Lazer Team

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Lazer Team
File:Theatrical poster of Lazer Team.jpg
Theatrical poster
Directed by Matt Hullum
Produced by <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
Screenplay by <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
  • Burnie Burns
  • Chris Demarais
  • Josh Flanagan
  • Matt Hullum
Story by Burnie Burns
Starring <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
Music by Jeff Williams
Cinematography Philip Roy
Edited by <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
  • Chris Demarais
  • Josh Flanagan
  • Aaron Marquis
  • David James Ward
Production
company
Distributed by <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
Release dates
<templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
  • September 24, 2015 (2015-09-24) (Fantastic Fest)[1]
  • January 27, 2016 (2016-01-27) (United States)
Running time
102 minutes[2]
Country United States
Language English
Budget $2.4 million[3]
Box office $1.6 million[3]

Lazer Team is a 2015 American science fiction action comedy film directed, produced, and co-written by Matt Hullum. The first feature film produced by Rooster Teeth, it stars Burnie Burns, Gavin Free, Michael Jones, Colton Dunn, Allie DeBerry, and Alan Ritchson. The film follows the Lazer Team, a group of four who find themselves responsible for the fate of the planet upon discovering an alien crash site containing a battle suit.

Lazer Team is produced by Hullum, Burns, and Doreen Copeland. Burns and Hullum also co-wrote the script, alongside Rooster Teeth employees Chris Demarais and Josh Flanagan. Funding for the film was largely raised through a successful Indiegogo campaign, raising over $2.4 million in a month. Filming began in October 2014, with principal photography taking place in Austin and New Mexico. Lazer Team premiered at Fantastic Fest on September 24, 2015, and was released theatrically on January 27, 2016. As of February 10, 2016, the film is also available on YouTube Red.

Plot

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In 1977, the government has secretly decoded a transmission, sent by the alien Antareans, which says that a deadly race known as the Worg are coming to destroy Earth. To help defend Earth, the Antareans have sent a powerful battle suit for the "Champion of Earth" to wear. The government begins training Adam (Alan Ritchson) from birth to be the Champion, naming the endeavor Project Perseus after the Greek mythological figure who fought using gifts from the gods.

38 years later, Officer Hagan (Burnie Burns) is called to a party where Zach (Michael Jones) is causing trouble and where he runs into his daughter and Zach's girlfriend, Mindy (Allie DeBerry). After tasing Zach, Hagan drives him away, only to find Woody (Gavin Free) and Herman (Colton Dunn) shooting unauthorized fireworks. Herman defiantly launches a massive rocket. The firework strikes the incoming UFO and causes it to crash nearby.

The UFO opens to reveal the battle suit, and the four men each take a piece of it. The suit activates when all four pieces are worn, and each piece becomes irreversibly attached and genetically locked to its wearer. Zach discovers that his arm-cannon can shoot energy projectiles, Hagan's gauntlet can create an energy field, Woody's helmet increases his intelligence over time and has a host of other functions, and Herman's boots can make him run at superhuman speeds (taxing Herman as if he were doing all the running himself, and often causing him to vomit from exhaustion). The UFO displays a holographic recording by an Antarean, saying that "confict is coming." The military shows up and apprehends the group. Angry that their preparations have been jeopardized and that Zach has posted a selfie with the suit (calling the four "Lazer Team"), Colonel Emory (Steve Shearer) gives Adam orders to train them in only four days, after which time the Worg are scheduled to arrive. As expected, the training goes horribly. Meanwhile, a group of soldiers is possessed by small robotic insects sent by the Worg, and begins to hunt down Lazer Team with advanced handheld weapons. They show up at Hagan's house and possess Mindy.

The officers in charge of Perseus decide to try and amputate the suit from the team, and Woody overhears with augmented hearing. They are brought to a hospital under the pretext that they are receiving "physicals", but escape using the suit's abilities. They are intercepted by Adam, but they work together to create a strong energy shield, and Zach knocks Adam unconscious. They escape the facility on a gurney pushed by Herman, and they hide out in Hagan's ex-wife's cabin. Zach calls the Worg-controlled Mindy on Skype and gives her his location. She arrives and attacks Zach and the others, but they subdue her and Woody communicates with the Worg through the device on the back of her neck. Before they can finish negotiating, Zach rips the device off and it self-destructs, destroying the cabin. They are pursued by the possessed soldiers, but manage to escape and kill one of them in the process.

They make their way to Zach and Mindy's high school, where they find out that an Antarean ship has landed over the town's football field, creating a giant forcefield around it. The Worg transmit a message across all electronic devices, calling the Champions of Earth to battle. Lazer Team is once again ambushed by the possessed soldiers, but uses teamwork to kill the remaining three. With the pressure of saving the planet weighing down on them, they all decide to hide except for Hagan, who turns himself in to the military. However, seeing the full potential in the team, Adam frees Hagan and they sneak to the stadium where a crowd has formed around the UFO. They find the rest of the team there and regroup. They hijack a police car and ram it into the forcefield, successfully reaching the football field.

The Worg warrior arrives in its own spaceship, and a crowd of holographic Antareans watches from the stands. To the team's horror, the Worg wears a full set of Antarean battle armor like theirs. Woody intercepts a transmission from the ship, revealing that rather than a war they are part of an elimination tournament where the Antareans destroy the losers' planets until one remains. Lazer Team proves unsuccessful at defeating the Worg by themselves, so Adam begins a distraction using riot gear from the police car as a makeshift battle suit. Adam sacrifices himself by letting the Worg destroy him with a dark-matter cannon, indirectly teaching the team how to achieve this with the suit. Lazer Team and the Worg fire dark matter beams into each other, creating a vortex at midfield. The four separated suit pieces malfunction and Lazer Team is blown clear of the forcefield, but the Worg and the Antarean ship are consumed.

The team is greeted by Mindy, the media and a huge crowd outside. Emory arrives and states that the war isn't over, and that Lazer Team is going into space, much to Hagan's disapproval.

Cast

  • Burnie Burns as Anthony Hagan, a traffic cop and a member of Lazer Team.[4] Hagan wears the left arm of the suit, allowing him to generate an energy shield.
  • Gavin Free as Woodrow "Woody" Johnson, a member of Lazer Team.[4] Woody wears the helmet of the suit, heightening his intelligence and granting him other enhancements such as X-ray vision.
  • Michael Jones as Zach Spencer, a quarterback for a high school football team and a member of Lazer Team.[4] Zach wears the right arm of the suit, which is an energy cannon.
  • Colton Dunn as Herman Mendoza, a former football athlete (who played on a team with Hagan) and a member of Lazer Team.[4] Herman wears the boots of the suit, which let him run at superhuman speeds.
  • Allie DeBerry as Mindy Hagan, Anthony's daughter[4]
  • Alan Ritchson as Adam, the Champion of the Earth[4]
  • Steve Shearer as Colonel Emory
  • Kirk Johnson as Officer Vandenbloom
  • Benjamin Scott as General Cale
  • Johnny Walter as Murdoch
  • Chris Demarais as Franksen
  • Jeremy St. James as Bean

The film also contains cameos from many other actors, most of them employees at Rooster Teeth. These cameos include Barbara Dunkelman, Lindsay Jones, Arryn Zech, Jon Risinger, Josh Flanagan, Matt Hullum, Gus Sorola, Shannon McCormick, Blaine Gibson, Brandon Farmahini, Joel Heyman, Yomary Cruz, Kerry Shawcross, Adam Ellis, and Miles Luna. Country musician Dale Watson, astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson, YouTuber Justine Ezarik, and Barenaked Ladies lead singer Ed Robertson also have cameos in the film.[5]

Production

Development

The concept for Rooster Teeth's first live action feature was in development as early as 2010.[6] It was first announced at Halo Fest during PAX Prime 2011.[7] Burns stated they were drawing inspirations from, "a lot of the sci-fi classics that we've grown up with," but were, "not making a parody and we're not making a send-up – we're making our own movie."[8] Influences on the script included "team movies" such as The Mighty Ducks and Cool Runnings. According to co-writers Chris Demarais and Josh Flanagan, the third act was completely restructured by them a week before shooting began.[9]

File:Matt Hullum - CEO of RoosterTeeth Productions (cropped).jpg
Lazer Team is the second feature film directed by Rooster Teeth CEO Matt Hullum.

While writing the story, Burns did not imagine himself playing Hagan, saying "I tend to be a bigger, loud-mouthed, talk-fast kind of guy... I had to essentially take it down a notch to play him."[10]

In February 2014, Burns confirmed the company was going to launch a crowdfunding campaign for the film as a way to offer more support options while gaining publicity.[11] Freddie Wong was a consultant in shaping their campaign.[12] The Indiegogo page for the film launched in June 2014. The fundraiser reached its $650,000 goal in under 10 hours and broke Indiegogo’s record for the fastest film campaign to reach $700,000.[13][14] Within three days, Lazer Team broke $1 million.[15] Lazer Team holds the record for the highest funded film campaign on Indiegogo with over $2.4 million collected.[16][17] On the final day of the campaign, Rooster Teeth released a special perk for a single fan to be cast in a walk-on role; within 20 seconds of the perk going live, 535 people purchased the perk, as it slowed the site's ticketing system. All 535 people were used for a crowd scene in the film.[18] Hullum stated that the crew had been contacted by multiple distribution companies, media companies, and acting agencies since the campaign began.[19] Burns corroborated, explaining that the film's budget increased as the campaign earned more money:

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The initial budget for talent was based on making the movie on the bare minimum with us throwing in the remainder of the expected budget. For instance, that meant using talent almost exclusively from in-house. As the budget grows, so do our opportunities to approach all kinds of talent. The same applies to Visual FX, quality of props and costuming, lighting, crew, etc.[20]

Casting calls and auditions for minor speaking roles in were held for attendees at RTX 2014.[21] Additional casting for extras was held during shooting.[22]

Filming

Principal photography began on October 14, 2014.[4][23] Filming took place over 40 days in Austin and New Mexico.[24][25] During the first week of production, filming took place at the Austin National Guard Armory, as well as the University of Texas at Austin.[26] Filming wrapped on December 13.[27] Reshoots started in late February 2015.[citation needed]

To avoid interrupting Achievement Hunter's online video schedule, Free and Jones pre-recorded content for a month prior to filming. During filming, both came into the office, "half the days that we had off" to film videos instead of sleeping for a few hours before returning to set.[28]

Release

Lazer Team premiered in Austin at Fantastic Fest, on September 24, 2015,[1] followed by a Canadian premiere at the Toronto After Dark Film Festival on October 16,[29] a European premiere at the Film4 FrightFest on October 24,[30] and an Australian premiere at RTX Australia on January 22, 2016.[31] Lazer Team was among the first titles in Fullscreen's newly launched feature film division.[32] Lazer Team had a limited theatrical release on January 27–28, 2016, in the United States, Canada, United Kingdom, Ireland, Australia, and New Zealand. The theaters were selected through the Tugg platform, which determines the interest of a screening at a specific theater.[33] The film reportedly grossed $1 million through pre-sale tickets.[34][35] From February 10, 2016,[36] the film was available for streaming as part of YouTube's new paid subscription service YouTube Red.

Reception

Box office

Lazer Team played in theaters as a cinema-in-demand model where if fans gathered a certain number of people who wanted to see the film, the producers would find a theater for a one-time showing event.[3] The distributors managed 480 screenings (for one night only) in both the U.S. and abroad. The picture was also four-walled for a 35-screen run in the U.S. It was played 47 times in the UK and fans lined up around the block. In Australia, it screened 65 times. Lazer Team ended up grossing over $1.1 million in the U.S. and over $1.6 million globally, according to Rentrak.[3]

Critical response

Lazer Team has received mixed reviews from critics. It received a score of 56% on Rotten Tomatoes[37] and a 42/100 on Metacritic.[38] Scott Weinberg, writing for Nerdist, praised the film's amiable, '80s tone and "surprisingly nifty" effects, calling it "a good deal of quaint, geeky fun."[39] Matt Donato of We Got This Covered dubbed it, "the Anti-Pixels."[40] Marc Savlov from The Austin Chronicle gave it a mixed review, writing "Sharply edited while ranging all over the comic map – Lazer Team has its share of groaners, to be sure – it's a solid debut from Austin's gaming and comedy hometown heroes."[41] New York Times Neil Genzlinger criticized the film saying "Lazer Team ends by setting itself up for a sequel, but that's mighty wishful thinking" and "What they—or the men playing them—really need to learn to do is act."[42] Matt Fagerholm of RogerEbert.com heavily criticized the film, writing "This movie is, in essence, a product of fame and money without the slightest tangible shred of effort.".[43] M Finn from 'Townsville Today' gave a more positive review stating, "despite featuring a total lack of Johnathan Thurston, it was nevertheless a delightful romp".

References

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External links