Cornell Militaru

To say Cornell has had a passion for music and entertainment since childhood is an understatement.  His first attempt at producing music was hitting the couch with wooden spoons at the tender age of eight months, later graduating to his first CB set, then subsequently TAMA, and finally Ludwig.  His first brush with acting occurred in 2005, having bit parts in the indie movies, Love in the Age of Fishsticks and The Patriot.  Later in 2007, he attended his first acting class in Belmont California.

Cornell aggressively began to pursue his acting career in 2012, teaming up with directors and producers to star and co-star in primarily independent films.  Meanwhile, he also cultivated his craft daily by shooting candid improv footage of himself and fellow actors.  Mr. Militaru is always on the go, thinking and planning for future projects.  His number one priority is to engineer his own acting leads by tenaciously building rapport with industry professionals to ensure a steady flow of work in his pipeline.

Cornell was born on December 29th, 1987 in Queens, NY, relocating to the Bay Area at the age of four.  He is more than happy to be a part of Fight 4 Your Life, viewing this film not only as a promising project, but also as a great experience and means to network.  We’re happy to have the very dedicated Cornell aboard the F4YL team!

For more on Cornell, be sure to visit his Facebook and IMDb pages:

https://www.facebook.com/CornellMilitaruEnactment

http://www.imdb.com/name/nm5417188/?ref_=fn_al_nm_1#Actor

 

– The one studios crew

 

Ian Hutchison

Born just twenty minutes away from Hollywood, CA in the suburb of Glendale, Ian Hutchison knew at a young age that his passion in life rested in working on movies, television or theatre.  Watching films throughout his life has helped shape him up to be the person that he is today.  Upon moving to Cape Cod, MA at the age of 10, he started his acting experience in children’s theatre working with Harwich Jr Theatre.

By the age of 15, and after yet another move to Davis, CA, Ian continued to get involved with both high school productions, as well as independent high school theatre companies, such as Acme.  He has done volunteer work for Davis Media Access, including camerawork and co-hosting a radio show with his best friend.  Ian also studies special make up effects, a subject that has inspired him for as long as he can remember.

After a five year long hiatus from acting or production work, Ian jumped into the opportunity to work on Fight 4 Your Life as soon as he caught word of it.  Contributing stunt work, acting and his make up skills, he has been a valued member of the F4YL team.

The return to performing is both refreshing and surreal to Ian.  He is determined now and believes that Fight 4 Your Life will kickstart the Sacramento independent film scene in a big way.  He strives to be apart of it in any way he can.

Your belief in F4YL humbles us, Ian.  Thank you for your hard work!  Keep at it and make those dreams come true!

 

– The one studios crew

 

Chris Sousa

Born in Hemet, CA, Chris Sousa has spent most of his life living in the Northern California mountain town of Placerville.  He has been training in parkour and free running for the last three and a half years.  He also has some experience in martial arts aggressive driving techniques, which he was able to utilize during his scenes in F4YL.

Fight 4 Your Life marks Chris’s first dive into acting and stunt work.  He is extremely excited about doing more projects in the future and is thankful for this awesome opportunity!

 

– The one studios crew

 

Devon Stump

Devon Stump has been a free runner for four years, and a practitioner of martial arts for twice as long.  On top of that he has spent most of his life on motorcycles or under the hood of a car.

Near the end of college, he was determined to find a line of work that would allow him to incorporate his many, adrenaline fueled hobbies.  This path eventually led him into pursuing a career in stunt work, and is making his feature film debut in Fight 4 Your Life.

Be on the look out for much more of Devon’s work in the future!

 

– The one studios crew

 

Jared Fong

Jared has had an interest in the creative arts for as long as he can remember.  Here are a few words from him directly:

 

“I’ve always been interested in creation, and since I enjoy movies and games, my interest spread into those two genres.  I took to screenwriting, game design, programming, and 3D modeling, and as I fiddled with those, I wanted to learn more about the production aspect of film.”

 

When Jared saw an ad for needed actors and crew for a project called Fight 4 Your Life, he jumped at the chance to be a part of the project.  Not only did the ambitious Jared come on board as an actor, but also as a much needed crew member.  He has been a dedicated and valued team member, making the haul from Fremont, CA to the Sacramento area for his required shoots, rehearsals, meetings and other F4YL oriented events.

When we told Jared we would like him to be a part of Fight 4 Your Life, he is remembered to have said:

 

“It’s going to be quite exciting to actually be a part of this film and learning the process of making it.”

 

Well, it’s been quite exciting having you be a part of it, Jared.  Thank you for all of your commitment and positivity!  Good things are in store for you friend.  You’re a natural!  And you takes hits like a champ!

 

– The one studios crew

 

 

Gwen Conklin

Originally falling in love with acting during high school and college, Gwen took a more traditional career track…and is very excited to have now returned to her ‘first love’.

In front of the camera, Gwen has been privileged to be in several film productions including shorts such as the award winning, “Happiness”, “Why Are We Even Here” and “Among the Ashes”, and feature films including, “Savior of None”.

Gwen also enjoys working behind the camera.  Her first on set experience was as production manager for television show pilot, “Around the World in 80 Dances” and she currently works regularly behind the camera as a script supervisor for Back 2 One Productions and Ambra Productions.

Enjoying the collaborative spirit of independent films, she loves the unique opportunity to apply all of her skills and talents to enhance a project and is co-producing a television series, “San Francisco Justice” as well as co-writing a feature film, “Z-14”.

Extremely versatile, she also writes, acts and directs comedy shorts for a sketch comedy team, and looks forward to directing a feature length film, “Alone”, next year.

 

I am so very grateful to be part of this exciting film project, and love the enthusiasm, spirit and vision of Bryan Bachar and his team!”, says Gwen.

 

Happy to have you aboard Gwen!  You’re a gem.

 

 

– The one studios crew

DeMarco Davis

DeMarco Davis is on the high rise acting list.  Constantly on the grind, he has recently moved down to Los Angeles from the Sacramento, CA area to further pursue his craft.  You can see him in such film titles as Inner City Snow, I’m in Love with a Church Girl and Buster Jones: The Movie.  He’s also acted in episodes of I Almost Got Away with It, House of Lies and A&E’s Cold Case Files, which was the “Jaycee lee Dugard Case” episode.

This dedicated artist spent four years in military active duty before deciding to make acting his career.  His college education in telecommunication engineering carried over into the military, where he used such skills during his one year tour in Bosnia.  The armed forces were a great experience for DeMarco.  The discipline and character they help build are attributes easily transferable into any area in life.  The entertainment industry is no exception.

DeMarco was one of the first auditions we had for Fight 4 Your Life.  The one studios crew could immediately tell his professionalism and skill.  And we knew we needed him on board.  Director Bryan Bachar says more on Mr. Davis,

 

“DeMarco is the type of guy you can plainly see is a professional at what he does.  He’s not doing this part time or as a trial type of thing.  You can see it in his eyes his passion for acting.  He’s hungry.  And it is a pleasure to have him on Fight 4 Your Life.  He brings more to this production.  He makes directing simple.  I hope to work more with him in the future and provide him with even more challenging roles.  I’m sure he can appreciate a challenge, as any true actor would.”

 

Look for DeMarco in a key role in Fight 4 Your Life.  You can’t miss him!  And check him out on IMDb, Facebook and Twitter.  His new flick Bullets Blades and Blood, which also has our very own Tony “The Tiger” Lopez in it, is coming out soon too!

 

– The one studios crew

 

 

Tucker Evans

Tucker Evans was born in Los Angeles, Ca.  He later moved to Elk Grove, Ca, where he went to high school and played football at Elk Grove High.  After high school, he joined the Navy, which taught him discipline and allowed him to realize there was more out there for him.  He just had to make it happen.

After serving our country, Tucker entered the restaurant business working every position from busboy to owner.  He had been bitten by the acting bug early on in life, performing in plays and small independent comedy bits.  It was only natural that he then soon decided to try his hand at acting in front of the camera on the local Sacramento independent short film circuit.

Tucker has been in several film festivals since, having made the decision that this is what he wants to do with his life.  He continues to participate in and support local Sacramento independent films, such as Fight 4 Your Life.  He views F4YL as an exciting project about to take Nor Cal by storm.  We agree Mr. Evans, and are thrilled to have you and your dedication on board!

 

– The one studios crew

 

Neketia Brown

Born and raised in Chicago, IL, Neketia Brown moved to California with her mother at the age of 12.  As a child, she knew that the performing arts was her true passion, and began performing in numerous stage plays and musicals.  Since then, Neketia has appeared in numerous film projects and countless commercials and national print ads.  In addition, she covers urban entertainment news for The Hub Magazine and has hosted several red carpet events, including the BET Music Awards and the BET Music Matters Tour.

Neketia believes that to whom much is given, much is required and strives to illustrate the importance of never compromising her integrity to get ahead in this game.  With the gift that God has given her and her tenacious spirit, she truly represents excellence or nothing at all!

one studios is estatic to have Neketia be a part of Fight 4 Your Life.  She represents the undying passion this film is all about!  Be sure to check out here YouTube channel here.

 

– The one studios crew

 

F4YL Origins

The story and characters of Fight 4 Your Life have many influences.  Bryan Bachar, creator of F4YL, grew up moving across the U.S., his father being a United States Navy SeaBee.  From the experiences of being immersed into many different cultures Bryan learned to appreciate the wide variety of ways of life the different parts of the U.S. offer.  This immersion also allowed him to live in many different styles of life, from poverty to a more middle class environment.  Always being one to jump around between different groups of friends, Bryan used his rich knowledge of society’s groups to acquire a broad understanding of the differences and likenesses of the peoples of his country.

 

It’s true, as they say, that we aren’t so different as we would like to believe.  I’ve seen the same faces, known the same personalities, no matter where I’ve moved to in the States, whether the southern Bible Belt, the west coast, east coast or mid-west.  It’s funny to me how many people are so quick to think of themselves and their community as so unique.  For example, many people in California, which has been my home for a good portion of my life at this point, have this Nor Cal vs So Cal mentality.  I’ve lived in both and both have the same type of people.  Same can be said when compared to Tennessee, Ohio, Mississippi, Texas, or anywhere else I’ve lived.

Now, don’t get me wrong, there are shell differences.  These differences are what I like to think of as culture, what is seen from the outside looking in.  How we partake in our daily lives, the color of our skin, the music we listen to, our spiritual beliefs, language and dialect, our ancestry, our food, what we hold important and so many other things make up this shell.  But once it’s cracked the inner part of who we all are is pretty much the same, no matter if we want to accept it or not.  We all face the same inner struggles at various points in our lives.  We all want relatively the same things in life…happiness, success, good health, family, friends, to feel appreciated, to be respected, freedom, love, etc., etc.

This is why I love the creative medium of filmmaking so much.  It allows me to fully express these shells of people, then shatter them to demonstrate how alike we all really are.  Through this destruction audiences are able to deeply connect to the characters on screen, surpassing the simple connections made by shell likenesses.  It makes no difference the race, gender or social status of the character.  A successful film gets viewers to feel for those persons they are watching.  It subliminally forces them to sympathize and root them on, hate them and boo them into damnation.  What a good film does, more than anything, is tell a story.  Within telling that story, it allows each and every crowd member to see a part of him or herself on that screen.  This is why movies are so powerful.

And this is why my fixations on culture, history and films blend so well.  Filmmaking already showcases all the shells of humanity.  It already promotes the deeper inner workings of us all.  Throughout cinematic history genres have been created to demonstrate these different sides of the human spirit.  In turn, these genres have been continually diluted into each other, blurring the lines of what kind of film a movie can actually be categorized as.  Especially in today’s age, everything has pretty much been done already, in terms of filmmaking.  This is why we are constantly being thrown recycled stories and franchises, because Hollywood uses what works.

In recent years I’ve noticed a focus on the technical aspects of filmmaking rather than what matters, the story.  For the last seven years or so big budget Hollywood has seemed to have been more concerned with how to shoot a story than how to tell a story, what story to retell rather than what kind of story could be told.  There have been bright spots, sure.  There always are.  I try to never speak in totality.  And the advancements in technology are great!  How films are made are vastly important towards the evolution of filmmaking, helping keep things fresh and more efficient.  But it’s all about balance.   Visual effects and computer animation are here to aid the star of a movie, it’s story, not be the star itself.

But it does seem as though this generation of Hollywood is beginning to get it again if they ever did truly lose it.  After all, no one can turn a blind eye to the fact filmmaking, as much of an art as it is, is a business when it comes to Hollywood.  And we all know the struggles creative media forms have been dealing with due to the same technological advancements that are making them reach higher grounds.  Piracy, I’m sure, has a strong part in the downward slope of Hollywood’s originality and focus on story.  The main thing to understand is things are turning around for a positive.

The big boom of comic book films demonstrates this well.  We are seeing these fictitious films based around fantastical heroes and villains dominate the box office.  Why? Well, for the first time these stories can be told how they were meant to be told because of the excellent technologies now available.  Cheesy FX in the past made it difficult for films like these to be believable.  Now, they can be quite believable.  This has attracted high caliber talent, writers and crew.  And boy has Hollywood caught on, taking these types of films much more seriously because of their lucrativeness, which, in turn, has allowed for a better balancing of technical and traditional story telling and acting aspects of filmmaking since so much is now going into these films.  They aren’t the dirty step children any longer, but the prized saviors, perfectly built to demonstrate both technical achievement and traditional storytelling.

You have fairly deep, complex characters now being truly explored by legit actors because there isn’t the stress of the “how to” and the “what does it look like” anymore, with the stories and characters being complimented by these awesome visual devices.  Once again the focus is back to where it should be, and everything is falling in place.  It’s really a no brainer for Hollywood to be taking advantage of making these kinds of films at this point.  It’s the perfect time for them.  They’ve always been around.  But not until recently could they really work.  And in their own way they’ve brought back some originality to big budget Hollywood.

The problem is people are always going to be hungry for something new.  There is a plethora of original stories to pull from when looking at the multitude of comic book universes out there.  There is originality in that.  But eventually people are going to yearn for more.  They are always wanting more.

So, what we have seen more and more is a melting of storylines and genres together in order to make a new type of film, one that can’t fully be clarified and categorized.  It’s less about what kind of film a movie is now than it is about what kind of story it is.  And this is totally fine by me.  After all, it really has always been about the story.  Genres are just a shell in themselves, a way to categorize and say “this is this and that is that”, just as with people and our races, countries and cultures.

Mainstream Hollywood still might be following strict guidelines.  But just as it has had success due to the advancement in technology, so too has the independent realm of filmmaking, which doesn’t suffer, at least most of the time, from the same burdens and restrictions as the big time studios.  More so than ever are we seeing independent film flourish.  Why?  Because here is where the true risks are taken artistically speaking.  Here is where experimental storytelling happens.  Here is where actors get to really focus on acting.

Hollywood might be catching up.  Of course, there are plenty of Hollywood budget films that have great acting, stories and overall artistic expression in them.   All I’m saying is independent film has always been the true storyteller’s and committed actor’s escape, an arena to truly engage one’s craft at the most pure of levels.  It’s never been about the big visual FX or monster budgets for indie film…..although every indie filmmaker would love a bigger budget I’m sure.

However, technology has made it easier for independent filmmakers to create higher quality films.  We are seeing breathtaking visuals come out of small indie studios, hell, even individual homes, all across the country, and the world for that matter.  And now with crowdfunding hitting the net hard independent filmmakers have a highly attractable, though not always successful, outlet to raise large sums of funds for creating their works.  More than ever independent filmmaking is on the rise.

The bridge between big Hollywood and independent film is becoming shakier and shakier.  In my humble opinion I foresee there one day being very little to distinguish between the two.  Sure, Hollywood will likely always exist.  It’s established for a reason.  But that doesn’t mean it’s system can’t be implemented by others, especially since the walls once holding smaller Joes back are becoming more and more scalable.

Fight 4 Your Life represents an inkling of what’s happening.  It might be my first full length feature.  But I believe in it, and so do the many other people involved in its production.  Who knows what success it might have.  I would like to say much.  But that is left up to time and viewers.  My team and I can’t force people to like our film.  We can only do the best job we can and see where it goes from there.  We can push to get your support though.  That is something we can get no matter if someone ends up enjoying the film or not.

My hope is people, at minimal, recognize the good message F4YL possesses within both its story and its creation.  It’s not that I am not confident in the film.  Rather, I have nothing but confidence in it.  I wouldn’t be putting in this exhausting effort otherwise.  I’m just a realist, a dreaming realist, with my head in the clouds and my feet on the ground.  And, if anything, I just want people to respect what the film is about and how we did it.  I hope it shows people that with enough tenacity, with enough diligence and smarts, something of this scale can be done in today’s world without the influence and power of those finger pointers and dream killers that would normally have the ability to stop it.

I’m doing it my way.  There’s no patting on the back going on here by any means.  Shoot, the film isn’t even done yet.  But there has to be something said about that at the same time.

I know I’m not the only one out there that feels this way.  And I’m most definitely not the only one doing it this way by a long shot.  The Sacramento area is just one of many throughout the U.S. where filmmaking communities are growing, hungry for acceptance, thirsty for something more.  It’s not just about Los Angeles and New York anymore.  They will continue to be the epicenters.  But this doesn’t mean they will remain alone.  In no way am I a L.A. or N.Y. hater.  I love the places and recognize their importance.  I just like seeing change, especially when that change is needed.  There’s enough creativity to go around and these juggernauts don’t need to hog it all.  With the mentioned advancements there’s no need for them to anymore.

Films are being made, good films, great films, passionate films.  It is passion which drives us all.  A good friend of mine, Urijah Faber, believes this.  And I agree with him 100%.  Without passion we are lazy.  Without passion nothing of value gets accomplished.  The journey of F4YL might be a tough one.  But nothing worth anything comes without a fight.

Just as Fleet Blackwood must fight for his life within the film, so must the film itself to be created.  The name is more than a simply a stylized motif.  It is a creed.

My upbringing, my relationships, my experiences and beliefs, they all reside in this film.  The countless hours of movies watched, characters learned, story arcs discovered, techniques revealed, they all are within this film in some way.  This is what I aim to do with every piece of art I make, always giving it my all.  My soul, my spirit, my passion, this is where Fight 4 Your Life stems from.

I realize I may speak a bit dramatically, even over the top.  But it’s my heart that takes over.  That’s that.  Just as with any one person, F4YL has many sides to it.  It is the melting pot of genres I spoke of.  The overall story may have been told many, many times before.  But it’s how you tell it.  That’s what makes a story original.  Fight 4 Your Life aims to be successful at bringing together many things, many sides, into a single cohesive work.

Wish us luck in getting it there.

 

– Bryan Bachar

Director

 

Thank you for supporting Fight 4 Your Life.  We still have a long way to go.  But if you’ve read this much, you’re interested in joining the fight.  It’s appreciated.  If you would like to help out further, please, check out our Funding page.  Everything helps, even just getting word out.  Thanks ahead of time.

 

– The one studios crew