SalemNews.com, Salem, MA

Lifestyle

July 21, 2007

Halloween canceled? It's all in the city's new movie

SALEM - Mayor Kim Driscoll will announce today that Halloween is in danger of being canceled.

Or at least that's what she'll tell an actor playing a TV news reporter this afternoon during the shooting of a seven-minute movie at Salem Common designed to promote the city's new Haunted Passport marketing program.

Halloween is, indeed, safe. But the plot behind the satirical movie, which began shooting yesterday, revolves around the concept that the new passports have been stolen in an attempt to "ruin Halloween."

"We have had one of the worst robberies in the history of Salem," the mayor tells a news reporter from the fictitious WSLM-TV. "Our Haunted Passports are missing."

"Mayor Driscoll," the reporter asks, "is Halloween in danger of being canceled?"

"Yes," Driscoll responds. "Yes, it is."

From there, a group consisting of a psychic, a Sherlock Holmes look-alike, a ditzy teenager and a nerd with a metal detector set out to investigate the missing passports. Their quest takes them to tourist hot spots around Salem: the Friendship, Salem Common, the Waterfront Hotel and Spellbound Tours.

The Haunted Passport program, which the city unveiled two weeks ago, is a $13 card that gives discounts at local shops, restaurants and other tourist destinations. Most of the deals are good through April 30, which local business owners hope will entice tourists to return to Salem during off-peak months.

The challenge now is finding a way to spread the word. Instead of breaking the bank on prime-time TV commercials, King Fish Media, which created Haunted Passport, decided to turn to the Internet. Once the movie is edited, they plan to release it on the video Web site YouTube and send it out through e-mail, hoping it will create a buzz around the new program.

"Since this is year one, we want to keep costs as low as we can," said Nichole Clarke of King Fish Media.

The Internet movie is intended do just that and could potentially reach a larger audience than a 30-second ad on a local TV affiliate.

"Anyone from across the world can see this," said Barry Dodd of The Entertainment Experience, the production company filming the ad. "It's definitely made it easier to reach people."

"It's just another medium to get the message across," Driscoll said. "If you get on (YouTube), it's pretty wide-ranging, from parents with newborn babies posting something to home videos of the Willows Horribles Parade."



Yesterday afternoon, a film crew of two and a cast of about 15 actors took over Cilantro, a Mexican restaurant on Derby Street, to film a scene where a waitress (played by Cilantro owner Esther Marin) suddenly turns into the Grim Reaper. As Dodd's camera rolls, the frightened team on the hunt for the Haunted Passport spring up from the dinner table and run out the front door, onto the sidewalk, leaving startled and confused passers-by wondering what was happening.

"It's a nice opportunity to advertise my place and help the city to run its Haunted Passport program," said Marin, who celebrated her restaurant's sixth anniversary on Wednesday. "I think (the program) is going to bring more business."

Today, the crew will shoot the bulk of the movie, including a scene at Salem Common that will feature dozens of ordinary Salem residents as extras. Driscoll will also make her YouTube debut.

"I'm playing the mayor - a real cameo," Driscoll said. "I've been given a script. I don't have my Screen Actors Guild card, so I won't be getting scale pay, but they've been giving me an outline to work with."

Once shooting wraps up this afternoon, crews will edit the scenes together and add sound and special effects. It's expected to hit the Internet sometime in August.

"It's just a neat way for us to do something a little different this Halloween," Driscoll said, "especially something geared toward raising revenue for the city in a creative way."

nnn

Staff writer Chris Cassidy can be reached at 978-338-2526 or by e-mail at ccassidy@ecnnews.com.

Text Only | Photo Reprints
Lifestyle
  • 5481134SN.jpg Short and snappy John Bonner's film "The Impossible Journey" gives a whole new meaning to the phrase, "You can't get there from here."
    The short movie, which will screen at the Winter Film Festival on Thursday, Feb. 16, tells the story of an 18-mile bicycle ride that Bonner took from his home in Marblehead to Boston.

    February 9, 2012 2 Photos

  • 5496506SN.jpg AN ARABIC MODE Can music solve the Israeli-Palestinian conflict?
    That possibility is being considered by a class at Salem State, which will host the SHARQ Arabic Music Ensemble on Monday, Feb. 13, for a performance and master class that are both open to the public.

    February 9, 2012 1 Photo

  • North Shore Entertainment Calendar Good cause and fundraisers
    DANCING WITH THE STAFF. Thursday, Feb. 9, 7 p.m., Swampscott High School, 200 Essex St., Swampscott. Dancing With the Staff competition will benefit the Swampscott High School Dance Team. $5/advance, $7/at the door. Open to the public. To purchase tickets, contact Coach Danielle Lannon at daniellelannon@gmail.com, or Alexa Baldacci at alexabaldacci@gmail.com.

    February 9, 2012

  • Pet Connection: How to prevent a lost-pet crisis Tonka, a beloved Jack Russell terrier and member of a Salem family, disappeared on Halloween while his owners were giving out treats and getting their kids into costumes for trick-or-treating.
    The devastated parents called the veterinary practice, Animal Control Officer Donald Famico and the Salem police to see if any lost animals had been turned in. Very little sleep was achieved that night. Mom and dad scoured the neighborhood looking for Tonka and contacted everyone they knew to help them find him. They had no idea if Tonka had been lost or stolen. The next morning, their young children were so enraptured with their Halloween candy they did not notice Tonka was missing, and their wise mother got them off to school calmly without distressing them with the bad news. Then she went back about her search.

    February 7, 2012

  • The Buzz Many wish people were more like dogs It seems some people are not dreaming of getting a puppy as a Valentine's Day gift, but rather wishing their human mates were more like a dog. And their dogs are helping them look for mates! According to an American Kennel Club survey:

    February 7, 2012

  • Don't fret over dog park snub: Don't fret over dog park snub Q: I'm trying not to take it personally, but my feelings are hurt. This morning when I showed up at the park where neighborhood dogs and their owners gather every day, there was one woman standing there with her dog, Daisy, a West Highland terrier. Her dog ran over to my dog, greeting us warmly. Daisy's owner was not so sunny. She responded to my bright "good morning" with a question: "Where is everybody?" She made me feel invisible. I felt like saying something nasty to her. Suddenly, my dog group feels like high school. Am I not in the popular crowd?

    February 7, 2012

  • Dear Abby: Savings bond gift matures into mother/daughter battle Dear Abby: I'm 30 years old and have a close relationship with my mother, but something is bothering me. When I was a little girl, my grandmother gave me a U.S. savings bond for my birthday. It has matured to its full value. My mother refuses to give it to me. She said that my grandmother intended it as a wedding gift.

    February 6, 2012

  • North Shore religion news in brief After 40 years of service to the church, the Rev. Canon Jurgen Liias, founding rector of Christ the Redeemer Anglican Church in Danvers, will retire following the 10:30 a.m. service on Sunday, Feb. 5. The Rev. Tim Clayton will be installed as rector of Christ the Redeemer this spring. During the interim, the Rev. Brian Barry will serve as priest-in-charge. There will be a celebration of Liias' ministry on Saturday, April 14, with a luncheon at the Danversport Yacht Club, 161 Elliott St., Danvers. Tickets may be obtained by calling 978-774-3163.

    February 4, 2012

  • North Shore religion calendar Sunday, Feb. 5
    Celebrating Foreign Missions, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., Tabernacle Church, 50 Washington St., Salem. Join church members and guests to celebrate and commemorate the ordaining and commissioning of the first missionaries who left America in 1812 for foreign missions. Speaker: the Rev. Liz Walker, ordained minister and award-winning television journalist. 10 a.m., service, honor church's missionaries from 1812; 1 to 3 p.m., historical artifacts display; 1 to 2:30 p.m., re-enactment of missionary's wife, Ann Haseltine Judson. 978-755-3164 or www.tabernaclechurch.org.

    February 4, 2012

  • 5473234SN.jpg New England Blues Festival returns to Salisbury For some, the blues season ends in September.
    Nick David is working to change that.
    For the third year, David, leader of the blues band Mr. Nick & The Dirty Tricks, is bringing the New England Winter Blues Festival to the Blue Ocean Music Hall in Salisbury. Four bands will perform on Saturday, Feb. 11, beginning at 8 p.m.

    February 3, 2012 3 Photos

NDN Video
Comments Tracker