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THE
WASHINGTON POST
'Down
Dog': Tweaking Yoga's Poseurs
By Ann Hornaday
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, March 3, 2005; Page C04
When "Wasp" won the Oscar for Best Live Action Short Film
on Sunday, writer-director Richard Roll did a mental double take.
"I thought, 'Wait a minute, I know that film,' " Roll
recalled in a recent telephone conversation. Then he remembered
why: His own film, "Down Dog," had competed against "Wasp"
at the Boulder International Film Festival in Colorado. And won.
Not bad for the very first screening of your very first foray behind
the camera. Roll, 38, had been an entertainment attorney for 10
years when he decided to try his hand at directing. "Most of
my clients are filmmakers, so I've been around it in a shadow-artist
capacity," said Roll, a Bethesda native who's back in town
for a screening of "Down Dog" tonight at the DC Independent
Film Festival. "I'd been itching to do this for a long time."
If the reaction to "Down Dog" in Boulder is any indication,
he may have a little hit on his hands. The 22-minute film is a punchy,
slick-looking satire of the Los Angeles yoga world, one in which
the path to enlightenment is often paved with as much greed and
avarice as serenity. The film's star, Jeffrey Johnson, who resembles
Will Ferrell with a topknot, plays a smarmy guru with a bevy of
gorgeous female followers, whose cover is finally blown by the arrival
of a mysterious student (Chane't Johnson).
Roll wrote "Down Dog" with his wife, Julie Piatt. "My
wife and I are actually pretty avid yoga practitioners," Roll
explained. "We're sort of part of this kind of yoga subculture
which is sort of particular to L.A. but that's growing nationwide
in popularity. And we noticed that a lot of humorous things go on
when people go on this quest for spiritual growth."
Originally, Roll and Piatt intended "Down Dog" to be a
feature-length film; after spending 1 1/2 years trying to get it
produced, however, Roll decided to do the short version, which will
be seen next month at festivals in Los Angeles and Phoenix, to "establish
that I had the capacity to handle it." Roll hopes to get the
feature production underway this year.
Meanwhile, he said, the most important thing is that viewers accept
"Down Dog" in the spirit in which it was made. "I
didn't want viewers to walk away thinking I was making fun of yoga,"
he said. "I wanted to celebrate it at the same time I was satirizing
it, and that's a very fine line to walk." Spoken like a true
yogi.
Down Dog will be shown with the feature "Brass Tacks"
at 6:30 p.m. at the City Museum, 801 K St. NW (at Mount Vernon Square)
as part of the DC Independent Film Festival. Admission is $9. For
more information call 202-537-9493 or visit www.dciff.org.
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PRESS
RELEASE / WASHINGTON, D.C. (February 4, 2005)
"Down
Dog" will make its East Coast premier at the 2005 DC Independent
Film Festival, to be held March 2-13, 2005. "Down Dog"
will screen Thursday, March 3 at 6:30 p.m. at Washington's historic
City Museum. "I am excited to screen my film before an
audience in my home town," remarked director Richard Roll.
For
tickets and additional information, please click
here to visit the festival website. |