8 /10 1 Votes8
3.9/5 Fandor Music by Sam Lassner Director Daniel Kremer | 8/10 IMDb Directed by Daniel Kremer Cinematography Aaron Hollander Music director Sam Lassner | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Produced by Erin Lovett Sherman, K.P. Rai Written by Daniel Kremer, William Cully Allen Starring William Cully AllenGlenn WalshK.J. LinheinPappu RaiPeter BrunetteWilliam McKeeverJulie Edelstein Initial release 18 August 2011 (Philadelphia) Screenplay Daniel Kremer, William Cully Allen Producers Erin Lovett Sherman, K.M. Rai Cast Daniel Kremer, Prashant Raj Sachdev, Prashant Pandey, Peter Brunette, Alanna Blair Similar New Jersey: The Movie, The Manager, Raise Your Kids on Seltzer, Munna‑A Love Story, Contract |
The Idiotmaker's Gravity Tour is a 2011 American independent comedy-drama film starring William Cully Allen, Glenn Walsh, K.J. Linhein, Pappu Rai, Peter Brunette, Erin Lovett Sherman, Alanna Blair, William McKeever and written and directed by Daniel Kremer.
Contents
Official trailer the idiotmaker s gravity tour in hd
Plot
Max Plugin is a jaded but flamboyant relic of the 1960s. In his teens, Max ran away to California, where he met Teschlock, a charismatic ascetic and guru renowned among a small group of young followers. At that time, when Teschlock asked Max to join him and his disciples on an ashram in India, Max declined and returned home. Now, forty years later, at age 57, Max takes a journey to India to find Teschlock's grave-site, and also himself. His adventures in India, and his Castaneda-esque experiences back home, form the heart of this very unusual road movie.
Production
The Idiotmaker's Gravity Tour was filmed predominantly in Varanasi, Uttar Pradesh, India, starting in the fall of 2010, with production ending a little less than a year later, in August 2011. The film was released in September 2011.
Reception
Independent filmmaking icon Rob Nilsson called the film, "a no-budget, do-it-yourself excursion to India from a filmmaker of considerable enterprise and admirable aplomb." Director Daniel Kremer was interviewed for both Around Philly and Philly Broadcaster around the time of the film's release.