Episode 28: Mark Gantt (Part 1)
August 10, 2010
Episode 28: Mark Gantt (Part 1)
August 10, 2010
THE BANNEN WAY (TV Series)
Sony Pictures Television
Created by Jesse Warren & Mark Gantt
Executive Produced by
Mark Gantt
Jesse Warren
Javier Grillo-Marxuach
Status: Pitching
Locke’s Redbox Picks Of The Week
by Locke Peterseim | Jul 31st, 2010 | 6:31PM | Filed under: DVD Reviews, Movies, Weekly redbox Picks
Recommended Smaller, Overlooked or Underrated Movies from the redbox Kiosks
The Bannen Way–About as polar opposite a crime flick from Jesse Stone as you could concoct, The Brannen Way was originally a made-for-the-Internet webisode series–a major-studio synergy experiment to see what happens when you put a little cash and flash into a web series. What happens (as collected here seamlessly into a full-length film) is a pretty by-the-numbers Tarantino/Smoking Aces/Guy Ritchie/Oceans 11 mash-up, but that’s not all bad. It’s directed and co-written by Jesse Warren, and series co-writer Mark Gantt stars as Neal Bannen, your usual roguish, hard-luck thief in cool suits, but Gantt’s a likable stretch of sleazy, Christian-Slater charisma.
by Marc Hustvedt on July 20th, 2010
By now, if you follow even passively the world of web series, you know well who Mark Gantt and Jesse Warren are. They were the two aspiring creators that defied the odds, making just a trailer to pitch their action drama—The Bannen Way—to anyone who would fund it, ultimately landing a deal with Sony Pictures Television for release on its online network Crackle. To be sure, it was one heck of a slick looking trailer, and there’s something to be said about having Neal Bannen (Gantt) himself making the pitch.
At the Banff World Television Festival this year, an army of digitally savvy, forward-looking producers was on hand as part of the nextMedia, which ran simultaneously. But when it came to webisodes and digital media in general, the buzz word at Banff Springs was “monetize.” Yes, there’s advantages to producing shows directly for the web. They’re cheaper and more flexible, plot lines can turn on a dime and creative control is easier to maintain. But how do you pay for it? How does it make money?
Long gone are the days when the family gathered around the box for appointment TV.
While shows like “American Idol” still bind us culturally — Mom can watch it live on TV, Dad can catch the digital video recorder (DVR) version and Junior can download it days later online — the desire to go to the Web for programming is driving a cultural shift.
The mouse will never replace the remote control as everyone’s favorite clicker, but Web-based entertainment has improved and expanded so greatly that some people have begun canceling their cable subscriptions to watch original and recast programming online.
Everything You Ever Wanted to Know about Producing Web Entertainment
June 16, 2010
On Monday, June 21st at 7:30 PM, filmmakers, actors and others will have an opportunity to learn from professionals involved in creating web entertainment at a panel discussion focused on how to produce for the web, how to get your work seen, how to market your web series and best practices for interacting with with the major sites that stream web series and more.
by Mathieas McNaughton on June 14th, 2010
Very few web series attract any pre-launch attention, those that do begin with a distinct advantage, an audience that is already aware of its existence. One of the biggest challenges a new series faces, is the ever increasingly daunting task of cutting through the clutter of online video. Furthermore, not only do web series need to compete with other shows, vloggers, and keyboard playing kids and kittens, they are also in competition with social media sites, other websites, games, and occasionally, real life. The competition for viewer attention has never been greater. Simply releasing a series and hoping that it will find an audience is not an option. Therefore, in order to be competitive, in order to build an audience, a series needs to begin generating buzz even before the show launches.
Some excited tweets and Facebook posts published last week on The Bannen Way social media accounts pages may have revealed an international tv distribution deal and DVD release of the multiple Streamy Award winning drama series.
From July 10 to July 31, HBO Canada will be airing the full 93 minutes (a feature-length version of the web series) in HD on The Movie Network and available on demand starting July 13, according to TMN’s online schedule. The listing describes The Bannen Way as an “action comedy,” which at first appears to be a listing error and not an attempt to re-market like in Tommy Wiseau’s The Room, the failed low budget indie drama successfully rebranded as an intentional “quirky new black comedy.”
Winner of 4 Streamy Awards® Including “Best Drama Web Series”
THE BANNEN WAY
Thrilling and Sexy Feature-Length Movie from the Original Crackle Series Debuts on DVD July 20th
May 25, 2010
Culver City, Calif. (May 25, 2010) – Experience non-stop action when the exhilarating feature-length movie from Crackle’s highly acclaimed online series The Bannen Way comes to DVD July 20 from Sony Pictures Home Entertainment. The series stars Mark Gantt (“Ocean’s Eleven”), Daytime Emmy® Award Winner Vanessa Marcil (TV’s “Las Vegas”), Gabriel Tigerman (TV’s “Supernatural”), Michael Ironside (Terminator Salvation), Academy-Award® nominee Robert Forster* (Jackie Brown), and special guest star, Academy-Award® nominee Michael Lerner** (A Serious Man). The DVD contains the all-new movie version of the series as well as six exclusive behind-the-scenes featurettes.
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