Tuesday, 30 September 2003 18:00
“The play goes like this: Lights up, four people talk for an hour, lights down.” Two months from now will mark the 15-year anniversary of the discovery of Steve Soderbergh’s sex, lies, & videotape at Sundance, which not only caused the big boom in indie movies still going on today, but brought the Sundance Film Festival the attention only enjoyed by the biggest of film festivals. We’re also two months from the ten-year anniversary of Kevin Smith and his film Clerks being discovered at the same festival. Clerks became a word-of-mouth hit in America, breaking ground as an independently produced (read: no studio backing until after the film is in the can) film which focused on people doing nothing but talking. Isn’t this what everyone was so excited about after sex, lies? That you needn’t any action, nudity, high budgets, or really anything else short of the right actors saying the right lines to get audiences interested in your film en masse? Films of this nature are the staple of the independent film market, and sadly, they have been sorely lacking for almost a decade.