Showing posts with label High There DVD. Show all posts
Showing posts with label High There DVD. Show all posts

NY POST: Wayne Darwen brings porn star to High There launch party!

NY POST
June 30, 2015


Quick hits... quick hits...

WAYNE Darwen brought porn star Sheila Marie to a party for the VOD and DVD release of his marijuana docmentary, "High There," at Hollywood's El Bar.  "Wayne introduced her to us as Isabel," said the film's producer Burt Kearns. "She said she was into yoga and spirituality"...

HIGH THERE is here! And Dave High is the Zig-Zag man!


Dave High is the Zig-Zag man!

One of the big surprises of today's release of High There, the award-winning, internationally-acclaimed gonzo nonfiction comedy, on DVD today was the screen menu-- in which director Wayne Darwen, as High High, is depicted as the character on Zig-Zag rolling paper products-- "Captain Zig-Zag," better known as the "Zig-Zag man"!

The DVD menu offers a choice between the film and an extra featurette-- an interview with the directors, "High Times & Low Expectations,"  produced and directed by Burt Kearns for Good Story Productions.


High There is already selling on Amazon.com and other sites in DVD and VOD form.  

Google Play, Vimeo and other sites are already rolling out the video on demand.  More sites and sources will feature High There in the coming days.

High There is distributed by BRINKvision, a Sam Peters International Productions Unlimited and Good Story Productions presentation of a Rat Lung picture.

Press Release: International spotlight hits HIGH THERE and director/star Wayne Darwen

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:

* Big week for nonfiction film in advance of official June 23rd release

* Storm over Darwen's rebuke of Robert Downey Jr.

HOLLYWOOD (MAY 22) -- Two of the world's most influential newspaper and online columnists, in two corners of the world, put the focus this week on High There director and star Wayne Darwen and his influence on today's pop culture.

Weeks before the nonfiction comedy film's official release on Richard Johnson of the New York Post's Page Six, and Mark Day of The Australian, wrote columns that were picked up by dozens of news organizations across the globe.

An international storm erupted Thursday after Johnson quoted Darwen's defense of independent filmmakers and journalists, in response to disparaging remarks by actor Robert Downey Jr.  

As Johnson noted, Darwen was the model for Downey Jr.'s newsman character in the controversial film, Natural Born Killers.

Three days earlier in Sydney, Day wrote a personal reminiscence of Darwen in Australia's only national newspaper.

He noted that his former reporter has been "described as the new Hunter S. Thompson — the new king of gonzo journalism," and that High There, which "reignites a film genre made popular decades ago by the likes of Cheech and Chong... is being hailed as a minor masterpiece."

Both columnists highlighted the triumph by Darwen and his fellow director Henry Goren earlier this month at the Cannabis Film Festival in Humboldt County, California, where High There won the Viewers' Choice Award.

The BRINKvision DVD of High There is available as a pre-order on Amazon.com and other online sales sites.

FOR INTERVIEWS, REVIEWS, PRESS MATERIALS
CONTACT: Sam Peters
goodstoryproductions@mac.com
SAM PETERS PUBLIC RELATIONS NY LA LV LN HK

The Australian: Wayne Darwen's High There stoner's film is a labour of love


THE AUSTRALIAN  May 18, 2015


MARK DAY
Columnist
Sydney

I coulda been famous. I coulda been somebody. I coulda been The Judge! But I said no and I missed out on my big chance for stardom. 

I kid you not. A couple of years ago I was invited to play a small role in a movie. 

Because of my grumpiness, stern features and stentorian voice I was offered the role of the judge in what I perceived as a wacky low-budget crazy movie idea being pushed by an old journalist mate of mine.

I declined, mumbling something about being too busy.

That movie has just won the viewers’ choice award at a Californian film festival. It is being hailed as a minor masterpiece and its producer/star is being described as the new Hunter S. Thompson — the new king of gonzo journalism.

Mind you, it is a specialist film and its festival award was decided by folk with a specialist interest. The film is called High There and it won at the first Cannabis Film Festival staged in Garberville, California, at the heart of the Emerald Triangle. (Who knew of such things?)

High There was conceived, written, co-directed and co-­produced by its star, Wayne Darwen, playing (if that is the word) investigative journalist Dave High. His co-director and director of photography was Henry Goren, aka Roland Jointz.

Are you getting the picture? High There is a stoners’ movie about sex, drugs, booze, idiocy and persecution — “all the things people want to see”, according to Darwen. It reignites a film genre made popular decades ago by the likes of Cheech and Chong.

According to the festival blurb, the movie is “a 2014 dark, nonfiction comedy film about a real-life, legendary but down-and-out tabloid television journalist who heads to Hawaii to film a marijuana travel series, only to become lost in a fog of drugs, sex and paranoia as he uncovers a secret government war to control the marijuana trade”.

That sounds as if the movie has a point to it, but I doubt that. I have seen only the trailer online but from earlier discussions with Darwen the whole point of the exercise was to not have a point. Well, I think that was the gist of it. When I inquired about a script for the judge’s role he told me not to bother about that … we would just see where it took us.

Hold that thought. None of us know where life will take us. In the mid 1970s, when I was news editor and later editor of the Sydney Daily Mirror, I was called on to nominate a candidate for a job as a correspondent in our New York bureau.

It was an unexpected call to fill one of the most prized positions available. On that day we had scooped the opposition with a great yarn that was the result of a young reporter’s skill, intuition, terrier-like tenacity and creativity; Wayne Darwen had stayed up all night and trawled the streets of Kings Cross to bring home the bacon.

It seemed to me that Darwen had, not for the first time, exhibited the attributes we wanted in the highly competitive Sydney afternoon tabloid wars and on that basis I offered him the job. It also helped that he could write.

It was proposed as a six-month posting. He took it and he took off, never to return. He worked in the bureau for a while, then joined the team of Aussies rewriting the American television story with A Current Affair, the program that became the powerhouse that helped generate the viewer attention that inspired the Fox network in the US.

The ACA team’s antics were amazing, preposterous, amusing, appalling, genius and sometimes — often, perhaps? — dubious. They were part of Rupert Murdoch’s early push into American TV and they adopted an “anything goes” culture that caused their immediate manager, Ian Rae, to tear out his remaining hair. But it was their devil-may-care, whatever-it-takes approach that got the stories that people watched.

ACA was headed by Peter Brennan, another former news editor of the Mirror who cut his teeth in TV on Ten’s Good Morning Australia and went on to make and lose various fortunes as owner or producer of TV reality and current affairs shows such as Hard Copy and Judge Judy.

ACA’s star reporter was Steve Dunleavy, the legendary Sydney reporter who, amazingly, has survived his hard-drinking, hard-living past to become a gentleman retiree on Florida’s beaches.

If you want the full story on this extraordinary group and their antics, ACA’s Burt Kearns (also a co-producer of High There) told it all in his highly readable book Tabloid Baby.

ACA was eventually killed off not because viewers got sick of it but because advertisers thought it too hot or too close to the bone to want to associate their products with it. Darwen became a freelance producer.

He also became known as the inspiration for Robert Downey Jr’s role in the movie Natural Born Killers. Steve Dunleavy may dispute this but either way, both were contenders for the Hunter S. Thompson crown of gonzo journalism.

From time to time Darwen made quiet trips to Australia and each time we would catch up for a yarn and a beer. We discussed making an outback discovery program but decided Australian audiences didn’t need another man in a wide hat chasing camels in the desert.

High There has been Darwen’s passion or plaything — you can never be quite sure — for several years and it is good to see his persistence and dedication to a seemingly absurd proposition pay off.

His movie was made on a shoestring and I haven’t seen it — it becomes available online on June 23 — so I don’t know if he found anyone to play his judge, or whether that character made it into the final cut.

But it serves to make the point that if we don’t know where life will take us, journalism is a good place to start.

Dave High promotes High There on the LA art scene


With the release of High There on BRINKvision DVD and On Demand rapidly approaching, writer-director-star Wayne Darwen aka Dave High has been out and about making the scenes, getting his photo snapped and making sure everyone knows High There is out there!

Last night, he was special guest at the opening of the hottest art exhibition in LA. Outlined at Bergamot Station's Timothy Hogan Projects features the work of five tattoo artist including the legendary Sean from Texas and tattoo designer/graphic artist Craig Atkins.



Atkins flew in from his home in Sydney, Australia for the event.  He and Wayne, who hails from Sydney and recently spent time on a projct there, had a lot to talk about.



Outlined, curated by Carolina Hummel (with Dave High and with the artists above), runs through June 26.  By then, you'll have your High There DVD!



Artists Jason McAfee, Craig Atkins, Sean from Texas, Matt McCormick, Carolina and High There production assistant (and top artist himself) Sam Kearns.


Press Release: Award & DVD kick off a smoking week for gonzo film HIGH THERE

Sales sites take pre-orders of DVD as June 23 BRINKvision release is announced with big win at Cannabis Film Festival

HOLLYWOOD (MAY 7) -- The marketing campaign for HIGH THERE, the gonzo nonfiction film about sex, conspiracy and marijuana, began with a bang this week, as producers announced a DVD release date, the film won the Viewers’ Choice Award at Humboldt County's first Cannabis Film Festival, and Amazon.com and other sites began racking up pre-orders for the DVD.

High There will be released on Limited Edition DVD and On Demand across North America by BRINKvision on June 23rd, but is already available for day-of-release delivery on sales sites including Amazon, Barnes & Noble and Best Buy. 

"This was a spectacular launch in just the right spot," says producer Burt Kearns. "We got the seal of approval from the heart of pot culture, and a rush of pre-orders because the DVD's a limited edition. It will definitely become a collector's item."

High There is a dark nonfiction comedy following Wayne Darwen in the guise of journalist-producer "Dave High," who heads to Hawaii to film a marijuana travel series, only to become lost in a fog of drugs, sex and paranoia as he uncovers a government plot to control the marijuana trade. Darwen is a veteran tabloid journalist and television producer who was the inspiration for Robert Downey Jr.'s character in "Natural Born Killers," has been compared to Hunter S. Thompson and is credited as a godfather of both tabloid television and "gonzo producing." 

"All it took was one weekend to realize that our instincts were spot-on," Kearns added. "Dave High is the new hero of the 420 generation. He's the real thing. That's why he took over the Cannabis Film Festival and that's why he'll take over the world!"

High There was directed by Darwen and cinematographer Henry Goren, who costars as Dave High's cameraman, Roland Jointz.

The film is produced by Sam Peters International Productions Unlimited, Good Story Productions and Rat Lung Pictures.

BRINKvision is known as "the last real independent film distribution company." Founded in 2001 by indie film pioneer Danny Vinik, it carries a diverse catalog of titles spanning a wide valley of genres and themes, from punk rock docs to critically acclaimed dramas to micro-budget features to blood-curdling horror films.

Pre-production is already underway on a High There sequel, Area 420.

Press Information:
Sam Peters Public Relations
NY LA LV LN HK

Contact Person:
Sam Peters
President
email: goodstoryproductions@mac.com

Press Release: High There DVD selling briskly as pre-order on Amazon.com and other sites

BRINKvision will release the nonfiction "stoner" comedy on June 23rd

HOLLYWOOD (MAY 7) -- HIGH THERE, the nonfiction comedy film that won the Viewers’ Choice Award at Humboldt County's first annual Cannabis Film Festival, is already stirring the charts as a pre-order DVD on Amazon.com and other sites.

The film will be released on DVD and On Demand across North America by BRINKvision on June 23rd, but is available for day-of-release delvery on sales sites including Amazon, Barnes & Noble and Best Buy. 

"This initial offering is a limited edition, and is sure to sell out," says producer Burt Kearns. "It will definitely be a collector's item."

High There is a dark nonfiction comedy following Wayne Darwen in the guise of journalist-producer "Dave High," who heads to Hawaii to film a marijuana travel series, only to become lost in a fog of drugs, sex and paranoia as he uncovers a government plot to control the marijuana trade.

It is directed by Darwen and cinematographer Henry Goren, who costars as Dave High's cameraman, Roland Jointz.

Darwen is a veteran tabloid journalist and television producer who was the inspiration for Robert Downey Jr.'s character in "Natural Born Killers," has been compared to Hunter S. Thompson and is credited as a godfather of both tabloid television and "gonzo producing." 

The DVD announcement was made on Saturday, after the film was screened at the Cannabis Film Festival in Garberville, Humboldt County, California, known as the "marijuana farming capital of the world." The award Sunday morning bestowed High There with a seal of approval from the heart of the pot subculture.

High There is produced by Sam Peters International Productions Unlimited, Good Story Productions and Rat Lung Pictures.

BRINKvision is known as "the last real independent film distribution company." Founded in 2001 by indie film pioneer Danny Vinik, it carries a diverse catalog of titles spanning a wide valley of genres and themes, from punk rock docs to critically acclaimed dramas to micro-budget features to blood-curdling horror films.

Press Information:
Sam Peters Public Relations

Contact Person:
Sam Peters
President
email: email

Web:  www.hightherethemovie.com

Press release link

The Viewers' Choice, The People's Choice: More photos from the Cannabis Film Festival


The first annual Cannabis Film Festival is history, High There made history as winner of the Viewers' Choice Award (aka The People's Choice Award!), and here are some more photos from the memorable weekend in Humboldt County.


Dave High & High There on the big screen.


Garberville Theatre owner Brigette Brannan.  
Help save the Garberville Theatre by clicking here.



Festival president Kellie Butterfield Dodds is surprised 
by an award of recognition for her killer work!


Kerry Reynolds of KMUD radio's Cannabis Consciousness show, 
faces the CFF camera.


Mary Jane The Musical was the highlight of the Friday night events.



Henry Goren AKA Roland Jointz, adds his signature 
to what is now a very valuable t-shirt.



Dave High was spotted across the street from the theatre at the Blue Room Tavern.



Some guys have all the luck.


On the green carpet.



Wayne and Emerald and Dope magazine writer Sharon Letts.


Wayne Darwen with Kellie Butterfield Dodds and the Skunk TV crew.


Wayne celebrates his award with festival executive director Stephen Quiggle.