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	<title>Observer &#187; GreeneStreet Films&#8217; Buddy System Hits the Jackpot In the Bedroom</title>
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		<title>Observer &#187; GreeneStreet Films&#8217; Buddy System Hits the Jackpot In the Bedroom</title>
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		<title>GreeneStreet Films&#8217; Buddy System Hits the Jackpot In the Bedroom</title>

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		<pubDate>Mon, 21 Jan 2002 00:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
					<link>http://observer.com/2002/01/greenestreet-films-buddy-system-hits-the-jackpot-in-the-bedroom/</link>
			<dc:creator>Rebecca Traister</dc:creator>
				
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		<description><![CDATA[<p>At 10 a.m. on Jan. 10, GreeneStreet Films' co-founder John</p>
<p>Penotti, 37 and bleary-eyed, slathered ketchup on a turkey wrap in the kitchen</p>
<p>of the company's Tribeca office. Titus, his yellow Labrador retriever, tracked</p>
<p>the sandwich's every move.</p>
<p> Mr. Penotti reached for a</p>
<p>baggie filled with white powder. "In a film office 10 years ago, this would</p>
<p>have been a baggie full of cocaine," he said. "Now it's vanilla Coffeemate."</p>
<p> On the counter was a</p>
<p>copy of Variety , which carried a</p>
<p>full-page "For Your Consideration" Oscar ad for In The Bedroom, the first movie to which GreeneStreet Films gave a green</p>
<p>light.</p>
<p> "We have to change our logo," Mr. Penotti said. He was focusing</p>
<p>on the minuscule white square at the bottom of the ad. Standing near him was</p>
<p>his partner, Fisher Stevens, who showed up in the kitchen.</p>
<p> "They shrunk ours," said Mr. Stevens. Mr. Stevens, who is also an</p>
<p>actor- Short Circuit, Reversal of Fortune -was recognizably</p>
<p>bespectacled and floppy-haired. "Look how big Miramax's is." Miramax</p>
<p>distributed In the Bedroom . </p>
<p> "Well, Harvey is a big guy," Mr. Penotti said of Miramax's</p>
<p>co-chairman, Harvey Weinstein. "Bigger than us." Then Mr. Penotti and Mr.</p>
<p>Stevens, shoulder to shoulder, copped Hans-and-Franz tough-guy poses.</p>
<p> In The Bedroom is</p>
<p>2002's quality sleeper, what You Can</p>
<p>Count on Me was last year. An honest, brutal family drama starring Sissy</p>
<p>Spacek, Tom Wilkinson and Marisa Tomei, and directed by a first-time feature director,</p>
<p>Todd Field, the film had the pedigree, reviews and general grown-up feel to</p>
<p>take charge of the art-house market in Oscar season. And it has: In the Bedroom has landed near the top</p>
<p>of the winter's short must-see movie list. It has also installed GreeneStreet</p>
<p>Films as a comer in an otherwise disastrous year for New York's film industry.</p>
<p> GreeneStreet has been quietly developing movies and keeping a low</p>
<p>profile since its inception five years ago. "It puts a lot of pressure on us,</p>
<p>and on our investors," Mr. Penotti said. It's a lesson that he and Mr.</p>
<p>Stevens-who has spent a decade living down the hype he earned 12 years ago for</p>
<p>being a promising actor and the</p>
<p>boyfriend of Michelle Pfeiffer-learned well.</p>
<p> "We've been waiting," Mr. Stevens said. "We were waiting for</p>
<p>something good to happen." In the Bedroom -about</p>
<p>the disastrous fallout of an affair between a college student and married</p>
<p>woman-was adapted from Andre Dubus' short story "Killings" by Mr. Field. With</p>
<p>Miramax marketing behind it became the small, deeply felt movie of the year.</p>
<p>With astonishing performances by Ms. Spacek, Mr. Wilkinson and Ms. Tomei, each</p>
<p>of whom has a shot at an Academy Award nomination next month, as does Mr. Field</p>
<p>for writing and directing, the movie became the art-house hit of the year.</p>
<p> GreeneStreet suddenly found itself in an extremely hot spotlight.</p>
<p> Which makes sense for a company housed in a converted lighting</p>
<p>factory on Desbrosses Street. GreeneStreet's lofty space is held up by</p>
<p>weathered wood columns and filled with stubbly film-school grads and lithe</p>
<p>assistants. Its two floors of offices are already home to a passel of renters</p>
<p>("buddies" is Mr. Penotti's film-mafia euphemism): writers Jon Robin Baitz and</p>
<p>Frank Pugliese, actor Rob Morrow and actor–director Griffin Dunne. Actor John</p>
<p>Turturro, who had Illuminata</p>
<p>production offices here, said he's considering setting up shop here again, and</p>
<p>Bruce Willis' New York production office is in the building. Matt Dillon will</p>
<p>soon move in.</p>
<p> There's also a P.R. firm (Mara Buxbaum's I/D Public Relations);</p>
<p>Track 9 Recording Studios; Red Scare special effects; Mr. Stevens' Naked Angels</p>
<p>Theater Company; as well as post-production suites and production office space.</p>
<p>All in all, the troupe adds up to a kind of triple-A threat to the Tribeca Film</p>
<p>Center, Robert De Niro's converted coffee-factory Death Star, just three blocks</p>
<p>south-not to mention the unspoken name of Miramax.</p>
<p> The two companies are structured differently. Miramax started out</p>
<p>20 years ago as a distributor, then began making its own pictures. GreeneStreet</p>
<p>produces pictures and gets other companies, such as Miramax, to distribute</p>
<p>them. The two companies have one thing in common, however. They each have a</p>
<p>kind of family, a stable-in Mr. Penotti's terms, "buddies": in-house actors,</p>
<p>writers, producers, flacks, sound– and special-effects teams that function as</p>
<p>an ad-hoc, miniature version of the studio system.</p>
<p> New York, said Mr. Dunne, has "never been a real film community,</p>
<p>like in Los Angeles. So it's nice to have a mini-studio, with a little</p>
<p>commissary." Mr. Dunne directed Lisa</p>
<p>Picard Is Famous , GreeneStreet's first release, a mock-documentary tracking</p>
<p>the burgeoning careers of two starving actors. It was released to warm reviews.</p>
<p>"It was also released on Sept. 14," said Mr. Stevens. "No one saw it."</p>
<p> GreeneStreet's next two films were the Benjamin Bratt vehicle Piñero , which received pretty</p>
<p>spectacular reviews for the actor, and In</p>
<p>the Bedroom .</p>
<p> "It was the first thing we technically committed money to, and it</p>
<p>was after every other studio and every financier had passed," Mr. Penotti said</p>
<p>with a broad grin in one of GreeneStreet's brightly lit conference rooms. Mr.</p>
<p>Penotti had gotten started as a production assistant and assistant director to Sidney Lumet on five films, including</p>
<p>one produced by Mr. Dunne, who also gave Mr. Stevens his first acting role, as</p>
<p>"one of the Jewish kids who's too nerdy to go out with Rosanna Arquette" in</p>
<p>John Sayles' 1983 Baby, It's You .</p>
<p> In those early days, Mr. Stevens was being touted as the Next Big</p>
<p>Thing-an energetic, promising character actor whose Naked Angels theater group</p>
<p>generated conversation. He was also, in either a Woody and Diane or Julia and</p>
<p>Lyle kind of matching, the unlikely beau of Michelle Pfeiffer. But his career</p>
<p>sputtered out sometime after Short</p>
<p>Circuit 2 , and his girlfriend wound up married to Ally McBeal creator David E. Kelley.</p>
<p> "I think I made a lot of mistakes," said Mr. Stevens. "I turned</p>
<p>down jobs, I was trying to be an artist. Now I'm in a place where I feel more</p>
<p>grateful, and respect and appreciate any kind of success."</p>
<p> Mr. Stevens and Mr. Penotti, friends for a decade, founded Madcap</p>
<p>Films in 1996 in tribute to their hero: writer, director and producer Preston</p>
<p>Sturges. "We had a hard time getting people to take us seriously with a name</p>
<p>like Madcap, and the time it was taking to explain the Sturges reference was</p>
<p>just not worth it," said Mr. Penotti.</p>
<p> Madcap shared Sixth Avenue offices with the Shooting Gallery, the</p>
<p>company that made Slingblade and was</p>
<p>a mainstay of New York's independent film world until its ugly 2001 bankruptcy,</p>
<p>which included allegations of dirty bookkeeping by its co-founders.</p>
<p> "It was a very big lesson to us," Mr. Stevens said of the</p>
<p>Shooting Gallery's demise. "We really liked those guys. They tried something</p>
<p>audacious." In early 1997, Madcap moved to an office on Greene Street, where</p>
<p>they changed their name. A year later, they set up shop in the raw Desbrosses</p>
<p>Street space, and began to build GreeneStreet's film center.</p>
<p> The company was originally backed by arts patron and Jones</p>
<p>Apparel Group chief Sidney Kimmel. "He was great for our development phase,"</p>
<p>Mr. Penotti said. Though Mr. Kimmel is no longer a GreeneStreet investor, both</p>
<p>partners were careful to emphasize their good relationship with their original</p>
<p>sugar daddy.</p>
<p> Their investing partners of the past two years, whom Mr. Penotti</p>
<p>and Mr. Stevens described as "extremely private," are Louis Bacon, Christopher</p>
<p>Pia and Michael Garfinkle, three principals from the Moore Capital Management</p>
<p>hedge fund who took personal positions in GreeneStreet. Mr. Bacon, the futures</p>
<p>and currency trader, was in his single days a fixture on New York's club scene,</p>
<p>but has since become increasingly reclusive and increasingly wealthy.</p>
<p> The company has three more films slated for release in 2002.</p>
<p>There's Just a Kiss , a feature</p>
<p>directed by Mr. Stevens, starring Ms. Tomei. It was purchased by Paramount</p>
<p>Classics and will be released this summer. The</p>
<p>Château , starring Paul Rudd and directed by Jesse Peretz (son of New Republic publisher Marty Peretz)</p>
<p>will be distributed by IFC in March. Then there's Swimfan- "We're changing it," Mr. Stevens said grimly of its title - a teen thriller starring Traffic 's Erika Christensen and Bring It On 's Jesse Bradford.</p>
<p> "We didn't want the girl from 90210, "</p>
<p>Mr. Stevens said, dating himself. "Or Buffy, "</p>
<p>Mr. Penotti added quickly. The film was just purchased by 20th Century Fox 2000</p>
<p>and will be released in the summer. </p>
<p> This year, GreeneStreet will go into production on a 70's</p>
<p>coming-of-age film, The Italian , with GreeneStreet tenant Frank</p>
<p>Pugliese directing. And Molly Gunn 's</p>
<p>production offices will soon move in. The film is about an Upper East Side</p>
<p>socialite who takes a job as a nanny to earn the respect of her boyfriend. Mr.</p>
<p>Dillon will star in the GreeneStreet project Tough Guy: The Eddie Maloney Story .</p>
<p> If there's one consistency within the GreeneStreet crew-Ms.</p>
<p>Tomei, Mr. Dillon, Mr. Dunne-it's of being, like Mr. Stevens, hype victims who</p>
<p>never quite lived up to their imagined star potential.</p>
<p> "It's not like we're looking to reinvent people's careers," said</p>
<p>Mr. Penotti, acknowledging that many in the stable have been around the</p>
<p>Hollywood block. "We're just looking for people to work with who are very</p>
<p>talented, and let their work speak for itself.</p>
<p> "These people are artists who have integrity," said Mr.</p>
<p>Stevens-who said that running the company has "killed my acting career." "We've</p>
<p>all done terrible movies, sure … but there is a sense with these artists that</p>
<p>they are not just trying to become stars, and have really struggled to make the</p>
<p>right choices, to do art and make a living. Now hopefully we can provide them</p>
<p>with a place where they can do both."</p>
]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>At 10 a.m. on Jan. 10, GreeneStreet Films' co-founder John</p>
<p>Penotti, 37 and bleary-eyed, slathered ketchup on a turkey wrap in the kitchen</p>
<p>of the company's Tribeca office. Titus, his yellow Labrador retriever, tracked</p>
<p>the sandwich's every move.</p>
<p> Mr. Penotti reached for a</p>
<p>baggie filled with white powder. "In a film office 10 years ago, this would</p>
<p>have been a baggie full of cocaine," he said. "Now it's vanilla Coffeemate."</p>
<p> On the counter was a</p>
<p>copy of Variety , which carried a</p>
<p>full-page "For Your Consideration" Oscar ad for In The Bedroom, the first movie to which GreeneStreet Films gave a green</p>
<p>light.</p>
<p> "We have to change our logo," Mr. Penotti said. He was focusing</p>
<p>on the minuscule white square at the bottom of the ad. Standing near him was</p>
<p>his partner, Fisher Stevens, who showed up in the kitchen.</p>
<p> "They shrunk ours," said Mr. Stevens. Mr. Stevens, who is also an</p>
<p>actor- Short Circuit, Reversal of Fortune -was recognizably</p>
<p>bespectacled and floppy-haired. "Look how big Miramax's is." Miramax</p>
<p>distributed In the Bedroom . </p>
<p> "Well, Harvey is a big guy," Mr. Penotti said of Miramax's</p>
<p>co-chairman, Harvey Weinstein. "Bigger than us." Then Mr. Penotti and Mr.</p>
<p>Stevens, shoulder to shoulder, copped Hans-and-Franz tough-guy poses.</p>
<p> In The Bedroom is</p>
<p>2002's quality sleeper, what You Can</p>
<p>Count on Me was last year. An honest, brutal family drama starring Sissy</p>
<p>Spacek, Tom Wilkinson and Marisa Tomei, and directed by a first-time feature director,</p>
<p>Todd Field, the film had the pedigree, reviews and general grown-up feel to</p>
<p>take charge of the art-house market in Oscar season. And it has: In the Bedroom has landed near the top</p>
<p>of the winter's short must-see movie list. It has also installed GreeneStreet</p>
<p>Films as a comer in an otherwise disastrous year for New York's film industry.</p>
<p> GreeneStreet has been quietly developing movies and keeping a low</p>
<p>profile since its inception five years ago. "It puts a lot of pressure on us,</p>
<p>and on our investors," Mr. Penotti said. It's a lesson that he and Mr.</p>
<p>Stevens-who has spent a decade living down the hype he earned 12 years ago for</p>
<p>being a promising actor and the</p>
<p>boyfriend of Michelle Pfeiffer-learned well.</p>
<p> "We've been waiting," Mr. Stevens said. "We were waiting for</p>
<p>something good to happen." In the Bedroom -about</p>
<p>the disastrous fallout of an affair between a college student and married</p>
<p>woman-was adapted from Andre Dubus' short story "Killings" by Mr. Field. With</p>
<p>Miramax marketing behind it became the small, deeply felt movie of the year.</p>
<p>With astonishing performances by Ms. Spacek, Mr. Wilkinson and Ms. Tomei, each</p>
<p>of whom has a shot at an Academy Award nomination next month, as does Mr. Field</p>
<p>for writing and directing, the movie became the art-house hit of the year.</p>
<p> GreeneStreet suddenly found itself in an extremely hot spotlight.</p>
<p> Which makes sense for a company housed in a converted lighting</p>
<p>factory on Desbrosses Street. GreeneStreet's lofty space is held up by</p>
<p>weathered wood columns and filled with stubbly film-school grads and lithe</p>
<p>assistants. Its two floors of offices are already home to a passel of renters</p>
<p>("buddies" is Mr. Penotti's film-mafia euphemism): writers Jon Robin Baitz and</p>
<p>Frank Pugliese, actor Rob Morrow and actor–director Griffin Dunne. Actor John</p>
<p>Turturro, who had Illuminata</p>
<p>production offices here, said he's considering setting up shop here again, and</p>
<p>Bruce Willis' New York production office is in the building. Matt Dillon will</p>
<p>soon move in.</p>
<p> There's also a P.R. firm (Mara Buxbaum's I/D Public Relations);</p>
<p>Track 9 Recording Studios; Red Scare special effects; Mr. Stevens' Naked Angels</p>
<p>Theater Company; as well as post-production suites and production office space.</p>
<p>All in all, the troupe adds up to a kind of triple-A threat to the Tribeca Film</p>
<p>Center, Robert De Niro's converted coffee-factory Death Star, just three blocks</p>
<p>south-not to mention the unspoken name of Miramax.</p>
<p> The two companies are structured differently. Miramax started out</p>
<p>20 years ago as a distributor, then began making its own pictures. GreeneStreet</p>
<p>produces pictures and gets other companies, such as Miramax, to distribute</p>
<p>them. The two companies have one thing in common, however. They each have a</p>
<p>kind of family, a stable-in Mr. Penotti's terms, "buddies": in-house actors,</p>
<p>writers, producers, flacks, sound– and special-effects teams that function as</p>
<p>an ad-hoc, miniature version of the studio system.</p>
<p> New York, said Mr. Dunne, has "never been a real film community,</p>
<p>like in Los Angeles. So it's nice to have a mini-studio, with a little</p>
<p>commissary." Mr. Dunne directed Lisa</p>
<p>Picard Is Famous , GreeneStreet's first release, a mock-documentary tracking</p>
<p>the burgeoning careers of two starving actors. It was released to warm reviews.</p>
<p>"It was also released on Sept. 14," said Mr. Stevens. "No one saw it."</p>
<p> GreeneStreet's next two films were the Benjamin Bratt vehicle Piñero , which received pretty</p>
<p>spectacular reviews for the actor, and In</p>
<p>the Bedroom .</p>
<p> "It was the first thing we technically committed money to, and it</p>
<p>was after every other studio and every financier had passed," Mr. Penotti said</p>
<p>with a broad grin in one of GreeneStreet's brightly lit conference rooms. Mr.</p>
<p>Penotti had gotten started as a production assistant and assistant director to Sidney Lumet on five films, including</p>
<p>one produced by Mr. Dunne, who also gave Mr. Stevens his first acting role, as</p>
<p>"one of the Jewish kids who's too nerdy to go out with Rosanna Arquette" in</p>
<p>John Sayles' 1983 Baby, It's You .</p>
<p> In those early days, Mr. Stevens was being touted as the Next Big</p>
<p>Thing-an energetic, promising character actor whose Naked Angels theater group</p>
<p>generated conversation. He was also, in either a Woody and Diane or Julia and</p>
<p>Lyle kind of matching, the unlikely beau of Michelle Pfeiffer. But his career</p>
<p>sputtered out sometime after Short</p>
<p>Circuit 2 , and his girlfriend wound up married to Ally McBeal creator David E. Kelley.</p>
<p> "I think I made a lot of mistakes," said Mr. Stevens. "I turned</p>
<p>down jobs, I was trying to be an artist. Now I'm in a place where I feel more</p>
<p>grateful, and respect and appreciate any kind of success."</p>
<p> Mr. Stevens and Mr. Penotti, friends for a decade, founded Madcap</p>
<p>Films in 1996 in tribute to their hero: writer, director and producer Preston</p>
<p>Sturges. "We had a hard time getting people to take us seriously with a name</p>
<p>like Madcap, and the time it was taking to explain the Sturges reference was</p>
<p>just not worth it," said Mr. Penotti.</p>
<p> Madcap shared Sixth Avenue offices with the Shooting Gallery, the</p>
<p>company that made Slingblade and was</p>
<p>a mainstay of New York's independent film world until its ugly 2001 bankruptcy,</p>
<p>which included allegations of dirty bookkeeping by its co-founders.</p>
<p> "It was a very big lesson to us," Mr. Stevens said of the</p>
<p>Shooting Gallery's demise. "We really liked those guys. They tried something</p>
<p>audacious." In early 1997, Madcap moved to an office on Greene Street, where</p>
<p>they changed their name. A year later, they set up shop in the raw Desbrosses</p>
<p>Street space, and began to build GreeneStreet's film center.</p>
<p> The company was originally backed by arts patron and Jones</p>
<p>Apparel Group chief Sidney Kimmel. "He was great for our development phase,"</p>
<p>Mr. Penotti said. Though Mr. Kimmel is no longer a GreeneStreet investor, both</p>
<p>partners were careful to emphasize their good relationship with their original</p>
<p>sugar daddy.</p>
<p> Their investing partners of the past two years, whom Mr. Penotti</p>
<p>and Mr. Stevens described as "extremely private," are Louis Bacon, Christopher</p>
<p>Pia and Michael Garfinkle, three principals from the Moore Capital Management</p>
<p>hedge fund who took personal positions in GreeneStreet. Mr. Bacon, the futures</p>
<p>and currency trader, was in his single days a fixture on New York's club scene,</p>
<p>but has since become increasingly reclusive and increasingly wealthy.</p>
<p> The company has three more films slated for release in 2002.</p>
<p>There's Just a Kiss , a feature</p>
<p>directed by Mr. Stevens, starring Ms. Tomei. It was purchased by Paramount</p>
<p>Classics and will be released this summer. The</p>
<p>Château , starring Paul Rudd and directed by Jesse Peretz (son of New Republic publisher Marty Peretz)</p>
<p>will be distributed by IFC in March. Then there's Swimfan- "We're changing it," Mr. Stevens said grimly of its title - a teen thriller starring Traffic 's Erika Christensen and Bring It On 's Jesse Bradford.</p>
<p> "We didn't want the girl from 90210, "</p>
<p>Mr. Stevens said, dating himself. "Or Buffy, "</p>
<p>Mr. Penotti added quickly. The film was just purchased by 20th Century Fox 2000</p>
<p>and will be released in the summer. </p>
<p> This year, GreeneStreet will go into production on a 70's</p>
<p>coming-of-age film, The Italian , with GreeneStreet tenant Frank</p>
<p>Pugliese directing. And Molly Gunn 's</p>
<p>production offices will soon move in. The film is about an Upper East Side</p>
<p>socialite who takes a job as a nanny to earn the respect of her boyfriend. Mr.</p>
<p>Dillon will star in the GreeneStreet project Tough Guy: The Eddie Maloney Story .</p>
<p> If there's one consistency within the GreeneStreet crew-Ms.</p>
<p>Tomei, Mr. Dillon, Mr. Dunne-it's of being, like Mr. Stevens, hype victims who</p>
<p>never quite lived up to their imagined star potential.</p>
<p> "It's not like we're looking to reinvent people's careers," said</p>
<p>Mr. Penotti, acknowledging that many in the stable have been around the</p>
<p>Hollywood block. "We're just looking for people to work with who are very</p>
<p>talented, and let their work speak for itself.</p>
<p> "These people are artists who have integrity," said Mr.</p>
<p>Stevens-who said that running the company has "killed my acting career." "We've</p>
<p>all done terrible movies, sure … but there is a sense with these artists that</p>
<p>they are not just trying to become stars, and have really struggled to make the</p>
<p>right choices, to do art and make a living. Now hopefully we can provide them</p>
<p>with a place where they can do both."</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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