Hamptons: Archives

Browse: October 2007

Last Minute Candy Fix

Happy Halloween. Are your candy baskets ready yet? If not, we've made sure to take the time to sample some goods for you and make some recommendations.

If You Live in East Hampton Town:

Your two best bets are Fudge n Stuff on The Circle in Montauk and Dylan's Candy Bar on Main Street in East Hampton Village. The drive out to The End to get to Fudge n Stuff is worth it, especially if you are an avid chocolate eater. Legend has it that a man who is allergic to chocolate once entered the Fudge n Stuff store and immediately went through a sneezing fit due to the significant aura of chocolate in the air. When the attack subsided, he still wolfed some some fudge and was fine. There must be something magical in it.

Meanwhile, Dylan's has perhaps the greatest chocolate pretzels ever made on the East End. The pleasant, extra touch is the mini M&Ms topped on the savory milk chocolate and crunchy pretzels. As you may or may not know, Dylan of Dylan's Candy Bar is the daughter of designer Ralph Lauren. Imagine the delicately crafted and creatively designed fabrics of his clothing magically transformed into works of candy, and you have good reason to stop by the store.

If You Live in Southampton Town:

The Fudge Company on Jobs Lane in Southampton Village has your chocolate candy, fruity candy, chewy candy, and bizarre candy. How bizarre? As bizarre as a cheeseburger made of marshmallows. It looks just like a cheeseburger and feels just like a McDonald's concoction, yet it tastes kind of fruity. The bun tastes like strawberry, the cheese tastes like Starburst/Skittles orange, and we're not sure what the meat tastes like, but it's not meaty. Also in the store were Cow Tales (think Tootsie Roll meets Ho Hos- chocolate chewy candy roll filled with cream), the classic Stallion Candy Cigarettes (but don't use them around kids because of secondhand sugar highs) and an entire yard stick of gum, which is very handy to have around when the flavor of your chew fades.

Going Nuts is another Southampton Village candy store on Jobs Lane, but it wasn't open yesterday afternoon so we can't tell you about, what we assume is, its wide array of candy.

In fact, because the Fudge Company was the only candy-specific store that was open the day before Halloween, we were forced to expand our research to King Kullen and Rite Aid in Bridgehampton. While there, we learned a couple of interesting bits.

First, there's such a thing as healthy chocolate (we think). Rich with antioxidants, we're familiar with the whole craze about dark chocolate being not so bad for you. King Kullen has plenty of dark chocolate, and much of it is organic. How much healthier does the word organic make chocolate? We don't know and we don't care, but we know it's healthier than most candy so therefore we draw the conclusion that it's pretty good for you on top of good tasting.

Another fascinating discovery we made was that Rite Aid is the only place that sells Candy Corn. Imagine that? One of the most popular staples of Halloween candy could only be found at a franchised pharmacy. Because Rite Aid was so plentiful with its variety of candy, we took an extra look around and found these delicious candies called Reese's Peanut Butter Cups, Snickers Bars, and Kit Kat Bars. We heard lots of great things about these items in the past, and after sampling them around the office could not agree more. The Peanut Butter Cups had a rich compound of peanut butter that blended perfectly with the mass-produced milk chocolate. Meanwhile, the peanuts, nougat, caramel and chocolate combination of the Snickers Bar was packed with multiple flavors that danced on the palate like a ballerina. Finally, the Kit Kat Bar went down too easily because of its light and crispy texture beneath the chocolate. The wafers never fill you up, which makes them all the more dangerous.

Our sweet tooth is still aching. Got any recommendations for a cure? Tells us by posting a comment below.

 

Viewing the World From Beneath the Surface

Alex Kirkbride speaks with Tracy Mitchell about his adventures with underwater photography and his three-year, fifty-state journey through the country that is the embodiment of his book American Waters.
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The Mighty Elm

Mac K. Griswold of the Sag Harbor Tree Fund spoke with Plum about the American elm tree and its presence on the East End with a clip from Dan Smith's documentary American Elm.
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Posters as Art

Rebecca Cooper, owner and curator of The Gallery, appears on the MorningNoon&Night Show to talk about her recent exhibit of Hampton International Film Festival posters.
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Hamptons Offshore Invitational

Oaklands Marina in Hampton Bays hosted the 2007 Hamptons Offshore Invitational, where nearly 100 boats competed and fished for yellowfin, shark, albacore, mahi mahi and many more categories, all to benefit Big Brothers and Big Sisters of Long Island.
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HIFF Filmmaker: Jesse Epstein

Jesse Kornbluth interviews Jesse Epstein, director/producer/cinematographer of The Guarantee– an innovative film using voiceover narration and real-time pencil illustration to tell the story about an aspiring ballet dancer and the surprising physical shortcoming that may interfere with his dreams.
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Sag Harbor Sailing School

If you haven't noticed, we're on an island. And there's nothing better than getting out on the water with Sag Harbor Sailing, where they offer sailing lessons, boat rentals, fly fishing, and sailing accessories in the perfect place to do it.

Sag Harbor Sailing School
51 Pine Neck Avenue
Sag Harbor, NY 11963
631-725-5100

www.sailsagharbor.com

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Halloween in the Hamptons

Some have given the perennials and the rest of the garden a break and have taken the time to gussy up the home for the ghouls and goblins that will come knocking on the door tonight. We've seen gigantic and inflatable spiders, guardian ghosts, Frankensteins and more on the lawns of the locals, and we're looking for more.

Send your favorite Halloween costumes and decorations to us at hamptonseditor@plumtv.com

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Scarecrow and Mrs. Witch kick back in Southampton with the little ghosts.
Kirk Cassels
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2007 World Series: Be Bitter or Hop on the Bandwagon?

2007 World Series

This is not the worst times but it is certainly not the best of times to be a New York sports fan:

  • The Mets choked and blew one of the biggest division leads in history.
  • The Yanks barely mustered up a win to avoid being swept in the first round of the playoffs and are currently A Rod-less with great potential to lose other marquee players.
  • After appearing in the playoffs last year, the Jets thus far have only beaten one team (the same team that everyone is beating), and have shown Pennington the bench.
  • The Knicks' season just started while they're embroiled in a sexual harrassment suit.
  • The Giants are playing in the most competitive division in the NFL.
  • The Rangers and Islanders are off to a good start but for how long until this recent curse on the Big Apple catches up to them?

Adding salt to the wound is the recent Golden Era of sports in Boston, as the Patriots are on their way to the perfect season, Boston College is #2 in the BCS, the Celtics have Kevin Garnett, the Bruins are actually pretty good for once, and, oh yeah, those Red Sox kicked the crap out of every pitcher they faced on their way to a sweep of the World Series. It's so bad that even former New York City mayor Rudy Giuliani endorsed Boston to win (political ploy yes but it still hurts).

Red Sox nation doesn't even stop there. There are still plenty of Red Sox fans in Colorado.

Meanwhile, it's not rare in the least to see a couple of Red Sox caps on the East End. So if you're a New York fan during this horrendous time, what do you do? Do you switch sides and move to the Cape or Nantucket or Martha's Vineyard? Do you stick to your guns and root against the Sox or for the Rockies?

This is, indeed, a decisive moment in time. Where do you stand?

Billy Sullivan's Hamptons International Film Festival Poster Signing

With each of the 15 years of the Hamptons International Film Festival comes 15 unique posters that emblematically attract the eyes to print before they view what's on screen. In celebration of this year's Festival, artist Billy Sullivan personally autographed copies of this year's poster at The Gallery in Sag Harbor before a single film was screened.
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Billy Sullivan signing a copy of his creative poster for the Hamptons International Film Festival.
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Six Steps to Order

Whether you're too busy working or too busy playing, it's easy to let clutter fill up your home and throw you off balance just a tad. In this clip, Emily Herrick of Herrick Home Organizing helps Plum's Tracy Mitchell clean out and organize her closet before her big move using a six step acronymn S.T.A.C.K.S.

S.T.A.C.K.S.© Clear & SIMPLE™, Inc. The C&S Systems are the property of Clear & SIMPLE™, Inc. and may not be copied or distributed without express written consent. 

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HIFF Best Documentary Feature: "I Am An Animal"

Ingrid Newkirk, the founder of PETA, is the subject of Matthew Galkin's documentary I Am An Animal. The film won the Hamptons International Film Festival's Golden Starfish for Documentary Feature. Before accepting the award, filmmaker and subject spoke with Plum.
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HIFF Breakthrough Film: AmericanEast

If you were in the midst of the Hamptons International Film Festival hubbub, then you must have heard the constant buzz about the politically charged film AmericanEast. If you weren't, then check the clip as the film's writer and director Hesham Issawi discusses the movie's narrative and undertones.
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Vanessa Redgrave

The 15th Annual Hamptons International Film Festival was a great week for actress Vanessa Redgrave. Not only did the world premiere of her new film Shell Seekers sell out at each screening, but the Oscar-winner also received the Festival's Career Achievement in Acting Award. Before she was interviewed by Alec Baldwin for the "A Conversation With..." series, Redgrave spoke with Plum about acting and her passionate advocacy for UNICEF.
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The Stars at HIFF: Famke Janssen and Chris Eigeman

In retrospect, Plum's coverage of the Hamptons International Film Festival was startlingly prescient. We talked to almost every winner of every award at the festival. (Sometimes we're just that good.) Here, Jesse Kornbluth talks with Famke Janssen (who won the Best Actress Award) and Chris Eigeman about Turn the River.

 

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The Issues at HIFF: Phil Donahue and Ellen Spiro

Phil Donahue and Ellen Spiro appear on the MorningNoon&Night Show to speak with Plum about their film Body of War, which follows the journey of Thomas Young, a paraplegic after five days as a soldier in Iraq, and his mistreatment by the govenment.
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Cyclocross in Southampton

Miles Romanow organized a crazy bicycle event called Cyclocross at the Southampton Youth Services. Watch the best in the world compete as Erwin Vervecken, the three- time world champion, races against the US tag team of Ryan Trebon and Barry Wicks.

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Bob Balaban on "Bernard & Doris"

Bridgehampton's own Bob Balaban speaks with Plum about his film Bernard and Doris, which opened the 2007 Hamptons International Film Festival.
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HIFF: And the Winner Is...

As they say in the biz: That's a wrap. The film festival is over. They laughed, they cried, they gave away a bunch of prizes. So who won? Who's headed towards inevitable stardom and future walks down red carpets? All the glorious details below:

Winning is nice, winning a bunch of money is even nicer. While the Golden Starfish Awards recognize the accomplishments of the filmmakers who have come to show their films, they also give them a nice headstart on their next project with prizes ranging from $185,000 in cash and services for the top prize to $1,000 for student filmmakers. So who are the next up and comers and who took home the awards?

Golden Starfish Awards:.

Best Feature: VALERIE (Germany, East Coast Premiere) Directed by Birgit Möller. “A very accomplished first film about a woman's struggle to survive at the margins of society while maintaining her dignity.”
Best Cinematography: KINGS (UK, US Premiere) Directed by Tom Collins and photographed by PJ Dillon. “For the beauty and texture, intermixing the past and present.”
Best Screenwriter: Writer/Director Chris Eigeman for TURN THE RIVER (US, World Premiere). “For it's unflinching realism, pitch perfect dialogue and 3 dimensional characters in a world that is so often given to stereotypes.“
Special Jury Best Actress Prize: Famke Janssen “For a brave and touching portrayal of a woman fighting for her child and her life.”
Documentary Feature: I AM AN ANIMAL: THIS STORY OF INGRID NEWKIRK AND PETA (US, World Premiere) Directed by Matthew Galkin.
Short Film: AT THE END OF THE SENTENCE (Scotland, 2005) directed by Marisa Zanotti.
Woozyfly.com Award for Best Music: Mark Mancina for AUGUST RUSH.
Career Achievement in Acting Award: Vanessa Redgrave.

Films of Conflict and Resolution:

BEHIND FORGOTTEN EYES (US, East Coast Premiere) Directed by Anthony Gilmore.
SOLDIERS OF CONSCIENCE (US, NY Premiere) Directed by Catherine Ryan and Gary Weimberg.

HIFF: Opening Night Party at Gurney's Inn

Chris O'Conner and Aleks Degtyarev treck to Montauk for the opening party of the Hamptons International Film Festival in hopes of capturing the dreams and aspirations of the film flock on their video camera. They get in over their heads when the film flock is ready to reveal everything, and not just about the films they have made and seen.
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Walking the Red Carpet at the Hamptons International Film Festival

The truly local aesthetics of the Hamptons can mesmerize you during any time of the year. But roll a thin, red piece of cloth out on an East Hampton sidewalk in October, and all eyes are fixated nowhere else. From actor Harvey Keitel to teenage filmmakers to Suffolk County Executive Steve Levy, jacks-of-all-trades worked the red carpet every night of the Hamptons International Film Festival.
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Harvey Keitel and Daphna Kastner before the screening of My Sexiest Year.
Kirk Cassels
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HIFF Guide: Fitting in at the Festival

Tickets to the festival alone don’t make you a film buff. There are nuances to consider as well. Like your vocabulary. And your wardrobe. As the Hamptons International Film Festival hits full swing in the next couple days, we’re here to help.

Halfway Through the Hamptons International Film Festival

Two days down, and just over two more to go as the Hamptons International Film Festival continues to roll. If you weren't in East Hampton for the opening night spectacles and shindigs, you missed Lisa Kudrow and Bob Balaban walking the red carpet just before the masses got down and grooved at the Gurney's Inn in Montauk.

Though there was no gigantic after party the second evening, the star-studded power returned to the sidewalks of the United Artists Cinema in East Hampton Village as Harvey Keitel, Frankie Muniz and Karolina Kourkova walked the red carpet en route to screen their film My Sexiest Year.

Also making an appearance, much to the pleasure of the crowd and paparazzi, were Alison Eastwood (yep, Clint's daughter), and Marcia Gay-Harden, whose performance in the film Pollock (about local and legendary artist) garnered herself the much coveted Academy Award.

You've been missing out on a lot if you haven't got your Filmfest fill just yet, but there's still plenty more to get excited about: A Conversation with Sydney Lumet takes place this afternoon, the filmmakers social party at the Star Room in Wainscott is Saturday night, and of course there are still the finale of events on Sunday. Don't miss out.

Opening Night of the Hamptons International Film Festival

There was a slice of Hollywood in the Hamptons when Lisa Kudrow and Bob Balaban were out and about for the opening night screening and festivities of the Hamptons International Film Festival. Crowds of film fanatics and celebrity gawkers lined East Hampton's Main Street to catch a flick or spot a star near the United Artists Cinema.

It was a mix of big names in the micro and macro sense as Suffolk County Executive Steve Levy addressed the crowd and praised Balaban (whose face is as familiar as a celeb as it is a local) before the director introduced his new film Bernard & Doris prior to the screening and followed up with a Q&A afterward.

Within minutes after the first films ended, the jamboree trekked about 11 miles east to the Gurney's Inn in Montauk for a nightcap of networking, dancing, eating, drinking, and the works. As the DJ dropped beats on the turntables, a percussion master matched the thump-thump on the bongos as the ground continued to shake.

As loud as it got, you could still overhear a couple of interesting blurbs. Here are some of our favorites:

  • "I'm a DeNiro look-alike in my spare time."
  • "A camera is the only thing that separates a stalker from a paparazzo."
  • "I know Spielberg's daughter's best friend, but not well enough to get a meeting with him."
  • "Are you a filmmaker?"
  • "My screenplay's tucked away, deep in a vault, where studio executives can't destroy it."

Ready For the HIFF?

With the Hamptons International Film Festival finally here, Plum has some special episodes of the MorningNoon&Night Show  at 8 a.m., followed by repeats at 3 p.m. and 10 p.m.

Before the first screening even showed, we chatted with Bob Balaban, whose film Bernard & Doris kicks off the festival Wednesday night to sold out theaters, the Festival's Programmers Josh Kouri David Nugent, as well as filmmaker Helen Hood Scheer and high school prodigy Gloria Dios.

We took the show a bit farther east from the traditional Bridgehampton Historical Society, and were lucky that our good friend Elie Tahari let us use their retail space in East Hampton. Hampton Coffee Company fed us good eating's as always, and Mark Anthony Rugs helped us with the decorating. Don't miss a cinematic episode as Jesse Kornbluth and Kate Hampton join us for this incredible week.