| For immediate release
Contact: Cara White 843-881-1480
Abbe Harris 908-233-7990
FIVE SISTERS FILM "MANNA FROM
HEAVEN"
WIDENING NATIONAL RELEASE THIS FALL
+ BENEFIT SCREENINGS OPENING
NIGHT FOR HABITAT FOR HUMANITY
COMEDY CHOSEN FOR CANADIAN CIRCUIT
MANNA FROM HEAVEN, an uplifting comedy from Five Sisters
Productions, will widen its release this fall, because of its popular
appeal among audiences.
"Manna from Heaven" stars Academy Award
winners Shirley Jones, Cloris Leachman, Louise Fletcher, Academy
Award nominee Seymour Cassel, Ursula Burton, Shelley Duvall, Jill
Eikenberry, Faye Grant, three time Tony nominee Harry Groener, Frank
Gorshin, Wendie Malick, and Austin Pendleton in a feel-good family
film about finding hope at any age. THE WASHINGTON POST called it
"a much-needed reprieve from the angst, irony and mean-spiritedness
that is endemic to modern cinema." MANNA was produced by the
five Burton sister team who helm FIVE SISTERS PRODUCTIONS (Jennifer,
Maria, Ursula, Gabrielle and Charity), and directed by siblings
Maria and Gabrielle Burton.
The opening night screening in each new market will
be a benefit for Habitat For Humanity. On their tour, the sisters
donate their proceeds from an opening night screening in each market
to the charity. Habitat For Humanity is their chosen charity, which
mirrors "Manna's" theme of community coming together through
a given project. For the occasion, the filmmakers will appear at
the benefit screening, as well as select screenings through the
opening weekends. They will also be available for Q&A sessions
with groups of 20 or more people over the course of the opening
weekends.
MANNA FROM HEAVEN has also been chosen for the Canadian
"Circuit" release, and will open in multiple cities across
Canada this fall, beginning with a gala celebration premiere in
Sudbury on September 18. It is an honor to be chosen for the Circuit,
and the sisters will be at the Toronto Film Festival to screen their
comedy for Canadian buyers on September 7.
With comparisons to "Waking Ned Devine,"
"Strictly Ballroom," and "My Big Fat Greek Wedding,"
this prize-winning truly independent comedy (the sisters do not
have studio funding) is a fable about what happens when you get
a "gift from God" (a financial windfall), but, many years
later, it turns out to be a loan -- due immediately.
Followers of Box Office Charts know that it is once
in a blue moon that a "true Outsider film" (to quote NY
Times Dave Kehr's description of MANNA) is able to thrive in US
movie theaters. MANNA FROM HEAVEN has defied the odds repeatedly
making the box office charts (and getting renewed in theaters),
despite the virtually nonexistent marketing budget for its domestic
release (the average advertising budget for a film now is 35 million
dollars). In only ten markets, it has grossed over $412,000 -- an
extraordinary achievement for a non-studio-backed independent film.
Along the way, it has been building a steadily growing audience
in market after market through a truly old-fashioned grass-roots
campaign.
Members of the Five Sisters Filmmaking team (which
includes the five real life sisters Maria, Jennifer, Ursula, Gabrielle,
and Charity Burton and their parents, Gabrielle and Roger Burton)
are making personal appearances at the AMC, Regal/Edwards, and independent
theaters around the country, traveling together in the "MANNA
Van." "It's very hands-on," says producer Jennifer
Burton. "We hand out green fliers to ticket buyers before shows
to let more people know about MANNA. Then, we do special Q&As
after shows for the audiences. What's really amazing is how many
people have been volunteering to hand out fliers to their own friends
and at work, service organizations, or church." A key theme
of MANNA is about a community coming together through a project,
and that is what is happening in real life, with audiences joining
in to make the word-of-mouth campaign a success.
Why are audiences embracing MANNA FROM HEAVEN? Because
it's different. How many American Independent films are about finding
hope at any age? How many times do you get to see so many classic
actors playing against type (i.e. Shirley Jones as a con artist,
Wendie Malick as a tough-talking casino dealer, and Jill Eikenberry
as a nurturing hairdresser)? How often do you get to talk about
a movie afterwards, not only with other audience members but with
the filmmakers themselves? How many movies can you bring your kids
and parents to?
The third feature from Five Sisters Productions, MANNA
FROM HEAVEN is literally a family film, written by their mother
(award-winning screenwriter Gabrielle B. Burton), co-produced by
their father (former jazz musician Roger Burton), and filmed in
their hometown of Buffalo, NY. Their first film "Just Friends"
is currently playing on AMC and the WE channel, and their second
film "Temps," which has been in development for a TV series
and will come out on video next year.
MANNA FROM HEAVEN has won awards at film festivals
and is a critic's pick at The Washington Post. It has already had
extensive runs in diverse markets, including Washington, D.C., Buffalo,
Columbus, Kansas City, San Diego, Los Angeles, and New York City,
where it opened to positive reviews and strong audience appeal.
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