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Aesha Waks

News

Aesha Waks

Top Three Parties: Rock Generation, Socialites in Sunglasses, Summer Fridays
Vf Daily’s picks for the top three parties around the globe last night. Rock Generation. Liam McMullan at the Maritime Hotel’s Hiro Ballroom, on June 24, 2009. From PatrickMcMullan.com. Who: The legendary serial rock climber Bebe Buell (who inspired Kate Hudson’s Penny Lane character in the movie Almost Famous), Buell’s daughter Liv Tyler (Liv’s dad, Steven Tyler, was not in attendance), social scene-ster Liam McMullan (Patrick’s kid) on the guitar, Liam’s wife-to-be, Aesha Waks, on the mic, rock ’n’ roll photographers Bob Gruen, Mick Rock, and a lot of flashbulbs. Where: The Maritime Hotel’s Hiro Ballroom, New York City. Why: Because the legendary Buell was celebrating her single “Air Kisses for the Masses,” which will appear on a forthcoming record this fall. Talking Point: Liam’s likeness to Robert Pattinson. Does anyone agree?...
See full article at Vanity Fair
  • 6/25/2009
  • Vanity Fair
A Packing Suburbia
This extremely low-budget indie feature (made for $60,000, the publicity notes breathlessly inform us) was actually filmed several years ago, but the current epidemic of school shootings has unfortunately given it a cutting-edge immediacy. The tale of a suburban youth and his descent into gun violence, "A Packing Suburbia" is more notable for its sociological relevance than its cinematic qualities, which are fairly minimal. The film is playing an exclusive theatrical engagement at New York's Regal Cinema Battery Park.

Written and directed by Stephen J. Szkarski, the melodramatic tale concerns the troubles of James Maxwell (Thomas Brandise), a teenager forced to move with his single mother into a undesirable Long Island, N.Y., neighborhood after she undergoes a nasty divorce. While he quickly finds a new girlfriend, Celeste (Aesha Waks), James just as quickly runs afoul of a gang of local toughs, led by Iris (Mariana Carreno), a Latina with a particular fondness for brutality. Iris invites James to join her gang, but when he demurs, she vows revenge, leading to the rape and murder of Celeste.

James, who's now in possession of a gun he found while walking home from school, manages to learn how to use it via some handy instructions found on the Internet (another of the film's areas of topicality) and, like Charles Bronson in "Death Wish", quickly sets out on a course of revenge. His transformation from sensitive youth to gun-wielding vigilante is the film's primary -- and most awkward -- dramatic device.

Unfortunately, the screenplay's heavy-handedness, the stilted direction and the less-than-assured performances diminish the impact of the film's valuable message. It doesn't help that the filmmaker, in the process of making a film supposedly decrying violence, has infused it with enough gory and sadistic brutality to fuel a dozen more supposedly exploitative teen thrillers.

A PACKING SUBURBIA

Cinema Esperanza

Director/screenwriter/executive producer: Stephen J. Szklarski

Producer: Liz Soldo

Film editor: Steve Oakley

Color/stereo

Cast:

James Maxwell: Thomas Brandise

Mrs. Maxwell: Molly Castelloe

Celeste Davis: Aesha Waks

Iris: Mariana Carreno

Running time -- 100 minutes

No MPAA rating...
  • 7/8/2004
  • The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
A Packing Suburbia
This extremely low-budget indie feature (made for $60,000, the publicity notes breathlessly inform us) was actually filmed several years ago, but the current epidemic of school shootings has unfortunately given it a cutting-edge immediacy. The tale of a suburban youth and his descent into gun violence, "A Packing Suburbia" is more notable for its sociological relevance than its cinematic qualities, which are fairly minimal. The film is playing an exclusive theatrical engagement at New York's Regal Cinema Battery Park.

Written and directed by Stephen J. Szkarski, the melodramatic tale concerns the troubles of James Maxwell (Thomas Brandise), a teenager forced to move with his single mother into a undesirable Long Island, N.Y., neighborhood after she undergoes a nasty divorce. While he quickly finds a new girlfriend, Celeste (Aesha Waks), James just as quickly runs afoul of a gang of local toughs, led by Iris (Mariana Carreno), a Latina with a particular fondness for brutality. Iris invites James to join her gang, but when he demurs, she vows revenge, leading to the rape and murder of Celeste.

James, who's now in possession of a gun he found while walking home from school, manages to learn how to use it via some handy instructions found on the Internet (another of the film's areas of topicality) and, like Charles Bronson in "Death Wish", quickly sets out on a course of revenge. His transformation from sensitive youth to gun-wielding vigilante is the film's primary -- and most awkward -- dramatic device.

Unfortunately, the screenplay's heavy-handedness, the stilted direction and the less-than-assured performances diminish the impact of the film's valuable message. It doesn't help that the filmmaker, in the process of making a film supposedly decrying violence, has infused it with enough gory and sadistic brutality to fuel a dozen more supposedly exploitative teen thrillers.

A PACKING SUBURBIA

Cinema Esperanza

Director/screenwriter/executive producer: Stephen J. Szklarski

Producer: Liz Soldo

Film editor: Steve Oakley

Color/stereo

Cast:

James Maxwell: Thomas Brandise

Mrs. Maxwell: Molly Castelloe

Celeste Davis: Aesha Waks

Iris: Mariana Carreno

Running time -- 100 minutes

No MPAA rating...
  • 6/7/2001
  • The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
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