Peloton, Ambush and Stoptime present the river why
The River Why Movie
You can fish all your life never knowing
it's not fish you're after ...  
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August 31, 2011

The Songs from The River Why

Hi All,

A number of different people have asked me about the songs in The River Why.  We worked with some great musicians.  Austin Wintory and Dominic Miller did the score.

The songs by scene follow:

From Scene Where Gus moves into his cabin:

“Run Like I’m A River”

Music By:  Coby Brown

Performed by:  Coby Brown

Background during Pool scene:

“Daylight”

Music By:  Coby Brown

Performed by:  Coby Brown

Background during Pool scene:

“Madman”

Music by:  Coby Brown

Performed by: Coby Brown

Love Scene with Gus and Eddy

“And Then They Fell”

Music By:  Brian Vander Ark

Performed by:  Brian Vander Ark

Last Song of Movie:

“Run River”

Written and Performed by:   Jon Swift

Song during credit roll:

“Fishin’ Blues”

Music and Lyrics by Henry Thomas

Produced and Arranged By:  Miles Kennedy

Performed By:  Yair Evnine

Enjoy!

October 12, 2010

Some history on making “The River Why”

Hi All,

This was recently posted by Atissa Manshouri on the Mill Valley Patch.   It will give you some background on how the film came to life.  Thanks for the post, Atissa.

http://millvalley.patch.com/articles/mvff-the-river-why-runs-back-to-mill-valley

For Tom and Kristi Denton Cohen, the Mill Valley Film Festival is more than just a cherished hometown event. It’s where they first met in 1983 (she as a volunteer, he as a filmmaker), where they live and where they will finally screen their feature film The River Why, a labor of love that’s taken more than 20 years to reach the screen.

The film is based on David James Duncan’s novel of the same name, a cult favorite ranked 35th on the San Francisco Chronicle’s list of 100 best books about the American West. The story of young fly-fisherman Gus Orviston’s coming-of-age and his quest for self-knowledge on the banks of a remote Oregon river has developed a wide following in the years since the Sierra Club first published it in 1982.

Bringing the novel to the screen has been a passion project for the Cohens for over twenty years.

A director (Hungry I Reunion, 1981) and producer (Massive Retaliation, 1984), Tom Cohen optioned the novel and wrote his first version of a screen adaptation soon after it was published. By the time he and Kristi married in 1987, it was meaningful enough to them both to include lines from the script in their wedding vows.

But a bad economy in the late 80s and the surprise success of another fly-fishing film, A River Runs Through It, in 1992, derailed the project. Tom moved forward with his career as an attorney and Kristi with hers as a director and producer of documentary, corporate and nonprofit films.

In 2002, she directed and co-produced Vertical Frontier (MVFF 2002), a documentary about the history of rock climbing in Yosemite narrated by Tom Brokaw, winning several awards from outdoor and mountain film festivals. Her success with that film encouraged the couple to give The River Why one more shot.

With a revised script co-written by John Jay Osborn, Jr. (The Paper Chase) in hand, Kristi and Tom set about finding an experienced LA-based production company, a strategy she learned from attending a Sundance Independent Producers Conference.

She met Jun Tan, a producer with Ambush Entertainment, at a film industry gathering in San Francisco, and he connected her with LA-based Matthew Leutwyler, a Redwood High School graduate who just happened to have read and loved the novel while spending time in Australia. He came on board as the film’s director.

A stroke of good fortune followed. Academy Award winning actor William Hurt – a fly fisherman himself who lives in Oregon – agreed to a supporting role in the film.

“He’s been absolutely tremendous,” Denton Cohen said. “When people hear that he’s involved with the film, it gives a certain credibility right away.”

Finding a natural outdoorsman to play the role of lead character Gus Orvitson was vital, and the filmmakers recalled an Outside magazine profile of up-and-coming young actor Zach Gilford (Friday Night Lights), who led wilderness adventure trips and counted ice climbing among his hobbies.

“There’s a certain movement that you have in the wilderness that just can’t be faked… it comes through in the body language and the eyes,” Denton Cohen said of Gilford’s comfort in the film’s setting. “Zach had that.”

Production took place in July 2008 on Oregon’s Wilson River and Portland, with a cast that includes William Devane, Amber Heard, and Mill Valley native Kathleen Quinlan, and a crew made up of many Marin-based colleagues.

Denton Cohen felt a strong responsibility to shoot the film in the greenest way possible, not only because of the author’s commitment to the wilderness and the novel’s environmental and naturalist themes, but because she had also become painfully aware of the excessive waste produced on most film shoots.

The producers’ sometimes funny and often frustrating efforts are documented in the short film Greenlit, an enlightening companion piece to The River Why that reveals the many obstacles the filmmakers faced in shooting green.

Although shepherding the film from the page to the screen required over twenty years’ worth of blood, sweat and tears for this Mill Valley couple, Denton Cohen said the struggle has been well worth it.

“If this film makes people stop looking at their handheld devices… just stop and look at a river for a moment, I’ll be happy,” she said. “It’s certainly had its ups and downs, but it’s not just your typical Hollywood film. It takes people to a place they haven’t been before.”

The film had its world premiere at the Dallas International Film Festival in April, but for Denton Cohen and her husband, the hometown screenings here will be “a real celebration… It’s a really good feeling to be here.”

October 7, 2010

HI All,

It looks like both the Saturday, October 9, and Thursday, October 14 screenings of “The River Why” are sold out at the Mill Valley Film Festival.  There might be tix available if you stand in the rush line.

I’m heading up to beautiful Oregon for the Bend Film Festival and a 3 pm screening on Friday, Oct 8,  before coming back for Mill Valley’s screening on Saturday.  The Bend Film Fest will also screen TRW on Sunday at the Sisters Movie House at 10 a.m.  www.bendfilm.org

Our director, Matthew Leutwyler,  can’t make it to the Saturday Mill Valley Film Fest screening , but will be there for the screening on Thursday, October 14.  Stop by and say hi.

The following weekend, we have screenings at the Heartland Film Festival in Indianapolis and the Gig Harbor Film festival in Washington state and the Salem Film Festival in Oregon.

The Gig Harbor screening is Friday, Oct 15 at 1: 3o pm. www.gigharborfilmfestival.com

The Salem Film Festival screening is Friday, Oct 15 at 6:30 pm and Monday, October 18 at 3:15.  http://www.salemfilmfestival.com/2010/films/features/riverwhy.html

The Heartland Film Festival is October 16 at 7 pm, October 18 at 6 pm, October 19 at 6 pm and October 22 at 8:15 pm.http://www.trulymovingpictures.org/festival-years/2010/movie/the-river-why

And keep an eye out for “Greenlit”, the documentary one of our Executive Producers, Miranda Bailey, directed about our efforts – sometimes more successful than others – to make “The River Why” green.  An enlightening and hysterical film.  It’s playing at a number of the fall film festivals.

Now, acknowledging there is more to life than coming-of-age love stories with fishing, I have this to say:

GO GIANTS!

(I can’t help it.  I’m a San Francisco girl.)

August 13, 2010

River Why Trailer Online!

The trailer for “Ther River Why” is NOW ONLINE!

It can be seen on our website:  www.theriverwhy.com

On youtube.com:

Or on vimeo.com:

Upcoming Screenings:

This weekend, August 14 at 3 pm:  The Rhode Island International Film Festival in Providence, RI

August 27 at 7:30 pm:  ACEFest at the Tribeca Cinemas in New York City

Mill Valley Film Festival, Oct 7 -17, 2010

More to come!

May 10, 2010

Book vs. Movie Review

There will always be many interpretations of great works of art and literature, the best (and simplest) example being “Romeo and Juliet” in tights and flowing gowns re-interpreted as “Westside Story”  in jeans.  But I especially like how Jam-Tex encourages the broadest appreciation of the experience.

FROM:  Jam-Tex
Music, Culture, and History

The River Why

Last week I got to see the world premier of the film The River Why at the Dallas International Film Festival. The movie is based on the book The River Why by David James Duncan. Duncan is a famed environmental and philosophical fiction writer that weaves fantastic narratives about fishing, religion, and baseball. Duncan should be a staple of American literature. Not only is the River Why an amazing read, but so is the heart-wrenching The Brothers K, an excellent work set in the Vietnam War era.

For the most part, it is common knowledge that the book is always better than the movie. This is the case for The River Why, but that does not mean the filmmakers failed. Quite the contrary, the movie version of The River Why is really good. The film captured many of the philosophical underpinnings of the book. The book leaves the natural world to one’s imagination. Whereas the movie brings the wonderful nature of an Oregon river basin alive. My advice would be to read the book and see the movie.

Kristi:  I agree.  Read the book.  See the movie.  In whatever order you prefer.

April 14, 2010

Meet the Cast: William Devane

William Devan as Dutch on set for "The River Why".

William Devane plays “Dutch”, a bumbling fishing reporter in The River Why.   Mr. Devane became widely known for his ten years as the villainous Greg Sumner on the drama series Knots Landing and his role as President Kennedy in the TV film about the Cuban missile crisis, The Missiles of October. He appeared in the films McCabe & Mrs. Miller, Marathon Man, The Bad News Bears in Breaking Training, Testament, Payback and Space Cowboys.  He has also appeared on the television series The West Wing and 24.

Mr. Devane is expected to walk the Red Carpet at the World Premiere of The River Why at the Dallas International Film Festival on April 14, 2010.  Zach Gilford and Kathleen Quilan will also be there. You can purchase tickets here.

April 13, 2010

Reflections from the AIFF

Crowds wrapped around the historic Armory in Ashland, OR for the Ashland Independent Film Festival.

The staff and volunteers made the Ashland Independent Film Festival an incredible experience. They had the biggest attendance ever and handled everything with grace and warmth. Nearly 1,000 people saw “The River Why” between the two preview screenings.

On Saturday, I spoke on the Reel Woman panel with:

  • Diane Bell (Director, Obselidia – which won Best Feature)
  • Gloria La Morte (co-director, Entre Nos, which won the Audience Award and Best Acting Ensemble)
  • Judith Ehrlich (Co-Director, The Most Dangerous Man in America:  Daniel Ellsberg and the Pentagon Papers – nominated for an Academy Award)
  • Emiko Omori (Director, Ed Hardy:  Tattoo the World)
  • Anne Lundgren (Producer, Calvin Marshall)
  • Sandy Cioffi (Director, Sweet Crude)

They were such an inspiring group with amazing experiences and insight.  I was honored to sit beside them.

My birthday was Friday and the audience sang “Happy Birthday” to me.  Hard to top that! Saturday came close because a number of people from the crew were at that screening and I loved seeing all of them again.

All in all, it was a great way to start our film festival circuit with a special preview as a “Thank you” to Oregon.

-Kristi Denton Cohen

Producer, The River Why

P.S. To see more pictures from the festival, please visit our Facebook Fan Page.

Cast and crew of "The River Why" celebrate the Special Preview at AIFF 2010.

April 12, 2010

“The River Why” Wins at Ashland Indie Film Fest!

Best Cinematography Award, Ashland Independent Film Festival

The "Best Cinematography, The Gerald Hirschfeld, ASC Award: Feature" Award

I’m pleased to announce The River Why won the “Best Cinematography, The Gerald Hirschfeld, ASC Award: Feature” Award last night at the Ashland Independent Film Festival!  This is a wonderful honor and very meaningful since we filmed The River Why in Oregon, along the Wilson River in Portland, in 2008.

We’ll post more pictures and updates from the festival soon, but we had to share the great news.

To see the full list of Awardees, please visit the Ashland Independent Film Festival‘s web site.

Thank you, Ashland!

-The Cast and Crew of “The River Why”

April 5, 2010

First Review: “‘The River Why’ is lovely, under-stated filmmaking”

April 5, 2010–The Easter Bunny delivered some “egg-cellent” news yesterday!  Our first write up by the Ashland Mail Tribune.

Journalist Bill Varble wrote:

It’s heartening to see the overall quality of the work being done by independent filmmakers around the world. That quality will be on display in our little corner of the world, as the annual Ashland Independent Film Festival gets under way Thursday.

The big little indie fest this year again boasts some extraordinary films among its 81 entries. And almost everything is at least worth seeing. Contrast this with a typical week’s crop of Hollywood commercial fare, which often leaves you scratching for a movie worth seeing.

Here are some thumbnail reflections…

“The River Why,” feature, 101 minutes

Producer Kristi Denton Cohen waited 20 years to make a beautiful film based on David James Duncan’s iconic coming-of-age fishing novel set in Oregon, and the wait was worth it. Gus Orviston, 20, leaves his fishing, bickering parents’ home to live in a cabin on the river and order his life so that he can fish 141/2 hours a day.

Gotta be bliss, right? Wrong. He’s soon frustrated and lost. But the right guides turn up at just the right moments as Gus moves toward awareness.

This is lovely, understated filmmaking. Director Matthew Leutwyler wisely lets his camera and his actors, including the eye-popping Wilson River near Portland, (this is one of those stories in which the environment is a character) tell the story. When it looks this easy, you know it was hard work indeed.

Although the cinematography is stunning, the producer says it’s still a work in progress, and she allowed it to be shown as a thank-you to Oregon. The final version will reportedly be yet more beautiful.

To read the rest of Varble’s reviews, please click here.

Also appearing at the Ashland Independent Film Festival is “Greenlit”, the behind-the-scenes documentary of The River Why‘s attempt to “green” the film production. The 12:00 noon April 10th showing of “Greenlit” will be followed by a panel discussion including “Greenlit” director Bailey and “River Why” green consultant Lauren Selman. Bill Vabler suggests “The ideal would be to see ‘[The] River Why,’ then see ‘Greenlit,’ then stay for the discussion.” We agree, Bill!

You can catch The River Why at 12:00noon on April 9th and 6:00pm April 10th. Get your tickets here.

The Ashland Independent Film Festival runs Thursday, April 8, through Monday, April 12, at the Varsity Theatre and other Ashland locations with 81 films, plus parties, awards and special events. Most showings are $10. See www.ashlandfilm.org for more information.

UPDATE: While you’re at the AIFF, here are a few other events you may enjoy:

  • “Reel Women” Panel with Producer Kristi Denton Cohen: 10:30am, April 10, 2010.
  • “It Ain’t Easy Being Green” Panel, following the screening of “Greenlit“, which documents The River Why’s attempt to “green” its film production: Screening starts at 12:00noon, April 10, 2010

Both events listed here: http://www.ashlandfilm.org/FilmBlocks.asp?Date=4/10/2010&clicktime=23:14:29

April 2, 2010

Who said fishermen don’t have a sense of humor?

I saw a vast array of April Fool’s jokes played out on Facebook and Twitter yesterday–married friends changing their status to “single”, then being caught by their wives; HootSuite announcing that is was going to start beta testing a 3D version–but one of my favorites was a blog post by Tom Chandler on The Trout Underground: Fly Fishing’s Independent Voice. Chandler seemed to take a page out of The Onion on April 1, 2010 when he wrote “Underground Breaking News: Even Trout Think Fly Fishing’s Whole ‘How To’ Genre Way, Way Overdone“.

The seemingly endless desire on the part of fly fishermen for detailed “how-to” fly fishing articles has riled the world’s trout, whose contempt for anglers has reached a boiling point.

“You’d think that sooner or later they’d get it, and just get their *sses out the door and go fly fishing,” said one Rainbow Trout, who refused to identify his location out of fear that “every noob with a bobbicator would show up and start setting the hook at the end of each drift – just like they’d read”…

Chandler goes on to “interview” more trout, but a Westslope Cutthroat trout sums it up best when he said,  “Do you sad, pathetic losers really need an article outlining strategies for untangling your leader?… I’m surprised Dr. Seuss isn’t fly fishing’s leading writer,” before getting distracted by something shiny and swimming off.

To read more of Chandler’s post, please visit The Trout Underground.

And while you’re in the fishing mood, be sure you get your tickets to The River Why:

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  Contact: Kristi Denton Cohen c/o Peloton Productions
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