Saturday, January 20, 2018

SLASH and SIR DOUG Available on Amazon Prime

Two projects I worked on have become available on Amazon Prime. 

Slash, a delightful coming-of-age comedy starring Michael Johnston, Hannah Marks, and Michael Ian Black and written & directed by Clay Liford, is available to stream on Amazon Prime (and is also available on iTunes. I was co-editor along with Bryan Poyser.



Sir Doug and the Genuine Texas Cosmic Groove is available to stream on Amazon Prime. This documentary about Texas troubadour Doug Sahm is a musical mystery tour that takes you from the 1950s to the 1980s with Doug as your guide. I was an additional editor.


Both of these projects were lots of fun to be a part of. They each had great teams of creatives behind them and each premiered at the SXSW Film Festival. Please check 'em out and enjoy!

Monday, September 25, 2017

THE SENSITIVES Trailer! UPDATE: Now available on iTunes, Google Play and Amazon for rent or to buy

"The Sensitives" Official Trailer from Drew Xanthopoulos on Vimeo.

The Sensitives - a verité documentary following three stories about suffering from and living with the mysterious illness known as Multiple Chemical Sensitivity or Environmental Illness  - is still screening publicly around the country and will be available online next month. Check out the trailer above.

While The Sensitives continues to screen on tour in select theaters around the country, it is now available for on iTunesGoogle Play, and Amazon. For more information about screening dates, please visit The Sensitives Facebook Page.

Friday, September 22, 2017

THE SENSITIVES wins Jury Mention at CIFF '17 + Reviews


The Sensitives, which I edited for director Drew Xanthopoulos, had a busy weekend September 15-17. It screened in Chicago, at the Newburyport Film Festival, and at the Camden International Film Festival. At CIFF, it was awarded Special Jury Mention for Cinematic Vision. It will next screen in the city where it was made: Austin, Texas, on September 29th. Details here

Since Premiere at the Tribeca Film Festival last spring, The Sensitives has sparked much discussion and praise. Here's a sampling of reviews:

"Observational and impressionistic" - Hollywood Reporter

"Empathetic yet nonjudgmental... Xanthopoulos allows each of the subjects to move at their own pace, but he and editor David Fabelo settle into an agreeably lilting rhythm that reflects life progressing even when the film’s subjects are threatened with being left behind."- Moveable Feast

"Xanthopoulos approaches the subject of being essentially allergic to modernity in a way that’s refreshingly non-symbolic. In addition to eschewing hard-nosed medical analysis, the film treads a line between acknowledging both its subjects’ very real symptoms and the frustration of friends and family who see them retreat into isolation." - The Verge

"[I]ntensive realism... invit[es] our empathy to stretch out wider and wider with each story." - Paste Magazine

"The Sensitives is a gentle and affecting window into the isolated prison cell that becomes a sensitive person’s life." - Vague Visages

To keep up with news and updates about The Sensitives, like it on Facebook or follow on Twitter.

Wednesday, April 19, 2017

Lots of Excitement For The World Premiere of THE SENSITIVES at the Tribeca Film Festival



The Sensitives - a verité documentary I edited (directed by Drew Xanthopoulos) - has its world premiere at the 2017 Tribeca Film Festival this week. It's earning some buzz ahead of it's first screening. Here's a quick rundown:

Tribeca's Director of Programming calls us one of the "hidden gems" of the festival.

IndieWire calls The Sensitives one of Tribeca's 14 "must see" films.

A little birdie told No Film School that The Sensitives is "one of the most cinematic documentaries they've ever seen." I'm not going to argue with whoever said that.

I don't know what Metro is but they're looking forward to our film.

Finally, Village Voice calls The Sensitives "superb" and "poignant." You're too kind.

More info soon and a little coverage of the fest!


Tuesday, February 16, 2016

SXSW 2016: SLASH Gets In + Panel News

Two big announcements for this year's SXSW Film Festival:

Last fall I jumped on to help out on Clay Liford's comedy Slash. Sharing editing duties with Bryan Poyser (who is better known as a director, but here's a secret - he's also a champ editor), Slash is a coming of age movie set in the world of erotic fan fiction, aka slash fiction. Not your typical backdrop for a teenage boy's sexual awakening... which will make it all the more satisfying to unveil to audiences next month.


Shot in Austin, Slash features a cast of up and coming stars and was made possible by a hard working, dedicated Austin crew. Clay created an original sci-fi super hero to base the slash fiction on, so after a successful Kickstarter campaign, costumes were designed & tailored while sets were constructed in the desert to help create a world within the world of the movie that helps sets the story in motion. Inspired by Harry Potter, Star Trek and who knows what else, Slash will be a fun time at the movies in March.

Click here for screening times!

I will also participate in a panel on March 12th titled "In The Cut: Editing a Movie Sample." I get to share the mic with such accomplished editors: Sandra Adair, Leah Marino, and panel organizer/moderator Kyle Henry. I'm inclined to sit back and learn as much from them as anyone else in the room.

Here's the panel description:

Editing is the final stage of a film's writing. How can editing be used to reevaluate/reshape what you’ve generated during production? Learn tips and strategies from editors who work across all forms and genres to tell engaging and emotionally moving stories. Featuring Emmy and Academy Award nominated editors of films that have screened at major festivals like Sundance, SXSW, Toronto, Berlin and Cannes. We will review samples from up to three works-in-progress (5 mins max length). Participants, please post samples to Vimeo and send links to moderator Kyle Henry at least 12 hrs before panel begins for selection via SXSocial.
Click here for panel info!


Thursday, November 19, 2015

Photos from the BRIGHT SHADOW world premiere

Bright Shadow - Lone Star Film Fest


If I wasn't so busy editing another documentary at the moment, I would have posted these photos sooner. On November 6th, Bright Shadow - a feature documentary about singer/songwriter Ana Egge - had its world premiere at the Lone Star Film Festival in Ft. Worth, Texas. I drove up the day of the screening, met up with director Jesse Lyda and the rest of crew - which included Ana, producer Jason Wehling, cinematographer Allen E. Ho, and executive producer Clark Lyda. After catching up over dinner, we headed over to the AMC Palace to screen the movie to festival goers.

Bright Shadow Q and A


Our Q and A after the movie was in front of a packed house, yet still felt intimate. Both Ana fans and folks unfamiliar with her music praised the movie and asked us insightful questions about the process of making it. It felt like the we connected with everyone in the room, which is what we aim to do when spending years piecing an emotional journey like Ana's.

(If you are unfamiliar with Ana's work, check out her latest album, also titled Bright Shadow, on iTunes or buy direct from her website. Past albums also available.)

Director Jesse Lyda with Ana Egge


After the movie, we walked across the street to the Flying Saucer where Ana played a set. Myself and the rest of the crew continued to talk to audience members who joined us at the screening. Great screening, great night!

Red carpet selfie

Friday, November 6, 2015

WORLD PREMIERE: Bright Shadow - a documentary about songwriter Ana Egge - debuts at the Lone Star Film Festival

Courtesy of anaegge.com
Bright Shadow, a documentary directed by Jesse Lyda, is an intimate window into the artistic journey of singer/songwriter Ana Egge. Jesse followed Ana during the run up to, making of, and release of her album Bad Blood which was produced by Steve Earle.

Jesse captured some moments on video that might be too raw for most artists to have laid bare, so it's a testament to Ana, her wife Amy, and the rest of Ana's family to let us tell their story. I think we crafted a film that is a modern, truthful meditation on artistic expression - whether that art be expressed through music, film, or family.

On a personal note, and admittedly this is a bit of inside baseball, it's the first feature I edited using Apple's Final Cut Pro X, which was much maligned by professional editors at the time we started work on the project. We used Final Cut X before it was truly, completely ready to take on a feature. The program has been improved and expanded substantially. It's my favorite NLE to use and I think its organizational features are particularly superb for documentary work.

Bright Shadow makes it's world premiere Friday, November 6th at the 2015 Lone Star Film Festival.