AfterEllen Reviews And Then Came Lola

And Then Came Lola Afterellen.com review

 

And Then Came Lola is a sugar rush of a lesbian movie.

Starring Ashleigh SumnerJill Bennett,and Cathy DeBuono, and directed by Ellen Seidler and Megan Siler, it plays out like a twisty, lighter Run Lola Run with a massive dose of queerness.

Lola (Sumner) is a laid back photographer who’s on the verge of a romantic breakthrough with her new girlfriend, Casey (Bennett), who is the straitlaced Bert to Lola’s Ernie. As the film begins, we witness a fantastic sex scene between the two dissolve into a dream, as Lola’s phone interrupts her reverie. It’s Casey, and she needs Lola to pick up a set of all-important prints for a crucial business meeting with Danielle (DeBuono), who also happens to be Casey’s ex-girlfriend.

Lola runs out the door — quite literally — and encounters a tragic-comedy of obstacles keeping her from being punctual the one time she needs to be.

What follows is part Run Lola Run and part Groundhog Day. Lola encounters everything from her ex, to a feisty meter maid, an angry dog, a runaway subway car and the very possessive Danielle on her way to Casey’s aid. If this doesn’t sound frantic enough, keep in mind that the events have a way of occurring multiple times, with several outcomes — and that the filmmakers use a wild variety of cinematic techniques to keep things moving and shaking.

Lola breaks into animated sequences every so often, depicting an exaggerated version of the live action Lola’s hilariously bad luck.  These little flights of whimsy are charming and cute, if a little jarring. There is also plenty of “from the couch” footage taken of the various characters talking about their feelings, their sex lives and their relationships, all under the guise of being in therapy.

Finally, Lola’s inner thoughts are presented via photographic montages (she is a photographer, after all), with great comic effect. In one scene, after being shunned by a saucy meter maid, she imagines a series of pictures showing Lola as a dominatrix, getting her revenge on the suddenly submissive meter maid.

These sequences are among the very best in the film — they’re funny, campy and wildly imaginative.

Yes, it’s frantic and hurried — but the excellent editing keeps the chaos in check.

It helps that the plot is quite simple — Lola has to meet Casey on time, or she may lose out on their relationship.  Stylistically, it’s not unlike one of the later Angela Robinson-directed episodes of The L Word — there’s plenty of split screening and general wackiness, but everything comes together nicely.

The “therapy footage” makes perfect sense in context — since the film moves so fast, it’s a good way to introduce back-story on the characters and explain the complex web of relationships. We soon find out that Lola’s photography lab is run by her jealous ex girlfriend, Jen (Graham), and that Lola has a bit of a commitment problem.

It’s standard drama fodder, but presented creatively enough to be entertaining.

The love scenes are fairly plentiful for the 67-minute running time, and, without exception, they bring serious heat to the screen. Rather than just teasing a kiss or cutting the camera after ten seconds of necking (as so many lesbian films are wont to do), each sequence is realistic, sultry and exceptionally well done.

The actresses have fantastic chemistry — I hope this is not the last time they share the screen. – 

 

Go here to read full review on Afterellen.com.

One filmmaker’s fight against the cyberlockers

Ellen Seidler Fortune magazine

In late 2006, Ellen Seidler, a Harvard-educated filmmaker, journalist, and journalism teacher, decided to make a feature movie with a friend, Megan Siler, a UCLA film school grad. Called And Then Came Lola, it was an homage to a German independent film they loved, and was a lesbian romantic comedy.

“We developed the script, we cast the film, and then we shot the film,” Seidler says. “When all was said and done, it cost close to a quarter of a million dollars.”

 

Ellen Seidler in Fortune magazineIn late 2006, Ellen Seidler, a Harvard-educated filmmaker, journalist, and journalism teacher, decided to make a feature movie with a friend, Megan Siler, a UCLA film school grad. Called And Then Came Lola, it was an homage to a German independent film they loved, and was a lesbian romantic comedy.

“We developed the script, we cast the film, and then we shot the film,” Seidler says. “When all was said and done, it cost close to a quarter of a million dollars.”

They financed the movie the way independent filmmakers do. “I took out a second mortgage, borrowed against my retirement, went into credit card debt,” says Seidler. “Not necessarily smart things, but that’s what we did.”

In June 2009, Lola screened to a sold-out crowd at the Frameline Festival in San Francisco, the premier lesbian-gay film event, and it later showed at scores of other festivals. Like many independent films, Lola had no theatrical release. It was distributed at first by DVD and later by download and streaming as those methods become available. Today legitimate versions are available in nine languages, through such outlets as Amazon (AMZN, -1.93%), iTunes, Netflix (NFLX, -1.22%), two worldwide video-on-demand services — Buskfilms and WolfeOnDemand — and an iPhone app. Legitimate streams are available for as little as $2.99.

Though Seidler knew the film would be pirated over peer-to-peer sites like ThePirateBay, she and her distributor considered those methods too geeky for most people. But by spring 2010, when the DVD came out, the plunging costs of data storage had combined with dramatic improvements in streaming technologies to catapult cyberlockers like Megaupload to the fore as the simplest way to see movies for free.

Within 24 hours of release, Seidler began seeing links to pirated copies of Lola on the web. Soon there were thousands. The links were mainly on ad-supported blogs and led to copies stored on commercial cyberlockers. She began emailing DMCA takedown notices — 1,200 in a single weekend in May 2010 — to cyberlockers, blogs, blog hosts (like Google Blogger), and ad networks (like Google AdSense), but it was “like putting up an umbrella under Niagara Falls,” she says. She showed Fortune spreadsheets corroborating that she has had, to date, well over 56,000 links to pirated copies of her film taken down. “It didn’t take me long to realize that this wasn’t about sharing,” Seidler says.

“It was about people making money.” And it wasn’t just pirates who were making money. The ads were often being served by Google (GOOG, -1.26%), adBrite, or other American companies, and, weirdly, the ads themselves were often for legitimate companies, like Deutsche Bank (DB, +1.57%) affiliates and even Netflix, which was one of Seidler’s distributors. Furious, Seidler launched her own site, called popuppirates.com, to “document the connection between piracy and profits” and to show how mainstream companies were profiting from this black market.

“I got to say it galled me to see Google making money off my film, and the pirate-operator making money, and we’re still in debt,” says Seidler. “There’s something wrong with that.” A Google spokesperson did not respond to inquiries seeking comment, except to acknowledge their receipt. (At a congressional hearing last November, a Google lawyer testified that the company more than complies with its duties under the DMCA, having taken down more than 5 million items that year and having shut down more than 150,000 AdWords accounts. According to the government’s January indictment against the cyberlocker Megaupload, Google also stopped serving ads for Megaupload in 2007 after finding “numerous pages” linking to “copyrighted content.”)

For its first quarter, Lola made less than a fourth of what its distributor, Wolfe Video, had anticipated. “There’s a market that hungers for this product,” says Maria Lynn, the president of Wolfe, which has been distributing LGBT films for 27 years. Cyberlockers made the difference, she maintains.

“Pirates fall into two categories,” says Wolfe Video founder Kathy Wolfe. “The first would be happy to pay if they could find the legitimate version of the movie. That’s incentivizing us to make that happen. But the second are the people who don’t believe they should have to pay ever. That that would have any legitimacy as a position is staggering to me.”

 

Ashleigh Sumner in Film Quarterly

Ashleigh Sumner

Ashleigh Sumner’s lead breakthrough role occurs in the new indie lesbian romantic comedy “And Then Came Lola,” which is loosely inspired by German arthouse classic “Run Lola Run.” Her performance in the independent film has received much attention including Advocate Magazine’s “One to Watch” honor at the 2009 OutFest Film Festival.

Ashleigh’s film work includes a lead role in the AFI short, “Mother,” which received awards at the Cannes Film Festival, Seattle International, and Florida Film Festival, along with being an official selection at AFI Fest, and receiving a New York Times Critic’s Pick. Her performance earned a Best Actress Nomination at LA’s Method Fest. Additional work includes appearances in the indie film, “The Hammer” and a lead role in Film Independents Directors Lab project, “Directed by Dorothy Arzner.” Ashleigh’s television credits include appearances on “Criminal Minds,” “CSI,” “Crossing Jordan” and a supporting role in the CBS television movie “The Locket” starring Vanessa Redgrave.

IFQ recently spoke with Ashleigh as she wrapped the 2009 film festival circuit with her indie gem “And Then Came Lola,” which recently inked a distribution deal and will be released by Wolfe Video in Spring 2010.

 

Who Profits from Piracy? Ellen Seidler talks to NPR

Ellen Seidler NPR

This isn’t one of those stories about a big Hollywood company suing a big Silicon Valley company for copyright infringement.  This is about a struggling independent filmmaker just trying to make a living doing the work she loves.

Ellen Seidler released And Then Came Lola this spring. Seidler describes her film as a “lesbian romantic comedy.” In the tradition of many independent filmmakers, Seidler and her co-director Megan Siler used $250,000 of their own money and paid for the feature through personal loans, refinancing and credit cards.

 

Ellen Seidler on NPR

To read and hear story, go here.

Stopping Piracy by Following the Money Trail

Follow the money

Follow the money

The idea of targeting websites financially goes back as far as there has been money changing hands on the Internet. However, the more recent history of it began when director Ellen Seidler launched the site PopUpPirates.com in 2010 (previous coverage), where she began to highlight many of the companies whose ads ran next to pirate downloads of her content.

(Note: Seidler now does most of her blogging at Vox Indie.)

Though Seidler began to receive some significant media attention, it wouldn’t be until December 2011 that the idea would take the national stage.

 

 

 

Full article here at Plagiarism Today

PopUp Pirates: Who Profits from Piracy?

Who Profits from Piracy

Who Profits from PiracyEllen Seidler is an independent filmmaker who, after spending $250,000 of her own money, made the lesbian romantic comedy “And Then Came Lola“.

However, even before the movie was officially released, it was leaked on a variety of pirate sites, often times hosted at various “file locker” services that would offer the video for download.

Seidler then began to defend her work on the Web, filing DMCA takedown notices by the dozen against file locker sites and advertising networks.

But Seidler noticed something she considered disturbing. Nearly all the pirate sites had advertisements on them, but they weren’t for companies with poor reputations, but rather, were for mainstream companies, many of which were in the U.S. These companies included Netflix, Microsoft, Network Solutions and many others.

In early July, Seidler was features on All Things Considered on NPR, where she talked about these issues and a representative from Netflix said that they try to avoid pirate sites but some simply fall through the cracks.

Shortly after that podcast, Seidler launched her own site and blog about her ordeals, PopUp Pirates, where she highlights the companies who advertise with pirates, in particular Google and vents her frustration at the time and energy spent enforcing the film and how all parties involved, the pirate site, Google and the advertiser, make money from the film but she does not.

Director Ellen Seidler talks to Back Stage about Online Piracy’s Negative Impact on Indie Film

Ellen Seidler's intv. with Backstage

Ellen Seidler isn’t in the indie game for the money. But when the filmmaker and her directing partner, Megan Siler, put up $250,000 of their own cash to make “And Then Came Lola,” they expected to at least be able to break even, paying off the debts they incurred during production. Their hopes were dashed when they discovered how extensively “Lola” was being pirated on the Web, damaging the financial prospects of the movie’s DVD and video-on-demand release. Seidler became infuriated, though, when she noticed corporate ads for companies like Google and Netflix popping up all over the illegal sites that carried her film. Back Stage talks to Seidler, who is fighting back on her blog and speaking out against corporate-sponsored Web piracy.

To read full story in Backstage go here.

Edge-Boston Review

MFA Boston review

And Then Came Lola screens in Boston

Deja vu takes on a whole new meaning in the romantic comedy And Then Came Lola. Filled with wall to wall pop music as well as vibrant performances, “Lola” is a lesbian romp done right.

The plot essentially resembles that of the hit film “Run, Lola, Run.” Lola, a forgetful, aloof individual, has had some very tough times with relationships in the past. Often accused of “checking out” emotionally at various points, or becoming apathetic, she certainly can’t keep a woman to save her life. When new love interest Casey (Jill Bennett) asks her to rush photographs to her for a very important client, the pressure’s on as to whether Lola will pull through.

To read full review go here.

Review from the Boston Phoenix

Boston Phoenix review

The relationship-challenged Lola (Ashleigh Sumner, a dead ringer for Jodie Foster) sprints around San Francisco to prove her fealty to girlfriend Casey (Jill Bennett) before Casey can get seduced away by a new business partner. Although it preserves the frenetic tripartite set-up of Tom Tykwer’s 1998 film, with Lola embarking on her journey three times (each with a different outcome), the lesbian-ified version of Run Lola Run replaces the crime and money with intense discussions about commitment. (Is that a rib nudge?)

GaydarNation Reviews LOLA

Gaydar nation reviews Lola

Loosely based on Tom Tykwer’s 1998 hit Run Lola Run, Ellen Seidler and Megan Siler’s version tells the same story three times over with differing outcomes, just like its predecessor. The writer-director duo pay homage to the original whilst giving it their own style and a few twists.

Such as the fact that And Then Came Lola is written, directed, funded, produced and acted by out lesbians. No mean feat within an industry where most people would struggle to name more than a handful of gay actresses who aren’t in the closet and working in Hollywood.

GaydarNation.com Interviews Ellen & Megan

Directors Megan Siler & Ellen Seidler

So what was it about Run Lola Run that inspired you to write and direct your own version?
Megan: I think we both thought it was a great film obviously, but it affords you a lot of freedom to play with the media. The structure’s like Groundhog Day and this idea of doing something over and over and trying to get it right seemed perfect for a lesbian romp.

Ellen: What you alluded to really opened up the narrative possibilities and when you’re dealing with a low budget film, the fact that you can have great animation and integrate stills and kind of play with it in that way, it allows you some creative opportunities that you might not normally have.

Obviously it’s a hat tip to Run Lola Run and we named our character Lola because we didn’t want to pretend that it wasn’t, but it’s a very different film in many, many ways. We definitely thought the structure would be fun. It’s about having a fun time. It’s a little more up than the original.

Megan: Also, as a romantic comedy or a romp, it sounds a little fantastical. I think the pastiche of media and the whole kind of mixing of it allows you to be playful.

How did you go about casting the film? Did you have specific actresses in mind?
Ellen: Not initially. We did some casting in San Francisco and we found one actress up there called Jenoa Harlow who’s an out lesbian and plays the girl in the park with the dog. She’s wonderful but there really isn’t the pool of acting talent in the Bay area of San Francisco.

Megan: Ellen and I really wanted to work local.

Ellen: So we went down to LA and had open castings. We were really determined after that to find some actors who were actually lesbians, so we did some targeted castings and that’s how we found most of the people in our cast. We thought it was important for the success of this film that we had actors who understood the lesbian vibe.

We had a number of actors come through who were talented enough but it just seemed as if it would have been somewhat of a stretch to embrace the role they were going to be asked to play. And the sexuality, there’s a lot of that in the film and for them to be comfortable with that is a hurdle. Plus, I think it’s just great that we can have talented out lesbians in our film and show off their talent.

Megan: It’s also great for us because they understood and felt very supportive of the project. It ended up being a very collaborative film. The more people who are onboard and want to support this kind of project really helps independent filmmakers.

Go here to read the full interview in GaydarNation.com.

Toronto Film Scene Reviews LOLA

Toronto Film Scene Review

The Inside Out LGBT Toronto Film Festival continued on Saturday with the time-bending, sexy, lesbian romp, And Then Came Lola , co-directed by Ellen Seidler and Megan Siler.

Ashleigh Sumner stars as Lola, who has been something of a train wreck in her previous relationships but she wants to have something more serious with her girlfriend Casey (Jill Bennett). Casey calls her one day in a panic asking her to pick up some photos for a client presentation and to meet her in an hour at a bar across town. Lola is known for being unreliable and late for everything so she knows this is her chance to make things right. She goes on a wild crazy journey across San Francisco in a series of comical situations that she both causes and is a victim of. Lola’s former lover Jen (Jessica Graham) who runs the photo developing store where she is getting the photos, causes Lola think back to how things went wrong with Jen and how not to repeat the same mistakes with Casey. What adds to the tension is that Casey’s client is Danielle (Cathy DeBuono), a sexy Italian woman that Casey might have a past with. Once she arrives at the bar with the photos, it doesn’t go as Lola hoped and things are ruined between her and Casey. The next morning Lola wakes up again like it was a dream and it all happens again but Lola can try and make it right .and she then of course wakes up later again and to get a final third chance.

If the name and situation sound familiar, this is a very loose remake of the basic premise of the 1998 German film Run Lola Run . This film doesn’t have any of the serious tones of the original, but the structure is the same. The film does add some original touches by having many of the action segments turn into animated sequences. It is also interlaced with relationship confessionals to the camera in a therapist’s office by all the main characters in the film. This is a clever touch that makes the movie more of a fun character study, rather than just a silly race to beat the clock.

If the women in San Francisco really look anything like the women do in And Then Came Lola, then I need to book my bus ticket there tomorrow. There isn’t a single woman in this film that is anything less than drop dead gorgeous. Not that there is anything wrong with that, but it certainly adds to the light feel of this film and for a comedy, and the film is extremely sexy. It’s a fun comedy that I think straight and LGBT audiences would really enjoy equally. –

by 

Go here to read review in Toronto Film Scene.

GaydarNation Talks to Jill Bennett

Jill Bennett in Gaydar Nation

Jill Bennett

Jill Bennett’s acting career started with roles in Beverley Hills 90210 and she went on to star in beefcake supernatural soap opera Dante’s Cove. She’s since embraced internet TV with a vengeance producing We Have to Stop Now with her partner Cathy DeBuono and videoblog The Violet Underground for shewired.com, where she tackles a multitude of gay issues.

The sexy actress stars in lesbian romantic comedy And Then Came Lola and she told Rachael Scott about working on the film, what it’s like to be one of the few out actresses working in Hollywood and her thoughts on gay cinema today.

So how did you come to work on the film?
Ellen Seidler contacted me through MySpace actually! She sent me the script and explained that it was a low budget project, by and for the lesbian community. She expressed that they wanted to hire within the community, which was a big draw for me. The rest, as they say, is history.

What appealed to you about the script?
It was a lot of fun – no coming out story, no dying of cancer at the end. Just a fun, sexy story for women. We need more of those types of movies!

What was it like working with Ellen and Megan?
They were fantastic – they did their best to take care of us during the whole shoot.

 

Ashleigh Sumner and LOLA in Uppror Magazine

Ashleigh Sumner

A colourful, dizzying mash-up of German cult classic Run
Lola Run made entirely by lesbians and starring lesbians.
And Then Came Lola is a low budget feature film from San
Francisco that has been winning accolades at LGBT (Lesbian,
Gay, Bisexual & Transgender) festivals across the globe.
The film sees Lola on a desperate trio of bids to get some important
photographs to her girlfriend on time because if she doesn’t their
relationship will get the chop. There’s nothing really original about the
story and the filmmakers are fully aware of the movie’s source
material, even down to the animated sequences which they gleefully
ape. What’s refreshing is that everyone involved in the film wanted to
make an out and proud lesbian film, set in a city seemingly populated
only by gays and dykes.

To read full story: PDF download here

 

GaydarNation.com Interviews Ashleigh

Ashleigh Sumner

 

The star of new lesbian rom-com And Then Came Lola is causing ripples of excitement through the queer film industry. 30-year old Ashleigh Sumner plays the titular character alongside an all-lesbian cast in a part writer-directors Ellen Seidler and Megan Siler say she was born to play.

Rachael Scott met with the multi-talented film, TV and theatre actress who is also a successful painter during the London Lesbian and Gay Film Festival to chat about her breakthrough role.

What was it that attracted you to the part of Lola?
I was very interested in having the chance to play a comedic role because most of the parts I play are very hard drama. The CSI’s, Crossing Jordan – I’ve been on all of those and someone’s dead or something. The theatre that I’ve done is mostly drama, too, but I actually kind of think I’m pretty funny. [Laughs].

So, I was drawn to the opportunity to use those skills, but also the chance to be given the lead in a film. I’d never been given that opportunity before. I’d played leads in theatre all the time and, for a lot of the time as an actor, that’s really hard to do when you’re unknown. They took a chance and I wanted to see if I was up to the challenge.

Can you tell me where your character is in her life when the film starts?
I think my character is where a lot of people are in their late-20s and early-30s. I think that there’s a shift that starts to happen about that time of life for many people. Some people it’s earlier and some people it’s later, but I think you start to examine what a relationship is. What kind of stable relationship you would like, if you are ready for one.

I think part of that is when you become a real partner, when you are ready for that challenge. It’s showing up and what that is. Personally speaking, there are some growing pains involved in that and I think that’s where my character is. She’s figuring it out and I think when you meet the person who’s right for you, you realize that you want your best to be even better.

 

 

Ashleigh Sumner interview with Autostraddle

Ashleigh Sumner

Out Actress Ashleigh Sumner Arrives in “And Then Came Lola”: Autostraddle Interview

Ashleigh Sumner is the adorable, every-girl star of the sexy lesbian romantic comedy, And Then Came Lola. Jess chats with her about her first on-camera sex scenes, seeing herself on the big screen, LA vs. San Francisco, gays & superheroes, and her artwork.

Out lesbian actress Ashleigh Sumner is mega-hot and stars as the title character in the new free-wheelin’ lesbian romantic comedy And Then Came Lola alongside Jill Bennett & Cathy DeBuono. This isn’t just another coming out story, it’s a funny guilty pleasure indie flick set in the super gay-ed up streets of San Francisco. And this time, writer/directors of the film went out of their way to cast lead actresses who were all openly gay — amazing, right?

Seriously, just look at that poster. You know you want to go to there. Well, guess what — the movie was just released on DVD so you can order that puppy right now! Along with San Francisco, the music in the film is a character unto itself, with songs by Jennifer Corday and Jessy Moss creating an energy that doesn’t let up as Lola runs, bikes and stumbles her way all over the city.

I chatted with Ashleigh about seeing herself on the big screen for the first time, performing her first on-camera sex scenes, gay life in LA versus San Francisco, superheroes, and her other world as a talented painter at sumnerartstudio.com.

Click here to read Ashleigh’s full interview with Jess on Autostraddle.com.

Ashleigh Sumner at work in her studio

Ashleigh Sumner time lapse

Check out photographer Mollie McClure’s time-lapse video of Ashleigh Sumner painting in her LA studio. Ashleigh was the star of “And Then Came Lola” and Mollie’s photographs are featured in the film.

Published on Jul 1, 2012 by mcclureimages
L.A. based artist Ashleigh Sumner creates in her studio over a three hour time period. A time-lapse is set-up to capture the process…every 4 seconds a frame is captured, the shutter speed was reduced to 1/4th of a second so that her movement, which is such a strong aspect of her style, can really be felt.

If you haven’t already seen her work, go find it.
Here, I’ll help you out… www.sumnerstudio.com

Showing as part of the GAZE festival, And Then Came Lola is a blast of a film, some much-needed fresh air on a somewhat stifling (for women anyway) programme. This is what happens when, after years of some great lesbian films but mostly awful lesbian films, the viewers get involved. Ellen Seidler and Megan Siler were obviously watching films and thinking “Jesus, I could do better than that!” They were right, they can. And Then Came Lola is a fast-paced, slick comedy that will give your funny bone a good workout.

It tells the story of Lola (Ashleigh Sumner, right), a photographer who thinks she’s cool but is just flaky. Fate takes a hand when her girlfriend (Jill Bennett) calls her up and begs for her help. She is given three chances to get to her lady on time. During the three sprints across San Francisco, she learns more and more about herself, realising that what she though was light and cool, is actually selfish and cold.

Determined to become a better person, she rushes to the side of her girl, desperately trying to keep her out of the clutches of her gorgeous ex, who has a hankering to reacquaint.

The storyline is helped by the fact that the women are hot. Look, it’s important ok? Ashleigh Sumner is a cute as anything, Jill Bennett is a babe and her real-life girlfriend, Cathy DeBuono, skates on the edge of drop-dead gorgeous and weird-looking. So head to the pictures to see something warm, sexy and entertaining. It’s what we all cry out for, for the other 51 weeks of the year.