Rochester Finger Lakes Film and Video Office
Rochester Finger Lakes Film and Video Office
Rochester Finger Lakes Film and Video Office
Rochester Finger Lakes Film and Video Office
Rochester Finger Lakes Film and Video Office
Rochester Finger Lakes Film and Video Office
Rochester Finger Lakes Film and Video Office
Rochester Finger Lakes Film and Video Office
Rochester Finger Lakes Film and Video Office
Rochester Finger Lakes Film and Video Office
 
Rochester Finger Lakes Film & Video Office, promoting the local film & video production community.
Rochester Finger Lakes Film and Video Office
Rochester Finger Lakes Film and Video Office Rochester Finger Lakes Film and Video Office Rochester Finger Lakes Film and Video Office Rochester Finger Lakes Film and Video Office Rochester Finger Lakes Film and Video Office Rochester Finger Lakes Film and Video Office
Rochester Finger Lakes Film and Video Office

News Archive

Fairport-produced baseball movie gathers honors
JIM MANDELARO • STAFF WRITER • OCTOBER 1, 2009
Much has changed about Signs of the Time since the locally produced documentary premiered at the George Eastman House last year.
Academy Award-winning actor Richard Dreyfuss is the new narrator.Major League Baseball footage has been added, including the controversial 1975 World Series play involving Cincinnati batter Ed Armbrister and Boston catcher Carlton Fisk.
And the 60-minute baseball film is on the festival trail, already winning "Best Documentary" at the High Falls Festival in Rochester last May and the SoCal Film Festival in Huntington Beach, Calif., last weekend.
"It's a different film (from the original version)," said executive producer Ray Manard of Crystal Pix, a production company in Fairport.
"But the film is more than just about baseball. It's about communication."
Signs explores the contributions of deaf baseball player Dummy Hoy and legendary umpire Bill Klem, a Rochester native, toward the development of hand signals used in baseball.
It's one of 13 films playing this weekend at the fourth annual Baseball Film Festival at the National Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown. Signs is up for three awards: Best Film, the Award for Baseball Excellence and the Award for Film Making Excellence. The movie will be shown tonight along with The Lost Son of Havana, which chronicles the return to Cuba of Luis Tiant after 46 years.
Don Casper, the director of Signs of the Time, will be in Cooperstown to speak about the film.
Nearly 200 actors, writers, directors and producers worked on the film over a five-year period. Signs includes interviews with Hall of Famers Bob Feller, Earl Weaver and Brooks Robinson.
When the festival season ends, the film will have been shown in about 20 venues. In addition to Cooperstown, it also will be shown this weekend in Tacoma, Wash., and Thunder Bay, Ontario.
Coming up, it's Secret City, Tenn. (mid-October); Celebration, Fla. (late October); and the Red Rock Film Fest in Utah (November).
Crystal Pix executives originally compiled a long wish list of possible narrators, including George Clooney, Harrison Ford and Billy Crystal.
"We wanted an actor with a good voice, and we wanted someone recognizable," Manard said.
Dreyfuss won a Best Actor Oscar for The Goodbye Girl in 1977 and was nominated in 1995 for Mr. Holland's Opus. He also was on the list. When he said "yes," the search ended."He has a connection to deaf culture through Mr. Holland's Opus," Manard said. "I'm not sure why he decided to work with us, but it may have been that." Dreyfuss was in New York City last October promoting the movie W (he plays Dick Cheney), and Crystal Pix execs met him there to record the narration.
Including the Armbrister-Fisk play also was a coup. The filmmakers had to take the footage out of the original due to Major League Baseball restrictions. Now it is included.
In the 10th inning of Game 3 of the 1975 World Series, Armbrister collided with Fisk while attempting to sacrifice bunt. Fisk threw wildly to second base in an attempt to throw out Cesar Geronomo, and the Reds went on to win 4-3. Plate umpire Larry Barnett was criticized for not calling interference on Armbrister.
"Back then, there was no signal for interference," Manard said. "All (Barnett) could do was point 'fair ball.' He couldn't communicate 'no interference.' Now, there is a signal for such a play. "That controversy demonstrates the need for communication with the umpire and players on the field," Manard said.
Crystal Pix eventually hopes to sell Signs of the Time to a network and then market it for home distribution. MLB Network, ESPN, A&E, The History Channel and the new Smithsonian Channel and Documentary Channel are possible buyers.
JMAND@DemocratandChronicle.com
Posted on 01 Oct 2009

 

 

 

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