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Post by Eric T. Jones on Jul 9, 2006 14:30:51 GMT -5
Unless you and Richie would desire a different location (or if my parents say otherwise), then yup, still at my house.
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Post by kenny on Jul 9, 2006 16:12:02 GMT -5
So this doesn't even involve me. Or am I just very confused?
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Post by Hanna(h) on Jul 9, 2006 23:21:47 GMT -5
Do you want us to bring anything?
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Post by Eric T. Jones on Jul 9, 2006 23:47:12 GMT -5
Currently, I don't think you need to bring anything. I suppose kenny could come along too... but it's my house, and I really, really mean it when I say control your language. (and I don't want to hear the answer "I know". Stop saying, start proving)
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Post by kenny on Jul 10, 2006 0:15:06 GMT -5
Point taken. Ok, I can make that. 4:30 - 6:00, right?
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Post by Eric T. Jones on Jul 10, 2006 0:17:47 GMT -5
Yup, 4:30-6:00PM tomorrow, my house.
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Post by Hanna(h) on Jul 10, 2006 21:31:16 GMT -5
I just realized, after today's session, are you still going to be calling this "Broadway Syndrome"? Or will there eventually be a different name for it?
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Post by bluesabre1 on Jul 10, 2006 21:41:39 GMT -5
The girlfriend might reference that the boy has the "Broadway Syndrome" because he keeps breaking into song. But that might be too self-referential. If we treat it like a disease that gives it a negative connotation and we want the audience to embrace the BS. Now if he has a "disease" and she doesn't and that's why they don't "love" each other then might mean something negative as well. But it might be a fun angle, laughter is infection, why not love and song?
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Post by Eric T. Jones on Jul 10, 2006 22:32:00 GMT -5
There's no reason that I would keep the title as "Broadway Syndrome", and I'm not going to write (the new) screenplay constricting to the title. This production I would like to be the opposite of "Visions"- very little, if any at all, self-referential material, and certainly nobody is a writer or artist of any sort in the film.
I might explore BS as a disease when I become a more experienced filmmaker (how to make the disease evident without it being tedious to the audience), but currently, it's not a requirement.
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