Photos
Avis à la une
Once upon a time, I worked at Highlands Playhouse with Lauren Bakhaus and Olivia L. Pipis. We lived in a house with 21 people and no television. A lot of the actors were from CMU, and Lauren whipped out this miniseries. I remember getting sucked into it, because we spent an entire day watching it! While we laughed a lot, the series itself was very impressively caught on film. The shots were artistic and thought out. We enjoyed it a lot!
She may have been a last minute casting, but you'd have been surprised to hear that when you saw Lauren's presence on camera. The characters through out were well captured. I don't remember the writing very much. I remember some over the top moments, but there were several dramatic moments that stood out despite the humor. Wish I remembered more...
She may have been a last minute casting, but you'd have been surprised to hear that when you saw Lauren's presence on camera. The characters through out were well captured. I don't remember the writing very much. I remember some over the top moments, but there were several dramatic moments that stood out despite the humor. Wish I remembered more...
Seeing this back in the ol' college days reminded me about how worthless college TV was. A bunch of snobbish college broadcasting students working on high caffeine and pathethic writing comes up with stuff like this. Can you suspend disbelief a million miles up? Is bad digital effects your cup of tea? This is your cake then, people. Boy, this stuff is BAD. The few times I did watch poor ol' "Moore Hall TV" I fought with my friends tooth and nail to flip that station back on PBS! Hmmmm let's take a minute to look at the requirements for this site, for one thing. I thought stuff shown on Public access TV wasn't accepted on here. MHTV=PUBLIC ACCESS. Local cable, folks. They'd show local schoolboard meetings LIVE for Cryin' out loud! "Lost Souls" and other tripe ground out by Matthew 'Should" Schutt-UP! should be tossed into the nearest recycle bin. Go watch the sun rise, go watch the paint on the walls dry. Much more engaging.
This was a show that was produced at my college (Central Michigan University) by some fellow Broadcasting students, and it wasn't very good, that's for sure. I even had the misfortune of making a VERY brief appearance in one of the episodes. The things you do out of the kindness of your heart, I suppose. Ham acting, outlandish story, well we can hope the makers of this went on to more professional things.
I remember seeing this when I was a student at CMU. I thought it was pretty funny...like silly funny. If you are a cold hearted cynic you would probably just think it was stupid but I think most people would find it entertaining. I remember it was hilarious to watch with friends because we were all drinking and in a good mood. I really liked some of the characters...the "Shakespearan Actor" guy was a funny character as so was the "Gorilla suit guy". By funny I mean funny in a ridiculous sort of way. The show had some dramatic parts but I thought even those parts were kind of funny. I bet the previous person only really saw 5 minutes of one episode and there were (I think) 6 one hour long shows.
Holy hell, I remember this show from my days back in college at Central Michigan University. I remember seeing Matthew Schutt in person, and wondered how one man could make such a terrible, terrible 'mini-series'. Come on, all college students are not drunk, two brain-celled simpletons who can garner hours of entertainment by trying to count all the cracks in the walls. "Lost Souls" is entertainment in name only, a badly acted, shoddily filmed, poorly produced, videotaped train-wreck of a show which served only to hold back the careers of all involved. It scares me now to see someone with such questionable talent as Schutt now is making films out in Hollywood. I guess Steven Spielberg can breathe a sigh of relief, for he doesn't need to feel threatened.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesEpisode 1 was originally filmed with Laura Taggett as Annabelle. However, due to scheduling conflicts, she informed the production company that she would not be able to appear for the production dates of episodes 4 and 5. Executive Producer 'Schutt, Matthew J.' immediately replaced her with actress Lauren Lowell, who filmed all of her scenes for episode 1 in one marathon recording session two days before the episode aired. Because co-star Larry Sutton (II) was unavailable for the reshoots, the back of Taggett's head is still visible in some scenes.
Meilleurs choix
Connectez-vous pour évaluer et suivre la liste de favoris afin de recevoir des recommandations personnalisées
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Sites officiels
- Langue
- Lieux de tournage
- Société de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée
- 6h(360 min)
- Couleur
Contribuer à cette page
Suggérer une modification ou ajouter du contenu manquant