Arts & Entertainment ON V HE COV R Film Family Photos by Angie Baan Left: Posing together on the set of Little Red Devil are, left to right, lead actor Jim Lewis of Berkley, Skeleton Factory co-owner and Little Red Devil director Tommy Brunswick of Milford, actor James Russo, Skeleton Factory financial adviser and business consultant Alan Gildenberg, Skeleton Factory co-owner Arlene Gildenberg, actor Daniel Baldwin and Little Red Devil bit player Eric Gildenberg. The Gildenbergs of West Bloomfield immerse themselves in the world of indie flicks. Serena Donadoni Special to the Jewish News 0 n one of the coldest nights of a frigid February, Arlene Gildenberg and her family left the warmth of their West Bloomfield home and headed to downtown Detroit to be extras in the indie horror film Little Red Devil, directed by Tommy Brunswick, Arlene's partner in the Metro Detroit- based film production company the Skeleton Factory. The Gildenbergs and other background performers gathered at Club Confidential, a deco-style nightclub located in the lower level of a small, ornate building on Congress and Shelby. In sharp contrast to the members of the film's crew, who were wearing jeans, T-shirts and very comfortable shoes while busily setting up the complicated scene that would end their 14-hour shooting day, the extras were wide-eyed and fresh, eagerly slipping into their assigned roles and nonchalantly lounging in the white-cushioned booths. Clad in stylish formal wear — women in their best little black dresses, the men in sleek dark suits — they were portray- ing the well-heeled attendees of a chic cocktail party hosted by Luc (short for Lucifer) and his henchman, Mr. Trundle. The actors playing Luc and Trundle were, respectively, Daniel Baldwin (John Carpenter's Vampires) and James Russo (Dangerous Game), two of the perform- ers who came from Los Angeles to join the Michigan-based cast for the 12-day shoot. For the Gildenbergs — Arlene, her hus- band Alan and 18-year-old son Eric — the evening spent at Club Confidential is one to savor, a taste of Hollywood glamour that's rarely afforded the financial partners in independent film productions. It was also an on-camera celebration of where the year-old Skeleton Factory is headed: With larger budgets and name actors, they aim to make the transition from direct-to- video releases to genre movies ready for the multiplex. Hollywood Actors What no one anticipated is just how much attention the Skeleton Factory's latest production would garner. The day this party scene was shot marked the tipping point, when Little Red Devil went from being a locally produced horror film to the refuge for "fugitive actor" Daniel Baldwin after a story in the Detroit Free Press was picked up by the gossip Web site TMZ and began appearing in publications all over the country. The Skeleton Factory's decision-makers knew all about Baldwin's well-documented legal troubles (three arrests in 2006), but Todd Brunswick — Tommy's husband and creative partner — asserts that Baldwin was never seen as a liability. So when a warrant was issued for Baldwin, for failure to appear at a Newport Beach, Calif., court on a felony charge of stealing a friend's car (which Baldwin insists was based on a misunderstand- ing), the tightly knit cast and crew closed ranks. The Daniel Baldwin they saw was a stalwart professional, an underrated per- former who was getting his life together. Nothing else mattered. As publicist Carolyn Krieger-Cohen of West Bloomfield dealt with an onslaught of press interest, and was amazed by the Film Family on page 38 March 8 2007 37