Dogs of Chinatown which I called "great, fast-paced gangster flick which leaves no time to dwell on any philosophical or moral ramifications, it just gets right to the ass-kicking point" in my review is getting a limited theatrical run in San Francisco with a limit of 200 seats per screenings which will be followed by a Q&A session hosted by the film’s stars, Eric Jacobus and Ray Carbonel. Now if only I could get these guys to send me their post apocalyptic and zombie flicks which have been in limbo for a while (hint hint). Here's the details folks:
Location:
Four Star Theatre
2200 Clement St.
(Cross street is 23rd Ave.)
San Francisco, CA 94121
Date/Time:
Friday, March 20 @ 9:00pm
Friday, April 3 @ 9:00pm
Tickets may be purchased at The Stunt People Store here:
http://contour.strongvon.com
or at the Four Star Theater box office on the nights of the screenings.
Location:
Four Star Theatre
2200 Clement St.
(Cross street is 23rd Ave.)
San Francisco, CA 94121
Date/Time:
Friday, March 20 @ 9:00pm
Friday, April 3 @ 9:00pm
Tickets may be purchased at The Stunt People Store here:
http://contour.strongvon.com
or at the Four Star Theater box office on the nights of the screenings.
- 3/3/2009
- QuietEarth.us
Year: 2008
Release date: Unknown
Director: Micah Moore
Writer: Micah Moore
IMDb: link
Trailer: link
Review by: quietearth
Rating: 6.5 out of 10
To be bluntly honest, I was dreading watching this. While visually lush, the acting looked sub par and I wondered how they could pull off a storyline that way. Was this going to be some cheap Joe Mantegna gangster film? Well I'm happy to report it isn't. It does have that sub par acting and the sound needs to be fixed at points, but in the end this is a great, fast-paced gangster flick which leaves no time to dwell on any philosophical or moral ramifications, it just gets right to the ass-kicking point. Done in a sin-cityish film noir style, the characters backgrounds are not flushed out, but fully complete in their roles, and more than adequate for the story. This is a gangster flick and an action film.
Release date: Unknown
Director: Micah Moore
Writer: Micah Moore
IMDb: link
Trailer: link
Review by: quietearth
Rating: 6.5 out of 10
To be bluntly honest, I was dreading watching this. While visually lush, the acting looked sub par and I wondered how they could pull off a storyline that way. Was this going to be some cheap Joe Mantegna gangster film? Well I'm happy to report it isn't. It does have that sub par acting and the sound needs to be fixed at points, but in the end this is a great, fast-paced gangster flick which leaves no time to dwell on any philosophical or moral ramifications, it just gets right to the ass-kicking point. Done in a sin-cityish film noir style, the characters backgrounds are not flushed out, but fully complete in their roles, and more than adequate for the story. This is a gangster flick and an action film.
- 11/2/2008
- QuietEarth.us
We’ve been following the work of indie director Micah Moore in these pages for a good while now, ever since he was turning out his goofy cult title Ninjas Versus Pirates. Moore’s latest effort is the feature length Dogs of Chinatown, a micro-budgeted martial arts noir that has been in the works for a solid year or so now. The film has just completed post production and to celebrate Moore has passed us a collection of exclusive clips from the picture. The budget limits are visible in spots but so are Moore’s visual creativity and the martial arts skills of San Francisco’s Stunt People. Very nice. Check the clips and the official trailer in the Twitch Player below the break.
- 8/29/2008
- by Todd Brown
- Screen Anarchy
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