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The LOST SUBURBIA directors. |
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Paul Natale has been working in the entertainment industry since graduating high school. But, in 2002 he decided to focus his creative energies specifically on film production. The successful film festival run of his 2004 short UN-REAL (which starred Sean King and was shot by Pete Bune) inspired him to continue writing and directing films and developing his skills. This led him to film schools on the East and West coasts, the production a few more shorts, and finally to France to attend EICAR: The International Film School of Paris. Here, his 2nd year Bachelor of Fine Arts end-of-year film, CASSIE, was awarded the best in class Grand Prize from an illustrious cinéaste jury panel. Natale is back in New York to continue his professional career. | ||||
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Peter Bune made up one fourth of the Long Island/NYC cult TV show, “The Slack Pack”. Bune edited the first 26 episodes and has co-directed the majority of The Slack Pack’s productions, including his first short, BORED (2001). In addition to work on the TV show, Bune co-wrote and directed his first feature film about the Long Island music scene, entitled THE FREAKS, NERDS, AND ROMANTICS. Bune is responsible for the cinematography behind Paul Natale’s UN-REAL (2004) as well as numerous other projects for various artists | ||||
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Sean
King has been steadily making films and videos for 16 years.
After graduating high school, he co founded the production group Horror
Business Pictures and wrote, produced, directed and acted in numerous
short films and videos that had many festival and public screenings, including
the acclaimed WEDDING PICTURES (2002). King then joined
the comedy film group "The Slack Pack" and
co-produced numerous sketches and over 30 half hour episodes for cable
television and festival screenings. In the meantime he took production
work on independent short and feature films, doing everything from sound
recording to assistant director. Recently, he has been focusing on acting
and freelance cinematography as well as the production of industrial videos.
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Terrence Smith has
been working in the film and video industry for seven years. His career began with a much fabled, Troma
Studios where he worked as a DVD production coordinator and eventually a co-location manager on
Citizen Toxie: Toxic Avenger 4. He began making films in high school where he met Sean King and
Elizabeth. The three would go on to make Man into Vampire in 1997. He attended college
at SUNY Buffalo and studied filmmaking and learned nothing. However, that didn't stop him from
continuing to pursue his interest in all things horror and film related. Currently he is a freelance
video editor in NYC as well as a full time dad to two daughters and husband to Elizabeth.
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Elizabeth Smith is making her debut into filmmaking and scriptwriting with The Institute for Mental Hygiene. She graduated from
SUNY New Paltz with a BFA in Metals, focusing her senior thesis on sculptural pieces representative of
mental and social defects. Elizabeth has tried her hand at many different disciplines, open to any art
form that can convey her desires. After working in the jewelry industry and serving as an artist's
assistant to a few major artists, Elizabeth now concentrates her time plotting and experimenting ideas
while raising her two young daughters.
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2005 Lost Suburbia Productions - Website Design © 2005 Skybox Multimedia |
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