Monday, September 22, 2008

Like Its Heroine, a Movie Encounters Savage Treatment ..


IT was known as the "Dakota Fanning rape movie" at the Sundance Film
Festival
in 2007. The press screening for "Hounddog" elicited actual
boos, not to mention eviscerating reviews. Even before that,
evangelical groups protested the film after someone involved in its
early financing alleged publicly (and erroneously) that Ms. Fanning
was naked in it.

Few movies recover from such a hostile reception, especially a
low-budget Southern-gothic tale set in 1959 about a 12-year-old
motherless girl obsessed with Elvis Presley who seductively sings for
a teenager in exchange for tickets to a concert of the King's. But
thanks to a radically different cut of the movie and the coffers of a
new independent film company listed on the Nasdaq's over-the-counter
market, "Hounddog" will finally make its way into 22 theaters across
the country on Sept. 19.

Sitting in the Cupcake Café in Clinton this month, the film's
director, Deborah Kampmeier, sipped tea and reflected on the journey
of her film, which cost just under $4 million. "The whole process was
challenging from the beginning," she said. "It's a story about a girl
whose voice and spirit are silenced, and then it's about her
reclaiming her voice on a deeper, truer level. It's very interesting
how the story that I'm trying to tell has been paralleled by the
actual events of the making of the film.

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