Interview: Jordan Trovillion of “Horse Camp”

Posted on March 11, 2015 at 3:55 pm

Horse Camp is a heartwarming story of a young girl’s adventures at summer camp. I really enjoyed talking to Jordan Trovillion, who plays Kathy, a shy girl who goes from having no friends to having one close friend to abandoning that friend when she is accepted by the camp’s mean girl clique.

Copyright Be Your Own Hollywood 2014
Copyright Be Your Own Hollywood 2014

Your film brought back a lot of memories of my own camp experiences, especially the songs.

That’s fantastic! That was one of the coolest thing about making that movie. It was going back and kind of remembering things that I don’t didn’t even know I had forgotten.

Were you a horseback rider before you made this film?

I rode a couple of horses when I was young. We lived out in the country and my neighbor across the street had horses and so we would occasionally go riding but I didn’t ever attend horse camp and I didn’t ever take formal lessons. We went on trail rides. Riding horses is not as easy as it looks but I think a big important part of being able to ride a horse is not to be afraid of it. And I think horses are super cool. I was afraid of them when I was a kid but I had kind of gotten over it by then. And the girl who played Stacy in the movie, Kristen Ryda, she had attended the camp and she was a counselor. She was the one who taught me how to ride horses. So we actually got along great! She was very helpful and super informative and so with a teacher like that I don’t think anybody would have any trouble riding.

I’m glad to hear that because she did a very good job of being mean in the film.

She’s so good! She has a really good little like kind of angry rat face. She’s so nice though in real life. She’s a really great woman.

Why do you think it’s important to explore the theme of mean girls and bullies in a movie like this?

I think that sometimes as adults we forget how difficult it is to be a kid and to be in a huge group of people who are creating their own social networks and cliques and what it feels like to be excluded, and how difficult it is to maintain all of your relationships in their priorities in a crazy environment like your high school or horse camp or middle school or a club or anything like that. I think that it is important to highlight these lessons, for young girls to be able to be nice to each other, to know when it is time to apologize and know where your priorities lie. And it’s confusing as a kid. It is an important thing for girls to have role models and have representatives of things that they can remember and called back to when they find themselves in these difficult situations. And again we have lots of lasting scars and it is very important to have something to lean on in situations like that.

One of the things that was particularly good in this film is that it shows not just that we all have to deal with the mean girls in our lives but with our own temptations to become a mean girl ourselves.

Exactly. And anyone who was met with some success of anything big or small knows the feeling of kind of getting that power and the seduction of it. Even in my life in making the movies,being able to see my face on a poster and interviews and it makes me feel like I’m an important fancy person for the day. And it’s like when my best friend calls me and is like, “Hey I need you up here, it is awkward, don’t worry about it but I need you to come up right now” I’m really grateful that I am the person that she calls for something like that because of the relationship that we form not because I’m a fancy person.

Parallel to that is one of the things that was most refreshing about the film — most movies about teenage girls include a makeover but in this one you get a makeover and then a make under.

That was a really important thing for the movie. There is a difference between being made up and being gorgeous and being a real person. There is a difference between taking care of yourself and not caring about what you look like. And it is true that taking care of your appearance and putting on a good face can make a difference in your life but this should not be your entire life.

What was it like to be all glammed up?

It felt like there were birds on my face. I couldn’t even breathe it was so weird. It was a lot of makeup and made my face feel very heavy.

Another thing I liked in the film was the relationship between Kathy and the girl who was her real friend.

Rachel Sowers is an amazing actress and is wonderful to work with and she is very much like her character. She is down to earth and chill and very low-key. And so we were filming the scene at the end when I’m was giving her the Camp Princess crown and she had been with Terry Mcglasson all day and had gotten herself to the place where she did in the set to cry. I had smoke blowing into my eyes the entire scene so I was already really teary. And I looked over at her and her face is all wet and she’s crying and so I started crying and she started crying harder. And so we had to just hug it out after that as it was very emotional.

What’s your next project?

I have a movie coming out that is sort of in the process of release called A Matter of Faith. And for the last several years I’ve been working on a show called Comic Continuum which is like Access Hollywood for dorks.

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Actors Contests and Giveaways

Interview: David Milchard of Russell Madness — Plus Copies to Give Away!

Posted on March 9, 2015 at 3:27 pm

Copyright Air Bud Entertainment 2015
Copyright Air Bud Entertainment 2015

David Milchard stars in “Russell Madness” as the father of a family who inherits a wrestling arena.  But I think he would agree that the real stars of the film are the talking monkey and dog.

He took the time to talk to me about making the film, which is a lot of fun .  I have copies to give away!  Send me an email at moviemom@moviemom.com with Russell in the subject line and tell me  your favorite movie dog.   Don’t forget your address!  (US addresses only).  I’ll pick a winner at random on March 16, 2015.  Good luck!

They always say that actors don’t like to work with animals or children. You managed to do both in this film so tell me a little bit about what that was like.

A dog and a monkey!  A monkey is an animal but some people will say it is also a human. And I work with CGI which means there’s nothing there at the time. So I feel like I can do anything.  I have been through the hurricane class of acting.  Crystal is the name of the monkey.  I like Crystal. She was fantastic to work with.  It was a great experience; it was actually funny; the very first day on the set, I hadn’t met the monkey yet. And we were kind of in an important scene in terms of like how to get it done so it was a crash course on how to handle a monkey. Getting the monkey up on my shoulder and then acting as though I always had the monkey upon my shoulder, like it is totally normal. And then every now and then a monkey does what a monkey does which is like really screech loudly in your ear. But for the most part Crystal was a professional. Very well behaved and it was super fun to work with Crystal. And then I learned that if you ignore the monkey just a little bit they adore you more. So that is what I did.

What was it like to work with CGI, or, rather, to pretend that what would be inserted via CGI was there?

Copyright Air Bud Entertainment 2015
Copyright Air Bud Productions 2015

We were moving very quickly so sometimes they would film the dog and then they would remove the dog. The dog would do some crazy flip.  And then you had to react to a dog flipping but there was no dog. So it was challenging but it was fun and working with the Director, Robert Vince, was great because he was very honest. If it was working, he would be like “Perfect, great!”  If not, he would say, “No, we are going to do that one again,” and then he would explain if I was looking in the wrong spot or whatever but it was really great. After that, I’m definitely capable of handling anything right now. Give me any sort of situation actingwise, I am ready.

Your co-star is John Ratzenberger (“Cheers”), and I know he loves to improvise.

Yes and I love to do improv, too. I actually performed in a place called the Vancouver TheaterSports League and that’s where I get my chops for improv over the last, I guess 10 or so years and it was great.  Yes, John and I would mess around a little bit.  He kept me on my toes for sure.

You were very believable as a dad.  What did you do to help the kids in the film get comfortable with you?

It was lots of fun.  Working in the “Conversations With” Web Series was very helpful because it is not shot like a traditional TV set or anything like that.   And being an improviser I have worked with lots of kids on stage in front of a live audience, which is very exciting and dangerous if you will. And so I felt quite prepared when I got on set and the kids were great. I mean everyone was super fun and Mason Vale Cotton was a consummate professional.  He was very prepared. And he was also very adaptable.  I mean it is hard acting with the dogs and animals and stuff but he was patient and he was fantastic.

I’m glad you mentioned the very funny “Conversations With” on YouTube, where you played the role of a 2, then 3, now 4-year-old, saying exactly what she said to her father.  Tell me how you psych yourself into that role.

I think there is more kid in me than I realize. I always want to try and get what I want when I want it. And so I definitely tapped into that. But basically, being an improviser you just sort of say yes to situations and also you observe a lot. So I spent a lot of time watching my brother raise his two kids and like I said I taught improv as well so I have worked with kids in that way. And then just watching Coco, I studied her sometimes and see what she does. And then I take some creative license.

I like the way you capture the temperament of a child without having to use an exaggerated baby voice.

Yes, Matt Clark, my friend and my partner in crime in the series, we talked about that at length actually when we were starting. We were like “Well, how much like a kid do I play it?”  We try to find a fine line about what makes the most sense.  Sometimes I do act like a kid because it feels right and then other times I feel like no, this is an adult moment, this is when maybe Coco’s exploring the world of what it is like to be older.

One of the things that I particularly enjoyed in the “Russell Madness” movie was the set.  It was just gorgeous.

When I walked on to that set, I was like, “Oh my goodness! I’m in a real movie!”  The set was amazing. And we were all really sad when we had to go to the modern version, but that was amazing too.  Everyone loved it. And then we were all kind of like joking that we could just leave it up and start a wrestling league here.  We were all sad when we had to leave that set.

What do you think families will talk about after they see the film?

I think people are going to love this movie because it has got a great little story.  The parents will be happy with the family message: family first, family is the best tag team. And I think that is a great element of it.  The monkey talks and we hear the monkey and that is super fun. And then of course we have got the dogs so if you like dogs, you are in. If you like monkeys, you are in. You kind of got it all and the kids were both talented obviously and super cute. So it is fun.

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Actors Contests and Giveaways Fantasy For the Whole Family Interview Talking animals

Contest: Libera Angels Sing — Libera in America

Posted on March 9, 2015 at 3:08 pm

The Libera boys choir performed at the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception in Washington, D.C. and it was recorded for a PBS special. I am thrilled to have a copy of this glorious performance on DVD, Angels Sing – Libera in America, to give away. The 40 boys from London who sing like a celestial choir perform holy and secular music, classical and traditional in a concert guaranteed to touch and inspire.  This is really special, and a perfect family treat for Easter.

Send me an email at moviemom@moviemom.com with Libera in the subject line and tell me what you are looking forward to this spring. Don’t forget your address! (US addresses only). I’ll pick a winner at random on March 15, 2015. Good luck!

And here is where you can see Libera on tour.

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Contests and Giveaways Music

Contest: Win a Flintstones WWE DVD/Blu-Ray — Stone Age Smackdown!

Posted on March 8, 2015 at 11:07 am

When Fred Flintstone has an idea to make money that involves putting Barney in the ring with the Stone Age WWE all-stars, what can possibly go wrong? This week, we find out in The Flintstones & WWE: Stone Age Smackdown, featuring John Cenastone (John Cena), Rey Mysteriopal (Rey Mysterio) and even The Undertaker, along with Mr. McMagma (Vince McMahon), The Boulder Twins (Brie and Nikki Bella) Marble Henry (Mark Henry) and Daniel Bry-Rock (Daniel Bryan).

I have a copy to give away! Send me an email at moviemom@moviemom.com with Smackdown! in the subject line and tell me your favorite Flintstones character. Don’t forget your address! (US addresses only). I’ll pick a winner at random on March 12, 2015. Good luck!

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Animation Based on a television show Contests and Giveaways

WIN Tickets to “Danny Collins” With Al Pacino and Annette Bening

Posted on March 4, 2015 at 11:00 am

WIN tickets to a free showing of Al Pacino’s new film, “Danny Collins,” in Washington D.C. on March 11, 2015. Inspired by a true story, Al Pacino stars as aging 1970’s rocker Danny Collins. But when his manager (Christopher Plummer) uncovers a 40 year-old undelivered letter written to him by John Lennon, he decides to change course and embarks on a heartfelt journey to rediscover his family, find true love and begin a second act. Also in the film: Annette Bening, Jennifer Garner, and Bobby Cannavale.

To enter: Send me an email at moviemom@moviemom.com with Danny Collins in the subject line. REMEMBER: the screening is in Washington, D.C. and seats are not guaranteed, so you have to get there early. Good luck!

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Contests and Giveaways
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