SexZ Pictures, Eli Cross Celebrate Upload Awards Victory
Sci-fi porn epic wins eight awards including Best Video Feature
By: Mark Kernes
Posted: 01/13/2008
LAS VEGAS - It wasn't as if SexZ Pictures didn't release any good movies
before Corruption, last year's
multi-award winner ... but owner Bo Kenney wanted to brand his studio in a way
that would put it solidly on the map.
"When I
came to the AVN offices after the
show two years ago and talked to Paul [Fishbein, AVN's co-owner], I said, 'Who's a good director? I'm really looking
to upgrade my company's profile'," Kenney recalled. "And he
introduced me to Eli [Cross], and it was just like I sat out there on that
little bench, he pitched Corruption
to me, and after he got done, I said, 'You're hired; let's do the movie.' I
gave him full rein and he just delivered. The story's pretty much the same with
Upload. Afterwards, I just decided to
hire him, bring him on as a full-time employee of the company, and I just let
him do his thing."
But this year's
"thing," which clocks in at just under five hours, took a massive
crew 20 days to shoot (including 12 sex scenes) in multiple locations all over
southern California, months to edit, and barely made it into stores before the
deadline ... and besides Best Video Feature, garnered seven additional awards:
Best Actress-Video (Eva Angelina), Best Supporting Actress-Video (Hillary
Scott), Best Solo Sex Scene (Eva again), Best Screenplay-Video (Cross and Alvin
Edwards), Best Non-Sex Performer (Bryn Pryor, Cross' alter ego), Best Special
Effects and Best DVD Extras.
For those who
don't know, Upload is about a pair of
cyber-cops (Angelina and Derrick Pierce) on the trail
of elite hacker Scott and a deadly computer virus which could wreak havoc on
the world.
"$350,000
is an incredible amount of money for porn," Cross admitted, "but for
what we were trying to do, it actually wasn't a lot of money because we were
basically trying to make a $2 million movie for $350,000, so it was still
really long days and a lot of work."
"The worst
part was post-production," he continued. "We started shooting a month
later than we had originally planned, and that really put us under the gun, and
so Ren Savant and I cut the movie primarily, and it was three months work for
both of us. We knew we were already under the gun, so we started off in crunch
mode, and for me it was three months literally every day, 20 hours a day
minimum that I was cutting and I did not stop. And we came so close to not
making the deadline that people were calling Paul trying to tell him that we
didn't have it in stores. We'd sent in a list of 192 stores that had the movie
to prove that we were eligible, because I literally got on a plane to fly the
hard drive that had the last half of the movie to the authorer on the Sunday
before the deadline; that's how close it came."
But even the
shoot itself had its problems.
"We had
arranged to rent this medical office building up in the Valley for the last
three days of shooting," Cross explained, "and four days before we
got into that location, they pulled the plug on it because they had sold the
building and decided that if the new owners found out they were allowing porn
to be shot there, it could screw up escrow. So we had no idea what we were
going to do... So [art director] Kylie [Ireland] and her crew of four people
built flats, and they built it here at our place; painted it, taped it, set it all
up, dressed it and did that all overnight one night. We went in there the next
day, we shot, and in the middle of the day, they completely redressed that room
so it's an entirely separate room in the movie. And then that night after we
wrapped, they knocked out one wall, put in two more flats, built that last wall
in at the end, put a window in it, repainted the whole thing, redecorated the
whole thing and we came in the next day at noon and shot and that became my
office in the movie, and nobody would ever know that those were sets."
Another location
they lost was a dry lake bed near Palmdale, when the U.S. Bureau of Land
Management wanted them to pay $5,500 to close the entire lake bed to tourists
and also screen off the sex from inadvertent onlookers.
"Of course,
that defeats the purpose of shooting in a dry lake bed in the first place,
because all you can see is sight screens," Cross groused.
Both Cross and
Kenney gave major props to stars Angelina and Scott, with Kenney adding,
"I can't say enough about Hillary; to get Best Female Performer and Best
Actress [for Corruption] last year
and then come back and take a role where she wasn't the star, and to put forth
the type of effort that she did with her character, that's real
professionalism."
AVN congratulates Eli Cross and SexZ Pictures for a job well
done, two years in a row.