THE OFFICIAL "MY DAY IN THE BARREL" HOMEPAGE
HOW DO I GET THEM?

This is the page where we tell
you all about our films, and how
you can get them on video. Of 
course, the most popular is "My
Day In The Barrel"... and here's
how you get it. The link below
will take you to our "Electronic
Order Form". Print out that form,
fill it out, send it with a check
or money order to the address at
the bottom, and... that's it! 
The films of your choice will be
rushed right to you. Now how
difficult is that?

CLICK HERE TO GET TO:

Our Electronic Order Form
Ain't technology grand?

THE VIDEOS

"Wow!" you're wondering. "Where the hell did these guys come from?
And how can I get my hands on not only their latest, the 
brilliant 'My Day In The Barrel', but the formative films that
made them the filmmakers they are today?"

Well. We'll tell you.

These are the previous films:

Payback (1995)- Well, it was a formative effort... which is to say,
it wasn't all that good. Still, you have to start somewhere. "Payback"
(whose title has since been stolen for a Joan Severance erotic 
thriller, a Mary Tyler Moore TV movie, and Mel Gibson's latest) was 
the story of a pair of gangsters who seek revenge from their Mafia 
family after a long spell in jail. "Payback" was shot over roughly 
two weeks or so in late 1994 and early 1995, on VHS with a budget of 
about $100. The filmmakers did some media mixing and were really 
just trying to figure things out. Jason Bailey and Mac Welch (later 
"Nick") starred as Mac and Bobby, the main characters (Bailey never, 
ever made the mistake of trying to play a lead again). Tim Hallacy, 
Monte Wheeler, and Mike Adams played the big guys, and Earnest 
Roberson played the cop with an axe to grind. Other cast members 
who went on to appear in more Mac Pac Pictures include Ned Berry, 
Haidee Goehring, Josiah Williams, Robert Legorreta, Damian Brown,
and Megan Hall. Bailey wrote, directed, and produced. Lonny 
Quattlebaum edited, and Cameron Pierron served as director of 
photography.
Oh, and you can't buy it, because there's a lot of music in it 
which the filmmakers didn't really pay to use.
Anyway, they learned and moved on to--

                                                              
Snake Eyes (1996)- Their first movie that was worth a damn (whose 
title has since been stolen for Brian DePalma's new movie). This 
one was a cinema verite noir about a pair of burned-out lesbian
detectives (Andrea Wipf and Megan Hall), a con man (Monte Wheeler)
on the way out, and a briefcase of stolen diamonds. Haidee Goehring,
Ned Berry, Damian Brown, Tiffany Zeigler, Tara Hoffman, Tim Hallacy,
and Earnest Roberson were among the cast. Also shot about two weeks
on Hi8-- total final budget: about $500. Bailey wrote, directed, 
produced, edited, and shot this one (in addition to appearing in one 
scene when an actor dropped out at the last minute). Lonny Quattlebaum
appears in two scenes as a barfly. While rough in its filmmaking,
"Snake Eyes" is a pretty smart, well-written and acted flick. I'm not
just saying it so you might want to buy one. But if you do... 
($10 plus $3 S & H)


Shark (1996)- A black comedy/thriller about a lying, cheating lawyer 
(like there's another kind) who murders a colleague to inherit an 
important case and partnership. Monte Wheeler starred as Thomas "The
Shark" Sharkey, with Tim Hallacy as his victim, Damian Brown as his
assistant, Andrea Wipf as his wife, Megan Hall as his mistress, and
Tiffany Zeigler as his secretary. This film was shot in four days 
(shades of things to come!) on Hi-8 (budget: $600), and was the 
filmmakers' first entry in the Kan Film Festival, where they took 
second place. Bailey wrote, produced, and directed; Quattlebaum was 
director of photography and co-editor. ($10 plus $3 S & H)


Bad Chemistry (1997)- This suspense thriller told the story of Amy
Mason (Megan Upton), a college student who is stalked by an
unbalanced fellow student (Monte Wheeler in his last B/Q appearance)
after she resists his aggressive advances. Damian Brown, Tiffany
Zeigler, Robert Legoretta, and Toby Tyner co-starred. This film
was shot on digital video with a $900 budget, and marked the team's
final foray into video. It also took second at the Kan Film Festival.
Bailey wrote, produced, co-edited, and directed; Quattlebaum was 
director of photography, executive producer, and co-editor. ($10 plus 
$3 S $ H)


My Day In The Barrel (1998)- Well, you certainly know all about it
by now, don't you? Bailey and Quattlebaum's first 16mm film (and
their first credited directing collaboration), this romantic
comedy/drama tells the story of Ray (Mike Hull), an overworked and 
overstressed college student who watches his life fall apart during 
one day of finals week. Damian Brown (a veteran of every single
Bailey/Quattlebaum flick) co-stars as roommate Dave; Mac Welch (in his
first film since "Payback") plays Nick; newcomer Jason Crile is Will.
Also appearing are Carrie Cadman, Chala Savino, Amity Hoffman, Thomas
Davis, Earnest Roberson, Larry Canup Jr., Danzel Muzingo, Becky 
Lathrop, Shannon Jowett, and Tiffany Zeigler. Brian Bailey and Kathy
Kroupa produced. Mike King was director of photography. Jason Bailey 
wrote, co-produced, co-edited, and co-directed; Lonny Quattlebaum 
co-edited and co-directed. Own it! Buy it! See it today! ($15 plus
$3 S & H)

And, available for a limited time only....

The "My Day In The Barrel" Special Directors' Edition (1998)- This
supplementary video features a running audio commentary by directors
Jason Bailey and Lonny Quattlebaum, detailing the writing and making
of this hilarious romantic comedy/drama. Also features the original
televison trailer, and exclusive behind-the-scenes footage and 
interviews. 96 minutes. (Available only with the original film as the
"MY DAY IN THE BARREL DIRECTORS' EDITION SET"- $25 pluse $5 S & H)

Order 'em today! They'll be worth money some day!

Click here to get to:

"Barrel" Main Page:
Production Notes:
Cast & Crew Bios:
Links:
Stop The Presses!:
Our latest poster:
Image Gallery 1:
Image Gallery 2:
Premiere Photo Gallery: