web Series directed by Kenneth Lui". Channel APA. Retrieved 2012-01-17.
- ^ "2011 STTV - Official Awards Nominees". Scribd. Retrieved 2012-01-17.
- ^ "ITV Awards: A Culminating Evening of Celebration with comedian Judy Tenuta". LA Splash. Retrieved 2012-01-17.