Birdemic: Shock and Terror

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Birdemic: Shock and Terror
Birdemic.jpg
First promotional poster
Directed by James Nguyen
Produced by <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
  • James Nguyen
  • Tim Ubels
Written by James Nguyen
Starring <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
  • Alan Bagh
  • Whitney Moore
  • Janae Caster
  • Colton Osborne
  • Adam Sessa
Music by Andrew Seger
Cinematography Daniel Mai
Edited by Kim Chow
Production
company
Moviehead Pictures
Distributed by Severin Films
Release dates
<templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
Running time
93 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Budget <$10,000

Birdemic: Shock and Terror (often shortened to Birdemic) is a 2008 American independent romantic horror film[1] written, directed, and produced by James Nguyen, and starring Alan Bagh and Whitney Moore. Inspired by Alfred Hitchcock's The Birds, Birdemic tells the story of a romance between the two main characters as their small town is attacked by birds.

The film was made with no studio support, largely self-financed, and produced through Nguyen's Moviehead Pictures company for a budget of less than $10,000. The film has gained notoriety for its poor quality, with many critics citing it as one of the worst films of all time.[2][3] After a limited theatrical release, the film gained a cult following and was picked up for distribution by Severin Films in 2010.

Plot

Rod (Alan Bagh) is a young software salesman living a successful life in Silicon Valley. He meets up with old classmate and aspiring fashion model Nathalie (Whitney Moore) and begins dating her. Things go well for the couple, with Rod receiving a large bonus that he uses to start his own business, while Nathalie is chosen as a Victoria's Secret model. As they grow closer, the couple remains oblivious to signs of something going wrong around them, such as unexplained wildfires and the carcasses of diseased birds turning up on beaches.

After consummating their relationship in a motel, Rod and Nathalie wake up to find that their town is under attack from eagles and vultures that spit acid and explode into flames upon striking the ground. Rod and Nathalie escape from the motel by joining up with an ex-Marine named Ramsey (Adam Sessa) and his girlfriend Becky (Catherine Batcha). As they leave town, they rescue two young children, Susan (Janae Caster) and Tony (Colton Osborne), whose parents have been killed by the birds.

The group proceeds to drive from one town to the next, fending off more bird attacks along the way and briefly meeting a scientist named Dr. Jones (Rick Camp) studying the phenomenon. Becky is killed by the birds, and Ramsey, in an attempt to exact revenge, tries to save a busload of tourists. As they leave the bus, Ramsey and the tourists are killed by acid that is dropped by the birds. Nathalie stops Rod from attempting to rescue Ramsey because she feared the birds will kill him, too.

Rod, Nathalie and the kids continue to flee from the birds, driving into a forest where they briefly meet a "Tree Hugger" named Tom Hill (Stephen Gustavson), who explains to them that the birds have only been targeting gas stations and cars and that the attacks are the result of global warming. After escaping a forest fire, the quartet ultimately settles on a small beach, where Rod fishes for dinner. As they prepare to eat, they are attacked by the birds, which are suddenly—and for no explained reason—chased away by doves. The film ends as Rod, Nathalie and the kids watch the birds fly off into the horizon.

Cast

File:Alan Bagh and Whitney Moore.jpg
Bagh, left, and Moore at a screening of the film
  • Alan Bagh as Rod
  • Whitney Moore as Nathalie
  • Adam Sessa as Ramsey
  • Catherine Batcha as Becky
  • Janae Caster as Susan
  • Colton Osborne as Tony
  • Rick Camp as Dr. Jones
  • Stephen Gustavson as Tree Hugger/Tom Hill
  • Patsy van Ettinger as Nathalie's Mother
  • Mona Lisa Moon as Mai
  • Danny Webber as Rick
  • Laura Cassidy as News Anchor
  • Damien Carter as Nightclub Singer
  • Jake Pennington as Clark
  • James Nguyen as a restaurant customer (cameo)

Production

File:Birdemic bus.jpg
A bus featured in one sequence.

Da Nang-born[4] director James Nguyen's family fled Vietnam in 1975, shortly before the Fall of Saigon.[5][6] He never received any formal training in moviemaking, but instead grew up watching the movies of Alfred Hitchcock, including The Birds (1963)[7] and Vertigo (1958), which Nguyen considers his favorite Hitchcock film.[8] Nguyen went on to be a software salesman in Silicon Valley.[7] He first picked up a camera in 1999[8] and eventually directed two movies, Julie and Jack and Replica.[9] The former, released in 2003, was a low-budget romance,[10] while the latter was never released.[8] Nguyen blamed this on the expensive storyboarding process and his casting decisions.[8]

Nguyen was inspired to write the script for Birdemic: Shock and Terror while spending time relaxing in Half Moon Bay, California,[11] and much of the filming took place in the area surrounding the community. Birdemic began production in 2006 and took four years to produce,[8] partly due to time limitations—filming was done mostly on weekends over the course of seven months [12]—and also due to financial restraints, as it was financed through Nguyen's day job, plus the time it took for Nguyen to find a distributor.

According to the film's website, the movie was partly inspired by Alfred Hitchcock's 1963 film The Birds (the film touts a cameo from Tippi Hedren, which is actually archival footage from an early Nguyen film, Julie and Jack, playing on a television)[13] and Al Gore's An Inconvenient Truth.[13] The film was produced for a budget of $10,000, but the distributors have spent more on marketing than it cost to produce the film and purchase the rights.[14]

Promotion

File:James Nguyen.jpg
Nguyen, director of the film, speaking at a screening

In January 2009, Nguyen traveled to the Sundance Film Festival in Park City, Utah to promote the film freelance, handing out flyers to passers-by from his van, adorned with stuffed birds and paper signs that read "BIDEMIC.COM" (spelling Birdemic wrong in his haste) and "WHY DID THE EAGLES AND VULTURES ATTACKED [sic]?", and renting out a local theater to screen the film.[9] Word of mouth eventually gave Birdemic attention from horror movie websites Dread Central[15] and Bloody Disgusting,[16] while the trailer was featured on the July 30 episode of G4's Attack of the Show.[17]

Release

On February 27, 2010, Birdemic received its Los Angeles premiere at the Silent Movie Theatre,[18] sponsored by Bloody Disgusting and hosted by Tim Heidecker and Eric Wareheim,[19] followed by a cast-and-crew attended screening at the Alamo Drafthouse in Austin, Texas on March 2,[20] with follow-up screenings in Tempe, Arizona.[21] and New York City.[22]

Severin Films acquired the film in early 2010 and launched the Birdemic Experience Tour 2010, which showed the film in numerous cities in the United States and Toronto, Canada from April through July 2010.[23] Birdemic premiered in the United Kingdom at The Curzon Soho in London on May 28, 2010.[24]

Home media

On April 3, 2009, Moviehead Pictures self-released Birdemic on DVD, selling it exclusively through Moviehead's official website and manufactured on demand through Amazon.com.[25] In early 2010, Birdemic was picked up by Severin Films[26] with plans to release the film on home media. Birdemic was released on DVD and Blu-ray Disc on February 22, 2011. The DVD's special features include an audio commentary by James Nguyen as well as one by lead actors Alan Bagh and Whitney Moore, two deleted scenes, a feature on the Birdemic Experience Tour, and an episode of the public-access San Francisco TV show Movie Close Up which features Nguyen and was aired as Birdemic was still under production (the host of the show, Bonnie Steiger, later played an extra in the bus rescue scene of Birdemic).

Reception

Birdemic has been noted for its poor quality, with reviewers calling out its wooden acting and dialogue, amateurish sound and editing, nonsensical plot and, in particular, its special effects, consisting entirely of poorly rendered CGI eagles and vultures that, in addition to performing physically awkward aerial maneuvers (non-animated bird sprites in the background will simply rotate 360° in mid-air), spit acid and explode with unrealistic smoke upon impact with the ground with a plane dive sound effect.[27] It has also been noted that the birds do not appear until 47 minutes into the film, nearly half way into it.

On a 2009 "Best of" list, Bloody Disgusting listed Birdemic amongst its honorable mentions, calling it "the best worst film you'll see in 2010".[28] The Huffington Post referred to the film as "truly, one of the worst films ever made."[2] Variety reported that "'Birdemic' displays all the revered hallmarks of hilariously bad filmmaking: inane dialogue...miscued music, godawful sound...and special effects that simply must be seen to be believed: birds dive-bombing and exploding in red-and-yellow poofs of smoke, and clip-art eagles, crudely pasted on the screen, with only their wing tips mechanically flapping."[29] The Village Voice described Birdemic as "one more in the pantheon of beloved trash-terpieces."[30] Salon commented on the "atrocious CGI" and reported that the film had become "a cult hit among bad-movie fans."[31]

An online review from the Independent Film Channel stated that the film feels "indebted to Wood's Plan 9 from Outer Space with its blend of ultra-low budget filmmaking and cuckoo bananas ecological message." [32] The Guardian and The New York Times[33] reported on the film's cult status, with The Guardian writing that "Birdemic features acting as wooden as a tree, clunky camera work...and crude special effects that reduce audiences to tears of laughter rather than terror."[34] Slate wrote that "aspects of Birdemic can seem too bad to be true...The film's artlessness comes to function as its own sort of hallucinatory art...we see the narrative space of the film breaking down and rebuilding itself constantly—bloody stitches on its forehead, bolts in its neck. This breakdown can be profoundly discomfiting and surprisingly infectious."[3] Rotten Tomatoes currently gives the movie a rating of 20%.[35]

Tim Heidecker and Eric Wareheim, who hosted the Los Angeles premiere, parodied the movie on their television series Tim and Eric Awesome Show, Great Job! in the episode "Crows".[36] On February 25, 2011 episode of The Soup, scenes of Birdemic, especially an elongated scene in which employees clap incessantly at the company's good financial news, was the "Clip of the Week". The Bob Buel Ridicule Theatre podcast featured both Birdemic and its sequel on its show, mocking the films extensively. A live show of the podcast How Did This Get Made? released on February 28, 2012 and starring cast member Whitney Moore and guest star "Weird Al" Yankovic (who states that he is a fan of the film) is dedicated to discussing Birdemic.[12]

A RiffTrax for Birdemic was released on February 22, 2011, featuring commentary by Michael J. Nelson, Bill Corbett, and Kevin Murphy of Mystery Science Theater 3000 fame.[37] The release of their commentary was quickly followed up by recreations of seven humorous scenes from the film.[38][39][40][41] On October 25, 2012, Fathom hosted a RiffTrax Live event featuring Birdemic.[42] A physical DVD as well as a digital download of the show was released on November 25, 2014.[citation needed]

Sequel

A sequel, titled Birdemic 2: The Resurrection[43] and also written and directed by James Nguyen, finished filming in March 2012[44] and was released in April 2013 with a special screening in Los Angeles followed by a tour to select theaters in the United States,[45] with an online release on April 16, 2013.[46] The plot centers around a struggling Hollywood filmmaker named Bill (Thomas Favaloro) who casts an aspiring actress named Gloria (Chelsea Turnbo) in his upcoming film before eagles and vultures attack. Alan Bagh and Whitney Moore reprised their roles for the sequel, as did Colton Osborne, Rick Camp, Stephen Gustavson, Patsy van Ettinger, and Damien Carter.

See also

References

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  12. 12.0 12.1 Birdemic: LIVE!, episode #31 of How Did This Get Made
  13. 13.0 13.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  14. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  15. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  16. Barrett, Simon 'Birdemic' interview on Bloody Disgusting Bloody Disgusting.com. Retrieved December 27, 2009.
  17. Clips of 'Birdemic' on "Attack of the Show" July 30, 2009.
  18. Official Theatrical Trailer for Birdemic: Shock and Terror
  19. Massacre, Tex Tim & Eric Host the Greatest Night of Your Life: Red Carpet Premiere of 'Birdemic'!
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  23. The Birdemic Experience Tour 2010 Trailer
  24. Birdemic Flocks to the UK
  25. 'Birdemic: Shock and Terror' on Amazon
  26. Birdemic Flies Its Way to Theaters!
  27. Morbid. 'Birdemic: Shock and Terror' www.dreamindemon.com. December 18, 2009.
  28. Massacre, Tex. 'Best & Worst of 2009' Bloody Disgusting. December 22, 2009.
  29. Variety Reviews – Birdemic: Shock and Terror
  30. Birdemic: Shock and Terror, One More for the Trash-terpiece Heap
  31. "Birdemic": The magic of atrocious CGI, confirmed
  32. Plan 10 From Half Moon Bay
  33. A Cheesy Horror Turkey Becomes a High-Flying Cult Hit
  34. Horror film Birdemic earns cult status for bad acting and worse special effects
  35. Birdemic: Shock And Terror Movie Reviews, Pictures
  36. The World is Gripped by Birdemic: Shock and Terror! New Theatre Listings, Trailer, and More!
  37. RiffTrax
  38. Four Hilarious Birdemic Re-Creations By RiffTrax
  39. Rifftrax Classic Birdemic Moments – An Exciting Accomplishment
  40. Rifftrax Classic Birdemic Moments – An Expert Consulted
  41. Rifftrax Classic Birdemic Moments – A Discussion Amongst Rogues
  42. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  43. BIRDEMIC 2 – The Resurrection
  44. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  45. [1]
  46. Birdemic 2: The Resurrection | Chill

External links