Subject: Are We Done Yet? Feature Film - Surf Stickers Date: Thursday, June 29, 2006 6:49:21 PM Thu, 29 Jun 2006 22:49:21 +0000 [View Source] Hello I am contacting your company to see if you are interested in providing us with stickers to use as set dressing in the feature film “Are We Done Yet?”. A number of characters in our film come from Hawaii and are archetypes of the “surfer dude”. We would like to use your logo stickers on their vehicle,work boxes and tools (they are building contractors). If you have hats and/or t-shirts, also with your logo that you would like to send, our costumes department could find use for them as well. We would like to use this opportunity to expose as many small surfboard shops and companies as possible. Your participation would add greatly to the film. You will find a synopsis of the film below. I also have a release form to forward from our studio Sony/Revolution. Script pages can be faxed to you upon request. I appreciate your time in considering this request and look forward to hearing from you. Sincerely, Linda Rea SYNOPSIS Starring actor-rapper Ice-Cube, “Are We Done Yet?” is the sequel to the hit comedy “Are We There Yet?”. Produced through Sony Pictures and Revolution Studios, it is inspired by “Mr. Blandings Builds His Dream House” starring Cary Grant. It is being helmed by Steve Carr who has also directed “Daddy Day Care” and “Dr. Doolittle 2”. The film is due to be released in 2007. Logline: Nick and his new family, bursting at the seams of his bachelor apartment, decide to move into their dream home in the Oregon country, only to have a few repairs turn into a nightmare of renovations. Synopsis: Nick (Ice-Cube) and Suzanne (Nia Long), now happily married, live in his bachelor apartment with the kids, Lindsey and Kevin and their dog, Kobe. It’s a very tight fit with no privacy and little room to move. Nick barely has time or space to work on publishing his sports magazine and get used to fatherhood. He decides to sell his sports memorabilia shop and learns some life-altering news; Suzanne is pregnant….with twins! A new home is now imperative. Taking a drive out to the country they meet up with Chuck Mitchell Jr., realtor and jack-of-all-trades, who shows them around a beautiful early-20th century house. They fall in love with it and decide, since Nick has sold his magazine, they can afford it. Lindsey and Kevin, however, are not happy about leaving their friends. They pack up their place in Portland and move into their new home. Almost immediately, things begin to go wrong. It’s just little things at first; the garbage disposal stops working; the chandelier crashes onto the dinner table; the power goes out. Chuck, also an electrician and contractor, comes to check things out, but Nick, annoyed at the way Chuck ingratiates himself with Suzanne, decides to hire a cheaper contractor. After the job is done (and after a nighttime run-in with a raccoon which ends with a hole in the roof) Nick is fined by Chuck, who also happens to be the city inspector, for tapping into other people’s power supplies. A deal is struck and before Nick knows what’s happening, Chuck has moved onto the property. Soon a parade of workers arrives to fix a new host of problems; from dry rot to corroded pipes to new roofing. As Chuck gets more and more involved with the family, displaying an even wider variety of skills, Nick becomes more alienated from them, feeling like a fish out of water. Finally he reaches the end of his patience with Chuck and his crew and fires the lot of them deciding he can do it all himself. After a fight, Suzanne and the kids move out to the guest house and it’s a lonely but busy time for Nick. Slowly, consulting a pile of do-it-yourself books, Nick begins the hammering and sawing. Nick and Kevin reconnect over an afternoon of fishing and when Nick finally realizes Lindsey is no longer a child, they too bond. Soon after, Nick finds out something about Chuck which brings them together in friendship. With all forgiven, the workers come back and help Nick complete the job and it’s almost perfect but for Suzanne. Clutching a bunch of flowers, Nick goes to make peace with Suzanne but she’s deep in labour and the hospital is too far to make it in time. They call for Chuck (an expert in the Bradley method of childbirth) but his car breaks down. Setting out on foot (good thing he was an alternate on the Atlanta Olympic team) Chuck begins talking Nick, Lindsey and Kevin through the birth via cellphone. After much chaos, Nick is revived from a fainting spell and, after a surprise visit from Michael Jordan, the twins arrive safely into the world and their new home. Six months later, at a backyard party, everyone celebrates the publishing of Nick’s new magazine, “Are We Done Yet?: How to Survive Your Re-Model”! Linda Rea Clearances / Product Placement “Are We Done Yet?” Revolution Dream Productions Ltd. 3500 Cornett Rd., Bldg. K Vancouver, BC V5M 2H5 604/453-6680 Phone 604/453-6681 Fax
did they send the same letter
requesting stickers to american standard and Kohler?
the surfing subculture edification
ties perfectly in with the michael Jordan Cameo
golly what an opertune moment for credible sposure.
go down in history with “”““bear””“” ficticious surfboards
and become magicly real thereafter?
Holly wood .would you…
…ambmrose…