Photo by Angie Baan Photo by Angle Baan At:4 4it Skeleton Factory publicist Carolyn Krieger-Cohen and husband, Jason Cohen, of West Bloomfield doubled as extras on Little Red Devil. for their performance of The Shadow Box, in which Eric played one of the lead characters. Eric, who in addition to being an extra in Little Red Devil also has a small speaking role, hopes to pursue a career behind the camera as a writer in the entertainment industry. The Gildenbergs have been members of Congregation Shaarey Zedek of Oakland County for 17 years. Recently, Alan Gildenberg left his position as a stockbroker to become an independent financial adviser as well as a business consultant to the Skeleton Factory on business matters. Both Alan and Todd Brunswick are now working for their wives, a fact they acknowledge with a laugh, but not a hint of embar- rassment. Finding Financing The Brunswicks began making movies on a shoestring budget, aware they had to take a leap of faith to pursue lives as filmmakers outside Hollywood and still make a living. Todd Brunswick recalls how filmmaker friends, those who have yet to get a movie off the ground, marvel at their output. You must be working 20 hours a week, they say, with Todd retorting, "Try 20 hours a day!" "Instead of trying to get it all right before doing that first one" he says, "we were just putting the whole process out there and were evolving with each film. For one of the scenes in Little Red Devil, the Gildenbergs and other background performers gathered at Club Confidential, a deco-style nightclub in downtown Detroit. "Each one was getting bigger and bet- ter." Now with financial backing from the Gildenberg family (including Alan's brother Stuart, a physician, and his wife, Suzanne), the Skeleton Factory is prepar- ing a slate of films and planning joint projects with Southfield native Warren Zide, the powerhouse producer of the American Pie and Final Destination series who launched FlipZide Studios. "Everyone's trying to take it to the next level," explains Alan Gildenberg. "We're going to set up our next year and then decide how we're going to raise money. We've had a lot of offers to put money into this, and if you have a huge success, and if you're making money for investors, more people want to get involved with it." In addition to the Gildenberg family, investors in Little Red Devil include Dr. David and Jolie Altman of Birmingham (brother and sister-in-law of Suzanne Gildenberg) and Dr. Jeffrey Tamaroff of West Bloomfield, a neighbor of Alan and Arlene Gildenberg. Everyone has high hopes for Little Red Devil, which was shot for under $1 million on high-definition digital video. (Precinct 13 Entertainment, a preemi- nent FX company based in Ohio, will be handling the special effects. After post- production, the Skeleton Factory will be meeting with sales agents and distributors to plan a theatrical release.) The film, which may have a different title by the time it hits movie screens, has the potential to go beyond the core audi- ence already familiar with the Brunswicks' films, according to Daniel Baldwin. "If they do this right:' says Baldwin, "and they get the right music involved, this could be one of those little films that makes a lot more money than they think. Everyone wants to make The Blair Witch Project, but certainly this film could get an art-house release. "This could be one of those things that makes $6, $10, $15 million. From my mouth to God's ears." "They're really into the genre of horror:' adds James Russo, the Devil's right-hand man, "but with a sardonic quality, a bit of humor mixed in, rather than playing it hot and heavy." Hot For Horror Horror films don't have to reinvent the genre every time, explains Eric Levin, only display some originality to garner fans. The Bloomfield Hills native loves hor- ror movies of all kinds, and as director of publicity and promotions in Chicago for Terry Hines & Associates (one of the major film publicity firms in the coun- try), he's responsible for getting the word out on movies like Pan's Labyrinth, made by one of Tommy Brunswick's favorite filmmakers, Guillermo del Toro. Demonstrating the potential for the genre, Pan's Labyrinth, which combines fantasy and supernatural elements with the hor- rors of the Spanish Civil War, recently won three Academy Awards. There has been a major resurgence of horror films in the past decade, and genre directors like Rob Zombie and Eli Roth have been dubbed the Splat Pack. Low-budget horror films now routinely top the U.S. box office, and since this is a genre that translates well around the world (unlike comedies), overseas profits are substantial. The success of films like Saw, 28 Days Later, Hostel and The Descent demonstrates that a clever take on famil- iar themes draws audiences to theaters in large numbers. And there's no stigma attached if a horror film is a remake, doesn't have a big name cast or comes out direct to DVD. Creativity is what matters most to horror fans, explains Levin, and the genre always needs fresh blood. "It taps into something;' Levin says. "Everyone likes being scared. Everyone goes to the movies to feel something, and horror movies definitely provide that. When you sit there, and you know you're going to jump, regardless of how good or bad it is, it still gets you, and people love that. You could tell the same ghost story a thousand times, and I'm still buying a ticket." LI March 8 2007 39