BATTLE OF THE YEAR (3D)
Director: Benson Lee
Cast: Josh Holloway (Lost), Laz Alonso, Josh Peck (Drake & Josh), Caity Lotz and hip hop star Chris Brown as Rooster
Rating: U/A
Duration: 110 mins (1 hour 40 mins)
Video Playlist: http://www.youtube.com/
Battle of the Year is the Olympics of break dancing, a tournament held every year that attracts all the best teams from around the world, but the Americans haven’t won in fifteen years. Los Angeles Hip Hop mogul and former B-Boy Dante (Alonso) wants to put the country that started the Sport back on top. He enlists his hard-luck friend Blake (Holloway), who was a championship basketball coach, to coach his team. Armed with the theory that the right coach can make any team champions, they assemble a Dream Team of all the best b-boys across the country. With only three months until Battle of the Year, Blake has to use every tactic he knows to get twelve talented individuals to come together as a team if they're going to bring the Trophy back to America where it started. Inspired by the actual World championship held yearly in France.
PRODUCTION
NOTES
An all-star American dance crew competes against the most talented teams from across the globe for
the most coveted title in hip hop culture in Battle of the Year, an
explosive and inspiring dance movie from director
Benson Lee. Inspired by Lee’s award-winning documentary, Planet B-Boy, Battle of the Year
showcases the exhilarating realm of competitive dancing with unprecedented depth and insight, as some of the world’s most
elite teams ignite the screen with an astonishing display of
athleticism, power and grace, all in state-of-the-art 3-D.
Hip hop mogul Dante Graham (Laz Alonso) has created a billion-dollar
business out of his b-boy past. Now he intends to reinvigorate America’s
reputation as the pre-eminent by creating an all-American dream team that can
win the legendary Battle of the Year, hip hop’s premier competition, in
Montpellier, France.
Graham turns to his old friend and former crew mate Jason Blake (Josh
Holloway) to coach the team. With help of his assistant coach Franklyn (Josh
Peck) and choreographer Stacy (Caity Lotz), Blake struggles to transform 13
headstrong individualists into a disciplined, cohesive and polished crew to
rival all comers.
But with the competition only weeks away, the internal rivalry between
dancers Rooster (Chris Brown) and Do Knock (Jon Cruz) divides the group into
bitter factions, as Blake struggles to overcome the despair and alcohol abuse
that have enveloped him since the death of his wife and child in a tragic
accident. If the dream team wants to bring the b-boy world championship back to
American soil for the first time in 15 years, they will have to face down
ferocious personal demons to succeed.
Battle of the Year stars Josh Holloway (“Lost,” Mission Impossible – Ghost Protocol), Laz Alonso (Avatar, Fast and Furious), Takers),
Josh Peck (“Drake & Josh”; The Wackness),
Caity Lotz (“Death Valley,” “Mad Men”) and Grammy®-winning recording
artist Chris Brown (Stomp the Yard)
as Rooster. The film also stars a crew
of real life b-boys including Jon “Do Knock” Cruz, Jesse “Casper” Brown, Ivan
“Flipz” Velez, Joshua Lee “Milky” Ayers, Richard “Lil Adonis” Maguire, David
“Kid David” Shreibman, Sawandi Wilson, Anis Cheurfa, Steve Terada, Gil
“Gillatine” Brace-Wessel, Sammy “SamO” Soto, Richie “Abstrak” Soto and Luis Rosado.
The film is directed by Benson Lee from a script inspired by
his acclaimed documentary Planet B-Boy
and written by Brin Hill (Won’t Back Down)
and Chris Parker (Mulan II). The
producers of Battle of the Year are Beau Flynn (Red Dawn, Journey to the
Center of the Earth), Tripp Vinson (The
Number 23, The Exorcism of Emily Rose),
and Amy Lo (Planet B-Boy, Dreaming Nicaragua). Executive producers
are Glenn S. Gainor (Friends with
Benefits, Easy A), William Packer
(Think Like a Man, Takers and Rich and Tone Talauega. Director
of photography is Michael Barrett (Texas
Chain Saw 3-D, Ted). Editor is
Peter S. Elliot (Iron Man 3, Think Like a Man). Production designer
is Chris Cornwell (The Ideas of March,
Footloose). Music supervisor is Pilar
McCurry while original music is by Christopher Lennertz (Identity Thief, Thanks for
Sharing). Costume designer is Soyon An (“American Idol,” “So You Think You
can Dance”). The film is choreographed by Dave Scott (Step Up 3-D, Stomp the Yard)
and Rich and Tone Talauega (who have worked with Chris Brown, Madonna and
Jennifer Lopez).
The running time is 1 hour and 49 minutes.
ABOUT THE PRODUCTION
B-boying is the innovative and
athletic dance form that originated on the streets of New York City during the 1970s
and became one of the four cornerstones of hip-hop culture, along with emceeing,
graffiti and DJing. Dubbed “break dancing” by the media, b-boying achieved overwhelming
visibility in popular culture. Its luster eventually faded in the U.S., even as
it continued to flourish around the world, as director
Lee Benson discovered in his award-winning 2007 documentary, Planet B-Boy. Today, the basic moves first
developed over 30 years ago have evolved into a highly sophisticated and
acrobatic form of dance that can be legitimately compared to top-flight Olympic
gymnastics.
“The world of b-boying has become global,” says Lee. “In Battle
of the Year, which was inspired by my documentary, a coach is asked to
put together a Dream team made up of the best b-boys in America with the sole
mission of winning the Battle of the Year, which is like the World Cup of b-boying.
More than 20 countries compete every year. The Dream team has a chance to bring
the gold back home to America, where b-boying started, for the first time in 15
years.”
Battle of the Year (or
BOTY) is a real life event that takes place each year in France, attracting crews
from around the world. “The competition has been going on for over 20 years,”
says producer Amy Lo, who also collaborated with Lee on his documentary. “It’s
a global event that attracts thousands of people. You can’t imagine the energy.”
Lo admits she knew nothing at all about b-boy culture before
working on the documentary. “What drew me in were the kids’ individual stories,”
she says. “Battle of the Year is a chance to explore that world further
and share it with even more people. I appreciate the element of self-expression
as well as the amazing physical feats, and my hope is that we inspire a new
generation to explore this art form.”
According to Lee, b-boying grew out of a need
for young people in the Bronx to express themselves through dance. “Wherever it
goes, it represents the disenfranchised, so it makes sense that it was adopted
by so many different cultures. It gives an option to kids who don’t have the
opportunity to go to traditional dance schools.”
Even before Lee and Lo completed
Planet B-Boy, they recognized the
potential to create a feature film that would reintroduce the b-boy
dance phenomenon to the country in which it began. Finding the right framework
for their movie was their first challenge. Producer
Tripp Vinson of Vinson Films helped the pair develop the property into a
feature film.
Vinson says he was peripherally
aware of b-boying from its ’80s heyday. “But Planet B-Boy was my real introduction to the culture. One of most
compelling things about it is that the people and their stories engage the
viewer at least as much as the dance. Their heart and warmth, as well as the
struggles they go through to pursue their dream, sucked me in and I felt that
it would make a great feature film.”
Lee’s documentary is an in-depth, insider’s look at
the international b-boy scene that stretches from Japan, France, Germany and
South Korea back to the United States. Using it as a jumping off
point, the filmmakers looked for an approach to set their film apart from
typical dance movies. “Contemporary dance pictures tend to stick to a formula,” says
Lee. “Ballerina meets street dancer. He gives her flavor and she civilizes him.
That storyline has been beaten to a pulp, so it was the last thing we wanted to
do. We came up with the idea of turning this into a sports film, which seemed
like a natural fit. It’s about competition and the dancers are physically on
par with elite athletes.”
Elements of teamwork and redemption are woven throughout the
story, says Lo. “It is a very American story, with a very diverse group of
people with big egos learning to put them aside to achieve a common goal.”
Although the storyline is strictly fictional, it is deeply
infused with the spirit of the documentary, using elements of different dancers’
experiences to craft a classic story. “A brilliant coach has fallen on hard
times and a hip hop executive wants him to put together the best dance crew in the
world,” says Vinson. “The world of b-boying tends to be about the individual
and the coach teaches them to become a team so that they can compete in the
Battle of the Year.”
The discipline of b-boying has evolved tremendously since the
early days of breaking, making it a study in individualism. “The kids overseas
have taken it and put their own stamps on it,” Lo continues. “It feeds back
into the U.S. on the Internet. All the b-boys study videos from events across
the world and eventually that informs their own style. The cross-pollination is
really fascinating.”
Lee says that while his interest in b-boying is deep and
passionate, he was never a real b-boy himself. “I have always been a huge fan. I
was first exposed to b-boying when I saw Flashdance.
Jennifer Biels is walking down the street and she runs into a group of b-boys.
I’d never seen people dance like that before. There was a host of other movies
that came out afterwards, like Beat
Street and Breaking. I watched
those as well and I was completely sucked in.”
A decade later, Lee had finished his first film and was
wondering what to do next. “I happened to see Flashdance on television. When I saw that scene, I started to
wonder what happened to the b-boys. Through the Internet, I discovered this event
called Battle of the Year and I became obsessed with it.”
He learned that not only were the b-boys still around, they
had gone international. “And they had evolved into these really powerful athletes,
but no one seemed to know about it. Wherever in the world it has gone, b-boying
has come to represent the disenfranchised or ignored, the people without
resources or advantages.”
He equates the art form with 1950s-era rock and roll. “It is was
a purely American thing that came out of blues and shocked the world. Then it
went around the globe and was reinterpreted by other cultures before coming
back here. Hip hop has the power of rock. It represents youth. That’s why it
has proliferated worldwide.”
And like rock and roll, you either have it or you don’t, he
believes. “The best b-boys are the ones who’ve dedicated their lives to it.
They draw on their personal experiences for inspiration and ideas. One thing I
find that the best have in common is that they don’t feel they chose b-boying. They
believe b-boying chose them.”
FINDING THE DREAM TEAM
The cast of Battle of the Year combines
experienced actors with top street dancers to create a visceral and authentic
picture of the reality of life as a b-boy. “It’s a really good mix,” says Amy
Lo. “The actors were really respectful of the dancers, who are most often the
unsung heroes in a situation like this, but we give them all their moment at
center stage.”
Josh Holloway plays Jason Blake, the down-and-out coach who redeems himself
as he teaches the boys to trust him and each other enough to become a real
team. “I wasn’t familiar with Josh from his role on ‘Lost,’
but from the moment I met him, I just liked him,” says Lee. “He’s a really
genuine person and very professional in his approach to the work. During
rehearsals, I was blown away by the way he redefined the coach. He really dug
deep into this character and brought such depth and humanity to it. A really
good coach is a mentor and Josh achieved that with a lot of the guys on screen,
as well as off camera.”
Holloway admits to being a closet b-boy enthusiast since his days as a high-school
basketball player. “I’ve been into dancing my whole life, but I never threw it out
there in public,” he says. “My basketball team had some really good b-boys on
it and we even integrated moves into our warm-ups. When I saw the documentary, I
was astonished by the athleticism and the evolution of b-boying.”
But even more than the dancing, he was drawn to the coach’s story. “It
grabbed me,” says the actor. “I know from my own experiences how much a coach
can shape your life. In this case, the coach has as much to learn as the team.”
Two years before the
story starts, Blake lost his family in a car wreck. “He just checked out and became
a serious drunk,” Holloway says. “It’s a painful struggle to come back. He’s an
alcoholic and he can’t let go of that yet, because it’s his survival mechanism.”
Eventually, he finds a
scribbled note in an old coaching notebook that gives him the key to reaching
his team. “It’s something his wife wrote years ago,” says Holloway. “Change how
you think, change your life. He rediscovers that and implements it in his
coaching. The difference now is that it’s being reflected back on him.”
Taking his role to heart, Holloway worked with the dancers to
bolster their confidence in their untried acting skills. “Josh was really
generous with his time and his spirit and his energy,” says Lee. “I think the b-boys
really felt that and appreciated it.”
“I was just so inspired by
every one of these guys,” the actor says. “The things they can do physically
are amazing, but their spirit and the energy are even more so. As someone who
is a fan of this type of dance, I was blown away by what these kids could do. It
was truly like they were in an anti-gravity room.
“And Benson brought
passion and an incredible depth of knowledge on this subject,” he adds. “He
didn’t just make a dance movie. He’s trying to tell the deeper story of this
culture and what it grew from.”
Blake’s revitalization is engineered by his old friend Dante,
the hip hop impresario played by Laz Alonso. “Dante
offers Blake this job trying to pull him out of his depression,” says Vinson. “Laz
brings a lot of humor and swagger to the part. It’s a lot of fun to watch him
work.”
The two characters go back 30 years to their days on dance
crew together. “Dante became a hip hop mogul,” says Lee. “Blake became a coach
for a championship basketball team. But losing his family sent him spiraling
out of control and into alcoholism. Dante really wants put together a team to
go to BOTY, but he also sees this as an opportunity to help his friend.”
Alonso’s performance redefines the image of the hip hop mogul,
says the director. “The clichéd portrait of a blinged-out record executive is
over, because hip hop has evolved. Moguls like Jay Z and Russell Simmons are
extremely intelligent, savvy and cultured. That’s what we needed to see in
Dante. No one could have personified that better than Laz. He’s a phenomenal
actor who figured out a very refreshing take on the character.”
Alonso grew up b-boying and
starred in the sensational urban dance film, Stomp the Yard, but even he is awed by the new wave of breakers. “Being
in this film is something really special for me,” he says. “It takes me back to
when I was a kid, although this is a whole different level of b-boying. These
guys are doing all kinds of aerial work, that we never dreamed of. You’re going
to see how it has continued to grow over the years.”
The actor brings his unique charisma
to the character. “Dante has a certain swag,” says Alonso. “He’s totally confident
in the way that comes when you know how successful you are. He’s an alpha and
he knows it.”
Dante has noticed that while
the rest of the world has embraced b-boying, the U.S., where it originated, no
longer has respect for the art form. “At BOTY, we are getting our butts handed
to us by the Koreans or by the Russians or the French every year,” Alonso says.
“He decides to put together a Dream team to bring the title back where it
belongs and the same time reach out to an old friend who is in trouble.”
Alonso says he enjoyed working
with Holloway. “Josh is a professional all the way,” he says. “So many of his
scenes are essentially monologues and he found a way to make every speech sound
brand new, so I have a lot of respect the work that he’s done in this film.”
Blake is assisted in his
coaching duties by a wisecracking junior member of Dante’s organization named
Franklyn, played by Josh Peck. The actor, best known for his role on the
Nickelodeon sitcom, “Drake & Josh,” kept the laughter going both on camera
and between takes.
“Josh Peck has a natural exuberance,” says Lee. “He channels
old-time comedians like Laurel and Hardy, Abbott and Costello, and Jackie
Gleason. He is one of the funniest actors I’ve ever met. The whole crew was
rolling on the floor at his improvisations. He is also extremely intelligent
and really funny at the same time. He brings a levity to the film that’s very
important. Blake is pretty hardcore in his training, and Franklyn adds a bit of
comic relief to those scenes.”
“I love watching Josh
Peck tear it up,” says Holloway. “He threw out things all the time that weren’t
scripted and I would have to try to hold it together. He’s just funny as hell.”
Peck appreciated the
opportunity to create a character in his own image. “Everyone was so generous
in allowing me to bring my own spirit to the part,” he says. “Benson was always
such a calm force on set. It was great getting to see him spread his wings and
come into himself as a director in his first feature. I fell in love with the
documentary, so I was really happy to be a part of this.”
Growing up in
New York’s Hell’s Kitchen, Peck was familiar with hip hop culture. “Sure, I’m a
white Jewish kid,” he says. “But in my neighborhood, when you graduate from Hebrew
school, you’re inducted into the Run-D.M.C. boot camp. It was always a part of
my life and I love it.”
While
attending the Professional Performing Arts School in Mahattan, Peck
studied musical theater. “I’m also experienced in Bar Mitzvah dancing, quinceañera dancing and weddings.
Anywhere dancing is promoted and appreciated, I’m involved somehow,” he says. “I
always had a little bit of rhythm, perhaps more than people give me credit for.
But I dance mostly by myself, alone, and it centers me.”
In this film, however, he remains on the sidelines, dance-wise. “Franklyn is a dancer in
his heart, but nowhere else in his body,” says Peck. “He’s not the most
physically gifted cat in the world. I think he would love to be a dancer, but
he became an assistant at Dante’s company instead. When Blake signs on as
coach, Franklyn becomes his assistant because he has so much knowledge about
dance and the hip hop world.”
Peck believes audiences will
be blown away by the level of dance in Battle of Year. “These dancers are
like superheroes,” he marvels. “They are so talented and at the apex of what
they do. It is such a different world than anything I’ve ever experienced.
Dance is an equalizer. There’s no advantage because of who you are or where you
came from. It’s purely based on skill and on how hard you’ve worked.”
At Franklyn’s urging, Dante brings
in Stacey, a choreographer who works with the crew to refine their routines. “We wanted to redefine some stereotypical characters as much
as we did the urban dance genre,” says Lee. “Stacey is not the usual
babe-in-the-woods who comes from classical dance. She’s an empowered and
talented choreographer who can throw down just as hard as the guys. It’s
beautiful to see that synergy and have a character that avoids the typical
clichés. She doesn’t bring Blake back to life by becoming his romantic
interest. They are comrades working together on a mission. She shows him that
it’s OK to take a look around and see life again. The way that they handled it
was really beautiful and very natural.”
Ten years of jazz and contemporary
dance training prepared actress Caity Lotz to play the role. She began b-boying
at the age of 17 and performed with the San Diego-based company, Culture Shock.
“It was all hip hop and breaking,” she says. “It was the first time I saw
b-boys flipping and all that stuff. I’ve always been very acrobatic, and
combining that with the dance drew me in. It’s such an in-your-face performance
style and so much fun.”
Her
character faces obstacles almost immediately, first with Blake, who doesn’t see
the need for a choreographer, then with the boys themselves, who assume the
sweet-faced blonde is in over her head. “My character has a lot to overcome,”
Lotz says. “Blake knows b-boys and he knows teams. But he finally realizes that
the performance is all about choreography. She brings that aspect of it. She is
an amazing choreographer and she knows the guys need her, which helps her
handle them.”
Grammy®-winning recording artist Chris Brown plays Rooster,
one of the most outstanding dancers on the Dream team. “I wasn’t really
familiar with Chris Brown’s music, but I was completely blown away by his
talent,” says Lee. “Chris is the consummate performer. He really respects the
craft of b-boying. He trained rigorously and his natural swagger is perfect for
Rooster. He owns this character and there’s no doubt that he’s one of the best
dancers out there today, but he’s one of the boys on the set. He doesn’t play
the diva card at all.”
Rooster becomes one of the group’s leaders,
which the filmmakers say came naturally to Brown. “Chris brings so many things
to this role like this,” according to Vinson. “It was a privilege to watch him
work and he was a lot of fun to have on set.”
Brown has been interested in b-boying since he was a kid and his natural
aptitude for dance helped him pick up the finer points relatively quickly. Still,
he says this was the most difficult dancing he has ever done. “Nobody’s faking anything
here,” says Brown. “Working with these guys was inspiring for me. They really pushed me to do my best because they were so serious. They were always willing
to show me how to do a move and they were really encouraging. I learned a lot
and I think I walked away from this movie with a lot of new friendships.”
Brown says he loves
acting and is always open to an interesting part, but he was hesitant to accept
a role in a film about dance, especially since he is already well-known for his
musical performances. “The script was incredible, though,” he says. “The
characters and the story made me want to be a part of it.”
Brown quickly learned
that there’s a big difference between performing and battling. “When I go out on stage in front of 15,000 people, I know they came to see
me,” he says. “Battling is ten times as hard because you face the judgment. If
you mess up, they let you know.”
The filmmakers were especially sensitive to representing real
life b-boys when it came to casting the dancers in the film. The director
and producer held four all-day sessions
in several cities, bringing in dozens of potential team
members to compete for a limited number of spots, just as the characters do in
the film.
“To make a b-boy movie,
we needed to have b-boys in it,” says Lee. “What they do is very difficult. We
couldn’t just hire actors or other types of dancers, because it is so specific.
We had auditions throughout the United States and we brought in some of the
best b-boys around to play our Dream team.”
Winning the trust of the b-boy community was a slow process.
When breaking was the biggest pop-culture fad of the 1980s, many movies tried to
portray the culture and most got it spectacularly wrong. “The b-boy community
became very insular,” says Lee. “It went back underground in order to evolve. Because
their image and their culture has been misrepresented in films for so long, b-boys
are very skeptical about movies. They are not trustful of media people.”
But the reputation Lee built with Planet B-Boy opened doors for the production. “They understood what
I was trying to do,” he says. “When word got out in the community, they were very
supportive.”
The majority of the dancers
in the cast are actual b-boys who underwent an extensive casting process that
included documentary-style interviews to assess their personalities and
on-camera charisma, as well as dance auditions. “We asked them why they became b-boys
and what it all means to them,” says Lo. “Of course, we had them come in and
dance. The two things together allowed us to see where they were coming from
and helped give us ideas and inspiration for the characters.
“It was important to us
that they represent themselves,” she adds. “They don’t have a much of a voice
in movies or in mainstream culture. They don’t get featured front and center.”
Using footage
of the interviews and dance auditions, Lee and Lo put “screen tests” of each
promising dancer to show to the rest of the production team at Screen Gems. The final crew includes performers with colorful names like
Lil Adonis, Kilowatt, Mayhem, Abstrak, Gillatine, SamO, Flipz and Do Knock. “A b-boy name is pretty much everything
to a b-boy,” says Do Knock, whose given name is Jon Cruz. “I remember the first
time I heard a person on the East Coast call me Do-Knock. I thought, I never
even met that guy before and he knows my name. It’s like a stamp. When people
start calling you by your b-boy name, you know you’ve made it.”
He says that he has known many of the
dancers on the shoot for years, if not personally, at least through their
postings on the Internet. “It’s just crazy to see them on this film with me. It
makes me happy because I feel so connected to them. B-boying is like one
family. We have one voice. I can go to Korea and not speak a lick of Korean,
but I can chill with one of the b-boys out there, because of that connection.”
Of the 13 dancers who make
the final cut, Do Knock is the one who challenges Rooster for leadership of the
crew. “Do Knock is actually a famous b-boy,” says Vinson. “He’s in the
documentary and he is really an exceptional talent. He moves like nobody I’ve
seen. Do Knock, the character, and Rooster have an ongoing beef that may or not
be about a girl. They’re very competitive and split the team into two different
factions.”
Rooster and Do Knock’s competition
threatens to derail the team before they ever get started, says Lee. “They are
two guys who need to let go of their egos and transcend the bickering. Ego is a
very dangerous thing on a team like this. It gets in the way of your
performance, your concentration and your teamwork. Their story is about letting
go of that in order to work for a greater good.”
The filmmakers were confident that they had great dancers and
gave them the support they needed to blossom as actors. “We focused on finding
engaging personalities who were comfortable in front of the camera,” says Lee.
“Most of them had never acted before, but because they play characters or take
on different personas when they dance, they understood performing.
We rehearsed for about two
months, split between dancing and acting. One of the toughest things for any
performer is to be themselves on camera and that’s what we wanted from them.
That was integral for these guys to achieve the level of acting that they did
in the film. And they far exceeded what we expected of them.”
LIVE FROM PLANET B-BOY
Battle of the Year was filmed in Los Angeles and in Montpellier, France, where
BOTY takes place each year. “This was a global production,” says Glenn S.
Gainor. “We brought over 75 people from around the world to the south of France
for BOTY. We’re the first Hollywood production to ever shoot in Montpellier.
Europeans in general really embrace b-boying as an art form, so it was a great
experience.”
Many of the cast members
had never been outside the United States before. “They were in awe,” Gainor
says. “Everybody who made this film grew through the experience and you can see
that in the film as well. There’s a great sense of sincerity when they look
around and realize how far they’ve come.”
Located on the coastline midway between Italy and Spain,
Montpellier is an ancient French city studded with medieval architecture dating
as far back as the 10th century. It provides a stark contrast to the
b-boys’ training ground in Southern California.
“The film goes from a very barren detention center outside of
L.A. to this gorgeous old city,” says Lee “It really communicates the diversity
of this culture. Visually, both locations are stunning. The detention center has
its own distinct history and then going to Montpellier and being surrounded by
French history was just stunning for us all. I loved seeing the b-boys make
that transition.”
To ensure absolute authenticity, Gainor
approached Thomas Hergenrother, founder of BOTY, and asked for his support in
making the first real b-boy feature film. “I knew that as the president of an
organization that helped legitimize b-boying, he would make sure we represented
it in the right way,” says the executive producer. “Making that part of the
shoot happen was a global operation. We had help from Paris, London, Tokyo, New
York, Germany and Austria. The teams came in from Israel, Korea, Russia,
Kazakhstan and America to compete at BOTY.”
The filmmakers flew in
Russia’s team, Top Nine, to compete in a battle sequence with the Dream team before
the competition started. “We also put together a phenomenal group from Korea
and flew them to Montpellier to dance in the film,” says Gainor. “And we have Vagabond,
the No. 1 b-boy team in France, just as they were in the Battle of the Year.”
Lee says he was
ecstatic when he learned they would be able to shoot during the actual
competition. “There’s no event like it in the world. The energy and dynamic can’t
be reproduced. When we filmed the dance battles, I literally could not sit in
my chair. I was jumping up and down because seeing these guys memorialized on
film for this huge audience in 3-D blew me away. It made total sense to go
there and it’s another way to differentiate this film from other urban dance
films that take place in the ‘hood.”
The completed film combines footage that was specially staged
for the movie, as well as live scenes from the actual event. “We were able to
shoot in the stadium a few days prior and mixed it with footage from the
battle,” says Lo. “Shooting the real BOTY is one of the most ambitious things
I’ve seen done in a studio film. We had no control. The people in that stadium weren’t
there to watch us shoot a movie. They really couldn’t have cared less about
that. They just didn’t want us to get in the way of their event.”
With just 15 minutes to film the Dream team on the stadium
stage, everything had to be perfectly timed. “We had to have all five cameras
and the dancers primed and ready,” says Gainor. “All the rehearsing and all the
technical work paid off, but I was incredibly nervous when we finally got our
guys on stage. They were in formation and nothing was happening. The crowd was
going insane. Our guys were just standing there. I ran up to the first
assistant director and I screamed, where’s the music? He looked at me and he
said, ‘four, three, two, one.’ And then the music hit. It was that precise.”
Lee and his director of photography, Michael Barrett, used
Sony’s F3 3-D cameras for the majority of the shoot. During BOTY they also used
the new Sony TD300 for the first time in a feature film. “The F3s are
terrific cameras,” says Barrett. “Their sensitivity is incredible. We were
often surprised by how little light we were able to use. The TD300 was
irreplaceable because we often didn’t have the physical space to put a crew. During
BOTY, we had very few places to put our cameras, but you could just throw a
TD300 on your shoulder. We had a guy hidden behind a speaker who got really
terrific footage.”
The filmmakers worked without storyboards
and Barrett was constantly improvising the best ways to capture the action. “I
had seen rehearsals, so I had some idea of what was happening,” says the
cinematographer. “Every shot had at least three cameras rolling, and in the
arena, we had as many as five. We would try to get a wide shot and two
close-ups at the same time in the dramatic scenes.”
Filming the competition
at BOTY was like making a 3-D documentary, Barrett adds. “It was just
fantastic. We were in the front row for one of the most exciting competitions I
have ever witnessed. That sequence is phenomenal. To be that close to the
dancers is an experience you just can’t imagine. You have to see it.”
Lee was given a crash course in the art of 3-D filmmaking at The Sony 3-D Technology
Center, which was founded to train and nurture filmmakers in the latest in 3-D
developments. “This is a second generation of 3-D films,” he
notes. “The first generation was really about experimentation and refining the
technology, as well as maximizing the novelty of it. But it’s no longer just about
throwing stuff at people. It’s also about the depth that you can produce in the
world that you’re creating.
“Dance is a natural genre for 3-D, there’s no doubt about it,”
he continues. “There have been a lot of 3-D dance movies made, but none that
showcase the sportsmanship of b-boying. The 3-D creates a sense of
dimensionality that enhances the story of these kids and what they go through.
The audience will be immersed in it. With multiple cameras rolling at all
times, we had so many wonderful angles to choose from.”
Barrett, who also shot Texas
Chain Saw 3-D and A Very Harold &
Kumar 3-D Christmas says there is nothing gimmicky about the way the
technology is used here. “It feels like you walk up to the screen and into
this world. Dancing by nature is a spectacle and the 3-D heightened it. We’ve
got guys performing incredible feats with their bodies, things you can’t
imagine are physically possible. When you see it in 3-D, it’s absolutely
astounding.”
The production brought in
three top choreographers to work with the b-boys: Dave Scott, and brothers Rich
and Tone Talauega. “Dave Scott has worked extensively in movies, on projects
including You Got Served and Stomp the Yard,” says Vinson. “Rich and Tone are known for live events. We were
introduced to them through Chris Brown. They have been creative directors on
some of his shows. They are all very disciplined guys who run a tight ship and
they were incredibly inspiring for the dancers.”
The trio created dance sequences that embrace and elevate b-boying.
“It is an intensely physical discipline,” Gainor says. “They have to develop
their neck muscles, their arm muscles and their shoulder muscles to an
extraordinary degree. It takes real athleticism, stamina, talent and passion to
excel in this art form. Everybody in the film brought their creativity to it.
You’re really experiencing the authentic dance.”
The dancers and
choreographers had six weeks prior to shooting to prep. They continued
rehearsals and training throughout the shoot for sequences that include the
show-stopping finale, in which they perform a complicated and dangerous dance
routine blindfolded. “That’s never been done before,” says Vinson. “You can
imagine how much rehearsal and timing it takes to get something like that right.
It’s the Dream team’s secret weapon.”
Dave Scott was eager to be involved in a project that he thinks will change
the way people look at b-boying, but he was always aware that there would be
certain unavoidable challenges. “This is a dance style that is very
individualistic,” he points out. “Our job was to make it more of a team sport
without taking away the dancers’ personal style. It’s a whole new hybrid from
of dance. In addition, the competitions are huge productions, almost like a
circus. We had to come with something that is like a hip hop, b-boy, Broadway production
number.”
The
choreographers also had to instill some of the discipline that more
conventional forms like ballet require into the b-boy dancers. “In the script,
the Dream team starts out as a motley crew of cocky kids whose egos keep
getting in the way,” says Scott. “And that is what we had to deal with in real
life. I got grey hairs trying to unite these guys. But, as in the script, they
slowly started to work together and become a family who help each other out.”
The
Talauega brothers were attracted to the idea of b-boying as sport. “This script
had all the right ingredients,” says Tone. “The story is timeless. The script
is raw and comes from the streets. The fact that it is structured more like a
sports story that a typical dance movie made us relate to it right away.”
The
brothers worked closely with Scott to turn the boys into a unified team. “In
front of the camera was exactly like what was going on behind the camera,” says
Rich. “The dancers are so used to trying to stand out. During rehearsals, one
guy would go off and start spinning on his head when we were doing something
else. Another guy would start soloing while we were trying to work together, so
it was a headache to get them all in the same frame of mind. So many worlds
came together in this and it was our job to make them all one world.”
Rich Talauega spent time working one-on-one with Chris Brown to transform
him into an authentic b-boy. “Chris is a sponge,” the choreographer says. “His
dance talent is completely natural. He watches something and then does it
perfectly the first time out. It’s like he downloads it into his head. He is
fearless and willing to try anything. Give him enough time, he will do it
better than you!”
Benson Lee is extremely
proud to have helmed what he believes is the first feature film that does
justice to hip hop culture. “In my opinion, Battle of the Year features
the best urban dancing ever put on film,” Lee says. “We have a great story with
really phenomenal actors in a movie that will appeal to a wide audience. It has
some really important, universal themes and the dancing is not only for young
people.
“It is the first real showcase for b-boys in a
narrative film,” he continues. “We have some of the best b-boys from around the
world representing a whole era of world class b-boying. I want more people to
want to learn about the art of b-boying. I want to help it transcend that worn
out image from the ’80s. It is a dynamic and powerful form of dance. It is a
sport. It is an art.
“And for the kids who get
involved, it provides them an opportunity to shine. Some of them would never
have had that chance to leave their neighborhoods and this has allowed them to
see the world. It’s amazing.”
ABOUT THE CAST
JOSH HOLLOWAY (Jason Blake) Consistently delivering memorable
performances, Josh Holloway has used his unassuming style and southern charm to
become one of Hollywood’s most sought-after talents.
Holloway is best known for his role as
James “Sawyer” Ford in the hit ABC drama “Lost.” Created by Jeffrey Lieber,
J.J. Abrams and Damien Lindelof, “Lost” ran for 6 successful seasons and was
critically acclaimed as one of the top series of all times. The show was the
recipient of numerous awards and nominations including the 2006 Golden Globe
Award for “Outstanding Drama Series,” 2005 Emmy® Award for “Outstanding Drama
Series” and the 2005 Screen Actors Guild Award for “Outstanding Ensemble in a
Drama Series.”
In February, Josh will return to
television in the new CBS dramatic thriller, “Intelligence,” as Gabriel Black,
an intelligence operative with a microchip implanted in his brain that allows
him to access the internet and all information it contains.
On the silver screen, Holloway can
currently be seen in the thriller Paranoia
alongside Harrison Ford, Gary Oldman and Liam Hemsworth. Up next, he will
star in the action thriller Ten
alongside Arnold Schwarzenegger, Sam Worthington and Terrence Howard.
Holloway was most recently seen in the
fourth film of the Mission Impossible series, Mission: Impossible – Ghost Protocol alongside Tom Cruise and
Jeremy Renner. Additional feature film credits include roles in Stay Cool, Whisper, Mi Amigo, Moving August and
Cold Heart.
His television credits include “Community,”
“NCIS,” “CSI,” “Walker, Texas Ranger,” and “The Lyon’s Den.”
Josh was born in California but spent
his childhood in the Blue Ridge Mountains of Georgia. He studied at the
University of Georgia but after one year, moved to New York City. There, he
found success in modeling and traveled all over North America and Europe before
pursuing a career in acting. He currently resides in California with his wife
and daughter.
LAZ ALONSO (Dante Graham) was hosen as one of Variety’s Top Ten
Actors to Watch in 2009 and is part of the new breed of emerging leading men in
Hollywood. Earlier this year, Laz
reprised his role of the popular villain “Fenix” in the mega hit feature film
for Universal Pictures, Fast & Furious 6. In addition, he recently starred in the NBC series “Deception”
opposite Meagan Good. In 2011, Laz toplined the A&E drama “Breakout Kings”
and showed off his leading man skills in the hit romantic comedy for Columbia
Pictures entitled Jumping the Broom
(May 6, 2011) for which he won a 2012 NAACP Image Award for Outstanding Actor In A Motion Picture.
His past credits include the lead role
of “Tsu’Tey” in the highest grossing film of all time, Avatar! Directed by James
Cameron, this sci-fi epic released by 20th Century Fox stars Sam Worthington,
Zoe Saldana, and Sigourney Weaver. The film is one of the most
technically complex productions ever mounted, making extensive use of cutting
edge 3-D, computer animation and motion capture F/X technology. In early 2009, Laz played the lead villain
role of “Fenix” in the fourth installment of highly popular Fast and the Furious franchise. Fast & Furious, which reunited the
original cast of Paul Walker, Vin Diesel, Jordana Brewster and Michelle
Rodriguez and posted the highest-ever April weekend opening. The movie
went on to generate over $350,000,000 in worldwide box office sales and along
with DVD sales and rentals, the film went on to be the highest grossing film in
2009 for Universal Pictures.
In early 2008, Laz executive produced
and starred opposite Danny Glover in Alan Jacobs’ Down for Life (aka Por Vida),
which ended up with a much-coveted position in the 2009 Toronto Film Festival for which it was critically
acclaimed and is currently debuting in
other film festivals around the country.
In 2008, Laz starred in Miracle at
St. Anna for director Spike Lee, in which he played one of four main leads
opposite Derek Luke, Michael Ealy and Omar Benson. The film, which
follows four black “Buffalo Soldiers” of the 92nd Infantry Division who get
trapped in a small Tuscan village on the Gothic Line during the Italian
Campaign of WWII, also stars John Leguizamo, John Tuturro and Kerry Washington.
Laz’s other movie credits include lead
roles in the Sony/Screen Gems’ hits Stomp
The Yard and This Christmas, a
lead role in 2006 Roland Joffe psychological thriller Captivity, and a co-starring role in the 2005 hit Jarhead, opposite Academy Award® winner
Jamie Foxx, Jake Gyllenhaal and Peter Sarsgaard. The feature and was
directed by Sam Mendes for Universal. In 2011 he had a supporting role in Rod
Lurie’s remake of the Sam Peckinpah classic Straw
Dogs for Sony Screen Gems. His past
TV credits include guest-starring roles on “The Unit”, “Bones”, “CSI: Miami,”
“The Practice,” “Navy: NCIS” and “Eyes” and in 2010 a recurring role in the TNT
critically acclaimed series “Southland.”
In addition, Laz speaks fluent Spanish and has starred on the Telemundo
hit novella, “La Cenicienta.”
Laz was born and raised in Washington DC
to Afro-Cuban parents. The first generation American in his family, he always
knew he wanted to be an actor. He remembers at a very early age entertaining
his family by imitating relatives and family friends. He graduated from
the prestigious Howard University School of Business, earning a Bachelors
Degree in Business Administration with a concentration in marketing. After
college, he worked on Wall Street at an investment banking firm. He and two
partners eventually started their own marketing business, promoting mainstream
products to the trend-setting urban market. Owning and operating his own
successful business freed up Laz’s time to finally explore his passion for
acting. Laz began taking classes in the evening to hone his craft and it
didn’t take him long to begin landing roles in commercials and videos.
From D.C. to New York, Laz feels his
upbringing not only taught him how to deal with the school of hard knocks, but
also prepared him for his biggest goal, his acting career. He credits the move
to NYC as his move into manhood and the city holds many great memories for him.
Laz also credits his acting ability to these life experiences, as he is
able to bring a little of what he knows or has dealt with into his characters.
JOSH PECK (Franklyn)
has established himself as one of Hollywood's rising talents making the
seamless transition from child actor to leading man.
In fall 2012 Peck was seen in Open Road’s
highly anticipated action feature Red
Dawn directed by Dan Bradley. He starred alongside Chris Hemsworth, Josh
Hutcherson, and Adriane Palicki. Red Dawn
tells the story or 2 brothers (Peck and Hemsworth) who form an army
"The Wolverines" to save their town from an invasion of North Korean
soldiers.
Earlier that year, he completed the
indie thriller The Timber opposite
James Ransone. The Timber is an
apocalyptic Western-thriller written and directed by Anthony
O'Brien Peck and Ransone play brothers seeking their missing father
in the harsh backdrop of the 1898 Yukon gold rush. The film is currently in
post-production.
In 2008, Peck wowed critics in Jonathan
Levine's The Wackness opposite Sir
Ben Kingsley and Olivia Thirlby. Wining the Audience Award at 2008 Sundance
Film Festival, Peck played a young man coming of age in the summer of
1994. In 2004, Peck received critical acclaim and a Special Distinction
Award with his co-stars at the Independent Spirit Awards for Mean Creek, alongside Rory Culkin, Ryan
Kelley, and Trevor Morgan.
Additional film credits include, ATM, Havoc, Special, What Goes Up. He
has also lent his voice to the Ice Age
blockbuster franchise as the character of 'Eddie' as well as in Aliens in the Attic, in which he plays
the voice of the character, Sparks. On television, he is best known for his
role of 'Josh' on the Nickelodeon series “Drake and Josh,” Peck received a 2008
Nickelodeon Kid's Choice Award nomination for the hit series. In 2008, he
starred in Nickelodeon's highly-rated TV movie, “Merry Christmas Drake &
Josh.”
Peck currently resides in Los Angeles.
CAITY LOTZ (Stacy) is best known for her role as Officer
Kirsten Landry on MTV’s “Death Valley”. Caity stars in The Machine slated to be released later this year. Her indie film Live At The Foxes Den with Jackson
Rathbone (Twilight) will be out this
year as well. Caity starred in The Pact,
which was a breakout film at the 2012 Sundance Film Festival.
On the small
screen, Caity is often recognized for her recurring role as ‘Stephanie’ on
AMC’s “Mad Men.”
A native of San Diego, California, Lotz
excelled in the arts from a young age, exploring studio art, photography,
dance, and drama, ultimately forming an irreplaceable love of performance
art. Dancing from the age of seven, Lotz
appeared as a dancer for Lady Gaga, toured with Avril Lavigne, and was a member
of “Soccx,” a musical pop group with two top-selling singles in Germany. Showcasing her individuality through
free-style and break dancing, Lotz has mesmerized audiences, raising the bar
with her unique acquired skills – tricking and parkour. Tricking, a form of performance martial arts,
and parkour, an expression of acrobatic moves like leaping from walls, gound
rolls, and precision jumping, are becoming increasingly popular in the US,
specifically in the entertainment industry.
In recent years, tricking and parkour have received much wider publicity
and popularity due to various stints in film and television.
Caity currently resides in Los Angeles.
CHRIS
BROWN (Rooster) F With over eight
million albums and 30 million tracks sold worldwide, one billion views on VEVO,
and success as an entertainer and philanthropist, Chris Brown has both proven
staying power and inspiring resolve. Brown has recently wrapped recording on his
sixth studio album, “X,” slated for release this November and has a world tour
set for early 2014. “X” is the follow-up to the artist’s 2012 album “Fortune.”
Debuting at No. 1 on the Billboard 200, the set has sold 462,000 to date per
Nielsen SoundScan. In 2007, he made his on-screen
feature film debut in Stomp the Yard,
and appeared as a guest on the television series “The O.C.” Other films Brown
has starred in include Think Like a Man
(2012), Takers (2010), and This Christmas (2007). Throughout
his career, Brown has won numerous awards, including two NAACP Image Awards,
three American Music Awards and nine BET Awards.
Following his entrepreneurial instinct, Brown founded the record
label CBE (Chris Brown Entertainment) in 2007, and has since signed Kevin
McCall, rock diva Sabrina Antoinette, former RichGirl member Sevyn, rock group
U.G.L.Y., and singer Joelle James. Brown has also released his past albums
under the label.
In addition to his success in music and film, Brown continues to
support long-term partnerships with charities including raising awareness and
funds for Best Buddies International and supporting youth education programs
at Jenesse Center Domestic Violence Intervention Program. Brown
recently took his philanthropy a step further, launching his Symphonic Love
Foundation to inspire his fans and to give back in the two focus areas of “art”
and “love.” Brown partnered with the world renowned Debbie Allen Dance
Academy to launch the Symphonic Love Scholars program, which provides talented
youth with full scholarships to the year-long academy, and joined AIDS Project
Los Angeles in encouraging testing and fighting stigma against people living
with HIV/AIDS. As part of his Unity Campaign, Brown joined forces with LA
City officials, Los Angeles Police Department and gang interventionists to
produce a series of South Los Angeles neighborhood events aimed at preventing
violence and promoting unity. Brown brought the Unity Campaign events to his
hometown of Tappahannock and Richmond, VA and plans to continue promoting the
campaign’s message of individuality, creativity and community through his
philanthropic and creative endeavors. Brown collaborates with other
acclaimed artists including Romero Britto, Slick and Ron English and leverages
his extensive social media reach and fan base to raise funds and awareness for
his Symphonic Love partners.
The 23-year old finds a sense of self in an art form that is reflective of the
moment. Brown, already a widely accomplished multi-platinum, Grammy
award-winning artist, builds upon his creativity through his art. “Graffiti
exemplifies the many types and colors of art, music and fashion that I love and
how I express myself,” he explains. “It’s my art... my graffiti.” Brown donates
a portion of every painting to his Symphonic Love Foundation. Symphonic Love
believes in the capacity of love and art to change the world. Brown recently showed his painting entitled ¨Chompuzz¨ at Art Basel, in
Miami, to rave reviews.
Brown takes another step in expression through fashion with his
already highly successful international clothing line Black Pyramid, often
collaborating with others such as Brooklyn Projects and BAPE. Black
Pyramid, and all-things interesting to Brown, can be found at his website www.mechanicaldummy.com.
In 2005, show business
natural 16-year old Brown emerged from small town Tappahannock, Virginia. His
star rose swiftly, as his promising skills drew comparisons to his idols
Michael Jackson and Stevie Wonder. His self-titled debut album, which was
certified double-platinum, featured the #1 Scott Storch-produced smash hit “Run
It!” (featuring Juelz Santana) and the Top 10 pop singles “Yo (Excuse Me Miss)”
and “Gimme That.”
ABOUT THE DANCERS
Ivan “Flipz”
Velez (Flipz) was born in
Mayaguez, Puerto Rico in 1979. He began tumbling at age 7, and was hugely
inspired by the Olympics. Soon thereafter, he began flipping off everything he
found in his path. In 1984, he saw the movie “Beat Street”, which ignited his
desire for a new art form. Having little luck attempting hand spins and
windmills, Flipz gave breakin’ a rest. His father relocated his family to
Florida for a better life in 1991. Looking for the next adrenaline rush, he
spotted BMX Freestyle in the XGames. Watching the creativity of the riders in
the air triggered his curiosity. Flipz saved his money to buy a bike and then built a ramp in his front yard. He hoped one day that he too could be in the
X Games.
At 15, Flipz was attending King High School in
Tampa, Florida and it was there at a talent show where he crossed paths with
Richie “Abstrak” Soto, who soon became his best
friend and new partner in crime. It was thanks to Abstrak that his passion for b-boying
was born. With his new partner, they formed Skill Methodz Crew in 1995. In 1999, Flipz relocated to Orlando after landing a contract with Universal Studios as a stunt/acrobatic dancer.
friend and new partner in crime. It was thanks to Abstrak that his passion for b-boying
was born. With his new partner, they formed Skill Methodz Crew in 1995. In 1999, Flipz relocated to Orlando after landing a contract with Universal Studios as a stunt/acrobatic dancer.
His
search for success in the commercial industry brought him to New York where he
landed a series of jobs off Broadway including “BreakThe Urban Funk
Spectacular”, “Forever Swing”, “Solar Powered”, and Rennie Harris’s “Rome and Jewels”, “Facing Mekka”,
“Repertory”, and “Illadelph Hip Hop Legends”. After filming 4 commercials and 2
films (Tracks and Honey), he thought it was time to give LA a try. While in LA,
he’s been hugely blessed to work with the biggest choreographers and alongside
Hollywood’s biggest stars.
His
film credits include Tracks, Honey, You
Got Served, Be Cool, Idlewild, Chicken Little, Stick It, Bring It On 3, and
Spider Man 3. He has worked with Madonna, Missy Elliot,
Gwen Stefani, Eve, Shania Twain, Paulina Rubio, Tweet, Destiny’s Child, Pink,
Mariah Carey, Whitney Houston, Deborah Cox, Queen Latifa, Will Smith, 50 Cent,
B2K, Marques Houston, Akwid, Ricky Martin, Master P and Little Romeo, Nelly, LL
Cool J, P Diddy, Fat Joe and R Kelly, and Kumbia Kings. He was fortunate enough
to perform for the Queen of England at her 50th
Golden Jubilee and on the Oprah Winfrey Show as a special guest for Madonna. Flipz is also a member of the street dance company Groovaloos which have appeared on So You Think You Can Dance, Battle Cry, and The Wayne Brady Show. He currently stars in their off-Broadway production Groovaloo.
Golden Jubilee and on the Oprah Winfrey Show as a special guest for Madonna. Flipz is also a member of the street dance company Groovaloos which have appeared on So You Think You Can Dance, Battle Cry, and The Wayne Brady Show. He currently stars in their off-Broadway production Groovaloo.
Jonathan Cruz (DoKnock) won the US American Star Search show 3 times in the
years 2003 and 2004. DO-KNOCK is a born entertainer and his mission in life is
to entertain and move crowds. In the 90's DoKnock studied Michael Jackson and
tried to imitate him. He especially admired the way Michael could entertain
thousands. DoKnock is a member of The Groovaloos as well as Super CR3W
(pronounced "Super Crew") which won the 2nd season of America's Best
Dance Crew.
Richard Maguire (Lil Adonis) was born in
New Rochelle NY. Childhood hyper
activity would eventually cause Richie’s mother to enroll him in the local YMCA
gymnastics program where he quickly excelled as a gymnast. At 13 years old and upon invitation, Richie
left his family to train full time at the International Gymnastics School in
Pennsylvania.
His
talents won him a full athletic scholarship at Temple University in
Philadelphia where he studied Marketing while participating and winning a
number of conference championships for the school. It was during this time that Richie was
exposed to the world of B-boying. He
initially focused on flairs, mills, and swipes followed by a back flip or so
and had no clue what the dance was about.
After being labeled “nothin but a gymnast white boy,” by a few of
Philly’s more accomplished b-boys, Richie decided to learn the culture and
discover the dance. He bought VHS tapes
from skate shops that showed him b-boying mixed in with skating, and
graffing. Night clubs would eventually
become his training ground.
In
2004 Richie hung up his gymnastics grips and entered the world of b-boy
performing. Cast from a worldwide
audition, he went on to be a key contributor and original member of Le Reve
directed by Franco Dragone (Cirque du Soleil).
A herniated disc and a shoulder surgery would effectively end his time
as a member of le Reve.
An
exhaustive regiment of self-lead rehab would slowly begin the healing process,
but determination and a hunger to return to dancing and acrobatics overtook his
pain. His recovery was slow but eventually Richie healed and met the members of Full force and Super crews, of which he would eventually become a member.
More
recently Richie was a principal performer in “ID” by Cirque Eloize and appeared
in Hephaestus at the Looking Glass
Theater in Chicago. In Addition, Richie
has appeared on SNL for roughly 10 seconds and has performed alongside Neil
Young, Chaka Chan, N.e.r.d., T.I., and M.I.A, and for two years represented the
American Heart Association in its hands only CPR campaign.
Richie
Currently Resides in Brooklyn NY, is the Son of Retired Fire Fighter Donald
Maguire and of Mother and World Champion of caring for her children Diane. He is proud of his sister Heather, who is a
U.S. representative at the world amateur muay thai kickboxing championship.
Jesse ‘Casper’ Brown (Rebel) grew up in a
small Canadian town and started dancing as a small child. In a
little town with nothing to do, Jesse listened to music and danced every chance
he got. Beat Street, Michael Jackson and
James Brown are some of his early favorites. Jesse's father was a
musician who showed Jesse the importance of music and soul. Jesse took what his
father showed him and pursued his dream of dance. When he was 10, his
mother put him in a dance school, where he became an award-winning dancer at
the age of 11. At age 12 Jesse moved to Los Angeles and began
working as a professional at 14. It wasn't until he saw a group
of b-boys performing on the street that he realized this is what he wanted
to do. Jesse is now one of the most
acclaimed and well respected b-boys across the world, and has worked with such
artists as P Diddy, Usher, Busta Rymes, Missy Eliott, KRS-1 and many more.
His crew and family are Boogie Brats
and the Mighty Zulu Kings.
Jesse’s feature film work includes Honey 1 & 2, The Princess & The
Frog, B-Girl and Kickin’ Ol School. He has also appeared in the short film The Ho Down and the award-winning
documentary All Out War. He
recently choreographed West Ghost Musical
which will be released in late 2012. On the smaller screen he was seen in
the critically acclaimed HBO series Treme,
in Disney Channel’s Lemonade Mouth, Star
Camp, Spring Break ’83 and in the award winning LXD: The Legion of Extraordinary Dancers by visionary
writer/director Jon M. Chu. He has
appeared on Jimmy Fallon, Conan O’Brian,
Dancing with the Stars, Teen Choice Awards, MTV Video Music Awards, Glee, Good
Morning America and So You Think You
Can Dance.
David ‘Kid David’ Shreibman (Kid) started b-boying in 2000 after being
inspired by the movie Breakin’. He soon took classes offered at a dance
studio where his mother taught ballet. With a ballet and jazz dancer for a mom
and a professional pantomime for a dad, it was hard for him to deny this
passion. Dedicated to the art, he left the classes and began practicing on his
own. In 2003 he entered the competitive scene, winning many regional
competitions. His reputation grew rapidly as he became recognized as one of the
top up-and-comers in the Bay area.
In 2004 Kid
David was recruited into the legendary Renegades
crew. With his new knowledge of b-boying, he was able to take his style to
the next level. In 2005, he severely injured his knee. Over time this injury
developed into something more serious; but after eight months off the floor he
started dancing again, and in June of 2006, with a new hunger and motivation,
he came back strong. Since then, he has consistently maintained a high level of
performance in battles. Today, he is
known for his original style and outstanding musicality. He has a strong
foundation based on footwork, glides, freezes and overall finesse.
Recognized as one of the top B-boys in the world, Kid David continues to
prove his skill whereever he goes.
He has been seen on film in Step Up 3D, Footloose and Glee Tour. For television he appeared in the 82nd Annual Academy Awards, So You Think You Can Dance, and Dancing
With the Stars. He danced in Miley
Cyrus’ music video and appeared in Lemonade
Mouth, a SONY spot, bam! and Face Off.
Anis Cheurfa (Anis) is a pioneer in
Martial Arts Tricking (“Tricking”), a combination of Martial Arts Kicks,
Acrobatics, Gymnastics, and Break Dancing.
He has won every major Tricking title across the globe including back to
back “The Big Trick” titles in Germany, ESPN2’s US Open ISKA Trick Battle, and
has performed for audiences in places such as France, Poland, Czech Republic,
and Thailand. In August of 2005, Anis
captured a Guinness Book World Record for performing 18 gainer full twisting
back flips in one minute.
Cheurfa’s
high flying Martial Arts Tricking is a unique and exciting style that he has
perfected and become world-famous for.
His characteristic moves have made him not only an internet sensation, a
world record holder, and a champion but also a leader in the Martial Art
Tricking community. Born in Paris, France, and starting Tae Kwon Do at the late
age of 13 his style became unique as he would emulated moves from action karate
movies and comic books.
Cherufa’s
popularity skyrocketed when people began posting videos of him performing his
dazzling maneuvers on the internet.
Millions of views later, these videos caught the eye of David Leitch and
Chad Stahelski at 87 Eleven, the
award-winning action design group in Hollywood, California. With major blockbuster movies to their
credit, they helped Cheurfa to further develop his skills. He was finally able to fulfill a lifelong
dream of performing on screen. His role
in Disney’s Tron: Legacy is his most
ambitious project to date.
Steve
Terada (Sight) has roots as
an iconic martial arts “tricker,” so it was a natural transition for him to
enter the world of entertainment.
Terada’s notable television dance credits include winning Randy
Jackson’s America’s Best Dance Crew with Quest Crew and Thirty Seconds to Fame.
He has made recurring appearances on So
You Think You Can Dance and ABDC including a special solo guest
appearance. Other credits include American
Idol, American Idol Gives Back, Shake It Up, Kickin’ It, Supah Ninjas, The
Tonight Show with Jay Leno, Lopez Tonight, Late Night with Snoop Dogg, TMZ,
Inside Edition, and the NBA All-Star Opener with Usher. Film credits include Alvin and the Chipmunks: The Squeakquel,
MacGruber, Indiana Jones/Crystal Skull, Honey 2, Crank, Memoirs of a Geisha, and Baby; Commercials for Nike, Kelloggs, and Dell and a coveted Intel
International Multiply campaign.
Terada has toured extensively nationally
and internationally, both with Quest Crew
and individually. A career highlight for
him was being featured on the Black Eyed Peas “Pump It” music video, as
well as performing in music videos with Snoop Dogg and Far East Movement, among
others. LMFAO’s Party Rock
Anthem/Everyday I’m Shufflin’ music video led to a three month stint on
their recent national/Canadian tour. He opted out of the Asia Tour to be included
in Planet B Boy!
Gil Brace-Wessel (Gillatene) has been performing dance and aerosol art on an
international level for years. As a B-boy, he has competed in countless
contests and performances including Dance
and the Child International in Brazil, Freestyle
Sessions in Los Angeles, SPIN Crew
Anniversary in Japan, and many others. As an artist he has shared his
mural walls with a grateful public in Brazil, Japan, Canada and the USA.
His greatest joy comes from performing, executing a piece, and teaching others,
especially kids.
Joshua Lee ‘Milky’ Ayers (Mayhem)
takes b boying to new heights with his signature moves and impeccable
musicality, and continues to be one of the most respected artists in both the
mainstream and underground b boy circuit.
He is a world renowned b boy who has been seen gracing the stage with
Black Eyed Peas’ front woman, ‘Fergie’ and on screen in the 2007 award-winning
documentary Inside the Circle and Step Up 3D.
Ayers
experienced hardships throughout much of his adolescent years but the b boy
circuit quickly became his saving grace. He moved several times between Texas
and Florida but settled in Los Angeles to pursue career aspirations. He is a member of the Masterz of Mayhem and M.I.N.D.
180 crews, and formerly of House of
Samurai. He has performed
internationally, receiving numerous accolades and winning hundreds of b boy
competitions and battles. He can be seen
in several music videos and commercials along with a number of television
appearances including Ellen DeGeneres
and Today Show.
Sammy Soto (SamO) was born and raised as a "New Yorker", and the
idea of dance was something SamO randomly stumbled upon. Gradually falling into
it through life experiences, it just felt like a natural talent. First starting
off as a B-Boy, he then branched off to other styles; such as House and
Hip-Hop, including choreography.
Most
envision B-Boying as dynamics and high flying moves, but what makes him stand
out is his burst of energy and high confidence while on the dance floor. Being
somewhat of an outcast, what took so many years of dedication to develop has
finally paid off. In the course of 10
years, he's been in music videos, commercials, and live performances. Currently
representing super B-Boy crew "X-Fenz",
SamO is now traveling the world, displaying his talent and inspiring others
through competitions; workshops; and shows.
Richard ‘Abstrak’ Soto (Abbstarr) is a versatile dancer and poet born and raised in NY City.
His love for music and movement started at a very young age; and over the years
he has become known for his extreme ground control and innovative style of
B-boy dance both nationally and internationally. This recognition has afforded him the
opportunities to travel the world teaching, learning, sharing and performing
this universal language of dance.
‘Abstrak’ is the founder and president
of a world famous B-boy group Skill
Methodz based out of Florida. He
has choreographed and worked commercially as well as in theatre, making him
well rounded in every aspect of this hip-hop culture. In 2004 he completed and
performed his first theatre play, 4
Bellies (an exploration; a battle of the mind and soul through abstract
language and dance). Abstrak’s recent credits are How to Make in America – Ducksauce, Step Up 3D and When In Rome.
Abstrak Dance is an urban movement
that takes hip-hop dance (breaking and house) beyond the circle and mind. An
unorthodox blend of disparate forms, it defies cultural and artistic
stereotypes. Its versatility of all forms of dance creates a whole new world of
movement. Abstrak Dance reveals the pure foundation of dance in the most
inventive way, without losing its essence. It is both an homage to and a
departure from street art.
Luis Rosado (Bambino) was born in Germany and grew up in
Italy. At age 7, he moved to Florida. Later on in life, he moved to Los Angeles
and has appeared in commercials and movies. He is a member of the legendary
"Skill Methodz" crew and takes part in tournaments around Europe,
Asia, USA, and Canada.
ABOUT THE FILMMAKERS
BENSON LEE (Director)
is an award winning, Korean American filmmaker who has worked in drama,
documentary, and commercial production for over 15 years. Mr. Lee's first
feature film, Miss Monday, was
accepted in the Dramatic Competition of the '98 Sundance Film Festival where it
was awarded a Special Grand Jury Price for Best Actor. His most recent film,
the documentary Planet B-boy, was one
of the top grossing theatrical documentaries in the U.S. in 2008. His work has
aired on HBO, MTV, the Sundance Channel, and theatrically distributed to over
30 countries worldwide.
BEAU FLYNN (Producer) In the summer
of 2011, Beau Flynn announced
the formation of his new solo venture, Flynn Picture Company, where he
continues to produce high concept, franchise and genre projects across all
media platforms, building on nearly 17 years of producing feature films. Prior to launching FPC, Flynn co-founded
production company Contrafilm in March 2004. Over the course of his
career, Beau Flynn has produced films that have earned more than $1.5 billion
at the worldwide box office.
Currently in production in Budapest,
Flynn is producing Hercules for MGM
and Paramount with Dwayne Johnson starring in the title role and Brett Ratner
directing. Evan Spiliotopoulos wrote the
script based on the Radical comic book property, “Hercules: The Thracian Wars.”
Flynn just wrapped principal photography
on Solace starring Anthony Hopkins,
Colin Farrell, Jeffrey Dean Morgan and Abbie Cornish. Afonso Poyart, director
of the Brazilian film Two Rabbits,
made his US directorial debut on a script by Sean Bailey and Ted Griffin, James
Vanderbilt, and, most recently, Academy Award-winning writer, Peter Morgan.
Flynn recently completed post production
on the 2011 Black List title Two Night
Stand, penned by Mark Hammer, starring Miles Teller and Analeigh Tipton, on
which Max Nichols made his feature directorial debut. He produced with director
and first time producer Ruben Fleischer. This is the first film produced under
the FlynnPictureCo. banner.
In January of this year, Paramount
released the Flynn-produced Hansel and
Gretel: Witch Hunters 3D, starring Jeremy Renner, Gemma Arterton and Famke
Janssen. To date the film has grossed over $225M worldwide. Paramount has
announced a sequel.
Prior to those films, Flynn produced Journey 2: The Mysterious Island 3D, the
sequel to Journey to the Center of the
Earth 3D, which starred Dwayne Johnson, Michael Caine, Josh Hutcherson,
Vanessa Hudgens and Luis Guzman, and grossed over $330 million worldwide after
it bowed in February of 2012. It was a top twenty grossing film of 2012.
In addition, the MGM remake of Red Dawn,
produced by Flynn, starring Chris Hemsworth, Josh Hutcherson and Jeffrey Dean
Morgan, hit theatres during Thanksgiving 2012 and was released by FilmDistrict
in conjunction with Open Road.
In 2011 Flynn released the modestly
budgeted The Rite, starring Anthony
Hopkins and directed by Mikael Hafstrom, for New Line, which grossed $100
million worldwide. He also released What’s
Your Number? for Regency/Fox, starring Anna Faris and Chris Evans.
In the summer of 2008, he produced the
family adventure hit Journey to the
Center of the Earth, starring Brendan Fraser. The first ever
live-action film to be shot in HD 3D, it was the widest digital release in
history, and grossed over $250 million theatrically worldwide. In the
fall of that year, Flynn released the Sundance hit Choke, based on the novel by acclaimed author Chuck Palahniuk,
starring Sam Rockwell and directed by Clark Gregg.
Prior to these films, Flynn produced
Scott Derrickson’s The Exorcism of Emily
Rose, which grossed in excess of $150 million globally, as well as “After
the Sunset,” helmed by Brett Ratner.
Also, in 2007, Flynn released the
thriller The Number 23, starring Jim
Carrey and Virginia Madsen under the direction of Joel Schumacher. In Spring 2006,
Flynn released his first CG-animated film, The
Wild, which grossed over $100 million worldwide. That fall, he
produced The Guardian, starring
Ashton Kutcher and Kevin Costner.
Flynn’s first company, Bandeira
Entertainment, independently produced such critically acclaimed films as Tigerland, Requiem for a Dream, The House of
Yes, The Alarmist, Guinevere and Johns.
Flynn’s first job in the industry was as Scott Rudin’s executive
assistant.
TRIPP VINSON (Producer) is a film and television producer with
over 15 years of experience producing studio and independent films in the
genres of action, horror and science fiction. Vinson’s credits include
blockbusters such as Journey to the
Center of the Earth, Journey 2: The Mysterious Island, The Rite, The Guardian and The Exorcism of Emily Rose. In November
2011 Vinson launched his own production company, Vinson Films. Most recently,
Vinson sold the Japanese Anime film Vexille
to Universal Pictures with Evan Spiliotopoulis writing, Drone Program to Lakeshore Entertainment, High Value Target to Millennium Films, and the television show “Intelligence”
to CBS, starring Josh Holloway.
Prior to opening Vinson Films, Vinson
was partner at ContraFilm, a New Line Cinema based Production Company. The
company boasts a worldwide box office gross of over $1 billion. The first
release under their banner was After the
Sunset, starring Pierce Brosnan and Salma Hayek and directed by Brett
Ratner. Also produced by Contrafilm, in conjunction with Lakeshore, was
Screen Gem’s The Exorcism of Emily Rose,
directed by Scott Derrickson, which not only grossed in excess of $150 million
worldwide, but was also one the most profitable and successful films of 2005.
In early 2006 Contrafilm released the CG-animated film, The Wild, for Disney, which has grossed over $100 million
worldwide. That fall, Contrafilm produced The
Guardian for Disney’s Touchstone Pictures, starring Ashton Kutcher and
Kevin Costner. In February of 2007, the company released the Jim Carrey
thriller, The Number 23, starring Virginia Madsen and directed by Joel
Schumacher for New Line Cinema.
Contrafilm
produced Journey to the Center of the
Earth, the first ever live action film to be shot in Digital 3D. Journey was a co-production between New
Line Cinema and Walden Media and was the first live action film completely shot
in digital 3D, grossing over $101 million domestically and $241 million
internationally from its summer 2008 release. In the fall of 2008,
Contrafilm released their Sundance hit Choke,
through Fox Searchlight. Choke was
based on the novel by acclaimed author Chuck Palahniuk, which starred Sam
Rockwell and was directed by Clark Gregg. New Line Cinema film, The Rite written by Michael Petroni,
starring Sir Anthony Hopkins and Colin O’Donoghue, was released in January
2011, grossing $96 million worldwide. In
the Fall of 2011, What’s Your Number?
was released, starring Anna Faris and Chris Evans. Journey
2: The Mysterious Island was released in February 2012, and currently has
grossed $335 million worldwide. Red Dawn was released by Film District /
Open Road in the Fall of 2012, starring Chris Hemsworth.
Currently in active development is Murder Mystery written by Jamie
Vanderbilt, with Anne Fletcher directing, as well as Bob the Musical set up at Disney. Along with that, Shadow Runner is set up at Sony Pictures
Entertainment, starring Chris Hemsworth and Inside
the Machine is in development with CBS Films, with Babak Najafi directing.
AMY LO (Producer) has been
awarded a 2010-2011 Sundance Creative Producing Fellowship and was the sole
U.S. producer selected for the 2009 Berlinale Co-Production Market.
Her
producing credits include the documentary Planet
B-Boy, which was released to critical acclaim from The NY Times, The LA
Times, Variety, The Wall Street Journal, and Good Morning America, before going
on to become one of the highest-grossing documentaries of the year. Planet B-boy further broke ground as an
independent film securing innovative sponsorship deals with Samsung and Southpole,
and engaging audiences across different platforms including mobile phone
content, live events, fan videos, and a 24-hour takeover of the YouTube.com
homepage.
Amy
associate produced On a Clear Day,
which premiered in competition opening night at the Sundance Film Festival and
was acquired for distribution by Focus Features. She previously worked as Head
of Development for NY and London-based InFilm Productions; has served on review
panels for the Gucci Tribeca film grants, the Global Film Initiative, the
International Emmy® Awards; and sat on the Selection Advisory Committee for the
Sundance Institute Feature Film Program.
Her
work as a writer has aired on PBS for the Foreign Policy Association and MTV,
and prior to her start in the film business she lived and worked in Beijing,
China as a freelance writer. Amy grew up in Alaska and graduated from Stanford
University with a dual degree in International Relations and Economics.
BRINN HALL (Written by) just
completed directing the feature “In Your Eyes.”
It is written and executive produced by Joss Whedon (“The Avengers”)
with Michael Roiff and Kai Cole producing for micro-studio Bellwhether
Pictures. The film stars Zoe Kazan,
Michael Stahl-David, Nikki Reed, Mark Feuerstein, Jennifer Grey, and Steve
Howey, and will be released in early 2013.
Hill
recently adapted the much acclaimed Young Adult novel Ball Don’t Lie, which he directed. The ensemble stars Nick Cannon,
Chris “Ludacris” Bridges, Academy Award winner Melissa Leo, Rosanna Arquette,
Emile de Ravin and streetball sensation Grayson “The Professor” Boucher.
Brin’s
short film “The Ecology of Love,” staring music and fashion icon Pharrell
Williams, and his moody short film “Morning Breath: A Brooklyn Love Story,”
were critically acclaimed. Together, they have captured a handful of
prestigious “best of” and top awards at numerous international festivals,
including a Special Jury Prize at the Sundance Film Festival.
Brin has
been featured in Entertainment Weekly,
Details, LA Weekly, Time Out, and The
Village Voice. He has written and/or directed projects for HBO Films,
Miramax Films, Sean “P. Diddy” Combs, Dimension Films, ESPN, AND1, MTV, Nike,
Visa, Details, Powerade, Bombay Gin, Warner Bros., Spike-TV, Intel, Jean Paul
Da’mage Jeans, Toyota, the NBA, the NFL, Kia, Nissan, Cadillac, Red Bull, and
The History Channel among others. His profile journalism can be found in SLAM
and Dime magazines, as well as other publications.
Brin is
a former college athlete and still holds out hope that people recognize him as
a sharpshooting two-guard on the hoops court.
CHRIS PARKER (Written by) wrote the upcoming Sony Pictures film Heaven is For Real, starring Greg Kinnear and scheduled for a
Spring 2014 release. He previously wrote
the features Mulan II and Vampire in Brooklyn.
WILL
PACKER (Executive Producer) has established himself as
one of Hollywood's blockbuster hit makers. Four of Packer's last five
releases have opened #1 at the box office. Most recently, he produced
Universal's Ride Along,
starring Ice Cube and Kevin Hart, Screen
Gems' About Last Night starring
Hart, Michael Ealy, Regina Hall and Paula
Patton, No Good Deed starring Idris
Elba and Taraji P. Henson and the highly anticipated Think Like A Man Too, all slated for release in 2014. He will
next produce Screen Gems’ Wedding
Ringers starring Hart and Josh Gad.
He also inked a two-year overall deal with Universal Television
in 2013. Under the pact, his first overall television deal, Packer will
develop new projects for the studio.
Packer's
biggest release to date, Think Like A Man, the film adaptation of Steve
Harvey’s best-selling book, “Act Like A Lady, Think Like a Man”, opened number
one at the box office, grossed over $96 million worldwide and won the 2013 BET
Award for Best Movie. Packer has also joined forces with Ambassador
Andrew Young and Martin Luther King III to launch BOUNCE TV, the first ever
over-the-air broadcast television network targeting the African-American
audience.
In
2007, Daily Variety magazine was on the right track when they selected him as
one of their “10 Producers to Watch.” Packer has also been acknowledged
on several high profile lists including; Black Enterprise’s “Most Powerful
Players Under 40”, JET Magazine's “Who’s Hot To Watch” and Giant
magazine’s “The Giant 100”. In March of 2008, Packer and his
business partner Rob Hardy were honored by Black Enterprise as one of the “Top
25 Money Makers in Hollywood” and on Ebony magazine’s prestigious “Power 100”
list.
Packer
blazed the box office charts with his heist film Takers (2010) and
continued his impressive string of movies taking the #1 spot.
Packer’s other number one films include: Stomp The Yard (2007) and
Obsessed (2009). Additionally, Stomp
The Yard held #1 for two weekends and received the 2007 Movie of the Year
honors from the BET Hip Hop Awards while Obsessed, featuring mega-star
Beyonce, was Sony/Screen Gems second highest opening in company history and
holds the title of the biggest opening ever for a last-week-of-April
release. Shortly after, Packer enjoyed the success of his holiday film This
Christmas, which grossed over $50 million worldwide. With
several exciting projects in various phases of planning and production, there
are still more great things to come from Packer. Packer is slated
to produce the yet to be titled Kemba Smith story, a dramatic true story about
young girl who made headlines after President Bill Clinton granted her clemency
from a 24.5-year prison sentence for conspiracy to sell drugs.
As Co-Founder and Chairman of the Atlanta-based production company, Rainforest
Films, Packer is responsible for producing and overseeing the company’s
studio-financed and self-financed films and distribution projects. He
co-founded Rainforest Films with his partner Rob Hardy in the summer of 1994
while both were engineering students at Florida A & M University.
After graduating magna cum laude from Florida A&M University with a
Bachelor of Science degree in Electrical Engineering in 1996, Packer decided to
forego lucrative job offers in the field of engineering to capitalize on his
entrepreneurial instincts and his passion for filmmaking. Packer and
Hardy also partnered with Sprite to produce the Sprite Step Off, one of MTV2's highest rated shows of 2010.
Packer is a dynamic and inspiring speaker who delivers
educational and motivational speeches to industry groups, as well as youth and
community groups nationwide. He has been honored with the key to the city
of St. Petersburg, FL, and “Will Packer Day” has been proclaimed in the cities
of Chattanooga, TN and Fort Lauderdale, FL. Packer has also been
honored with the Meritorious Achievement Award from his alma mater Florida
A&M University, the highest honor the University bestows.
GLENN S. GAINOR (Executive
Producer) is the senior
vice president in charge of physical production for Screen Gems, a feature
division of Sony Pictures Entertainment. He has held the position since January
2007. In addition to this position, Gainor has executive produced multiple
projects for Screen Gems, including Friends with Benefits, Priest, Takers,
Death at a Funeral and Obsessed, to name a few.
Gainor oversaw Straw Dogs, Easy A,
Burlesque, Country Strong, The Roommate, Fired Up, Armored, The Stepfather,
Lakeview Terrace, First Sunday, This Christmas and more. He has
advised on co-financed and negative pickups such as Carrie, The Vow,
along with the Resident Evil and Underworld franchises.
Gainor has pushed for new technology and
a different way of thinking on productions. For About Last Night, the
company used batteries over generators, plug-in lights that required no
rigging, the 16 bit, 4K digital F65 camera and shot entirely in practical
locations from Dodger Stadium to authentic downtown LA locations such as
Cole’s, Casey’s, The Broadway Bar, The LA Athletic Club and various lofts. The
result is a vibrant, honest-looking movie that uses everything the city has to
offer to tell the best story it can.
Gainor produced the romantic comedy Think
Like A Man, which also filmed entirely “off lot,” this time in Culver City
and downtown LA, and was the first feature to be shot exclusively with LED
lights, the most energy-efficient alternative to traditional movie lighting
packages. Gainor’s dedication to maintaining environmentally sustainable productions
began in 2007 when he oversaw the construction of the super structure built on
Stage 23 at Sony Pictures Studios for Quarantine. The very same
structure was repurposed on seven other Screen Gems productions, including The
Stepfather, Takers and Obsessed. The Environmental Media
Association has repeatedly recognized Gainor’s efforts and awarded Screen Gems
with the Green Seal for implementing sustainable production practices and
raising environmental awareness.
Gainor believes that “green initiatives” also key into greater efficiency. By using lower wattage lights such as LED’s, moving away from generators as everyday power sources and embracing digital technology that decreases production waste, Screen Gems has been able to produce with a lighter footprint, less waste and greater efficiency. For example, while in Atlanta for No Good Deed, the company shot in practical locations with minimum lighting. It is also one of the first features to be shot and released in 4K, a topic Gainor touched upon when he spoke at the DGA’s Digital Day, 2012.
At the end of 2011 Gainor wrapped Battle of the Year: The Dream team, a 3D feature film inspired by the documentary about a yearly international dance competition which re-discovers one of the most incredible dance phenomena the world has ever seen. This production was shot in Los Angeles as well as Montpellier, France. The picture culminates with the American cast performing in front of 12,000 hip-hop fans for the live event, “The Battle of the Year.”
Gainor believes that “green initiatives” also key into greater efficiency. By using lower wattage lights such as LED’s, moving away from generators as everyday power sources and embracing digital technology that decreases production waste, Screen Gems has been able to produce with a lighter footprint, less waste and greater efficiency. For example, while in Atlanta for No Good Deed, the company shot in practical locations with minimum lighting. It is also one of the first features to be shot and released in 4K, a topic Gainor touched upon when he spoke at the DGA’s Digital Day, 2012.
At the end of 2011 Gainor wrapped Battle of the Year: The Dream team, a 3D feature film inspired by the documentary about a yearly international dance competition which re-discovers one of the most incredible dance phenomena the world has ever seen. This production was shot in Los Angeles as well as Montpellier, France. The picture culminates with the American cast performing in front of 12,000 hip-hop fans for the live event, “The Battle of the Year.”
In addition to his executive duties at
Sony, Gainor has also been recognized by the city of Los Angeles for his
donations to the non-profit organization Million Trees LA. Additionally, he was
honored by the Los Angeles City Council and Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa for
keeping film production in Los Angeles, and he was the 2009 keynote speaker and
recipient of the California on Location “Signature
Award,” given in appreciation for his efforts in preserving California’s
film industry and culture. Gainor is also a contributing member to the Motion
Picture & Television Fund’s Next Generation.
Previous producing credits include three pictures for Adam Sandler’s Happy Madison––Strange Wilderness, Grandma’s Boy and Deuce Bigalow: European Gigolo. Gainor produced Nicolas Cage’s directorial debut, Sonny, and served as line producer on the critically acclaimed Panic, directed by Henry Bromell. He co-produced George Hickenlooper’s The Man from Elysian Fields, as well as the top-selling Sundance picture, Happy Texas. Gainor also produced for the stage, teaming with director Andy Fickman for the musical Sneaux.
Previous producing credits include three pictures for Adam Sandler’s Happy Madison––Strange Wilderness, Grandma’s Boy and Deuce Bigalow: European Gigolo. Gainor produced Nicolas Cage’s directorial debut, Sonny, and served as line producer on the critically acclaimed Panic, directed by Henry Bromell. He co-produced George Hickenlooper’s The Man from Elysian Fields, as well as the top-selling Sundance picture, Happy Texas. Gainor also produced for the stage, teaming with director Andy Fickman for the musical Sneaux.
A member of the DGA and PGA, a graduate
of the film program at California State University at Northridge, a recipient
of the 2010 Cinematheque Award from the Department of Cinema, Gainor launched
his career in the film industry writing and producing an independent pilot
which led to an offer to write for an ABC series. However, Gainor chose to
pursue his career in producing.
RICH & TONE TALAUEGA
(Executive Producers) extend their talents
far beyond the reach of conventional dance choreographers, encompassing
wide-ranging success as music video directors, musicians, producers, and
performers who are at the forefront of today’s pop culture movement. As
muti-faceted artists, they are able to achieve truly unique results in their
work as choreographers, which continue to make them highly sought after by the
top names in the industry.
As teenagers,
Rich and Tone were discovered by Michael Jackson’s choreographers while free-styling
at a club in Oakland, CA. Within a year, Rich and Tone were on their way to
becoming legendary dancers and choreographers, having toured with both Diana
Ross and Michael Jackson within months of moving to Los Angeles.
Rich
and Tone’s dedication, unique style, and creative abilities have translated
into work in a range of artistic mediums. Their highly visible projects include
work for iPod, Coca-Cola, Gap, Mitsubishi, as well as the feature films Take the Lead, Bring it on Yet Again, and Save the Last Dance. They also received
an Emmy® nomination for their work on the 2005 NAACP Image Awards. In the fall
of 2008 they served as artistic directors and choreographers for what was, “the
biggest performance ever created for Dancing
with the Stars -a piece celebrating Macy’s 150th anniversary, in
which they took viewers on a journey-“Dancing through the Decades”-the 1930’s,
1960’s, 1980’s, and the future. Rich
+ Tone returned to their roots, choreographing multiple numbers in the
critically acclaimed “Michael Jackson The Immortal World Tour,” which was the
highest grossing tour in the US in 2011 and 2012. They also are the choreographers for Cirque
du Soleil's newest show "Michael Jackson ONE" at the Mandalay Bay
Resort and Casino, opening in May 2013.
The
list of artists seeking their collaboration have included Madonna, Jennifer
Lopez, Usher, Chris Brown, Gwen Stefani, Christina Aguilara, Kylie Minogue,
Missy Elliot, The Black Eyed Peas, The Backstreet Boys, Monica, Pink, and Dirty
Vegas. Rich + Tone creative
directed Madonna's MDNA Tour, the highest grossing tour of 2012, as well as her
Super Bowl XLVI Half Time Show performance, which was the second
most-watched live televised event in US
history only behind Michael Jackson, the King of Pop’s halftime
performance. 2012 turned out to be a
landmark year for Rich + Tone, as both the MJ Immortal World Tour and MDNA were
among the top five highest grossing tours of the year.
They have
been nominated for numerous MTV Video Music Awards for videos such as Chris
Brown’s Fine China, Jennifer Lopez’s Get Right, Madonna’s Sorry and 4 Minutes, as well as Chris Brown’s Wall to Wall and Forever.
They also received an Emmy®
Nomination for their work on the 2005 NAACP Image Awards.
Renowned photographer and director,
David LaChappelle has often sought out the talents of Rich + Tone, working with
them on several video and commercial projects.
Rich + Tone collaborated with LaChappelle on the critically acclaimed
film “Rize” for which they served as producers of the film, choreography
coordinators, and producers of the soundtrack. The film was released in June of
2005 by Lions Gate, and Peter Travers of Rolling Stone described the film as
"A knockout! A visual miracle!"
Further
expanding their passion for filmmaking, at the end of 2009, Rich and Tone
completed a directing program at the renowned New York Film Academy. They directed the video "One
Shot" for the UK phenomenon and hit pop group JLS, which spent 6 weeks at
the top of the charts.
MICHAEL BARRETT (Director
of Photography) was born in
Riverside, California. He received a BA in Art from UCLA and an MFA in Film
from Columbia University. His credits include the feature films Kiss Kiss, Bang Bang, Goal! The Dream
Begins, You don’t Mess with the Zohan, Bedtime Stories, Takers, Everything Must
Go, Zookeeper, A Very Harold and Kumar 3D Christmas, and the Golden Globe
Best Picture nominated Bobby. He recently completed photography on Seth
MacFarlane’s feature directorial debut Ted
starring Mark Wahlberg and Mila Kunis. He earned ASC Award
nominations for outstanding cinematography on the CBS series CSI: Crime Scene Investigation and won
an ASC award for the pilot episode of CSI:Miami.
CHRIS CORNWELL (Production
Designer) has a career that spans 20 years, during which time he has served as
both production designer and art director for a number of feature films and
television projects. In addition to Planet B-boy, he designed Think Like a Man for Screen
Gems. Prior to these films, he designed the feature film Cursed and several episodes of the
television series “Glory Days” and
“Wasteland” for creator Kevin Williamson.
Chris served
as art director for the highly successful feature film Footloose, along with The
Ides of March and The Roommate.
His other film credits include Burlesque,
Takers, Death at a Funeral, Armored, Obsessed, Quarantine, Prom Night, Gone Baby Gone, Vacancy, Crank, Stick It, The Dukes of Hazzard, 13
Going on 30, Daddy Day Care, America’s
Sweethearts, Driven, Flick, Lost Souls, Instinct, Where’s Marlowe?,
A Smile Like Yours, House Arrest, Black Sheep, Unstrung Heroes and While You Were Sleeping.
For
television, he provided art director work for “Deep Red,” “Curacao,”
“Cooperstown,” “Seduction: Three Tales from the ‘Inner Sanctum,’” “The Lounge
People,” “Wildflower” and “Just Say Julie.”
Chris got his
start in the world of art direction as an assistant working on such films
as Wedlock, Phenomenon, Teaching Mrs. Tingle and The
Kid.
PETER S. ELLIOT (Editor) most recently completing editing for the
huge box office hit Iron Man 3 for
writer/director Shane Black and Marvel Studios. This was the first time he
collaborated with Black but it was the second feature where he has joined
forces with Marvel. Prior to this Elliot
was brought in to do some additional editing on Captain America: The First Avenger.
Tim
Story is a director who Elliot has worked with a number of times. In 2012,
Elliot edited the box office hit Think
Like a Man for Story and Screen Gems. This was the third feature that he
joined forces with Story on as he edited 4-Rise
of The Silver Surfer and was also his Visual Effects Editor on Fantastic Four.
Tim Hill is another Director who Elliot has worked for
numerous times. In 2010 Elliot edited Hop
for Hill and Illumination Entertainment. This was their third feature
together. The other two films were Alvin & The Chipmunks and Garfield: Tale of Two Kitties. Prior to
taking on “Hop” he collaborated with Director Paul Scheuring on his
suspense/thriller The Experiment
starring Forest Whitaker and Adrien Brody.
Elliot
has also enjoyed a long relationship with Director Roland Emmerich. He edited the disaster film 2012 which he received a nomination for
a Golden Satellite Award. Prior to 2012 he
was an Additional Film Editor on The Day
After Tomorrow. He also worked as Emmerich’s Visual Effects Editor on high
profile films Godzilla and Independence Day. He first worked with
Emmerich in 1991 as the Additional Film Editor on Universal Soldier.
Additional Feature credits include Elliot’s work as a
Visual Effects Editor on films such as Daredevil,
Blade II, Dr.Doolittle 2, Hollowman II, Stigmata and Volcano.
Elliot’s
career dates back three decades to 1987 where he began his work in the field of
Post Production first as an Assistant Sound Editor. Elliot first became interested in filmmaking
as a teenager and began to pursue his career while studying film at California
State University Northridge where he attended and received a Bachelor of Arts
Degree in Film.
SOYON
AN (Costume Designer) is
the two-time Emmy® Award winning costume designer of So You Think You Can Dance and the stylist for American Idol. In addition to the shows, Soyon also designs the
costumes for American Idol Live and So You Think You Can Dance Tour. She is
the former designer of Forever 21’s high end line Twelve by Twelve. Soyon is
also the Contributing Fashion Director of California-based Jimon Magazine. Her
celebrity clientele have included Carrie Underwood (Play On Tour), Jennifer
Lopez, Mariah Carey, Kate Bosworth, Mia Maestro, and Avril Lavigne. Soyon’s
work has been covered in Glamour, People, OK! Magazine, Seventeen, LA Times,
AOL’s Stylelist, WWD, InStyle, Hollywood Life, USMagazine.com and more.
DAVE
SCOTT (Choreographer) danced
his way “straight outta Compton” and straight into Hollywood and a
multi-faceted career in dance, choreography, and artist development spanning
music, film, television, and commercials.
He has been filming several projects for both film
and television this year, including Mindless Behavior on Ellen, So You think You Can
Dance and The Black Eyed Pea
Experience for Kinect on Xbox, where he lends his voice and moves to the
game. You can also see Dave’s moves on the big screen in the 3D phenomenon- Step Up 3D and the romantic comedy Maid of Honor. Dave has also been featured on Dancing with the Stars and has hosted hit MTV show Countdown to American’s Best Dance Crew.
Other theatrical credits include Dance Flick, Stomp the Yard, You Got Served (which garnered him the 10th Annual Choreography Award for
Best Choreography in a Feature). In addition; Scott was the key ingredient
behind the success of B2K,
giving them their name, style, hot dance moves, and all out sex appeal. In just
two years, B2K scored two platinum albums; and headlined sold-out tours
nationwide.
Scott has molded and shaped the
images and careers of many other hot artists, including the newest boys group
Mindless Behavior, Tyrese, Marques Houston and the musically renowned Brian
McKnight, allowing them to reach new and unexpected heights in their careers.
Scott has lent his talents to several commercial campaigns including Chevy and
Pantene, the Fox TV success Bones,
and choreographed dance sequences in 2004’s Coach Carter starring Samuel Jackson.
Scott has graced the covers of virtually
every industry publication including Dance Spirit and Arena Magazine,
as well as features in LA Times West Magazine, King, Vibe, and Grip, and has performed at nearly every major award show. Scott
continues to teach master classes in dance nationwide, and to inspire kids and
adults of all ages.
“Oscar®”
and “Academy Award®” are the registered trademarks and service marks of the
Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.
“Emmy®”
is the trademark property of ATAS/NATAS.
SCREEN GEMS
PRESENTS
A CONTRAFILM
PRODUCTION
JOSH HOLLOWAY
LAZ ALONSO
JOSH PECK
CAITY LOTZ
FLIPZ
JON DO-KNOCK
CRUZ
ANIS CHEURFA
JESSE CASPER
BROWN
KID DAVID
SAWANDI
WILSON
RICHARD
MAGUIRE
STEVE TERADA
LUIS ROSADO
JOSHUA LEE
“MILKY” AYERS
SAMMY SOTO
RICHIE “ABSTRAK”
SOTO
GIL
BRACE-WESSEL
TERRENCE J
SWAY CALLOWAY
AND CHRIS
BROWN AS ROOSTER
CASTING BY
TWINKIE BYRD
COSTUME
DESIGNER
SOYON AN
CHOREOGRAPHY
BY
DAVE SCOTT
CHOREOGRAPHY
BY
RICH + TONE
TALAUEGA
MUSIC
SUPERVISION BY
PILAR MCCURRY
MUSIC BY
CHRISTOPHER
LENNERTZ
CO-PRODUCERS
DAVE SCOTT
LISA ZAMBRI
EDITOR
PETER S.
ELLIOT
PRODUCTION
DESIGNER
CHRIS
CORNWELL
DIRECTOR OF
PHOTOGRAPHY
MICHAEL
BARRETT
EXECUTIVE
PRODUCERS
WILL PACKER
GLENN S.
GAINOR
RICH + TONE
TALAUEGA
PRODUCED BY
AMY LO
PRODUCED BY
BEAU FLYNN
AND TRIPP VINSON
INSPIRED BY
THE DOCUMENTARY “PLANET B-BOY” BY
BENSON LEE
WRITTEN BY
BRIN HILL
AND
CHRIS PARKER
DIRECTED BY
BENSON LEE
CAST
JASON
BLAKE JOSH HOLLOWAY
DANTE
GRAHAM LAZ ALONSO
FRANKLYN
JOSH PECK
STACY
CAITY LOTZ
ROOSTER
CHRIS BROWN
FLIPZ
FLIPZ
DO
KNOCK JON DO KNOCK CRUZ
ANIS
ANIS CHEURFA
REBEL
JESSE CASPER BROWN
KID
KID DAVID
SNIPER
SAWANDI WILSON
LIL
ADONIS RICHARD MAGUIRE
SIGHT
STEVE TERADA
BAMBINO
LUIS ROSADO
MAYHEM
JOSHUA LEE “MILKY” AYERS
SAMO
SAMMY SOTO
ABBSTARR
RICHIE “ABSTRAK” SOTO
GILLATINE
GIL BRACE-WESSEL
AS
HIMSELF TERRENCE J
AS
HIMSELF SWAY CALLOWAY
SWAT
JONATHAN LEGACY PEREZ
KILOWATT
MICHAEL CARRASCO
ACES
VICTOR KIM
VILLIAN
DONNIE CRUMBS COUNTS
FLAIR
J D RAINEY
GRIFTER
DOMINIC SANDOVAL
INTRICATE
MORRIS ISBY
DANI
DANIEL LIECHTY
COLDEYE
OREN PINCHAS MICHAELI
GATLIN
KEITH STALLWORTH
PAUL
PAUL KIRKLAND
SCOTT
DEMETRIUS GROSSE
JAMES
JESSE ERWIN
BENSON
JAY LUCHS
VALERIE
KRISTY M. JOHNSON
BRIAN
GIOVANNI GIUSTI
JANICE
NATALYA OLIVER
LA’S
FINEST LUIS DALMASY
TONY
STYLES
JACOB
LYONS
JOEL
TEKNYC MARTINEZ
JEFFERY
MACHINE MCCANN
JOSH
ORTIZ
MICHAEL
SILVA
JOSE
RUIZ
DANCER
HITCLIFF LEIGH TAN
AS
HIMSELF KAMEL
AS
HIMSELF STORM
AS
HIMSELF THOMAS HERGENRÖTHER
JOLENE
WERONIKA ROSATI
MC
SPAX RAFAEL “SPAX” SZULC-VOLLMANN
MC
TRIX ALBERT “TRIX” THOMPSON
BOTY
OFFICIALS MARINE BOHIN
JULIEN
BEAUVOIS MOCHOT
BOTY
HOSTS MALEEK MOUJOUIL
NASTY
MOURAD SAADI
MTV
FRANCE HOST CHINA MOSES
TELECINCO
HOST TANIA LLASSERA
MUSIC
ON TV! HOST TAKAHIRO UENO
MTV
RUSSIA HOST ARTEM KOROLEV
SKY
ITALIA HOST FRANCESCO CASTELNUOVO
KISS
UK HOSTS RICKIE HAYWOOD WILLIAMS
MELVIN
ODOOM
PROSIEBEN
HOSTS JOKO WINTERSCHEIDT
KLAAS-HEUFER
UMLAUF
FRENCH
TEAM SMOCKEMON
FARIOUSS
B-UYSS
RIYAD
NIGGAZ
WAZZ
MEDOX
BILLY
BOY
MAXTENDAX
MONCEF
RUSSIAN
TEAM ROBIN
KOSTO
KOMAR
DISCO
T
FLYING
BUDHA
TONY
ROCK
SIMPSON
WOLT
REZKY
KOREAN
TEAM JOTEE
FLEX
NAUGHTY
1
DUCKY
THE
END
KILL
TRICKX
ROOKIE
STUNT
COORDINATOR LANCE GILBERT
STUNT
COORDINATOR (MONTPELLIER) PASCAL
GUEGAN
STUNT
FRENCH PUNK GUY SEAN GUEGAN
FRENCH
PUNKS COLIN DELEAU
JEROME
GASPARD
KARIM
KERBOUA
ALEXANDRE
MARTIN
UNIT
PRODUCTION MANAGER
GLENN S.
GAINOR
FIRST
ASSISTANT DIRECTOR
MARK
ANTHONY LITTLE
SECOND
ASSISTANT DIRECTOR
JASON ROBERTS
DANCE SEQUENCES EDITED BY HARVEY WHITE
PRODUCTION
SUPERVISOR VALERIE BLETH SHARP
CO-PRODUCER
RAPHAËL BENOLIEL
ART
DIRECTOR CHARLIE CAMPBELL
SET
DECORATOR DENA ROTH
PROPERTY
MASTER GUILLAUME DELOUCHE
SCRIPT
SUPERVISOR JODY BLOSE
“A”
CAMERA OPERATOR DAVID LUCKENBACH
“B”
CAMERA OPERATOR ALLEN EASTON
“C”
CAMERA OPERATOR JOE CHESS
“A”
CAMERA FIRST ASSISTANT MICHAEL
WELDON
“B”
CAMERA FIRST ASSISTANT JOHN HOLMES
“C”
CAMERA FIRST ASSISTANT JOHN YOUNG
“A”
CAMERA SECOND ASSISTANT KIRK BLOOM
“B”
CAMERA SECOND ASSISTANT AMI HOWARD
“C”
CAMERA SECOND ASSISTANT SARAH
GALLEY
CONVERGENCE
PULLER/RIG TECHNICIAN MARKUS
LANXINGER
3D
RIG TECHNICIAN SCOTT STEELE
DIGITAL
IMAGING TECHNICIAN MICHAEL
DEGRAZZIO
COSTUME
SUPERVISOR JACQUELINE ARONSON
SET
COSTUMERS KATHRYN BUCHER
LISA
MARIE HARRIS
LEA
EDSON
ASSISTANT
COSTUME DESIGNER JOAN LEE
MAKEUP
DEPARTMENT HEAD ANGIE WELLS
KEY
MAKEUP KOKEETA DOUGLAS
MAKEUP
ARTISTS NATHALIE ALLEN
VONDA
MORRIS
HAIR
DEPARTMENT HEAD COLLEEN LABAFF
KEY
HAIR STYLIST ROBERT WILSON
HAIR
STYLISTS KIMBERLEY SPITERI
JOCELYN
CARPENTER
COREY
HILL
CHIEF LIGHTING TECHNICIAN RUSSELL CALDWELL
BEST
BOY ELECTRIC BRIAN HARTLEY
RIGGING
GAFFER WILLIAM PAVLU
KEY
GRIP RICHARD MALL
BEST
BOY GRIP THOMAS CRAWFORD
RIGGING
KEY GRIP BLAKE PIKE
DIGITAL
ACQUISITION SUPERVISOR TOBY GALLO
SOUND
MIXER DOUGLAS AXTELL
BOOM
OPERATOR GUNNAR WALTER
VIDEO
ASSIST DAVID KATZ
LOCATION
MANAGER BRIAN O’NEILL
ASSISTANT
LOCATION MANAGERS S. DYLAN
KIRKLAND
MORGAN
PATTERSON
PRODUCTION
COORDINATOR VICKIE M. HSIEH
ASSISTANT
PRODUCTION COORDINATOR MICHELLE
POOLE
2ND
SECOND ASSISTANT DIRECTOR LILLIAN
AWA
ADDITIONAL
2ND ASSISTANT DIRECTOR LAUREN
PASTERNACK
PRODUCTION
ACCOUNTANT CHRIS ROMBERG
1ST
ASSISTANT ACCOUNTANT NICHOLAS
BROWN
PAYROLL
ACCOUNTANT LORI IKEDA
CONSTRUCTION
COORDINATOR KAREN HIGGINS
GENERAL
FOREMAN DAVID OTT
PAINT
FOREMAN DAVE GOLDSTEIN
LABOR
FOREMAN JOHN LOZANO
LEADMAN
JOHN NAEHRLICH
ON
SET DRESSER PHILLIP THOMAN
SET
DRESSERS BROCK HELFER
PAUL
CUNNINGHAM
ROBERT
GREENFIELD
JAMES
BOYCE
PROPERTY
MASTER ASSISTANTS TAYLOR VAUGHAN
HAYDEN
BILSON
ART
DEPARTMENT COORDINATOR REGINA
HERMOSILLO
UNIT
PUBLICIST LINDA BROWN-SALOMONE
STILL
PHOTOGRAPHY MATT KENNEDY
SET
MEDIC SUSAN BANNOUT
SPECIAL
EFFECTS SUPERVISOR TOM FRAZIER
ASSISTANT
TO MR. VINSON TARA FARNEY
ASSISTANT
TO MR. LEE NICK MONGONI, JR.
ASSISTANT TO MR. GAINOR JAMIE LIEBERMAN
PRODUCTION
ASSISTANTS MATTHEW CUNY
JOSH
BENAVIDEZ
SAM
MCDONALD
DANNON
TAYLOR
ANDREW
CALVER
ASSISTANT
CHOREOGRAPHERS KOUNTRY VACULIK
KRISTI
CRADER
B-BOY
CONSULTANT MIRI PARK
CASTING
ASSOCIATE MICHELLE ADAMS
EXTRAS
CASTING BRANDI HAWKINS
TRANSPORTATION
CAPTAIN DAN BRIZENDINE
TRANSPORTATION
CO-CAPTAIN JAYSON EHLERS
CATERING
GALA CATERING
CRAFT
SERVICE CHARLIE SCOTT, JR.
STEPHEN
SCOTT
TRAVEL
PROVIDED BY AIR TAHITI NUI
MONTPELLIER,
FRANCE CREW
PRODUCTION SERVICES BY FIRSTEP
PRODUCTION
MANAGER ROZENN LE PAPE
FIRST
ASSISTANT DIRECTOR ELIOT MATHEWS
SECOND
ASSISTANT DIRECTOR DELPHINE
BERTRAND
THIRD
ASSISTANT DIRECTORS NICOLAS
DESSOMMES
AURORE
COPPA
SET
DECORATOR BENOÎT TETELIN
“B”
CAMERA OPERATOR HUGUES ESPINASSE
“C”
CAMERA OPERATOR VASCO NUNES
“B”
CAMERA FIRST ASSISTANT DAVID
CHAMBILLE
“C”
CAMERA FIRST ASSISTANT MARTIN
LEVENT
“B”
CAMERA SECOND ASSISTANT JÉRÉMY
MAUROY
ADDITIONAL
CAMERA OPERATORS EMMANUEL DE
FLEURY
TIM
MENDLER
ADDITIONAL
CAMERA ASSISTANTS MAEYA DRECQ
FOREST
FINBOW
3D
RIG TECHNICIAN CÉLINE TRICART
COSTUME
SUPERVISOR PATRICIA COLIN
ASSISTANT
COSTUMERS SARAH MONFORT
OLIVIER
LIGEN
COSTUMERS
MAGALI BONNOT
AURORE
PAGEOT
AURÉLIE
DOLBEAU
RAFAEL
STORA
MAKEUP
ARTISTS FABIENNE ROBINO
KARINE
HAMELLE
HAIR
STYLISTS VÉRONIQUE BOSLE
CATHERINE
JABES
OLIVIER
SEYFRID
GAFFER
THIERRY BAUCHERON
BEST
BOY ELECTRIC JEAN FRANCOIS
DRIGEARD
KEY
GRIP CYRIL KUHNHOLTZ
SOUND
MIXER JEAN-MARIE BLONDEL
BOOM
OPERATOR FRÉDÉRIC PARDON
VIDEO
ASSIST SUPERVISOR THIERRY POUFFARY
LOCATION
MANAGER ARNAUD DUTERQUE
ASSISTANT
LOCATION MANAGERS JEREMY BAU
CHRISTEL
RASQUIN
PRODUCTION
COORDINATOR LAURENCE COUTAUD
GARNIER
ASSISTANT
PRODUCTION COORDINATOR JENNIFER
SIMONNET
PRODUCTION
ACCOUNTANT BERNARD LAMY
ASSISTANT
PRODUCTION ACCOUNTANT KIM
COURCELLE
ACCOUNTANT/CASHIER
BÉATRICE GIRAUD
PRODUCTION
ACCOUNTING ASTRID MONARQUE
STANDBY
PROPS OLIVIER CRESPIN
ASSISTANT
STANDBY PROPS PIERRE MAXIME DUVAL
SET
DRESSERS JONATHAN LACOUR
THOMAS
LEMIERRE
SIMON
STEHLE
STILL
PHOTOGRAPHER LOHIM CARRAU
UNIT
MEDIC ZACCARIA ERRABIH
PRODUCTION
ASSISTANTS GIANCARLO AZZARELLI
HELOISE
MARSAND
AURIANE
LACINCE
DIMITRI
CESARIDIS
NAI
MA
CASTING
SAMIA FADLI
EXTRAS
CASTING ELSA BRUGIÈRE
TRANSPORTATION
COORDINATOR NATHALIE ANSELME
TRANSPORTATION
CAPTAIN CÉDRIC ALLARD
CATERING
LOCAFÊTE – JLG RECEPTION
POST
PRODUCTION
CO-EDITOR
PATRICK GALLAGHER
ASSOCIATE
EDITOR JOHN DIETRICK
ASSISTANT
EDITORS STACEY CLIPP
ALAIN
ROMI
BOB
BERMAN
RE-RECORDING
MIXERS DEB ADAIR
CHRIS
CARPENTER
SUPERVISING
SOUND EDITOR RICHARD YAWN,
M.P.S.E.
SUPERVISING
DIALOGUE/ADR EDITOR BERNARD
WEISER, M.P.S.E.
ASSISTANT
SOUND EDITOR LYNN SABLE
SOUND
EFFECTS EDITOR DANIEL PAGAN,
M.P.S.E.
DIALOGUE
EDITOR DAVID WILLIAMS
FOLEY
ARTISTS SARAH MONAT
ROBIN
HARLAN
ANITA
CANNELLA
FOLEY
MIXER RANDY K. SINGER
ADR
MIXERS BRIAN SMITH
DAVID
A. WEISBERG
VOICE
CASTING BY RANJANI BROW
WENDY
HOFFMAN
POST
SOUND SERVICES PROVIDED BY SONY
PICTURES STUDIOS
CULVER
CITY, CALIFORNIA
SUPERVISING
MUSIC EDITOR TODD BOZUNG
MUSIC
EDITOR JACLYN NEWMAN
ADDITIONAL
BEATS AND PROGRAMMING BY DJ
NU-MARK
SCORE
PRODUCTION BY DREW SILVERSTEIN
ALEX
BORNSTEIN
CONDUCTED
BY ALLAN WILSON
ORCHESTRATED
BY MICHAEL J. LLOYD
ADDITIONAL
MUSIC BY PHILIP WHITE
JAMIE
CHRISTOPHERSON
TIMOTHY
MICHAEL WYNN
AARON
KAPLAN
PROGRAMMING
BY CHRIS NEWLIN
MIXED
BY JEFF VAUGHN
MAIN
TITLES BY PICTURE MILL
END
TITLES BY SCARLET LETTERS
DIGITAL
INTERMEDIATE BY COLORWORKS
DIGITAL
COLORIST TRENT JOHNSON
3D
CAMERA SERVICES PROVIDED BY 3ALITY
TECHNICA
VISUAL
EFFECTS
ZOIC
STUDIOS
SENIOR
VFX SUPERVISOR ROCCO PASSIONINO
EXECUTIVE
VFX PRODUCER RAOUL YORKE BOLOGNINI
VFX
PRODUCERS ANDREW COX
JOEY
BONANDER
VFX
COORDINATORS EMILY KISTER
DEANNA
LOUIE
DIGITAL
EFFECTS SUPERVISOR JEFF BAKSINSKI
COMPOSITING
SUPERVISOR RANDY BROWN
COMPOSITORS
DYLAN YASTREMSKI
RAFAEL
PEREZ
RELIANCE
MEDIAWORKS
EXECUTIVE
PRODUCER SANJOT SONALKAR
PRODUCTION
HEAD SUDHIR REDDY
VFX
PRODUCERS CINDY BOND
LIAM
TULLY
COMPOSITING
SUPERVISORS JOSEPH VINCENT PIKE
PRASHANTH
VS
2D
LEAD ANGELO PERROTTA
STEREO
ARTIST BRANDO BENAWAY
VIDEO
- I/O JEFF SCHIFFMAN
I/O
PAUL JACKSON
3D
STEREOSCOPIC CONVERSION
VENTURE
3D
STEREOGRAPHER
TODD COGAN
TECHNICAL
SUPERVISOR CHANGWON CHOI
COORDINATOR
INA SHIN
PRODUCER
SUNGMOON LEE
LEAD DEPTH
ARTIST KEVIN JEONG
LEAD
PAINT ARTIST YEONGJOO SHIN
PROJECT
MANAGER TOMMY LEE
RELIANCE
MEDIAWORKS
OPERATIONS
HEAD INDRANEEL GUHA
CONVERSION
PRODUCER PREET SINGH
CONVERSION
SUPERVISOR SUHEL KHAN
SR.
PRODUCTION MANAGER SACHIN
BHANUSHALI
PRODUCTION
MANAGER DEVENDRA DURGE
ASST.
STEREOGRAPHER SUBODH SOMAN
ROTO
& PAINT LEADS SARFARAZ UDDIN
SAMEER
KUDALE
VFX
EDITOR LINDA SUNDLIN
VFX
COORDINATOR BRYCE BRECHEISEN
MUSIC
“FREE FALLING”
WRITTEN BY RYAN BUENDIA
PERFORMED BY THE BANGERZ
COURTESY OF JBWKZ RECORDS
“IN THE CITY”
WRITTEN BY ERIC GOLDMAN
AND MICHAEL CORCORAN
PERFORMED BY THE LA OUTFIT
COURTESY OF KEEP SMILING MUSIC
“NEED A CAPTAIN”
WRITTEN BY ERIC GOLDMAN
AND MICHAEL CORCORAN
PERFORMED BY THE LA OUTFIT
COURTESY OF KEEP SMILING MUSIC
“RUN!!!!”
WRITTEN BY A. ZHARKEVICH AND B. BULATOV
PERFORMED BY NEWTONE
COURTESY OF PIGFACTORY USA LLC
“BOOM”
WRITTEN BY ANTONIO HARDY, KARL JENKINS,
MELVIN LEWIS, MARLON WILLIAMS,
NATHANIEL WILSON AND TARIK COLLINS
PERFORMED BY THE ROOTS
COURTESY OF GEFFEN RECORDS
UNDER LICENSE FROM
UNIVERSAL MUSIC ENTERPRISES
“FAST MAN (BOOTY MAN)”
REMIX PRODUCED BY Z-TRIP
“TEMPERATURE IS RISING”
WRITTEN BY ERIC GOLDMAN
AND MICHAEL CORCORAN
PRODUCED AND PERFORMED BY
THE LA OUTFIT
“DAD AND MCDONALD UPSET”
WRITTEN BY CHRIS LENNERTZ
“THE DREAM TEAM
IS IN THE HOUSE”
WRITTEN BY MICHAEL PERISON
AND RUFUS PERISON
PERFORMED BY L.A. DREAM TEAM
COURTESY OF GEFFEN RECORDS
UNDER LICENSE FROM
UNIVERSAL MUSIC ENTERPRISES
“MR. BLUE SKY”
WRITTEN BY JEFF LYNNE
PERFORMED BY ELO
COURTESY OF BIG TRILBY RECORDS
“SAME SONG”
WRITTEN BY TUPAC AMARU SHAKUR,
RONALD R. BROOKS, GREGORY E. JACOBS,
GEORGE CLINTON JR., WILLIAM COLLINS,
JAMES VITTI AND WALTER MORRISON
PERFORMED BY DIGITAL UNDERGROUND
COURTESY OF TOMMY BOY MUSIC
BY ARRANGEMENT WITH
WARNER MUSIC GROUP FILM & TV LICENSING
CONTAINS ELEMENTS FROM
“THEME FROM THE BLACK HOLE”
“ORISHA”
WRITTEN BY LEIGH MCALLISTER GRACIE
PERFORMED BY SPEEDOMETER
COURTESY OF FREESTYLE RECORDS LTD.
“A JOURNEY INTO STEREO SOUND”
NARRATED BY GEOFFREY SUMNER
COURTESY OF TRANSACORD LTD.
“PAPA’S GOT A BRAND NEW BAG”
WRITTEN AND PERFORMED BY JAMES BROWN
COURTESY OF UNIVERSAL RECORDS
UNDER LICENSE FROM
UNIVERSAL MUSIC ENTERPRISES
“GIVE IT UP OR TURN IT LOOSE
(IN THE JUNGLE GROOVE REMIX)”
WRITTEN BY CHARLES FRED BOBBITT
PERFORMED BY JAMES BROWN
COURTESY OF UNIVERSAL RECORDS
UNDER LICENSE FROM
UNIVERSAL MUSIC ENTERPRISES
“SOUL MAKOSSA”
WRITTEN AND PERFORMED BY MANU DIBANGO
COURTESY OF MERCURY FRANCE
UNDER LICENSE FROM
UNIVERSAL MUSIC ENTERPRISES
JAMS”
BY DJ NU-MARK
“TREAT ‘EM RIGHT”
WRITTEN BY MCKINLEY JACKSON,
RICHARD SIMPSON, MELVIN STEALS,
MERVIN STEALS AND HOWARD A. THOMPSON
PERFORMED BY CHUBB ROCK
COURTESY OF SELECT RECORDS
BY ARRANGEMENT WITH FINE GOLD MUSIC LLC
“UNIVERSAL MIND CONTROL (UMC)”
WRITTEN BY CHAD HUGO,
LONNIE RASHID LYNN AND PHARRELL WILLIAMS
PERFORMED BY COMMON
COURTESY OF GEFFEN RECORDS
UNDER LICENSE FROM
UNIVERSAL MUSIC ENTERPRISES
“SOUTH KOREA (AEGUKGA)
(NATIONAL ANTHEM)”
(TRADITIONAL)
“BREAKERS DEDICATION”
WRITTEN BY MICHAEL DIPPON
AND DAMON TALTON
PERFORMED BY COLOURS UNITED
FEATURING DJ MIKE MD
COURTESY OF ASR RECORDS GERMANY
“BACK N FORTH”
WRITTEN BY ERIC GOLDMAN
AND MICHAEL CORCORAN
PERFORMED BY THE LA OUTFIT
COURTESY OF KEEP SMILING MUSIC
“ZG FREESTYLE THROWBACK #2”
WRITTEN BY STEVEN ROYBAL
PERFORMED BY ZULU GREMLIN
“CELEBRITY MASHUP”
WRITTEN BY BRET AUTREY
PERFORMED BY BLUE STAHLI
COURTESY OF FIXT/POSITION MUSIC
“B BOYIN FREAK FREAKIN!!!!”
WRITTEN BY ALLAN PETER GRIGG
PERFORMED BY KOOL KOJAK
COURTESY OF KOJAKTRAX
“FAST MAN (BOOTY MAN)”
WRITTEN BY ROBERT DAVIS
PERFORMED BY PC’S LTD.
COURTESY OF BOYKINS MUSIC
BY ARRANGEMENT WITH JAZZMAN
AND NOW-AGAIN RECORDS
“I’M OK YOU’RE OK”
WRITTEN BY CHRIS LENNERTZ
“COACH TAKES THE JOB”
WRITTEN BY CHRIS LENNERTZ
“TOUGH BREAK”
WRITTEN BY MARK ALI POTSIC
PERFORMED BY DJ NU-MARK
COURTESY OF HOT PLATE RECORDS
“ROLLOVER DJ”
WRITTEN BY CHRISTOPHER JAMES CESTER
AND NICHOLAS JOHN CESTER
PERFORMED BY JET
COURTESY OF ELEKTRA ENTERTAINMENT GROUP
BY ARRANGEMENT WITH
WARNER MUSIC GROUP FILM & TV LICENSING
“LES CITES BLEUES”
WRITTEN BY SAMY HASSID
AND PASCAL VENTURINI
PERFORMED BY PANAME DANDIES
COURTESY OF CRUCIAL MUSIC CORPORATION
“KICK OUT THE EPIC
MOTHERF**KER”
WRITTEN BY STEFAN ENGBLOM
AND OLLE CORNÉER
PERFORMED BY DADA LIFE
COURTESY OF SO MUCH DADA,
UNIVERSAL MUSIC AB
& THE ISLAND DEF JAM MUSIC GROUP
UNDER LICENSE FROM
UNIVERSAL MUSIC ENTERPRISES
“KOREAN BATTLE”
WRITTEN BY ERIC GOLDMAN
AND MICHAEL CORCORAN
PRODUCED AND PERFORMED BY
THE LA OUTFIT
“SING, SING, SING (WITH A SWING)”
WRITTEN BY LOUIS PRIMA
PERFORMED BY
BENNY GOODMAN AND HIS ORCHESTRA
COURTESY OF BLUEBIRD/NOVUS/RCA VICTOR
BY ARRANGEMENT WITH
SONY MUSIC LICENSING
“LOVE THANG”
WRITTEN BY MCKINLEY JACKSON,
MERVIN STEALS AND MELVIN STEALS
PERFORMED BY FIRST CHOICE
COURTESY OF SALSOUL RECORDS
UNDER LICENSE FROM VERSE MUSIC GROUP
“STYLE WARS”
NARRATED BY SAM SCHACHT
COURTESY OF PUBLIC ART FILMS, INC.
“GO”
BY DJ NU-MARK
“LOOKING FOR THE PERFECT BEAT”
WRITTEN BY AFRICA BAMBAATAA,
ROBERT ALLEN, ARTHUR BAKER, JOHN B. MILLER,
JOHN ROBIE AND ELLIS WILLIAMS
PERFORMED BY AFRICA BAMBAATAA
AND SOULSONIC FORCE
COURTESY OF TOMMY BOY RECORDS
BY ARRANGEMENT WITH
WARNER MUSIC GROUP FILM & TV LICENSING
“KNOW THE LEDGE”
WRITTEN BY ERIC BARRIER AND WILLIAM GRIFFIN
PERFORMED BY ERIC B. & RAKIM
COURTESY OF GEFFEN RECORDS
UNDER LICENSE FROM
UNIVERSAL MUSIC ENTERPRISES
“DIRTY WEATHER”
WRITTEN BY THOMAS CHAPMAN
PERFORMED BY DIRTY WORMZ
COURTESY OF BIELER BROS.
RECORDS, INC.
“AS YOUR FRIEND (DANNY HOWARD REMIX)”
WRITTEN BY CHRISTOPHER MAURICE BROWN, JAMAL F.
JONES,
NICK VAN DE WALL, LEROY P.L. GHAZI,
ALI N. NADIR SAKIR AND URALES VARGAS
PERFORMED BY AFROJACK FEATURING CHRIS BROWN
COURTESY OF ISLAND DEF JAM RECORDS
UNDER LICENSE FROM UNIVERSAL MUSIC ENTERPRISES
COURTESY OF THE ISLAND DEF JAM MUSIC GROUP
AND UNIVERSAL MUSIC B.V.
UNDER LICENSE FROM UNIVERSAL MUSIC ENTERPRISES
CHRIS BROWN APPEARS COURTESY OF RCA
RECORDS
©2013 SCREEN GEMS, INC.
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
SCREEN GEMS, INC., IS THE AUTHOR OF THIS FILM
(MOTION PICTURE) FOR THE PURPOSE OF
COPYRIGHT AND OTHER LAWS.
CETTE OEUVRE A BÉNÉFICIÉ DU CREDIT D’IMPÔT EN FAVEUR
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THIS FILM HAS BENEFITED FROM THE TAX CREDIT FOR
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STEVE JOBS PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF ALBERT WATSON
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