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Two of the last three years, Dallas was well-repped by comers who arrived in Utah as hopeful newbies and came back snow-burned vets. In 2004, Shane Carruth, a software engineer, took to Sundance his deadpan, what-the-fuck time-travelogue Primer, which cost him $40,000 to make and transfer from 16mm to 35mm—a pittance to some, an empty bank account and credit card-breaker to most. He returned from Sundance with the fest's most prestigious award, the Grand Jury Drama Prize, the same one given in previous years to the likes of American Splendor, You Can Count on Me, Welcome to the Dollhouse and Blood Simple. Not even Steven Soderbergh's debut sex, lies and videotape—the film that more or less put the fest on the general public's map—received such an honor.
Then, last year, Michael Cain, founder of the Deep Ellum Film Festival, brought his unrelenting, unforgiving, years-in-the-making documentary TV Junkie to Sundance. Cain, who's responsible for bringing the AFI International Film Festival to Dallas beginning this March, assembled the movie with co-director Matt Radecki using thousands of audio and video recordings made by former TV newsman Rick Kirkham, who chronicled the dissolution of his family because of his addiction to drugs and booze. Like Primer, TV Junkie was also feted at the fest: It received a Special Jury Prize and was nominated for the Grand Jury Documentary Prize.
But Carruth and Cain both know too well that being a favorite in the thin air doesn't mean much once you come down to earth. Indeed, even after being referred to in Entertainment Weekly last year as "a mesmerizing documentary trip to hell," only now is TV Junkie getting a release, and it will be on HBO on March 16 as part of the cable channel's semi-regular "Faces of Addiction" series. While that's probably better than a theatrical release—after all, millions watch HBO, where a doc released to theaters is more likely to get a few thousand pairs of eyeballs—it's still been a struggle, Cain says, despite the Utah huzzahs.
"Sundance is something you build up as being so big: 'We're at Sundance. That's it. We're a household name. This is gonna change everything,'" Cain says. "And then you realize, no, unless you're one of, like, 15 movies out of that whole experience, you're gonna be one who continues working on the movie, selling the movie, getting it in other festivals. You still have all these other things to deal with. The hard work starts after Sundance."
Cain says there was talk last year of getting theatrical distribution through Picturehouse, the HBO-New Line Cinema joint venture headed up by former Inwood Theater honcho Bob Berney. But in the end, he says, HBO made a "more generous offer" that also included editing the film into a classroom-friendly DVD that could be used to educate students about the perils of addiction. Indeed, the film will be screened in Albuquerque at the end of March at a National Youth Leadership Council conference, which some 3,000 high-school-age kids are expected to attend.
"But one of the nicest things that came out of Sundance was as soon as I got back, it was like, 'OK, you have a month to get ready to lock down the AFI deal,'" Cain says. "The nice thing that came from the heat of the awards was that a lot of people were like, 'OK, so the AFI deal is suddenly more valid, because Michael's an award-winning Sundance filmmaker, so that means this festival's artistic vision will be solid.' And it was a nice reward for the Deep Ellum team. I've loaned around the award to members of our team, so everyone gets to have it at their place."