James Keitel

Películas

Se ocultan en la oscuridad
Producer
No mucho después de que John Chambers y su familia llegan a su nuevo hogar en una pequeña ciudad rural de Pensilvania, John comienza a experimentar parálisis del sueño. Acostados allí paralizados, atrapados en su propia pesadilla, los seres de otro mundo visitan a John. Son entidades que existen en las sombras más oscuras de la noche y que solo se pueden ver por el rabillo del ojo. Estos encuentros comienzan a perseguir a John, transformándose en terror total cuando descubre el único propósito de las entidades ... el secuestro de su hijo de siete años. Al final, John descubrirá el horrible secreto de la ciudad, un portal en su tierra, y hará un último intento para salvar a su hijo antes de que las personas de la sombra lo lleven permanentemente a su mundo.
The Pikme-Up
Producer
In the mid-1980's the coffeehouse movement in Los Angeles was beginning with wild promise. A tattered Hollywood storefront called The Pikme-up became the prototype for a new subculture that started as an unruly rebellion and exploded into a national phenomenon. The place was a bohemian revolution, a happening of ideas, poetry, music, and performance where a motley group of outcasts formed a unique community and an enduring family. Our documentary on The Pikme-up utilizes an amazing wealth of materials--more than 5000 photographs, over 200 video hours of performances, hundreds of print elements, and intimate interviews with friends, employees, and performers. We hope our experimentation with the materials and how memory is represented in film is true to the spirit of this amazing moment in Los Angeles cultural history.
The Pikme-Up
Director
In the mid-1980's the coffeehouse movement in Los Angeles was beginning with wild promise. A tattered Hollywood storefront called The Pikme-up became the prototype for a new subculture that started as an unruly rebellion and exploded into a national phenomenon. The place was a bohemian revolution, a happening of ideas, poetry, music, and performance where a motley group of outcasts formed a unique community and an enduring family. Our documentary on The Pikme-up utilizes an amazing wealth of materials--more than 5000 photographs, over 200 video hours of performances, hundreds of print elements, and intimate interviews with friends, employees, and performers. We hope our experimentation with the materials and how memory is represented in film is true to the spirit of this amazing moment in Los Angeles cultural history.
Wanderlust
Director
Struggling to hold together her train wreck family, Kelly tracks down her drifter brother to a seedy, remote island off Chile and discovers him living with a ragged group of expatriates.