Andrew Bujalski took the indie movie world by storm a few years ago with his wonderful post-collegiate ennui flick Funny Ha Ha. Well, storm might be an exaggeration; it was more of a slow-burn. The fuse was a long one that continues to burn, as the film remains in sporadic release around the country, more than four years later. In fact, the film wasn’t screened for us until last year. It was worth the wait, however, as evidenced by the film’s appearance on our Top 14 Movies of 2005.
Austinist Interviews Filmmaker Andrew Bujalski
Please Be Upstanding for Kat Candler
We love Kat so much we had to get the word out about the premiere of her new film jumping off bridges this Saturday at the SXSW Film Festival. You may not have a film pass, but you should go and try to get a ticket. Kat is not only a local filmmaker to support, she is a spotlight on truth and beauty. Great independent films don't have to always be about crude jokes, violence,...
Movie Review: “Funny Ha Ha”
Austinist remembers those awkward years just after college; you know, the ones that find you drinking too much, underemployed and looking for love in all the wrong places. The years seemed to represent some sort of way station between adolescence and the alleged “adulthood” about which we had heard and read so much. In his debut feature film, Funny Ha Ha, writer-director Andrew Bujalski explores these testing times through the eyes of thumb-twiddling beauty Marnie, played to great effect by cute newcomer Kate Dollenmayer.

