Funny Doesn't Grow on Trees
COMIC EVANGELISTS Preach $50 Lesson
by John Wildman
AFI FEST Daily News
 Writers
and directors Daniel Jones and Dann Sytsma arrive at the world premiere
of their film COMIC EVANGELISTS, November 5 at AFI FEST 2006 presented
by Audi. (Photo by Michael Buckner/Getty Images)
|
Anyone with an extra $50 might think about a nice dinner, or a couple of new DVDs, or the benefits of saving the money.
But few might think they'd take that $50 and make a feature film for festival audiences in Hollywood.
The scenario didn't play out exactly that way for Daniel Jones
and Dann Sytsma, but they did indeed end up with a feature film at AFI
FEST 2006 presented by Audi.
And yes, they made it for $50.
COMIC EVANGELISTS follows the misguided hopes of an evangelical improvisation troupe, skewering fundamentalist intolerance.
AFI FEST Daily News: How did the two of you connect originally?
Dann Sytsma: He had moved back to Kalamazoo, Michigan - where I
live - and he had heard that we were doing improv from Dan Sanford, who
is one of our members, and said he wanted to come film some of our
shows. AFI FEST Daily News: How did the idea to make COMIC EVANGELISTS come about?
Daniel Jones: The improv comedy group Crawlspace Eviction got
invited to perform at the Toronto International Improv Festival. We
were talking about ideas for a road movie. And we thought we're going
up to Toronto, it'll be fun, it'll be a distraction. But then we were
sifting through some ideas for something more exciting to do and Adam
Carter and Dann Sytsma had this awesome idea to invent this
Fundamentalist Improv Troupe.
AFI FEST Daily News: What kind of projects had you been working on prior to COMIC EVANGELISTS?
Daniel Jones: I did a documentary called TWO ROADS TO
JOHANNESBURG that took place at the United Nations. We followed three
young people who were at this world seminar for sustainable development
in Johannesburg, South Africa. Following that I got hired to shoot
video for a documentary about a guy who was walking from Florida to
Boston. So my experience has been pretty serious issue-based
documentaries.
 COMIC
EVANGELISTS protest the screening of their own film, November 6 at AFI
FEST 2006 presented by Audi. (Photo by Veronika Cernadas/American Film
Institute)
|
AFI FEST Daily News: While you were working on those
projects, were you secretly thinking, "this is great, but if I could do
something funny...?"
Daniel Jones: I had always wanted to do some sort of comedy. I'm
a great fan of comedy in all of its forms - especially mockumentary.
Things like THE OFFICE or ARRESTED DEVELOPMENT - cinŽma vŽritŽ style of
narrative humor. I was so inspired by that stuff because it fits so
well with what I like to do in terms of documentaries. It's all about
picking up a camera and shooting what happens.
AFI FEST Daily News: How did the dynamic work with you two, directing the film?
Daniel Jones: Dann and I have really good chemistry. We both
find a lot of the same things funny. We're both very Midwestern white
boys, so we have a lot in common. Beyond that, Sytsma's got this
incredible theatre background so his thing was kind of guiding the cast
and the acting. Dann Sytsma: Dan is probably one of those most humble
filmmakers you're ever going to run into. He's really able to put you
at ease. He'd say, "Look, I know it's improvised, but we're going to do
it again. Let's play with a different flavor." And the way that he
would do it was always very flattering to the improviser. I credit Dan
with how well it is put together.
AFI FEST Daily News: What does it mean that the film was made for $50?
Daniel Jones: It means exactly what it is. We spent $50 on this
shoot. All the equipment, all the overhead costs were not there. The
cast was doing it for free. And we were already going to Toronto so
that was taken care of. The biggest expense was a $44 location fee
which was for Noah's epilogue scene on a basketball court. We also
spent six or seven dollars on props. We had to go to the Family
Christian bookstore to buy posters, stickers and t-shirts since we
didn't have those lying around. So when we say $50, we really mean $50.
AFI FEST Daily News: What was the biggest surprise for you once you became involved with making the film?
Daniel Jones: The biggest surprise to me was bringing the
footage home and seeing that there actually was a way to weave this
thing together. We were coming to this with a very YouTube style, like,
"Let's make something that's 10 minutes and it'll be funny to show to
friends or whatever." So coming home, we had 10 hours of footage. We
shot like it was a documentary. We shot as much as we could, the cast
would keep going and they kept coming up with good stuff. So, it was a
big surprise to get it home and put it on the computer and see that we
actually had the potential to put something together that was over 60
minutes.
Dann Sytsma: When we got back from Toronto we realized the
value of these characters we created and the value of the story that
unfolded while we were there.
For an improv-generated film, it's impressive how tightly constructed
the story is. Daniel Jones: And that was definitely a challenge. You come
home with 10 hours of footage, it really takes some time to look over
all of that. It's exactly like doing a documentary. There was a lot of
stuff that Dan and I had to figure out a way to develop afterwards,
making up a story and doing things to fill in the blanks.
AFI FEST Daily News: Was that 10 hours of footage basically where the movie came from?
Dann Sytsma: No, we had to sit down and say, "This story line is
strong, this story line is not strong enough to bother with. There were
a lot of storylines that we thought were fun initially, but ended up
just not panning out. Then we had to fill in a lot of the cracks with
the monologues and the interviews that we filmed. A lot of that stuff
was done after we got back from Toronto. Even the performance itself.
We had the idea for it, but we weren't able to do it while we were in
Toronto so we did that when we got back. That's actually the only
scripted portion of the film.
AFI FEST Daily News: Are you a very religious person or were
you? Did that aspect of it come naturally to you or did you have to do
research?
Daniel Jones: Adam Carter and Dann Sytsma would tell you that a
lot of the inspiration came from the fact that the majority of us came
from Christian backgrounds. Not speaking for myself along those lines,
but Adam had to come out to his church group and Dan Sytsma still goes
to church. He comes from a Fundamentalist Christian background. The
movie isn't so much about "look at these crazy Christians," although it
is an incredibly funny device, it's more about the issues of tolerance
within fundamentalism and the kind of behavior the conflicts there can
breed. But when we were coming up for ideas for the improv scene in
Toronto, I was totally out of my element on what to talk about. But
they were able to be very specific with Biblical things they could
mention.
Dann Sytsma: The Christian information in the movie I didn't
have to research at all. I grew up in that atmosphere. I went through
13 years in an intensely conservative Christian elementary school and
high school. The family I grew up in was very very focused on the more
fundamentalist side of Christianity. So the information is all in my
head and it was pretty easy to pull it from. It was cathartic in a way.
The name of the character that I play, Rick, is from a character I did
in a friend's play that was based on the really ugly side of
fundamentalist Christianity. And I told him this and he said that when
he wrote it, that character was based on this guy we knew who was just
an ass. I mean, he just thought he was like the next John the Baptist
and he was the biggest idiot you'd ever find. AFI FEST Daily News: How did it feel when the film was accepted at AFI FEST?
Dann Sytsma: I was expecting a call for at least two weeks
telling us that there was an error. I just kept waiting for the call,
and then every time Dan would call he would have some new information
about it but I kept expecting him to say, "Yeah, well, they actually
watched the movie and um..." And then I got an email from someone
saying how much they had heard about our movie CONVICT EVANGELISTS. So
I thought, "Well, maybe CONVICT EVANGELISTS is supposed to be at the
festival." Daniel Jones: It was an absolute surprise. And I'll be
absolutely candid. We entered the film in like, 13 festivals and got
rejected by the lowliest of them. We became humbled very quickly. We
had played a rough cut for a test audience in Kalamazoo and it really
had bolstered our egos and got us excited. But we weren't really
expecting it to have an audience outside of our little bubble in
Kalamazoo. So to hear that it got into AFI is a huge, huge thing for
us. We are absolutely thrilled.
|