The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, October 27, 1999 - 9 ABC bends for Lue, BochCol he Washington Post The scampering of little mouse bet you heard late last week was the o d of execs from Disney's ABC c rk beating a hasty retreat after etting publicly whipped by ollywood's biggest baddest TV cat, teven Bochco. The Mouse House network nnounced on Friday that, upon fur- ier consideration, it had decided to ive Bochco's "NYPD Blue" its old 'uesday 10 p.m. time period after 11, though it won't happen until Jan. t, after telling Bochco the pre- ious week that his show probably ouldn't return to its berth at all. cens the network wanted to contin- e giving that slot to Sela Ward's dat- tgdratta, "Once and Again," which st happens to be produced and wned by Disney. "Once" has been irdng there since the season's start, ut' ABC had promised Bochco that Once" would bow out when "Blue" e ed on Nov. 9. Instead it looked the network was going to give referential treatment to the show it wned. DBochco, who's nobody's fool, went ght back to his plush digs over at Qth Century Fox and started calling V critics and reporters in key mar- eis who are fans of his cop show. his led to a spate of news reports xer several days slamming corpo- itoevil ABC for doing "NYPD Clue" fans wrong in the name of ver- cal integration. "I'm not thumping my chest - 'ujust relieved that we got a better suit than we had reason to think we crc going to before," said Bochco iaphone news conference arranged astily by his publicist shortly after BC. made its about-face Friday egnipg. modestly shared credit for the a' saying that it was "in no small rt hanks to you guys and the way which you wrote about this stuff." ABC's West Coast co-chairman u Bloomberg insisted Friday that is '.was the plan from the begin- ng director hits it ig with 'Goat on Fire' Dennis Franz is more than 'Blue' with ABC. him about any "plan." "They didn't say anything about anything," Bochco told his fan club -er, the critics and reporters. "They said they were not presenting us with a fait accompli, but they refused to share with us any other scenarios, although they said they had one in mind. When I asked what it was, they wouldn't divulge it." The scenario now is to continue running "Once and Again" in the Tuesday time slot through Dec. 28. When the pro football season ends and ABC's Monday night opens up, "Once" will move to Mondays at 10) p.m., debuting there on Jan. 24. "Once" has been steadily shedding viewers since its debut, while CBS's "Judging Amy" in the same time slot has been adding them. ABC dismiss- es the decline, saying the show was particularly hard hit by the baseball playoffs. Though Bochco said the new plan was only the second-best thing he could've hoped for - the first being the return of "Blue" to the Tuesday slot on Nov. 9 as originally planned - he sounded pleased as a cat with fresh mouse on its breath. That's because, with 22 episodes ordered and a January start, "NYPD Blue" won't have to air a single rerun this season. And "NYPD Blue"'s rerun ratings stink to high heaven. Rerun-less, "Blue" blazes. Take last season, for example. From its season debut until the end of the May sweeps race, when the season officially wrapped, "Blue" averaged 14.5 million viewers - its lowest season average ever -- and ranked No. 15. Take out the in-season reruns, and "Blue" averaged 16 mil- lion viewers and was a Top 10 show. 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'I was lying on the floor of my 8-by- 10-foot apartment in Venice and I said, 'I guess I'm going back to the Lobster Dock,"' the 25-year-old Jordan remem- bers telling Derick Martini, who stars with his brother Steven in Jordan's ultralow-budget, "Goat on Fire and Smiling Fish." Moments later, the Toronto International Film Festival called: Jordan's first feature, a sweet tale of two brothers finding love in Los Angeles, was in. Suddenly, this 540,000 movie that producer's rep Jeff Dowd calls "not the next 'Blair Witch,' but 'Blair Witch McMullen"' was off and running. First, though, Jordan and the Martini brothers had to race to get a 35mm print to show in Toronto in.early September. There, the film won standing ovations and the coveted audience Discovery Award, and earned rave reviews from critic Roger Ebert ("remarkable") and Daily Variety ("boasts .., date-movie appeal"). Back-to-back screenings for film distributors on both coasts sent the three friends on two transcontinental flights in four days. There's been a tidal wave of phone calls from agents who couldn't be bothered before, numerous power breakfasts and nearly no sleep. "Struggling in Hollywood is insane -- people not taking your calls, people not returning your calls. And all of a sudden there's this heat that we're in now," said Jordan, looking happy but weary. "Evervbody wants to meet you ... All of a sudden they're your best friends, though they weren't your best friends three weeks ago when you were trying to show them a (rough) copy of your film" No matter how cynical the movie industry can sometimes appear, the story of "Goat on Fire and Smiling Fish" proves that this town can still muster genuine excitement for a fresh discovery. But it also proves something else: While a huge independent phenomenon such as the micro-budgeted "The Blair Witch Project" is still possible, a lot has changed in the four years since Ed Burns' debut independent feature, "The Brothers McMullen," found its niche. In fact, some people say it's harder than ever to get great little movies to break through. "Unfortunately, in today's market- place, the demands on theaters do not support a smaller film like ('Goat on Fire') that has to sit in a theater and grow and grow, said Tony Safford, a senior vice president of acquisitions at 20th Centurv Fox, one of several distributors that opted not to bid on Jordan's film. "It's a wonderfully sweet film. But its hard to get the proper theater support to sustain that growth." Even if acquired cheaply, other indus- try insiders explained, it can take a mini- mum of S2 million to merely launch a movie, let alone make it stand out in a crowded field. That reasoning meant that despite the accolades, the ovations and the raves, there has been no frenzied bidding war for "Goat on Fire and Smiling Fish" -- and not only because of its unwieldy title (drawn from the nicknames bestowed on the film's two main characters by their Native American grandma). But Dowd, the film's inimitable pro- moter (who was immortalized as "The Dude" in Joel and Ethan Coen's film "The Big Lebowski"), insists "Goat on Fire" is the kind of film that can develop a following from the grass-roots up. "We're going to be like a touring rock band, screening this film for free for thousands of people to build word-of- mouth, and taking these four guys on the road," Dowd said, waving a beefy hand toward the film's director, the two stars and the movie's secret weapon: 74-year- old Bill Henderson, a veteran character actor who plays a retired motion picture soundman who counsels one of the brothers on love and life with a grace that Ebert called "unforgettable." Dowd thinks the filmmakers' real-life friendship adds to the movie's mar- ketability much like Ben Afileck and Matt Danon's buddy story helped sell "Good Will Hunting." Money for the production was ridicu- lously tight. For months, the filmmakers worked off a 400-page handwritten script (they had no computer) and jok- ingly dubbed themselves Caveman Productions. When shooting in nine Los Angeles-area locations over 12 days, the filmmakers begged and borrowed to assemble the necessary equipment to get the movie made. When that didn't work, they tried something else: lobster. "Mv family has this restaurant, exit 9 off the Belt Parkway in Brooklyn. So I'd say, 'I don't have any money, but do you like seafood'?"' Jordan said, recalling how he'd get his dad to send the crus- taceans via overnight mail. "It was amazing," recalled Derick Martini. "When we were at our worst, no money, and something had to be done, bring in the lobster!" For Henderson, it was the script - not the garlic butter - that drew him to the project. "Somehow I knew who that character was when I started reading it,: said the gravelly-voiced actor and jaz_ musician, who clearly got a kick out of working with his yOuthful cohorts. "I have ties older than all these guys" Since the Toronto whirlwind, which Henderson likened to being in the wake of a comet, everyone's egos are healthier, but their creature comforts are about the same. During one of the screenings for distributors last month, Steven Martini had his car impounded for nonpayment of parking tickets. The filmmakers are planning their next project (a dark family comedy set in Long Island), so money remains perpet- ually scarce. For the next few months, they'll be occupied with finishing a final print of "Goat on Fire," which was shot on super lItm, and with crossing their fingers that it will be accepted to the Sundance Film Festival, held in January That job at the Lobster Dock, it seems, will have to wait Director Kevin Jordan (top left) scored well at this year's Toronto Film I Call today! Fe d Trp i ash!!!1 Spring Break 2000 StudentCit .com is look- for Highly Motivated tudents to promote Spring Break 2000! Organize a small group and travel FREE!!! Top campus reps can earn Free Trip & over $10,000! Choose: Cancun, Jamaica or Nassau! Book Trips On-Line Log-In and Win Free Stuff. g.StudentCity.conm 1-80o-29S-1443