After the movie, Garcia, 53, took questions from the audience, many of whom belong to the Orange County Film Society, which invited the Cuban-born celebrity to town.
When an audience member asked Garcia what it was like having his daughter, Dominik García-Lorido, in the movie with him — and playing a stripper at that — Garcia cracked a joke, saying he hoped all the men were “tying their shoes” during the scene where she was hanging upside down from a pole.
But Garcia added that he was proud of his daughter and that he gave her space to play her part.
“She can handle herself,” he said.
If there was one message in particular that Garcia kept pounding home during his personal appearance, it was that “City Island” was shot in 27 days and cost $6 million.
It’s a tactic he encouraged more independent studios to embrace and start “picking up,” saying the number of movies made could quadruple and that the good ones will eventually find their way to the top.
“Big budgets don’t necessarily make good movies,” Garcia said. “We used the same sort of cameras we used to shoot ‘Ocean’s Eleven.’
“The catering was just different. For ‘Ocean’s’, we had tuna. For ‘City Island,’ we had Oreos.”
Without question, Garcia said the movie industry is in the midst of change, if not at its apex.
Not only are more films being shot outside of Hollywood — something that’s actually hurting those who rely on the film industry for their livelihoods — but the reviews and advertising are surfacing in social networking sites like Facebook and Twitter, he said.
“In the old days,” Garcia said, “you used to have to make physical contact” to promote a movie.
“But cream rises and good movies find their way to the top,” he said. “Look at ‘The Hurt Locker’ and ‘Juno.’”