Friday, July 10, 2009

Great new review from NewTeeVee.com!

Read it here at: http://station.newteevee.com/2009/07/10/operation-midnight-climax-depicts-one-of-the-cias-dirty-sexy-secrets/

Operation Midnight Climax Depicts One of the CIA’s Dirty, Sexy Secrets
Editor's review by Liz Shannon Miller, July 10, 2009 — Comments (0)

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Premiere: June 8, 2009
Length: 10 minutes
Budget: Medium
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The 1950s, the CIA, the hookers it hired, and the LSD they dispensed to johns — a true story. That’s a heck of a pitch for anything, especially in the world of web video, which rarely trips into decades past.

Independent production company Strange Science LLC stumbled across the story of Operation Midnight Climax while writer Ramesh Thadani and director Zach Jordan were working at Videojug.com, where they were asked to research conspiracies for a potential video piece. There’s a full write-up on the operation at Wikipedia, but the Cliff’s Notes version is this — during the 1950s, as part of their experimentation with LSD and other mind-altering substances, the CIA hired prostitutes to dose their customers with drugs so that agents could observe the effects via two-way mirror.

Climax adds an element of fiction by depicting one of these brothels, run by Millie (Meredith Salenger, best known as Natty Gann from The Journey of Natty Gann), and its regulars, who have no idea that they’ve just become the subjects of a government trial in mind control. By putting the premise out front and center in a nicely rendered opening sequence, there’s minimal suspense in the first two episodes, which are mostly about the set-up of the experiment.

Instead, these episodes are more character study than narrative, establishing relationships and providing glimpses of backstory. So far, the most intriguing is that of the well-read African-American prostitute Bea (Vernetra Gavin), for whom turning tricks is a more dignified profession than any other career option available to her during that time period.

It’s a choice that plays well with the show’s deliberate pacing, which is just one of the ways the creators have managed to invoke the era they’re depicting. Anyone who’s ever tried to recreate a time period on a limited budget knows what a challenge it can be, but Strange Science produced the first three episodes for a cost somewhere “in the mid-four-figures,” according to Producer and Director of Photography Glenn Sauber.

It helps that the series is largely limited to one or two locations. The biggest expense was set construction, which pays off on-screen — the 1950s decor of the brothel is a huge factor in selling the show’s place in time. “We’re trying to find the fine line between impressing people by what we can do for so little and telling producers that we’ll work for nothing,” said Sauber.

Climax’s dialogue occasionally leans too heavily on the appropriation of 50s slang, but the lush, sepia-tinged cinematography alone is a draw, darting between a classic film noir look, the paranoia-inspiring perspective of the ever-watching CIA, and the actual drug-enduced hallucinations the men experience. Right now, the only thing missing is a stronger narrative arc, but it’s hard to blame Climax for that, given how it’s not even clear what exactly the CIA was hoping to learn from these experiments. The fact that they existed at all is drama enough, I suppose. It’s a little depressing to realize that the idea of our government experimenting on its citizens isn’t as shocking as it once was.

Saturday, July 4, 2009

Midnight Climax mentioned on SciFi Wire!

http://scifiwire.com/2009/06/new-operation-midnight-we.php

New Operation Midnight Web series answers the question: What ever happened to Natty Gann?

Mix 1950s CIA mind-control experiments, the star of The Journey of Natty Gann and a Twin Peaks vibe and you get Operation Midnight Climax, a new sci-fi Web series that launched this month. (Watch the first installment after the jump.)

The series stars Gann's Meredith Salenger, Quinton Flynn, Todd Cahoon and Stephanie Lemelin in an original screenplay by Ramesh Thadani (The Thirst: Blood War) directed by Zach Jordan (Joe Digital, Inc.).

The series drew on historical details of the 1977 Senate hearing that brought the MKULTRA program into the spotlight, the creators said. "Every great story starts with a compelling 'what if?'" Thadani said in a statement. "In our case, the 'what if' really happened. After reading a bit about the actual Operation Midnight Climax, my mind was buzzing with possibilities."

Here's the offiicial description of the series:

In 1953, the CIA initiated the notorious MKULTRA program, under which for nearly 25 years the agency tested LSD on thousands of Americans. Operation Midnight Climax operated under this mind-control program: The project consisted of a web of CIA-run safe houses/brothels in San Francisco, Marin and New York, where prostitutes on the CIA payroll were instructed to lure clients and where the unsuspecting victims were given a wide range of substances, including LSD, and monitored behind two-way mirrors. The CIA used Operation Midnight Climax to test new techniques in sexual blackmail, surveillance and the use of mind-altering drugs in field operations.

Filmed over the course of a few days and using limited resources to bring the 1950s world alive on the small screen, Operation Midnight Climax is envisioned as the beginning of a larger interactive story.

Remember When The CIA Was Into LSD? 'Operation Midnight Climax' Does

Remember When The CIA Was Into LSD? 'Operation Midnight Climax' Does

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