ABOUT
THE FILM
May
1999. A
fever is sweeping over the globe. The most popular film saga of all time is
returning to theaters. For young fans like Brad, this is the first chance he has
to see the films the way they were meant to be seen. And he will do ANYTHING to
ensure a seat in a darkened theater when it returns.
PRODUCTION
NOTES
It is
often amazing how a seemingly small event changes the outcome of one’s life.
That’s what happened to Jason Prugar in 1999.
The year
immortalized in a Prince song brought sweeping changes to the college sophomore.
Jason learned he'd be a father and subsequently retired from basketball. He also
joined the Student Government Association (SGA) as Treasurer. It was also the
year that Star Wars returned to the
big screen. The world had Star Wars fever, eagerly anticipating the first new film in 16
years. Jason was no exception, even going as far as to make plans to wait in
line for tickets to go on sale.
One
Thursday evening, the SGA faculty advisor was late for the weekly meeting. To
pass the time, Jason’s friend Bryan Schaefer, a fellow SGA member, showed a
video he made for literature class. He wrote, directed and edited it himself.
Something
clicked in Prugar’s mind when the film ended. It was if a veil had been
lifted; a box opened. A wealth of possibilities hit him and he’d never be the
same. “I’ve often wondered what it’d be like to make my own film. If
Bryan, a regular guy like me, could make a film, why couldn’t I?”
Jason
immediately researched filmmaking techniques. It consumed his thoughts so
completely that he remembers vividly the night Bryan showed the video but
nothing about the subsequent 48 hours.
Another
development was taking shape: plans to see Star
Wars. Jason watched news reports of fans forming lines as early as February
1998. “My hometown (Phillipsburg, NJ) opened a new theater in ’98, and our
town was still relatively small,” Jason recalled. “I knew a small line would
form, but not until the week tickets went on sale.”
Jason’s
research led him to some online website like Eejit’s Guide to Filmmaking and
his hometown library. He had no plans to visit home in the near future (finals
were soon), so he’d wait til summer break before diving into those books.
Shortly thereafter, Lucasfilm announced that the film would be released on May
19 and later that tickets for the Phillipsburg theater would go on sale May 12
at 3:30pm.
He also
discovered that his last final exam was May 12th.
Jason
quickly made plans with friends to get tickets. Two friends would wait in line,
starting at 5am, and Jason would join as soon as he could. He also planned to
pack, not party, the last weekend before the exam to save time.
May 12th
came and the exam went smoothly. Prugar was on the road to the theater at noon,
and with an hour ride, would arrive in plenty of time to join his friends in
line.
Once
again, fate decided to change things up. Major road construction was taking
place on route 222, which is a 2 lane road. Prugar had to take a detour through
towns he’d never heard of, much less rode through. “It was terrible,”
Jason said. “The way I was going, I thought I was halfway to Canada. Luckily,
I saw a car I knew from Alvernia (College, his school) and followed it to the
right highway.”
A week
later, Prugar started a summer job with a family friend. It allowed him free
time, so he borrowed all of the library’s filmmaking books. He read them,
copied the pages and took copious notes. He decided to write a script based on
his experiences getting Star Wars tickets.
He practiced techniques with his dad’s VHS camera, which he would later use to
shoot the film. Jason told his friends about his plans and many agreed to help.
Later
that summer, Bryan hosted an SGA summer retreat at his parents’ home at Jersey
Shore. Jason brought the script with him. Knowing the first draft of his very
first script would need work, Bryan’s brutal honesty would help him hammer out
the kinks. “Bryan tells you how it is. I admire that in a person and I knew
his feedback would be helpful. I showed it to him and he said ‘Dude, this is
terrible. There’s no story. It sucks’. I told him I knew, I needed his help.
We got a good script out of it.”
Bryan
helped him hone the story and The Prize was
born, based on Prugar’s experiences getting to the theater. Jason showed the
script to friends and many signed up.
Jerry
Tumolo signed on to play Brad, the main character, modeled after Jason. Anna
Pambianchi, a friend since kindergarten, signed on to play Alicia, modeled after
Prugar’s best friend of the same name. Jim Wolfe, Jason’s best friend, took
the role of Zach as well as Director of Photography. Keith Ketcham, his other
best bud played John the cross dressing actor and camera operator. Mike Huber
also played a cross-dresser (Jason himself has a cameo in the film, see if you
can spot him.)
He got
five filming locations including his home. The shoot took a total of 10 days,
including a brutally cold night that had Jerry Tumolo, in shorts putting on a
jacket between takes, even for short corrections. The cops stopped production
twice, but when they saw the camera equipment, wished the production well and
went on their way. Being the first production of a first-time director, there
were problems. A scene on screen for less than a minute took over four hours to
shoot. There were delays and it took three months to get the 10-day shoot
completed. But Prugar took it all in stride. “Nothing ever goes the way you
plan it, but every film that has had a delay or problem has played at film
festivals, so I am not complaining!”
For
post-production, Jason found Jim Pruznick of Informative Media. He was a good
collaborator and trusted Prugar’s vision. They worked well together and in two
days’ time, The Prize was a film!
Sadly,
concessions had to be made for budget, time and technology. With VHS, it was
impossible at the time to have music and dialogue together unless you played
music on set while filming. Also, the Star Wars crawl Jason had
envisioned for the beginning was not a possibility, so he settled for a
Powerpoint facsimile.
The film
opened to a small screening of Prugar’s college classmates. It was well
received, and Jason took it to the film festival circuit. It was accepted to the
New York International Independent Film and Video Festival in New York City.
With cast and crew in attendance Jason trekked to his screening. He was shocked
to see a line extending halfway down the block, waiting to get into the theater
(they were there to see the feature film The Prize was attached to, but
they were still going to see his picture!). The audience laughed at the right
moments and had a good time. They gave Prugar’s film a standing ovation at the
end.
“It
was breathtaking to have that experience, your film shown to an audience in an
actual theater. Especially when it’s your first film and something you learned
to do a year ago. You don’ t think that’s going to happen. It’s something
I will never forget.”
The whole experience was a joy for Prugar, who immediately starting working on his next picture. He formed Jbird Entertainment with his pals and came up with ideas. A beast awoke within him, thanks to his friend Bryan, fate and a teacher who couldn’t be on time.