Monday, 14 April 2014

Comedy Fest Q&A: Jonny Potts

Comedy Fest Q&A: Jonny Potts


JONNY POTTS

1) Tell us the name of your show
The Delusionaries

2) Which came first – the show name or the show content?
The content. Those expecting a Luminaries parody gonna be disappointed but my god look at that poster.

3) C’mon, be honest….
I killed a man.

4) Any other working titles for the show?
Use Your Illusion III, which some band had already.

5) How long – honestly- have you been working on this?
Three years.

6) What’s been the biggest challenge of pulling this show together?
Making the show consistent across three different characters, and finding the right pitch to discuss certain topics.

7) Who’s your biggest comedy rival – and why?
Life's too short for that.

8) Who’s your biggest comedy friend – and why?
Hadley Donaldson, who designs my posters and with whom I've done two Comedy Fest stand up shows.

9) Which show is your must see? Why?
Hamish Parkinson's 'Party Party Party. Fun Fun Fun' because he's calling it 'absurd' and 'dumb', two very desirable elements in comedy.

10) Give us your definition of a great night out during the festival
Seeing two or three shows and having one of them genuinely surprise you.

11) What goes through your mind, the minute before curtain goes up?
Sometimes a Ramones, Iggy or Clash song.

12) What about when you’re on stage?
Mostly nothing, occasionally 'what's next?'

13) How easily distracted are you?
I need to be distracted more easily, truth be told. Sometimes I lock into a set performance too much. Gotta work on being more in tune with the room. Thanks for bringing up my weaknesses.

14) Give us your dream comedy line up
Line-up shows often dilute essence, and make comedy a joke competition. I would love to have seen  a long set from Richard Pryor.

15) Just finally, where will you be in 5 years’ time
My plan is to work really hard but never have any real success, so probably just like maybe next door.

JONNY POTTS performs his show THE DELUSIONARIES (WLG 7 – 10 May) as part of the 2014 NZ International Comedy Festival in cahoots with Old Mout Cider Comedy Gala (24 April – 18 May). For more info visit www.comedyfestival.co.nz

Comedy Fest Q&A: The Reverend Dr Vinyl Burns

Comedy Fest Q&A: The Reverend Dr Vinyl Burns


Comedy Fest Q&A
The Reverend Dr Vinyl Burns.

1)Tell us the name of your show
Vinyl Burns' Variety Hour

2)Which came first – the show name or the show content?
70% The Content


3)C’mon, be honest….
Honest.

4)Any other working titles for the show?
“An hour of special & expensive horsesh*t”

5)How long – honestly- have you been working on this?
I have spent my whole life preparing for every moment... So, ages.

6)What’s been the biggest challenge of pulling this show together?
Convincing people that, even though it's not dick jokes on Seven Days, it's spectactularly skillful and compulsively funny.

7)Who’s your biggest comedy rival – and why?
Rival????  It's not sport.  But, while I won't name names... It's because he's a toolbag.

8)Who’s your biggest comedy friend – and why?
Mr Fraser Hooper... He's a genius with a terrible sense of direction.  Hilarious.

9)Which show is your must see? Why?
I must see mine sometime... It's hard to play guitar solos on a 7ft unicycle and spin western guns, if you're not watching.

10)Give us your definition of a great night out during the festival.
 A sold out show, a few interviews, some back-room deals and a glass of red.

11)What goes through your mind, the minute before curtain goes up?
“Face, Pockets, Loops, Guns, Bike, Pants, Stretch, Mic, Hair, Hat, Gap, Sex, Go”

12)What about when you’re on stage?
 “Who ARE you people???”

13)How easily distracted are you?
100% distracted.  100% focused.  The whole show is total focused distraction...

14)Give us your dream comedy line up:
George Carl, Jerry Lewis (young), Dylan Moran,  Andy Kaufman, John Clarke, Sacha Baron Cohen.

15)Just finally, where will you be in 5 years’ time.

VINYL BURNS performs his show VINYL BURNS VARIETY HOUR (WLG 14 – 17 May) as part of the 2014 NZ International Comedy Festival in cahoots with Old Mout Cider (27 April – 18 May). For more info visit www.comedyfestival.co.nz
Living in Martinborough, Touring the world. Physically and virtually

Sunday, 13 April 2014

Comedy Fest Q&A: Brendon Green

Comedy Fest Q&A: Brendon Green


Brendon Green
**2014 Billy T Nominee **

1)Tell us the name of your show
Some More Mr Nice Guy

2)Which came first – the show name or the show content?
Haha, the show title. Damn it.

3)C’mon, be honest….
I will be in my show, that's the whole point of it!

4)Any other working titles for the show?
About 60 different puns on the word Green. I want to use all of them over the course of my career.

5)How long – honestly- have you been working on this?
The first rough outline in my head happened in September last year. What the show is now is incredibly different, but the seeds had been sown, as comedian farmers would say.

6)What’s been the biggest challenge of pulling this show together?
Too many conflicting ideas that I fall in love with way to quickly. I want this show to be streamlined like Porsche wearing a windbreaker.

7)Who’s your biggest comedy rival – and why?
I'm a white, middle class, heterosexual, male. Nobody comes to mind...

8)Who’s your biggest comedy friend – and why?
There are too many people to name, please don't make me do it! Are you trying to ruin relationships here? You sicko. To purposely misquote the great Smashmouth, 'Why can't we all be friends?'

9)Which show is your must see? Why?
Sam Simmons 'Problems'. I saw it 5 years ago in Edinburgh, and it was genius. He's been working on it and improving it ever since, so I can't even imagine what the experience is going to be.

10)Give us your definition of a great night out during the festival
It kicks off with a Tinder match. That leads to pre-drinks at The Basement, where I just so happen to bump into a bunch of comedians who I know. How embarrassing/impressive. A 7pm show, a drink, an 8.30 show, a toilet break, a 10pm show, then some serious hand holding. Denny's at 3am to reminisce.

11)What goes through your mind, the minute before curtain goes up?
“Your future wife could be here, don't embarrass yourself.”

12)What about when you’re on stage?
“None of these people want to marry you, try harder.”

13)How easily distracted are you?
Not very. Once I start you'd be hard pressed to stop me. I'd perform through a fire if it weren't “illegal”.

14)Give us your dream comedy line up
I don't know about the line up, but it would be MC'd by a topless Matthew McConaughy. That dude could warm any audience up, if you know what I mean.

15)Just finally, where will you be in 5 years’ time
Slightly closer to death.

Brendon Green is a 2014 Billy T nominee and performs his show SOME MORE MR NICE GUY in Wellington (7 – 10 May) and Auckland (13 – 17 May) and as part of the 2014 NZ International Comedy Festival in cahoots with Old Mout Cider 24 April – 18 May. For more info visit www.comedyfestival.co.nz
Closer to death.

Comedy Fest Q&A: Tom Wrigglesworth

Comedy Fest Q&A: Tom Wrigglesworth


Comedy Fest Q&A
TOM WRIGGLESWORTH

1) Tell us the name of your show
It’s called Utterly at Odds with the Universe

2)Which came first – the show name or the show content?
The name - my Granddad said it about me. We find out how in the show

3)C’mon, be honest….
Deadly serious…and you’ll find out why that’s true in the show!

4)Any other working titles for the show?
No, although when I was writing it I referred to it as ‘the one that could go either way’

5)How long – honestly- have you been working on this?
Took weeks and weeks to write. Performed it 20 times in preview, 30 times in Edinburgh, 40 times on tour….but I’m still ‘working on it’ - there’s always something you can tweak.

6)What’s been the biggest challenge of pulling this show together?
Being able to do it without crying was pretty tricky in the first instant. Then remembering the catalogue of call backs that are needed to make everyone else cry.

7)Who’s your biggest comedy rival – and why?
There’s a clairvoyant touring round UK called Sally Morgan, who sells out the big rooms in the theatres I perform at (usually in the smaller studio space grrr). She might not be in comedy per say, but the fact people turn up in their droves is a joke.

8)Who’s your biggest comedy friend – and why?
The compere who’s about to announce me on!

9)Which show is your must see?
Why?

10)Give us your definition of a great night out during the festival
You know - I’m so boring and professional these days, a great night for me is a belting show, following by sensible food and an early night, allowing me to do it all again the next day. I am aware that this might be somewhat at odds with a genuine festival goers definition of a good night out.

11)What goes through your mind, the minute before curtain goes up?
Why am I doing this? I used to have a proper job? Could I bolt it? I used to ask the manager to hide my coat before I went on, to stop me from running away!

12)What about when you’re on stage?
Next line…what’s the next line…speak clearly…

13)How easily distracted are you?
Oh I’m Mr Focused, I mean there is very…..oh look a butterfly.

14)Give us your dream comedy line up
Dave Allen, Ross Noble and Billy Connelly. I’ll man the door.

15)Just finally, where will you be in 5 years’ time
Looking back with rose tinted spectacles about the 24 hour flight to New Zealand I’m currently dreading

TOM WRIGGLESWORTH performs his solo show UTTERLY AT ODDS WITH THE UNIVERSE (AKL 6 - 10 May & WLG 12 - Sat 17 May) as part of the 2014 NZ International Comedy Festival in cahoots with Old Mout Cider (24 April – 18 May). For more info visit www.comedyfestival.co.nz

Comedy Fest Q&A: Eamonn Marra

Comedy Fest Q&A: Eamonn Marra


Comedy Fest Q&A

EAMONN MARRA

1)Tell us the name of your show
Man on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown

2)Which came first – the show name or the show content?
Well some content came first, then the name, then I changed the content and now it doesn’t fit the name as well as it could but I think it’s a better show. It’s still a good name and a good show though.

3)C’mon, be honest….
I am always honest

4)Any other working titles for the show?
I had other ideas for shows that have some similar ideas and content, one called Welcome to the Internet (you live here now) and one called Help me win the Wilberforce Award. These shows might yet happen.

5)How long – honestly- have you been working on this?
This is my first comedy fest solo show, so I guess I’ve been working towards this developing my voice and content for the two years I’ve been performing. But I’ve only seriously been focussing on this show since late February after performing a different show in the Fringe Festival.

6)What’s been the biggest challenge of pulling this show together?
Working out the structure. I have a lot of ideas and a lot of material which tends to come reasonably easily, but working out the narrative sequence of the show without it ending up as a bunch of five minute sets being squished together with a vague overriding theme. I’m not sure if I’ve succeeded in this yet.

7)Who’s your biggest comedy rival – and why?
There is no point in rivals when we can work together instead.

8)Who’s your biggest comedy friend – and why?
This is hard, I’ve known Joseph Harper a long time and he is probably my biggest inspiration and one of the main reasons for doing comedy, I don’t see him very often anymore but he’s more important to me than he probably realises. Ricky Threlfo has been my biggest supporter and is a lot of fun to perform with and I wouldn’t be where I was without him. Johnny Potts is performing on some of the same nights in the same nights in the same venue as me and I couldn’t think of a person I would rather share that honour with.

9)Which show is your must see? Why?
Hayley Sproull and Chris Parker’s show Tighty Whiteys.

10)Give us your definition of a great night out during the festival
An early show at Bats with a friend during which we bump into another group of two or three people then we eat dinner over the comedy fest booklet deciding what to see next and end up deciding on a show that starts in five minutes across town so hurrying to see that. Someone buys me a beer and I either meet cool people or a cool person who I don’t think remembers me from a year or two before remembers me.

11)What goes through your mind, the minute before curtain goes up?
I realise that the only thing I can remember is the very first line I’m going to say and have no idea how I will get through six minutes/ten minutes/quarter/half/an hour.

12)What about when you’re on stage?
Some sort of burning white light of fear and appreciation

13)How easily distracted are you?
I am at university writing at essay at the moment.

14)Give us your dream comedy line up
I feel like such an imposter answering this question, I do not have an extensive knowledge of comedy. Louis CK and Simon Amstell and Maria Bamford would be there. Miranda July and David Sedaris and George Saunders would all be there too even though they’re not comedians. Joseph Harper would be doing something. The audience would be nice and no one would say anything racist.

15)Just finally, where will you be in 5 years’ time
If things continue at the rate I’m going at the moment, I’ll be in my eleventh year of an undergraduate degree.

EAMONN MARRA performs his solo show MAN ON THE VERGE OF A NERVOUS BREAKDOWN (WLG 5 - 8 May) as part of the 2014 NZ International Comedy Festival in cahoots with Old Mout Cider (24 April – 18 May). For more info visit www.comedyfestival.co.nz

Saturday, 12 April 2014

Watch_Dogs Nvidia Tech trailer

Watch_Dogs Nvidia Tech trailer

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WATCH DOGS FEATURING NVIDIA TECHNOLOGIES - TRAILER


TO VIEW THE VIDEO CLICK IMAGE BELOW

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The Other Woman: Movie Review

The Other Woman: Movie Review


Cast: Cameron Diaz, Leslie Mann, Kate Upton, Nikolaj Coster-Waldau, Don Johnson
Director: Nick Cassavettes

Hell hath no fury like a woman scorned.

Well, in this latest comedy, it's three women - so you can bet your bottom dollar, that's a truckload of scorning to come...

Cameron Diaz stars as ice queen lawyer Carly, who's in the early throes of an idyllic relationship with the hunky Mark (Game of Thrones star Nikolaj Coster-Waldau). He's the guy who shows up with flowers at work, a sparkling smile and a mischievous glint - and Carly's fallen hard.

But, trouble hits paradise when Carly discovers Mark's married - to the slightly needy, neurotic and clingy Kate (Leslie Mann, one of the best things in this romcom). With her instincts being to run a mile, Carly's blindsided when Kate goes all Cable Guy on her, forms a friendship and confides in her - and things get even more complicated when Kate and Carly find Mark's cheating on all of them with a third mistress, Amber (Sports Illustrated swimsuit star Kate Upton, complete with obligatory slow mo bikini run).

All three vow to take revenge....

The Other Woman is clearly a chick-flick that has parallels to the film John Tucker Must Die. But it also has a couple of secret weapons to ensure the male part of the audience / poor suckers being dragged along don't feel shortchanged.

Firstly, the slightly wooden Kate Upton.

Clearly a marketing ploy by bringing in a topless Kate Upton in a white bikini in slow-motion on the beach is aimed at giving the male sector of the audience something to engage with in this female bizarre bonding piece (even if it does fail given the relative stiffness of her performance). Though, once the initial appeal to half the prospective audience has gone out, she proffers little to the proceedings.

Secondly, Leslie Mann.

Her comic timing and ever-so-slightly OTT performance provides some much needed welcome relief which is few and far between - aside from vomiting into handbags and obligatory crowd pleasing diarrhea sequence as the nasty old philanderer starts to get his comeuppance (if that's your kind of thing). But Mann pitches a kind of middle ground between genuine bitterness, despair and lust for revenge as she rolls through the gamut of emotions. And to be frank, she's never less than watchable as the predictable plot and inevitable revenge games (laxative, oestrogen poisoning) get underway.

Cameron Diaz is in a thankless role as the wronged woman and she soldiers on regardless, offering a watchable turn that seems off kilter with the material. The worst offender though is Nikolaj Coster-Waldau aka Jaime Lannister who goes so far OTT once the diarrhea scene kicks in and in his final moments that you wonder what on earth the director Cassavettes was thinking in not asking him to dial it back a notch.

If you like relatively brainless fare and feel like grabbing a group of girls together for a night out after pre-loading, you will find yourself amused thanks to some fleeting moments. Though if sober be aware The Other Woman lacks any real kind of bite and is more a cinematic beating than an insightfully amusing and comic movie on cheating.

Rating:


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