Follow on Google News News By Tag Industry News News By Location Country(s) Industry News
Follow on Google News | Clint Black and Philanthropic Billionaires Push Unbeaten Wheelchair Racers Toward OscarGrammy-winning country superstar Clint Black's original song "A Better Life" has been included in the forty-one songs from eligible feature-length motion pictures in contention for nominations in the Original Song category for the 83rd Academy Awards
By: Tamara Henry, M.A. Unbeaten is competing with other films such as Alice in Wonderland, Waiting For "Superman", Eat Pray Love and Burlesque. Not only did Cher executive produce and perform in Burlesque, but she was also among the many philanthropic contributors to Unbeaten. Oscar-nominated, Emmy-winning "Blues Brother" Dan Aykroyd opens the film. Jane Seymour and Gene Simmons filmed PSAs for the movie. Sam Worthington invited Unbeaten filmmakers and racing stars to the Los Angeles premiere of Avatar. James Cameron explained why his main character "Jake Sully" in Avatar was a disabled Marine veteran. It is without a doubt the year of the wheelchair. And this simple heartfelt story of triumph and transformation of the human spirit is what touched the heart of the Academy and led it to choose Unbeaten as one of 101 films that originally qualified in the Documentary Feature category. Leading the charge on the philanthropic efforts of the film is JP Dejoria, the CEO of Paul Mitchell Systems, number 105 on the Forbes "Richest People In America" list. Of the 1,112 billionaires on the planet, eleven of them have contributed to the independent filmmaking mission. It was JP Dejoria's initial donation and his long-standing admiration for men like Christopher Reeves that got these wheelchairs rolling: http://www.youtube.com/ Filmmakers Steven C. Barber and Tamara Henry, M.A. along with executive producer Shane Krider and producer Greg Strom spent 2010 taking the UNBEATEN message all over the world. The film showcased in Toronto, Sundance, Australia, Prague, New York, and Los Angeles, winning a spot in the top ten at the Milan International Film Festival and a Remy Award from the 43rdAnnual World Fest-Houston International Film Festival. Unbeaten premiered in Washington, DC at the Walter Reed Medical Army Hospital for 200 spinal cord doctors and medical professionals and 200 wounded U.S. Marine veterans of whom several were honored with the UNBEATEN Gold Medal Awards. Unbeaten film-makers received the coveted Commander's Coin for the healing mission which was shown on CNN's American Morning with John Roberts, when they delivered Paul Mitchell Systems products and Avatar DVDs donated by producer Jon Landau to the real life Jake Sullys. "A Better Life" by Clint Black is what the filmmakers hope this movie will give to the disabled community, which in 2010 is celebrating the 20-year anniversary of the (ADA) Americans With Disabilities Act. The Unbeaten message was also shared nationally via Good Morning America, The Today Show and every local news show in Los Angeles. Filmmakers also presented an Unbeaten Gold Medal Award to the injured/paralyzed Santa Monica High School football player Cody Williams, as the ceremony was being filmed for Andy Lauer's documentary on Cody which is executive produced by Peter Berg of Friday Night Lights on NBC. AMC Loews Theaters has stepped in and offered a special week at the Broadway 4 in Santa Monica to show a week run of Unbeaten four days before the official announcement of the Oscar nominations. The film will be available for viewing starting Jan 21st on the Third Street Promenade in AMC 4. You can RSVP and join the Unbeaten Facebook event page http://www.facebook.com/ Unbeaten follows 31 paraplegics 267 miles in six days between Fairbanks and Anchorage. The film takes us into the 55 mile-per-day grind of three wheelchair racers, Chris Kohler, Geoffrey Erickson and Edwin Figueroa. The story transitions midway through as the filmmaker follows the elite racers of the US Paralympics squad, Oscar "Oz" Sanchez" (current Paralympic Gold Medalist and fastest man in the world in a hand cycle) and Alijandro Albor (Silver Medalist) in their quest to medal at the 2008 Beijing Paralympics. The Gold Medalist and the filmmakers were welcomed home at a Universal Studios parade with Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger. Unbeaten is not their only film. They are also currently in post production on the CSI-style WWII recovery mission in The Pacific, a film intended to compliment the first film "Return to Tarawa: The Leon Cooper Story" which catapulted the Discovery Network's Military Channel ratings and was seen around the world on CNN's Larry King Live with Oscar-nominated actor and narrator Ed Harris. A new A-list celebrity is scheduled to narrate the sequel UntilTheyAreHome.com in post-production now with a budget of $211,000. This sequel documents the honorable repatriation of United Stated Marines to home soil for identification and proper burial. The Unbeaten filmmaking mission of redemption and passion will open your eyes, challenge your mind and warm your heart. This mission called for unprecedented persistence and determination. Will the real "Jake Sully" please stand up? His name is Marine Veteran Gold Medalist Oscar "Oz" Sanchez, who needed an Unbeaten, carborundum- http://www.oscars.org/ End
Account Phone Number Disclaimer Report Abuse
|
|