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Solar Town USA Media Coverage
Posted by: | CommentsKos Films Teams up with Art Harris
Posted by: | CommentsKos Films Teams up with veteran journalist Art Harris to present the new series Foreclosure Inc.
Breaking the Curse program streaming online
Posted by: | CommentsThe Gracie Award winning PBS documentary is available to view here:
Solar Town USA article on Oprah.com
Posted by: | CommentsForeclosure Inc Media Coverage
Posted by: | CommentsForeclosure Inc Trailer
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Foreclosure Inc. Trailer from Kos Films on Vimeo.
Inside the high-stakes cut-throat world of Arizona foreclosure brokers!
REALITY SERIES FORECLOSURE, INC. COMPLETES FILMING IN ARIZONA
Posted by: | CommentsAward-Winning Film Director Brian Kosisky Serves as Executive Producer of Reality Program Centered On the Foreclosure Crisis in America

Kos Films has completed principal photography of the first season of Foreclosure, Inc., the first television documentary series to explore the foreclosure crisis in America. The program is presented as a 10-episode series set in Phoenix, the fifth most populous state in the U.S., and Maricopa County, with the most foreclosures of all counties in the U.S. The series will air on cable television in 2010. 2008 Gracie Award-winning director Brian Kosisky serves as Executive Producer.
Foreclosure, Inc. takes reality television viewers on a roller-coaster ride into the wild world of foreclosure investing. For over two months, Kosisky’s crew was granted exclusive, unprecedented access to the inner workings of the top foreclosure broker in Arizona (PostedProperties.com), and assembled in various sites around Phoenix, including Maricopa and Pinal counties. Viewers meet and become intimately acquainted with the investors, brokers, house-drivers, auctioneers, protesters, and tenants who come together under the most hopeless and desperate of circumstances, resulting in the most emotional and compelling real-life drama seen on television to date.
The stakes are high as homeowners face crushed dreams, and personal and professional failures, as investors and brokers attempt to make the best of a collapsed market. Kos Films captures the unfolding events, placing an emphasis on the personalities involved and the conflicts that arise between the characters.
Kos Films, LLC is a private production company formed by filmmaker Brian Kosisky who utilizes high definition digital filmmaking to create compelling content with a focus on telling each story with maximum emotional impact. Kosisky’s national Emmy, Dupont Gracie, and Peabody Award-winning team of filmmakers produces programming for national television networks, focusing on hour-long documentaries. His most recent film, Solar Town USA, will air in 2010, and his earlier film, Breaking the Curse, aired on PBS and received the 2008 Gracie Award for Outstanding Documentary. Before creating Kos Films, Kosisky served as senior producer and national news editor for CNN, where he produced and edited feature stories and special projects for the network. Seen by millions of television viewers around the world, Kosisky’s work has captured some of the most important and compelling news events of the last decade.
Call of the Shadow Wolves Prepares to Film
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SHADOW WOLVES, which is preparing for production in Arizona. The film centers on an elite
force of Native American “Shadow Wolf” operatives and a story of their work with an FBI agent
to prevent an impending terrorist attack. Kosisky was most recently honored with the 2008
Gracie Award for his PBS film, “Breaking the Curse.”
Kos Films has announced that CALL OF THE SHADOW WOLVES will start shooting in southern Arizona beginning in October 2009. Award-winning filmmaker Brian Kosisky is set to direct the film.
CALL OF THE SHADOW WOLVES centers on the real-life elite force of “Shadow Wolf” operatives and a story of their work with an FBI agent to prevent an impending terrorist attack against the United States. The Shadow Wolves, part of the U.S. Dept. of Homeland Security, comprise a Native American immigration and Customs Enforcement tactical patrol unit based on the Tohono-O’odham Reservation, a stretch of land the size of Connecticut that straddles the international border in Arizona. Considered the best trackers of human beings in the world, The Shadow Wolves have come face-to-face and captured some of the most notorious drug smugglers to enter the U.S.
“Most people know very little about The Shadow Wolves,” said Kosisky. “This is a tremendous opportunity for a storyteller to create a present-day Western where Native Americans are the heroes.”
BRIAN KOSISKY is an award-winning film director, screenwriter, and producer, and has been using his creative talents to produce stories with depth and emotion for more than 15 years. CALL OF THE SHADOW WOLVES marks his feature directorial debut. Kosisky’s “Breaking the Curse” aired on PBS in 2007, and received the Gracie Award for Outstanding Documentary; his most recent film to complete production, “Solar Town USA” will air on PBS in Fall 2009. Before directing films, Kosisky was a senior producer and editor for CNN; producing, shooting and editing special projects and feature stories. Seen by tens of millions of viewers in more than 200 countries and territories around the world, Kosisky’s work has captured the most important and compelling global news events of the last two decades.
KOS FILMS, LLC is a private production company that utilizes high definition digital filmmaking to create compelling content with a focus on telling each story with maximum emotional impact. Helmed by Kosisky, Kos Film’s national Emmy, Dupont, Gracie Allen, and Peabody Award-winning team of filmmakers produce programming for multiple platforms, including feature films and documentary films for national television networks.
Solar Town USA Clips
Posted by: | CommentsClips of the documentary can be seen here.
Kos Films Producing “Solar Town USA”
Posted by: | CommentsKos Films has started its ambitious follow-up to the Gracie Award-winning documentary, “Breaking the Curse”. ”Solar Town USA” tells the story of America’s first solar town and how it has shaped the alternative energy ideas and policies of today. Production is scheduled on- location in Wisconsin, California, Kansas, Kentucky and Colorado. It will be produced and directed by Brian Kosisky and co-produced and hosted by Daryn Kagan.
The inspiring story of a small town 30 years ahead of its time.
A community ravaged by 100 years of flooding. Dreams built, rebuilt, then washed away.
See what the people of Soldiers Grove, Wisconsin did in the face of adversity and how their bold innovation and will to survive as a community turned them into America’s first solar town.
Three decades after their landmark move, we’ll revisit Soldiers Grove and its residents for a look at what’s worked, what hasn’t and how we can use the lessons they’ve learned to build a more sustainable future.
* * *
You’ll meet Bill Becker, a military veteran and journalist who, after covering the war in Vietnam,
sought solace in the picturesque and simple town of Soldiers Grove. He was not prepared for the threat of the nearby Kickapoo River.
For years, the river was the source of drinking water, farm irrigation and transportation. But it was also temperamental, and summer storms brought continued devastation.
Already skeptical of the Army Corps of Engineers’ repeated attempts to fix the situation with levees and dams, Becker was not convinced that trying to contain the river was a realistic solution.
One day while in casual conversation, a fellow resident joked to Becker that they should just “pick this town up and move it out of here.” After another monstrous flood in 1978, that’s exactly what the residents of Soldiers Grove set out to do, but with a twist…
Tom Hirsch, an architect fresh out of college, was asked to lead the relocation study and not only rebuild the town from scratch, but also make it energy independent. First, residents had to move out of the flood plain and onto higher ground. Then, a landmark ordinance was instituted that required all new buildings get at least half of their heating energy from solar sources. It was a risky undertaking.
“Nobody had done this before that we knew of,” said Hirsch. “We were making it up as we went.” What they made was revolutionary – a “solar attic” that used solar panels on a building’s roof to draw in the sun’s heat and trap it above, where a series of vents carried the warm air throughout the building.
The Dworshack family, originally from the suburbs of Milwaukee, moved to Soldiers Grove in 2004 and took sustainable living a step further. With no connection to power or plumbing, they currently live off solar energy, a wood stove and their own garden. They say they aren’t trying to change the world, they’re just doing what they can to make a difference.
Bill Becker, the small-town journalist who spearheaded the relocation of Soldiers Grove, changed careers and worked for the Department of Energy, helping other towns faced with similar problems. He has been from Illinois to Missouri, to Thailand and back to New Orleans, where he helped introduce the concept of solar energy after the devastation wrought by Hurricane Katrina.
Becker helped develop a Department of Energy program that moved innovations in solar technology from the lab to the marketplace; innovations that are creating the solar-powered homes of today.
California environmental activist Chris Cote was excited by the innovations in solar technology, but frustrated in the lack of implementation by the homebuilders in his community– so Chris became a homebuilder himself! He now builds communities of houses powered by the sun.
And the newest solar towns– they’re being built by college students! Every two years, the Department of Energy turns the National Mall in Washington, DC into a showcase of solar powered homes created by Universities across the world.
Now, the lessons of Soldiers Grove are being used to help another small Mid-western town. Greensburg Kansas was wiped out by an EF5 tornado in May 2007. As residents rebuild, they are transforming their town into a solar and wind-powered tourist destination.
Solar Town USA’s film crew had exclusive access to the 2007 State of Wisconsin-sponsored evaluation of Soldiers Grove’s solar systems and its attempts to bring the systems up to date. The film offers an honest assessment of the first solar town in the nation, what worked, what didn’t, and those people trying to advance solar today. It is an entertaining, emotionally engaging, and educational story that is never preachy or political in tone.
With its traditional storytelling format and contemporary and stylistic visuals, Solar Town USA shows what’s possible when people work together against adversity. Expect many twists and surprises…and lessons for the future solar towns of the world.




