Your new movie The
Second Age of Aquarius - in a few words, what is it about?
It’s
about Alberta Stevens, a computer programmer and AI creator, who brings
back a 1960s rock star, Russell Aquarius, from the afterlife as a very
lifelike avatar. Think: The Odd Couple meets This is Spinal Tap!
The
Second Age of Aquarius is based on a short story of yours - so how
closely did you stick to that story, and was it always intended to be
adapted to the screen?
My
co-screenwriter and longtime friend Darren Smith and I collaborated on a
book of rock music-related short stories in 2015 called Sex Death Rock N
Roll. The story is called Fandom/Phantom, and we tag-teamed it—I wrote
the chapters from Alberta’s point of view and Darren wrote Russell’s.
I always thought it was a fun story but it was written just to “be”…
with nothing else in mind. A few years later, I got to think how it could
be a fun, fairly easy-and-cheap film to make. I followed the same formula
as my other features—limited locations, seven-day shoot—and we made it
happen.
Now
we have another book: Sex Death Rock N Roll 2: The Russell Aquarius
Edition. It delves into the backstories of all the characters in the
movie. We are blessed with some actors who are also writers, so Helen’s
story is written by Nancy Long, Sid’s story is written by Martin Olson,
and Brooke Lewis Bellas [Brooke
Lewis Bellas interview - click here] and I collaborated on Tawny’s tale.
What were your sources of
inspiration for The
Second Age of Aquarius as well as for the story it's based on? I’ve
always been a huge fan of guitar-driven classic rock and
singer-songwriters of the 60s and 70s. I also like quirky 80s comedies
like Weird Science and
Mannequin—but both of those movies center on guys
bringing their crushes to life so I wanted to flip the genders. Do
talk about your writing partner Darren Smith, and what was your
collaboration like? He’s
a great collaborator. I first met him in 2008 on the set of his film,
Repo! The Genetic Opera and we hit it off immediately. He and his wife,
Nancy Long, became good friends of mine. Darren and I have collaborated on
several projects, including a short film (Not With My Daughter) and other
books (the Rock & Roll Nightmares series), but The
Second Age of Aquarius is the first time I’ve worked with Nancy and it won’t be the
last—she’s such an asset to have on the set. She’s up for
anything… she even took on the role of the kooky landlady, Helen, after
the actress originally cast had to drop out.

Staci (center) with Michael Ursu and Christina
Jacquelyn Calph |
Quite honestly, if you could, which
deceased rockstar would you bring back to life? While
I am more a fan of Jim Morrison, I think he might be a little too much
like Russell! So, I’ll opt for Jimi Hendrix. He was, by all accounts, a
really nice person in addition to being insanely talented and innovative. What can
you tell us about The
Second Age of Aquarius' brand of humour? It’s
irreverent, dark humor with a lot of inside stuff for rock music fans. A few
words about your overall directorial approach to your story at hand? Since
time is money and we didn’t have a lot of both, I had to rely on the
cast to already be close to the characters naturally—therefore, not a
lot of constant “directing” was necessary. So, a lot of the directing
was in the casting. Since the story does take place mainly inside
Alberta’s apartment, it was important to at least keep the actors moving
around. You
of course also have to talk about the music in your movie for a bit!
I
absolutely love what Darren did in writing period-correct songs for
Russell Aquarius—and of course, Michael Ursu’s vocals are spot-on [Michael
Ursu interview - click here].
Darren is a fantastic songwriter and lyricist. He co-wrote all of the
songs in Repo! The Genetic Opera and I loved that soundtrack… I played
the hell out of it when it came out. I hope his fans will do the same with
The
Second Age of Aquarius EP (which is called Lysergic
Astrologies). The
songs are not only funny and lively, but they really do feel like they
could have come out in the swinging 60s—Darren even used period
instruments and recording techniques to capture the feel of acid rock
music.
Brooke Lewis Bellas
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Do
talk about The
Second Age of Aquarius' cast, and why exactly these people?
As
I mentioned above, casting is key. Christina Calph [Christina
Jacquelyn Calph interview - click here], who plays Alberta, is
beautiful but it’s easy to believe she could be an indoorsy computer
programmer. She brings intelligence and emotional reality to the
character, who is mourning the loss of her grandmother and grappling with
agoraphobia.
Michael Ursu is what I call a unicorn… he’s not only
believable as a 60s-era rock star (no tattoos… they didn’t have any
back then), he sings and plays guitar, and is an excellent comedic actor
who is up for absolutely anything (his wardrobe mostly consisted of
tie-dye underwear).
Brooke
Lewis Bellas’ role was originally written as a voiceover but after she
was cast we had fun bringing her to life onscreen as Alberta’s rocker
mom who is stuck in the 80s and is from New Jersey (the home of Bon Jovi).
Martin Olson is famous in the animation world (he won an Emmy for Phinneas
and Ferb), and I just happened to meet him at a party when I was casting…
he’s a hilarious and such a larger-than-life personality. Even though
he’s not an actor, I thought he’d be perfect as Russell’s manager,
Sid… and he is! Keeshan Giles is an excellent comedic actor and he
brought so much to a small role and made it his own. Richard Trejo, our
DP, is multi-talented and I’d seen his acting in a horror short before,
so he was perfect as Julio. And Nancy Long was awesome as Helen—the pink
hair curlers are the icing on the cake!
What
can you tell us about the shoot as such, and the on-set atmosphere?
It
was a weeklong whirlwind! Thank goodness for my first AD, Jacob
Rachinski, line producer Nancy Long, and DP Richard Trejo—they all
understood the timeframe and helped keep everything on track. The actors
all came with their A-games and we got it done. We had a couple of extra
days to shoot the end-credits montage scenes. The
$64-question of course, where can The
Second Age of Aquarius be seen? It
is on Amazon Prime, iTunes, AppleTV, YouTube, Vimeo, Xbox, and Vudu. Anything you can
tell us about audience and critical reception of The
Second Age of Aquarius yet? It’s
only been seen by relatively few people—it did win some awards at the
ZedFest Film Festival—so I’m looking to see if audiences get it or
not. It’s not for everyone, but I think people who love the same things
that Darren and I do will really “dig it” (as Russell would say). Any future projects
you'd like to share?
I’m
currently writing the non-fiction edition of Rock & Roll
Nightmares.
The series has three fiction books right now, so this is a bit of a
departure. It’s basically a true crime book even though there are also
stories of plane crashes, suicides, overdoses, and of course, the famous
27 Club. The research is fascinating! It’s like the infamous Kenneth
Anger book Hollywood Babylon but for rock music fans. Your/your movie's website, social
media, whatever else? www.SecondAgeOfAquarius.com
– we have the trailer and music videos there, but a lot of other fun
tidbits and links to the social media. Thanks for
the interview!
Thanks
for the great questions and review!
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