A documentary filmmaker granted access
to the death Star to film a short has been unmasked as rebel
filmmaker Darryl Gold and detained for questioning. Imperial
Security Officer Pasteur Iztion announced that the Empire has
file inches thick on Gold's "credits".
"Darryl Gold is a film maker and veteran
of "New" media," read Iztion. "He is a skilled
artist in many digital environments and has created content for
and authored numerous multimedia web sites and CD-Roms. His first
award was the "1985 Video Culture Festival Award" for
best home video. He wowed the international jury by plugging
a rented VHS recorder into the back of an apple computer and
playing video games to music."
Iztion continued. "Darryl
has worked as an wasted-genius-visual-effects-animator on a few
TV series including Gene Roddenberry's Earth: Final Conflict
and Invincible. He is also the creator of the underground video
cult favorite 'High Tech Noon' (www.darrylgold.com/demo) which
played the Fantasia 99 Festival in Montreal and won the prestigious
"Magic Bunny Award" at the Kingston Light Plays Tricks
Film Festival."
Imperial Spokesman Admiral Iko
read a brief, prepared statement. "We are shocked and dismayed
at the unprecedented access we have granted Mr. Gold to classified
Death Star stuff. His recreations of our space station through
green screen technology, his home computer and the help of talented
rebel friends has allowed him to lovingly poke fun at life on
the Death Star during a very stressful time.
Mr. Gold's film, Death Star Repairmen
, is a short film about two Imperial handymen trying to fix a
drink machine on the Death Star. During shooting, their work
is suddenly complicated when those pesky rebels attack the station.
Our heroes would love to kick some rebel keysters but they're
not qualified to do anything except fix the machine...
Darryl Gold's most recent acts
of espionage embrace the mediums of Digital Video and Flash animation.
Darryl's short "Hello My Name is Jack Valenti" and
co-production of "The Milkman Cometh" have played to
rave reviews at Karaoke parlors and big loud parties, shocking
horrifying all present. His collaborative, multimedia productions,
"Visa Las Vegas" and "Aloha Dixon And Deane"
have recently played to sold out houses. His animated short "Hacky
Holidays" was selected for the 2001 Cabbagetown Short Film
and Video Festival but didn't win best comedy because, in his
own words, it wasn't gay enough.
Mr. Gold will held for questioning
indefinitely unless the Empire finds it can use him as a bargaining
chip to lure Luke Skywalker into the Emperor's grasp.
END TRANSMISSION
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