Friends from childhood, the star and director of the unsettling Slamdance satire about a working actor driven to madness when his phone doesn't ring talk about the inspiration of the Mekas brothers and doing the limbo of show business.
The writer/director of the drama that took home this year's top prize at Slamdance talks about letting reality spill into his story of an African-American man whose life takes a turn for the worst as he's trying to put himself on the right track.
Andrew Edison's raucous debut is clearly the work of immature kids who may or may not have even graduated with GEDs, but that's why it's great.