Putting festival’s films to the test
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Young Chang
NEWPORT BEACH -- Jon Muir’s television and VCR are in the bedroom of
his Corona del Mar home, but he doesn’t let himself get comfortable in
bed while screening features for the Newport Beach Film Festival.
Instead, he sits on the floor. He watches the films alone. He dims the
lights and focuses, as if the task isn’t just recreational.
His one distraction: buttered and salted popcorn.
“It seemed important to me that you give each movie your full
attention,” said Muir, 48. “When you realize how much work goes into a
movie, you owe it to the [filmmakers].”
Muir is the sole non-industry community member on a jury of 12 whose
job is to judge each feature screened at the festival and help decide
which title will earn best feature, best documentary, best director, best
cinematography, best screenplay and two audience awards.
Muir landed the jury spot after writing a review of “Brotherhood of
the Wolf” in January for the “Everyone’s a Critic” contest co-sponsored
by the film festival and the Daily Pilot’s promotion department.
His review won and garnered him the prize of being a festival judge
and screening every movie for free.
“We are a festival that celebrates the rich diversity of film and the
rich diversity of our community, and we felt it was natural to further
integrate our city and our community into the process of the festival,”
Executive Director Gregg Schwenk said.
Muir, a former attorney and now a trust officer for Commercial Capital
Bank in Irvine, entered the contest simply because he’s always loved
films.
“When I realized I’d get to see all these movies and not pay, it was
like being a kid in a candy store,” he said.
Four weeks before the festival started, Muir picked up available
videos three or four at a time to screen in advance. Nowadays, he devotes
his weekends and evenings to watching videos and attends a number of
screenings at the four Newport Beach theaters for titles that are only
available on the big screen.
On Sunday, Muir watched the 4 p.m. run of “The Cabbie,” the 6 p.m.
screening of “The Trespasser” and the 8 p.m. showing of “Rodents.” Each
was subtitled and shown at Edwards Island 1.
“That was fairly grueling,” Muir said, of reading subtitles for half
the day.
But the fun outweighed the stress for the longtime movie fan.
Muir’s earliest favorite movie was John Ford’s western “The Man Who
Shot Liberty Valance.” Muir watched it when he was just 7 or 8. As an
adult, he appreciates the movie because it shows so much about America.
There was just one theater in Muir’s native Pennsylvania town of 7,000
people. It used to offer Saturday movie packages including 17 cartoons
and a “Three Stooges” short for 25 cents. Muir spent a large part of his
childhood in this theater.
“There are still 7,000 people, and there is still one movie theater,”
he said.
So far, his favorite feature at the festival is the German work “As
Far As My Feet Will Carry Me.”
“It had great cinematography,” Muir said. “And without sounding
pretentious, it had great economy in storytelling.”
* Young Chang writes features. She may be reached at (949) 574-4268 or
by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
FYI
WHAT: Awards Night
WHEN: 7 p.m.
WHERE: Tent at Newport Beach Marriott Hotel, 900 Newport Center Drive,
Newport Beach
COST: $30
CALL: (949) 253-2880
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