University of South Carolina Libraries
'Now By Skot Garri Assistant EnUrtalnmw A nAlir Mrt ?? n ucn iiiuvic 19 wuiicitujr gui rigors of editing, will soon to 1 story of six college students bac who are suddenly thrust in situation. The movie features six new s ever heard of these actors, it's n seen them before on the silver they know them personally. The every one else who has been ini are Carolina students. THE MOVIE, entitled Nowhei of one of the most unique course! Studies 299, under the scr Professor Franklin Ashley. Th? extension of another course ta involved 18 students, all worki mon goal. That common goal is I "I've never seen a more c students, Ashley said. "I most! just to see if it could be done. It of my creative writing courses students, I wanted to give them wonting witn tneir skius. "They (the students) were anything. At one point, they got i Saluda River at six in the moi just grinding out something just cared about the end results." The movie will be aired on E (ETV), Dec. 21. According to D the story's student script write -- : ;;vv. Toga party parti< here to SkEditor on television wai ^ ?t i had to really bi mg through the final , ^ end res^t, t>eleaspd. It tells the kpackmg in the wild, Nowhere to to a life-and-death students backp North Carolina tctors. If anyone has informs them oi iot because thev have that IS slowly 5 screen, but'tecause ^ut f J"'1?1"8 six actors, as well as get up to h.gher /olved in the project, can reac "WE SPENT e to Run, is the result Anderson said. * on camDus General W1? Wlth SP* ?} or three people ?f the project was ; course, which is an ' ught by Ashley, has individual ng towards one com- The students their new movie. wrote an origir film. The prim ietermined group of guitar, bass an< y started this course as well as a sti is an extension of one . I had so many good THE STUDE] a chance to continue forward to seei although the ve; willing to do almost much shorter t ; up and got out to the The movie w rning. They were not time of its com to get by. They really time it has b minutes. "This ducational Television characterizatio avid Anderson, one of we're confident rs, "getting this thing show through.' \ ^'~ ^ ,'' --7- '""v^r^i ' j| nn SHHH St*ph?fl McO cipant...borrowing fron Run of in b our chief concern from the start. We ist ass, but we're all pretty proud of Run tells the story of a group of acking in the Pisgah Mountains of . They hear a radio broadcast that r a dangerous leakage of chlorine gas seeping through the mountains. For ts, the movie recounts their efforts to ground before the invisible lethal gas 1. a lot of time developing characters," "It isn't really fair to credit specific :ific things. There may have be?n two who wrote the script, but by the time completed, everyone had made their input." nf thic mnoflu ovnlnpafivA nmiKOA nloA v* mmw (iivuvjij va^/iva uvitv vuut aiau lal musical score specifically for the cipal instruments used were piano, 1 flute. The songs feature voice tracks rict nstrumental score. NTS involved in the movie are looking ng the finished product on television, rsion that will be aired on ETV will be han the actual product. as close to one hour in length at the pletion, but because of limitations of een cut down to approximately 23 will, of course, hurt the continuity and n of the movie," said Anderson. "But : that all our work and effort will still f By Je Oameci "It's the Louie I The strange lyri recorded in the eai these days in colic The credit or nostalgic craze mi former honor studc the movie Animal I played a seasone fraternity of the ej out to wreak havoc day. THE KINGSME dead to redo thei Animal House, wei appearance at Air party was being a The Kingsmen c the day before th< "The problem a were not original explained Steve based promoter o "The back-up gn ti;oon ' f nfo ?rmack ? GAMECOCK Qut fl bunch n the past camP?8" ? students prod fe-and-death st v: ii-J '' >JSh Ashley directing... 'They cared abo\ i cancels to> . <R ? the show g< ff La Grone All was not ock staff writer found, a grou{ xm-eye, oh, baby ..." a crowd disaj ics to this popular song failure to sho ly 1960's are all the rage the Kingsme ;ce towns coast-to-coast. oblisinff the tr blame for the latest passable vers ist go to John Belushi, a Hit, who stole the show in Animal Hoi iouse. Belushi in this film "That made d brother in a college Cheryl Johnsc arly 60s, an unruly rebel Summerville. on the conventions of the party before, i one would be N, resurrected from the OTHERS W r hit "Louis, Louie" on came to see th *e scheduled for a Nov. 30 to make the nost Nuts, where a tno? Rrnnlcs farv irranged. ' Key West, F1 ancelled the afternoon of four times. J< lir scheduled show. Another 01 rose with the people who Mosser, joke< members of the group," went to a tog? Clouse, the Hollywood- said. "Cleopa f the Kingsmen's shows. Profession sup we were using just significance I found out they'd only obviously bor >e shows together. They "I don't kr e enough material to be more nostalgi lows." said Paul Hig -owner L,yn under was teacnes a c cause forces beyond his "College stud ork. late 50s. They i blow to our morale," he "I would h ione too much advance are less conct I the toga party. We even were in the (H of flyers around frats on sociology pro! cry ? the wi luce movie ruggle David Anderson ? GAMECOCK ut the end result' ga date, oes on lost. A replacement band was ) called Satin. Satin confronted p pointed with the Kings men's w. The group paid homage to n on their fourth number, >ga-clad crowd with a rusty but ion of "Louie, Louie." ise enthusiasts went wild. i me feel right at home," said in, a freshman art major from "I'vp n<*vpr Kppn tn a inrta and I'd always wondered what like." ERE more philosophical. "We le Kingsmen but we're willing best of the situation," said a former USC student from la. "I've seen Animal House^ ohn Belushi's my hero." utspoken socialite, Charles i about an imaginary past. "I i party at Julius Caesar's," he itra looked neat in a sheet." ai uuaci vci s v^ucsiiun mc of the whole scene, since it rows so much from the past. ?ow if this generation is any ic then any other generation," gins, a sociology professor who ourse in deviant behavior, ents now weren't born until the missed out on a lot of the fun." esitate to say students today irned with the issues than they )s," said Wade Smith, another Fessor. "But the major rallying ir ? has gone away."