| Western New York Catholic Newspaper
by Mark Ciemcioch
While many believe the election season to be over,
for the Burton family its just beginning. But the election
theyre preparing for is counted in tickets instead of votes,
marquees instead of ballots.
Collectively, the family is responsible for making
the independent movie "Manna from Heaven" and is beginning
to reap the rewards of two years of work as the film opens in several
markets, including Buffalo, in January. Since the movie doesnt
have the $35 million marketing budget many other studio films have,
members of the family, parents Roger and Gabrielle and five sisters
Charity, Gabrielle, Jennifer, Maria and Ursula, are traveling cross-country
to promote the film in a get-out-the-vote effort.
"One thing thats important for people to
realize is how much power they have over the entertainment industry,"
Jennifer said. "The only way movies like this will stay in
theaters and continue to be made is to go see them."
The Burton family has established quite a pedigree
for themselves in the cultural community, as most of them have experience
both in front of and behind the camera. Roger, who produced the
movie, worked as a professional musician as well as a psychology
professor at the University of Buffalo for many years before he
retired to work with Five Sisters Productions, the company his daughters
formed. His wife Gabrielle is a prolific writer, as the author of
"Heartbreak Hotel" and "Im Running Away from
Home but Im Not Allowed to Cross the Street." "Manna"
is Gabrielles third screenplay.
As for the daughters, Jennifer and Charity helped
produce "Manna," Gabrielle and Maria co-directed the film
together and Ursula stars in the pivotal role as Theresa, the nun
who becomes the catalyst for the latter-day events of the movie.
Gabrielle and Jennifer both attended Harvard University (Jennifer
earning her doctorate in English literature) in Cambridge, Mass.,
Maria and Ursula graduated from Yale University in New Haven, Conn.,
while Charity studied at Denison University in Granville, Ohio.
Filmed in Buffalo in mid-2001, the movie tells the
story of one neighborhood that comes into a large windfall of money
that mysteriously falls from the sky. A young girl proclaims the
event as a "Gift from God," and when she grows up and
becomes a nun, she feels its time to pay the money back. Needless
to say, the others arent really enthusiastic about the idea.
But for the creators of "Manna," enthusiasm
is not a problem when promoting the release of the film. The movie
opened in selected markets in Missouri and Kansas in August and
had a successful eight-week run, quite an accomplishment for an
independent movie without a distributor. The Burtons, who have established
a production company called Five Sisters Productions, have been
working directly with the booking agents who determine what movies
play in which theaters.
But because the movie has a relatively small marketing
budget (and fundraisers are being held to increase that sum), members
of the family are traveling to areas where the movie is playing
and promoting the film themselves through interviews, flyers and
setting up shop in supermarkets and churches.
It appears to be working. Following a successful screening
in Washington, D.C., that was attended by Sen. Charles E. Schumer,
D-N.Y., and Jack Valenti, president of the Motion Picture Association
of America, "Manna" opened in theaters in the capital
region. Producers were very pleased when national chains AMC and
Regal retained the movie at least through the beginning of the turbulent
holiday season, including competition from a certain boy wizard
named Harry Potter.
Western New Yorkers will have to wait a little longer
to see "Manna" in a local theater. Originally set to open
in the area on Dec. 6, the movie was pushed back to mid-January
because an onslaught of franchise pictures and sequels have limited
the number of screens. But the promotional push is still gearing
up, with the cast and crew hitting town with events at churches,
interviews with media and possibly a question-and-answer session
with the filmmakers after a screening. A "Manna" van is
also being created as part of the Art on Wheels exhibit. Similar
to the Herd about Buffalo project from 2000, the van will be ready
around the beginning of the year.
"Manna from Heaven" is another cultural
brush with fame for Buffalo with a handful of films that either
take place in the city or were filmed nearby, including "The
Natural," "The Last Seduction" and "Buffalo
66." However, many of these movies featured very little of
the city and were mostly filmed elsewhere (another movie, "Bruce
Almighty" starring Jim Carrey, was partially filmed in Buffalo
this year without the star ever setting foot in town). In the case
of "Buffalo 66," directed by Western New York native Vincent
Gallo, the dreary cinematography of the film certainly didnt
do any favors for the tourism sector.
The Burtons took another direction with "Manna,"
not only highlighting the various cultural, architectural and natural
landmarks of the city, but also making the city a central character
in the film, not unlike Woody Allens classic "Manhattan."
Sheas, the Albright-Knox Gallery, the Niagara River and St.
Teresas Church on Seneca Street are among the many landmarks
seen in "Manna."
"Buffalo is just unknown visually to people,
and there are so many interesting architectural sights that people
just dont know about," mother Gabrielle said, who tries
to set many of her stories in the region. "They have an image
of Buffalo being filled with snow and Bills games and thats
it. People have told me ("Manna") is distinctly Buffalo."
The role of religion also comes into play in the movie,
as the screenwriter inserted her Catholic upbringing into the role
of Theresa. Gabrielle said her Catholicism became part of her, and
it managed to permeate into the comic fable that "Manna"
is.
"Its more culturally Catholic," Gabrielle
said of the movie. "The characters have a diverse berth of
beliefs, so theres a lot of ways people can relate."
"(The movie) is something we were very familiar
with," said co-director Gabrielle. "We feel responsible
to have a socially conscious movie. Its not a religious movie
per se, but it does appeal to a lot of religious people because
it has values of community and rejuvenation."
A key element to the films Five Sisters Productions
make, as evident in "Manna," is to create more of a family-oriented
movie that everybody can see. The massive success of an independent
movie like "My Big Fat Greek Wedding," which has grossed
more than $200 million and is one of the most profitable films of
the year, is showing Hollywood executives there is an audience for
a product like "Manna."
"What has been interesting to us is that this
movie has had appeal to the Catholic audience, but it also has wider
appeal," Jennifer said. "People cared, and they wanted
to see it out there. There arent that many movies that appeal
like Greek Wedding, but this is one of them."
Just by talking to them, one can tell how proud the
Burtons are of their product. Their third feature to date following
"Temps" and "Just Friends," "Manna"
is their biggest production to date and includes an award-winning
cast, including Seymour Cassel, Shelley Duvall, Frank Gorshin, Cloris
Leachman and Buffalo native Wendie Malick. The Burtons found their
family ties greatly helped in the production of the movie, to create
the best product possible. This is the first time the five sisters
worked on a script by their mother.
"Theyre pretty tough though," Gabrielle
said of her daughters. "They cut out some of my best jokes,
but they promised me they would be on the DVD."
All joking aside, the Burtons all enjoyed working
with one another, and are looking forward to doing it again.
"Its really a great blessing," said
the mother. "Its all very, very congenial."
Volunteers are needed to hand out flyers, sell
t-shirts and posters at the movie theatres. For more info e-mail roger@NOSPAMfivesistersproductions.com
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