ron maxwell

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Copperhead Blog App

If there is one thing we have seen in the promotion and distribution of Ron Maxwell’s Copperhead, it is that the production team is not afraid to integrate new aspects and technology in order to boost viewership and appeal to modern audiences. We have seen some groundbreaking new ways of interacting with fans, namely through the “Demand” feature, which has prospective audience members get involved and show why the film should make it to a theater near them. For independent films, this is going to be the future. Now, I have a new bit to share with you, called the “Copperhead Blog App”, which you can access by clicking here. This app allows you to test your Civil War knowledge through trivia games, check out a massive gallery of behind-the-scenes photos, and perhaps most uniquely, have the ability to download recipes of dishes that would have been cooked in the 1860′s time-period that Copperhead takes place in. Talk about bringing history alive! Please check it out.

The app also includes a countdown to the June 28 release day. We’re only 17 days away! How excited are you?

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The first actor I interviewed involved with Copperhead was Josh Cruddas, which happened right after filming began. We just went for the basics and he promised me another interview once filming ended, to give a better picture of his overall experience. Since I am lucky enough to have already seen the movie, I can say that Josh does a wonderful job in the role of Jimmy, who is kind of like the main character, Abner Beech’s, adopted son. Copperhead begins with Josh reciting the opening narration, setting the stage for the story to come—some of that narration can be heard in the voice-over on the trailer. As good of an actor as Josh is though, he is an even better person. We have remained in touch all this time, and I am proud to know such an aspiring young actor, who has such a bright future ahead of him. Though he has acted before, hopefully this will serve as his “big break”. At the end of our interview, Josh added, “All in all, playing Jimmy in Copperhead was a life-changing adventure for me, and I’ve made many new friends while creating a film that I believe will be something special. I need to thank Ron for giving me the chance to be in a picture like this, and I’m so grateful for the support I’ve received from everyone involved in the production and from folks back home and around the world. I feel very blessed.” Below is our full interview. Enjoy!

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Just this past week, the official trailer and updated poster for Ron Maxwell’s Copperhead, which will hit theaters on June 28th, was released, much to the excitement of fans, who have waited nearly 10 years for another Civil War film from the director of Gettysburg and Gods and Generals. The trailer, amongst fans, has generated a lot of discussion and rave reviews. Also garnering excitement is the new movie poster, which I must say is much better than the original, and really captures and essence and intensity of what this film is about—the American flag backdrop was totally necessary, to convey the point that even with all the strife and how this country was torn apart, we were all Americans in the end. It also includes the tagline, “Patriot to some. Traitor to others.”, which is central to the main character of Billy Campbell, as well as the entire Copperhead political movement as a whole, due to their anti-war feelings.

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A release date for Ron Maxwell’s Copperhead has been set for June 28. The premiere for the film will be held sometime in the week prior, in Washington D.C, before opening near Civil War battlefields along the east coast. We are all very excited! Stay tuned for more information as we get closer, as well as for additional interviews with cast and crew members.

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Can you believe that there are actually people out there in this world who watch movies together as a family, and then sit and discuss them? I personally know of a few who do, and some who don’t, but probably would if there was something worth discussing. Just last spring, when I was teaching a course on World War II, I sent out notice that we would be watching parts of Schindler’s List after school. A few days later, a parent called me asking, “Could you please tell me what scenes you will be showing so I can discuss the film with my son when he gets home? It was such a powerful movie when I first saw it.” This actually made me very happy, to find out that there are people who watch films and talk about their meaning, or the effect they leave on the viewer. The Civil War is a surprisingly family-oriented subject, not just with the actual history of soldiers going off to war, and sometimes finding themselves on the battlefield fighting against good friends and even family members on occasion, but because of what the modern tradition of reenacting has done for “living” history. We see with many re-enactors, how it was the father who first got involved as a soldier, and then after a few years, the wife joined as a soldier’s companion or battlefield nurse, and later still, the small children getting involved with dressing up and becoming a drummer boy, or something along those lines. It must be assumed that these families watch Civil War movies together because they are all into the subject so much, but sometimes, that can be a difficult task.

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Good afternoon, everyone! Just wanted to share this quick post with you, which is something that Ron Maxwell, the director of Copperhead, wrote on his Facebook this afternoon. Recognizing the importance of social media and word-of-mouth when it comes to publicity with films and other entertainment mediums, this is a message regarding what YOU can do to help the success of his upcoming film, slated for a summer release. If you love American history, film, and when the two meet, please help spread the word, by telling friends who are also interested in the subject, and even sharing the links of the official website (which includes my official blog of the film), the production’s Facebook and Twitter pages, and this blog as well. Together, as students of history, we can accomplish something. I’ll leave Ron to tell the rest:

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Some historical films mimic the time period they are trying to portray. Some films become that time period. Thanks to the production team of designer Bill Fleming, costume designer Kate Rose, a stellar hair and makeup team and Kings Landing Historical Settlement, and the hundreds of “living historians” who served as background extras, Copperhead becomes one of those films. There is an authenticity you are going to witness that is beyond most films set in other times. The people are not Hollywood cardboard cutouts, they are real. That is what will excite history buffs when they watch this film, because there is an earthiness to what we see.
That was my overall impression of this film, along with the passionate acting performances by the ensemble cast , and even more than Laurent Eyquem’s powerful, melancholy score. The scenery and people who filled it in brought this picture to life – taken to an even higher level by cinematographer Kees Van Oostrum. However, these extras are not the “norm” by any stretch, because they all do it for a love of history, and some even do it for a living at the settlement. Because of this, the clothing is not fresh off the rack, the people are not polished, and the beards are real. You truly feel as if you stepped out of an H.G Welles time machine and into the 1860′s.
Perhaps the reason for such an effect is the simplicity at hand. While the characters and their relationships are extremely complex, the story is deceptively simple. The audience is never lost, because the camerawork and pacing allows you to realize where you are at all times. In one of the weekly production videos, co-producer John Huston mentioned that he and director Ron Maxwell were going for a Pieter Brueghal feel, due to his paintings of peasant life in the middle ages. As production came to a close, we saw comparisons drawn to Jan Vermeer, and his depictions of simple housework. The only other director to leave me with this impression was the Italian maestro Pier Paolo Pasolini, who went out of his way to strip his productions of anything artificial, sometimes going so far as hiring people who had never acted a day in their life in lead roles, to avoid anything that looked fake or put on. He would even travel to the most remote parts of the earth to film even a small section of his work. The reason for this was to achieve an unmatched authenticity, so we can put aside our modern world and forget we are watching a movie. So we can transform ourselves to be in whatever time period is being presented to us.
Wherever Pasolini went, he cast locals to use as extras. In so doing, he immediately gained their respect, and with that, trust. He also received something even more important: camaraderie amongst cast-members, which any filmmaker will tell you is sometimes rare to behold. Maxwell seems to be in the same situation with Copperhead. He used the photogenic Kings Landing, and its people. After speaking to a few of the extras and actors, they have told me it really felt as if everyone was a family. This occurred not just among the extras who already knew each other, but even when some of the bigger names arrived. The actors, however legendary or unknown, were quickly assimilated in 19th century life, and it showed in the final product. Plainly said, this is an authentic period movie with real people. The sincerity will bring families together who happen to view it as a whole. This will be a film that will stand alone amongst films set both during the American Civil War and 1800′s as a whole.

I would just like to start off this post with an announcement, to tell you all that the official website for Copperhead: The War at Home will be experiencing a complete redesign and upgrade in the coming days. This post below was going to be my latest write-up, and since I don’t know if I will be able to post it immediately, I wanted to share it here, and also because I have not written anything on the film for this blog in quite some time, after moving official coverage over there. Please enjoy!

When you think of directors paying tribute to past artists in their films, what immediately comes to mind? For me, it would be an instance in a horror movie, where, when someone is getting killed, or if something frightening is happening, you hear music that is eerily similar to what Alfred Hitchcock used in Psycho, during the infamous shower scene. How about paying tribute to an older actor or actress, who experienced some greatness earlier in their career, but is now getting on in years? In The Night of the Hunter (1955), director Charles Laughton, an ardent admirer of D.W Griffith and his many castings of actress Lillian Gish, led him to multiple close-ups of the elder actress’s face in the only film he ever directed, to reflect some of her past glory as a superstar of the silent era and also his admiration, though she was not as familiar with what was the present-day audience. As yet another example, in 1957, for the filming of his epic meditation on man, fate, life, and death, Ingmar Bergman used medieval religious paintings and ballads as the basis for his setting and haunting cinematography of The Seventh Seal.

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Billy Campbell on the set of “Copperhead”.

For better or for worse, we are going to be tracking the progress of Ridley and Tony Scott’s National Geographic documentary that is currently in pre-production and slated to air next year. I have had people tell me it is a project worth covering, and people tell me that it is a waste of time because of how inaccurate the source book, Killing Lincoln, is, and due to the author being Bill O’Reilly. While I acknowledge both of those items, I have had a chance to see the working script and also have two connections to the cast and crew, and because I have immense respect for both of those people, I am going to devote some time to this in the hopes that the film will be better than the book.

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As I said last week, my coverage of Copperhead will be moving to their official website and blog, called the Copperhead Courier. If you have been following it so far, you will note that the few posts I have put up were already posted on this site. I just wanted to get the juices flowing over there, so now, new articles will be coming, some from Jim Lavoie, owner and operator of Bulldog Publicity. My first new post is a little piece on the director, Ron Maxwell. I do not want to call it a biography, because it is more of my personal experiences in dealing with him as well as how the Civil War community views him. Please give it a read over there. The first two paragraphs are below:

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