Indie Film Blog

                                                 One Vision's Long Journey into Reality

  

A diary of my arduous process to develop, finance, produce and distribute a totally independent, digital, feature film (DREAMS AWAKE).  Come along for the ride, comment if you like, and maybe we’ll learn something, and of course have a little fun.  Originally I gave myself from March 15, 2005 to September 15, 2006 to turn my dream and vision into reality, with only my imagination to guide me.  Since we all know film development can be unpredictable and full of unanticipated obstacles, a self-imposed deadline should not jeopardize the project's quality.  My new timeline was more flexible and production finally commenced when the script was where it needed to be in order to tell an engaging and original story.  Check in regularly for my ongoing progress.  UPDATE: We did go into production and finally wrapped in September, 2007, and are currently in post-production mode ...  JAD


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Archive Thirty-Two

April 10, 2008 - Web Works

Winging by a wire and bringing the fire ...

I've been spending most of my time lately getting all the stuff together we need for the new website.  Even though someone other than myself is designing it and making sure it all works right.  We hope to have the first version up by next month.  This is certainly taking a lot more time than I anticipated.  Especially since my main focus as been the rough cut I'm still working on.  However, other matters beyond the edit (and website) has taken my attention away ...

A little about the website itself.  It will consist of five main sections:

1) Story, which will include a logline and synopsis with several photos that help represent the story, along with a director interview and a few more photos;

2) Cast, which will include bios of the eight main cast members, as well as quite number of photos of them, along with a few photos of the other cast members, and finally several photos of the cast and director "at work".

3) Production, which will include production notes about several elements of the production, key crew bios, a number of behind the scenes photos of the crew, some behind the scenes video, and a blog.

4) Media, which will include several appropriate media photos, news articles and broadcast pieces (to be updated as we get more coverage), trailers and an EPK (electronic press kit).

5) Community, which will include some appropriate photos, contact page, forum, and social network links.

I don't believe we'll have every piece ready to go, but most of it will be there.  I'm also quite sure we'll add some other elements as this progresses ...

As far as the edit, that has been slow going, as previously mentioned.  Once I'm done with this rough edit, I'll hire an editor to work with me.  In fact, I'm currently looking for one.  So if you're out there, contact me now.  Also, I'm currently consulting with someone on the visual effects elements we need in some of our more challenging scenes.  Hopefully that will help me get a grip on that so I know exactly who I need to hire.  Until then, back to the grindstone ...

Jerry

 

April 15, 2008 - Shasta Pix

Enjoy, enjoy ...

 

          

A few flakes dropped last night, so a new coat for the mountain.
A couple shots from the deck.

Jerry

 

April 27, 2008 - MacGuffin?

The bait, a gimmick, sleight of hand, or plain old imagination? ...

We all know what a MacGuffin is, right?  Well, just in case you forgot, let's rehash it a bit.  Very basically, it's a plot device to help get the story going, in effect an engine that gets cranked up to drive the characters (and us) into the story.  What may be unique about it's role as a plot device is the fact that what it really is in the end is quite insignificant.  In other words, it's a type of fool's gold with maybe some apparent value, but in the end not worth much of anything.  It's main function is get the characters going, engage the audience and move the plot along.  Usually it's  an actual physical item, but can also be an action, a person, or an event, all of which are usually ambiguous ...

Examples: The suitcase in Pulp Fiction, the stolen money in Psycho, the maltese falcon in The Maltese Falcon, the sleigh Rosebud in Citizen Kane.  We could go on and on with this, but you get the gist of it.  Although these are not good examples for the concept that the less specific the MacGuffin the more interest the audience will have, they were very obviously used well in their respective films.  In addition, most of us are quite aware that it was Hitchcock who used this device very successfully in his films and the term has become synonymous with a 'Hitchcock' film ...

In the end, the MacGuffin's  real purpose is pull us into the main characters' world and to in essence 'fall in love' with them so we will follow them wherever the story takes us.  So, the MacGuffin itself is a hollow, featureless gimmick that just allows us to fall into the story, until we can establish an emotional resonance with the characters, finally satisfying our curiosity about these characters' lives.  The MacGuffin hooks us, but doesn't drive us home, just fuels our imagination towards resolution ...

What does all this have to do with Dreams Awake?  Within the first ten minutes of the film, a Macguffin is offered up that helps kick start the story, and which the characters discover and eventually realize is...ha, I can't spill all the beans, can I?  You'll have to see the film for yourself.  Coming soon ...

Jerry

 

Comments -- Indieshares Launch -- 5/3

IndieShares, a new independent film company based in Seattle, WA is on the verge of igniting an independent film revolution by giving the audience a say in what movies are made and for the first time in history an opportunity to own a piece of the action.

IndieShares receives thousands of scripts online, which then move through its rigorous and proprietary review process. Scripts with the highest IndieScores are optioned and then voted on by the public.

Right now, at www.indieshares.com, movie fans can watch three video pitches and cast their vote for free. When voting concludes, the winning script will be made into a securities offering. The general public will then have the opportunity to invest as little as $10 per share in the winning screenplay. In the future, IndieShares plans to have multiple voting events and investment opportunities available simultaneously.

Please take a look at our website, www.indieshares.com.

Thank you,Jay Schwartz

 

May 7, 2008 - The Hero's (filmmaker's?) Journey

A tunnel, a battle, a process, and maybe a light? ...

Feeling a little burnt out the other day, I got to thinking about the 'good old days', before the tricklings of the idea for this story first surfaced from my subconsious.  Wow, that's been about five years now.  No wonder I've been feeling a little beat up lately, living with this story as long as I have and watching it morph into something beyond what I had imagined.  In fact, that's exactly where I am right now, watching a major change getting ready to happen, doing battle, not knowing where it will go, changing in the process and bringing something back better than I planned, all for the world to see ...

It's a bit like the hero's journey, huh?  Joseph Campbell, right?  Remember? The monomyth, the commonality of mythologies that have been in the world all over the world for thousands of years in thousands of cultures?  Which Campbell had so articulately laid out in his book, The Hero with a Thousand Faces, about the archetypal hero...

The protagonist in Dreams Awake in essence goes through this hero's journey.  There is a very definite call to adventure, which she must answer, or else...   Then there is a series of events, a road of trials, if you will, in which you hope she achieves the goal, or boon, as it's called.  This sometimes means the hero finds important self-knowledge, leading the return to the ordinary world.  And in the end, the hero must apply the boon, meaning she uses what was learned to improve the world she lives in.  So it's not just about the hero, but the society, culture, civilization they inhabit.  Makes you wonder if possibly this mythological construct was used as a means to keep people in place or in order.  Meaning it's a well-designed way for a culture to preach the idea that unless the struggle an individual goes through is good for the society they live in, their own personal struggle is not that important.   Hhhmmm, maybe, but maybe too that's a part of the fabric a culture needs to keep it viable.  The individual's struggle for the good of their whole world.  I guess, not a bad way to live ...

In the end I'd like to think that our little film works out that way, as far as the  story goes for the hero and as far as the film goes in the world.  I do know that as the creator of this little expedition through storyland, that the journey is something I could never have predicted.  But then, who would have wanted to?  We surely can't take the fun out of the process, and I am starting to see the light at the end of the tunnel.  Yes, and about time, the battle weary soul that I am ...

Jerry

 

May 20, 2008 - The Editor Search

Lots of choices? ...

It's been a while I know, but my wife and I took a much-needed vacation, and I had to forget about all this for awhile.  Of course, that didn't completely work, yet I did get some rest and relaxation.  On to the task at hand...

I'm going to vent a bit, so I'll apologize up front, but I'll try to keep it to a minimum.  As I've previously stated, I'm currently looking for an editor to bring all the marvelous pieces of our masterpiece together.  The resumes have been flowing in, almost 200 by last count.  Next week I'll start interviews and weed through that.  So far I've got about a dozen decent candidates.  Below is the ad I've been running on all the main film job boards I know about ...

FEATURE EDITOR WANTED

WAY TO GO MEDIA has finished production of an independent feature film and is currently seeking a dramatic feature editor experienced with HD in Final Cut Studio.

We need a solid technical and creative person who is well-organized, detail oriented and a good communicator.  You must have a strong story sense, and be willing to experiment with the aesthetics and style of the material.  You will be working closely with the director throughout the post process, and together will be responsible for the quality of the final delivery.  You should have a working knowledge of additional software packages that support the post process, possibly After Effects, Photoshop, Shake, and other editorial support solutions, as well as be familiar with third party plug-ins as needed.  Also, you should have color correction, motion graphics, compositing and audio skills.  It would also help to have special effects experience, or at least be able to collaborate on workflow process.  We expect someone with a good work ethic, a positive attitude and who is resourceful.  It would also help to have knowledge of setup and management of hardware, and be able to export/compress video for online trailers.

Footage is HDCAM that has been imported into Mac Pro with ProRes codec.  There is also some P2 footage, but is minimal.  We have our own system, and you must be willing to work in Mt. Shasta, CA over the summer and have project completed in September.  Pay negotiable.  Please email your resume with references and reel to (blank).

DREAMS AWAKE -- While on vacation a disconnected family gets stranded near mystical Mt. Shasta and gets more than they could have ever bargained for. A family drama grows into a spiritual mystery, and finally becomes a mystical adventure. A glimpse into the subtle but intense possibilities of the human spirit, this story delves into that magical lore between reality and illusions, dreams and awake, and life and immortality.

More info:  http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1053835/ or www.waytogomedia.com or www.dreamsawake.tv

A lot to ask for I know, but what I would like.  Here's the gripe, or should I more correctly state, a lesson for some of you out there when applying for such a position.  Mostly for you young starting out editors ...

Please don't beg, plead, or offer your first born to me.  It's very unbecoming, and I certainly don't want to terrify a little one ...

Don't apply for something you absolutely have no qualifications for.  Like you're going to a community college to get an associate degree in philosophy and happen to take an editing class or two and thought you'd like to 'give it a try'.  Right ...

Please don't list everything (ten pages worth) you've ever done since you were born - 'third place in a class photo contest in middle school'.  Okay ... 

You live in Indonesia and you plan to take a vacation in the states, so you'll have a couple weeks available here that you could work on it.  Hhhmmm ...

You work for a small publishing house in the heartland, but you'd like to escape and do my editing for me.  Copy editing.  Huh?  Sorry, wrong position ...

You've worked at a small TV station for 20 years doing a lot of the daily grunt work and you want to escape.  You've done basic news, sports and weather spot editing and only know Avids.  But of course you've never done any narrative work or long form of any kind, but you'd like to and meanwhile you'd like to learn the Apple system.  Wow ...

You live in another foreign country, though I'm not sure which one because you don't speak English, but from what I gather you think we can figure out how to communicate.  And another thing, you want to work at your place, wherever that is, and we can periodically communicate...who knows how (or why?).  Amazing ...

You're an all around indie filmmaker who writes, shoots, directs and edits all your own ultra low budget films, so ya'd like to take a stab at editing someone else's film for a change.  I have great respect for what you do and all you do, especially in a true indie way.  However, I'm not sure I'm ready to hand over my film to someone, who while they may be a true auteur filmmaker, isn't a true editor nor who may have the depth of experience I'd like in my editor.  If you wanted to get together and discuss the whole world of filmmaking and compare notes, great.  I'd love to.  If I wanted to go this route, I'd edit the film myself, but I'm actually learning the folly of that.  Yeah ...

There's no way you can leave the big congested city to work at such an amazingly beautiful place as Mt. Shasta over the summer on heaven forbid, someone else's equipment at someone else's facility.  Only at your facility in which you will only charge me $1000/day and I can come down to it when you feel I need to.  Oh boy ...

Had enough?  There's more, lots more, but I've had enough.  You get the point.  It never amazes me the variety of people who not only work in the film industry but the variety of people who work at each job.  I find it utterly fascinating.  Now, I'm really not trying to make fun of these editorial candidates, just wake them up a bit to the reality.  Actually my heart goes out to them, but please people try to read and understand who and what I (or anyone) want and need.  Plus, there is the factor of the amount of time I have to waste sorting through all this.  Of course, that goes with the territory.  The important thing here for me, is how this presents you to someone like me.  If this is how you apply for a job, this probably reflects on how you will do the job.  It doesn't instill any confidence, and it really is true that you only have one chance to make a first impression ...

Now there were several other candidates who maybe weren't quite right for this position, but I didn't mind that they applied.  They had cut a few shorts, some commercials, music videos and such, and been doing this maybe 2, 3 or 4 years.  They want to stretch and push their edge or envelope or whatever you want to call it.  They either hadn't done any features, or hadn't done much if any narrative work.  Shoot, go for it and try to get the experience you want.  Not a problem.  For me though, this is a very major decision for the film, and I want to 'get it right'.  And I plan to.  I noticed that a lot of the younger candidates seemed very technically proficient, but maybe short on story sense.  For me story sense trumps the technical.  I don't know if that just comes from experience or not, so maybe the older ones get that better?  I'm not sure, but it seems to make obvious sense, though I'm sure that isn't true for all of you out there ...

Just one more simple beef, and I'll knock all this off.  Online reels.  They are fine for initial contact, but please in the final analysis I'd like to see more than a few minutes of a couple scenes edited from several different films.  A complete narrative work to analyze would be great.  Send me one, or direct me to what I should get.  I think the professional editors understand that, so get a clue.  Okay, enough already ... 

Anyway, wish me luck.  I'm hoping by next month me and my newfound editor will be hard at work on this last leg of this long journey ...

A final note.  Today is the 100th birthday of my favorite actor.  TCM had several of his films on last night, and I watched parts of three of them; The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance, Anatomy of a Murder, and Harvey.  I loved them all, and even though you were aware of him in each role, each one was so different than the other.  He had both a center to himself and quite a range he could explore.  But then, having John Ford, Otto Preminger and Henry Koster as directors may have helped some.  Very cool ...

Jerry

 

Comments -- The Journal of Short Film -- 5/20

The Journal of Short Film released Volume 11 (Spring 2008) today.  Vol.11 is the long-awaited Portland Volume, featuring 24 filmmakers from Portland, Oregon.  The JSF is a quarterly DVD that, to date, has published over 120 filmmakers from 10 countries.

The Journal was thrilled to have Portland filmmaker Karl Lind serve as guest editor for Vol.11.  The collection maintains the JSF's normal wild diversity while highlighting one of the most singular, lively art scenes in the country.  This is the Journal's first geographically themed volume, and, through Lind's work and Portland's amazing depth of talent, the result is impressive.

www.theJSF.org
 

 

Comments -- Inside Look into Action on Film Festival - Interview with Founder Del Weston -- 5/22

Check out the IndieClub.com interview with longtime IndieClub.com member & founder of the 4th Annual Action on Film Festival, which takes place this year at the end of July in Pasadena, CA. IndieClub.com is very excited to support AOFFEST! It is a festival that features a wide range of quality films, and most importantly, Del Weston and his team go above and beyond to support filmmakers and the indie filmmaking community as a whole.

Del set aside some time from his busy schedule of preparing for the upcoming festival to talk with us about everything from the fest submission process (yep - they're still accepting) to distributors, to the Black Tie Awards show, to cigars.

Check out the interview at the IndieClub.com website: http://www.indieclub.com/Q&A/delweston.asp

 

May 31, 2008 - The Search Continues

Fewer choices ...

I'm narrowing it down, the final jackpot for the editor sweepstakes.  I've interviewed nine candidates now and have it down to three finalists.  Now it gets tricky, as all three of them would probably work.  Now the intuition thing plays out.  Which one would work best for me?  And is a great fit for the film?  At this point I'm not completely sure, so now what?  Pull out my crystal ball?  Roll the dice?  Dance an offering to the gods?  Uh, no...

On top of that I did promise three editors I'd meet with them in San Francisco on my way back up to Shasta.  I should honor that, but that probably means putting that decision off a few days.  I do want to find someone soon, but maybe hurrying the decision isn't the best way to go.  Plus, I do have a couple more interviews here.  I guess it's a good problem to have, several who could work ...

On another front, I've gotten a few distribution inquiries lately, all from foreign distributors.  Hhhmm, in my spare time (ha, right) I have been working on a distribution strategy, a type of hybrid plan.  That landscape seems to be changing rapidly, but I still don't see a light at the end of the tunnel for indies really breaking out of traditional paradigms.  The theories are out there, but we might be years away from making that pan out.  I see and meet more and more people trying to make that happen, but until there are true runaway hits in that world it won't be a true viable paradigm.  Now maybe, that is part of the point.  Maybe true runaway hits is not what that paradigm is about.  But we do need some type of metric to define some type of success for it to be a viable path for those floundering around in that space.  Don't we? ...

Once this editor situation is resolved I'm going to start searching for a marketing person.  I certainly don't think I can sit around and wait for a distributor, or an audience, to find us.  Once we have a real film, whether we search for a distributor or try to find an audience on our own, we will for sure need a way to stand out from the crowd.  It boggles me how many films are being made these days, which means finding our true path out of that massive world and into the light of day has gotten a whole lot harder.  And the journey continues ... 

Jerry

 

June 10, 2008 - Website Touches

Progress, finally ...

I spent a few days in Texas huddling with my webmaster, trying to finalize some of the finer points of our new website design and clarify a few snafus and miscommunications.  I think we're completely on the same page now and things should go quicker.  A little tidbit from the Production Notes page to whet your appetite ...

THE ADVENTURE

Background.  Developing, producing and distributing an independent film is an all-encompassing and overwhelming venture and adventure.  Filmmakers, explorers all, must take on the world to breath life into their vision and push its birth into that very same world.  A cinematic team that collaborates towards this artistic creation requires a deep level of persistence, dedication and enthusiasm.  During this process, this adventure, if this team grows together they can become a family.  A film family united for a singular goal, an overriding hope.  A hope that this film family can create a significant cinematic work, one the world has never seen before.

Character & Story.  Unique characters must inhabit a compelling and engaging story, usually driving it into fresh and unexpected territories, and hopefully giving it a distinctive life of its own.  Two very unique ‘characters’ inhabit this film.  One is a strong, beautiful and magnificent testament to vertical creation, the other a subtle, barely perceptible but significant harmonic.  One an outer landscape, the other an inner landscape, known and unknown, blending and struggling with each other.  Together both offer a lush tapestry that blends throughout this narrative, allowing a typical, disconnected, modern family to work out their problems in a unique way.

Mount Shasta - “Where Heaven and Earth Meet”

                “I consider the evening twilight on Mt. Shasta one of the grandest sights I have ever witnessed.”

                                                                                                                                -- Theodore Roosevelt, 1903

                “When I first caught sight of it over the braided folds of the Sacramento Valley, I was fifty miles away and

                afoot, alone and weary. Yet all my blood turned to wine, and I have not been weary since.”

                                                                                                                                -- John Muir, 1874

                “Lonely as God, and white as a winter moon, Mount Shasta starts up sudden and solitary from the heart of

                the great black forests of Northern California.”                             -- Joaquin Miller, 1874

                And well this Golden State shall thrive, if like its own Mount Shasta, Sovereign Law shall lift itself in pure

                atmosphere - so high.”                                                                       -- John Rollin Ridge, 1854

                “Mount Shasta, a vision of immensity such as pertains to the vast universe rather than to our own planet.”

                                                                                                                                -- James Dwight Dana, 1849

Mt. Shasta, a 14,179-foot strato-volcano in northern California, rises abruptly some 10,000 feet above the surrounding level ground that encircles it, and on a clear day is quite a majestic sight for more than 100 miles.

This impressive mountain has a very rich cultural history that goes back to the numerous Native American tribes who have inhabited the nearby area for hundreds of years.  They have long considered the mountain sacred.  In addition, various groups of spiritual seekers consider Shasta a place with mystical powers.  A few have been coming since the 1930’s, and there was profound growth for such mystical practices in the ‘60’s and ‘70’s.  This activity has spawned all types of remarkable stories about the mountain to the point that it is considered one of the seven sacred mountains of the world.  The numerous books written the past 100 years about Mt. Shasta’s spiritual energy and the experiences people have had on the mountain have also contributed to an extensive and growing mythology.

There is no doubt that Mt. Shasta is a special place, and the team who created Dreams Awake felt very privileged to have been able to shoot their film in such an extraordinary setting.  Also, the Shasta area does have a bit of film history itself.  In 1934 MGM Studios sent a group of cameramen to shoot background shots for their project, The Rear Car.  By all accounts it seems the film never actually went into production.  In 1972 Climb An Angry Mountain, starring Fess Parker, was shot in the surrounding area, mostly in McCloud and Weed.  In 1976 Baby Blue Marine, starring Jan-Michael Vincent, had a couple scenes shot in McCloud and Weed.  In 1986 Stand by Me had a scene shot in McCloud.  In 2007 Babysitter Wanted had a few scenes shot in Weed and Lake Shastina and various other locations in Siskiyou County.  Even though these films had scenes that were shot in the area, Dreams Awake is the first feature film that was completely shot on and around Mt. Shasta.

In Dreams Awake, Mt. Shasta represents a parable for the inner quest and the backdrop to play out the struggle.  Shasta, where transformative adventures reveal, purify and free the human spirit for a higher reality and purpose.  This magic mountain, with its secret lore from Native American and mystical legends, serves the plot by being the background tapestry for which everything plays out, reinforcing the tenuous, shifting balance between the physical and spiritual worlds.  Essentially, this is a spiritual mystery about learning why we could be here on earth.  The underlying lesson being that magic is one of the fundamental, underlying properties of reality.  We just have to learn where and how to look for it, so we can wake up and be more aware to our true inner nature.

Inner Sound – “Music of the Gods”

Historically speaking, most cultures of the world have had some type of creation myth that involved sound, usually sound as the first creation and that everything else created came from such ‘otherworldly’ sound in the ether.  A number of spiritual, mystical and religious texts have spoken of this metaphysical equation of sound as an element of their most honored traditions.

Plato wrote that the cosmos was constructed according to musical intervals and proportions.  Pythagoras called it ‘Music of the Spheres’ and believed that it fills our inner ears and we are constantly in contact with it from the moment of our birth.  Another Greek philosopher, Heraclitus, called it ‘Logos’ (divine word or sound).  Some Native American traditions call it ‘Song of the Creator,’ while the Bible calls it ‘The Word’ and ‘Voice of Many Waters’.  Hindus refer to it as ‘Anahad Shabd’ (unlimited tone or unstruck melody) and ‘Akash Bani’ (voice from the heavens), while the Sufis say it is ‘Saute Surmad’ (tone that fills the cosmos).  Lao Tzu described the Tao as ‘unimpeded harmony’ and referred to the ‘Great Tone’ as the source of all things.  A number of other cultures, such as the Aborigines, Aztecs, Eskimos, Malayans and Persians all believed that the universe originated in sound.

Today there is a popular, still developing theory among physicists called String Theory, which attempts to provide a complete, unified and consistent description of the fundamental structure of our universe.  Very basically, it explains the smallest possible component of reality as a vibrating string, or a bundle of them intertwined, and that how matter is created depends on the way these strings vibrate.  And of course when something vibrates, it creates a tone or harmonic of tones.  String theory tries to bridge and tie together the theories of relativity and quantum mechanics into the currently accepted “Big Bang” theory of the universe’s creation.  In fact, the very word Universe means ‘one song’, uni meaning one and verse meaning song.  Is creation merely a song being sung?  A cosmic symphony of sorts?  And each of us exists as a unique harmonic signature within that symphony?

Okay, enough of that.  Did any of you see the front page of the June 1, Sunday edition of  the LA Times?  A story about Mt. Shasta was there, about a new array of radio telescopes in the area searching for ET. The latest SETI project, it's supposed to be the largest such operation in the world.  Hhhmm, almost ties into the film.  Is there a marketing angle here, or just wishful thinking? ...

And finally, I have chosen my editor.  More on that next time ...

Jerry

 

Comments -- The next great female filmmaker? -- 6/18

Lifetime Networks is currently searching for the next-great-female filmmaker and we'd like you to encourage your readers to enter!  Who knows, maybe one of your talented readers will be thanking you live from the Kodak Theatre.

Where: Potential contestants can visit http://www.mylifetime.com/sweeps/ewfc/submit.php to submit their video entries.

When: We'll be accepting entries through July 8

The winner will receive the opportunity to have her short film shown on Lifetime Movie Networks, a cash prize of $5,000 as well as trips to networking events and festivals.

Help us shatter Hollywood's glass ceiling!

Best regards,
David, On behalf of MyLifetime.com
 

 

June 21, 2008 - Editorial

Pieces coming together like magic ...

Yes, we finally have a real editor hard at work transforming all the pieces of the puzzle into a real film.  We should have an assembly by next month and a rough cut in August.  We're pushing the process to have something ready to publicly show by October ...

And now, introducing him, Robert Gordon (Bob), who has a fair amount of credits and comes very highly recommended.  Obviously, I'm still learning how to work with him, but so far it's been quite good.  In his first week I've already learned a few things I didn't know.  Not that that should be a surprise, but that I'm always much happier learning new things related to the process of creating ...

He reviewed the first few minutes he'd put together for me, and while I was not really surprised since I've seen the footage so much, it certainly had a different feel than I had expected.  But of course, it's raw and needs a few more ingredients.  The chef is just getting the ingredients together and giving me an early sip.  For now I'm staying out of the 'kitchen' and letting him go wild with his recipe.  I haven't given him a whole lot of direction.  He's just putting it together based on his interpretation of the script.  I like having a fresh set of objective eyes on the footage, and him figuring out what we actually shot, instead of me thinking what we shot and telling him so.  But once he's had his say, I'll go in with my stack of notes and we'll hammer it out.  And hopefully come out with a feast for everyone ...

While Bob is doing all the heaving lifting, I'm intensifying my efforts to bringing aboard a composer.  I been referred to about ten of them, all seeming to be qualified.  We shall see.  I'm also researching film festivals and distributors, so the saga moves on ...

You should check this article on alternative distribution.  Quite intriguing ...

Jerry

 

June 30, 2008 - A Production Story

A little loving here and there ...

As we've moved forward on the film, I couldn't help but look back exactly a year ago and remember that we were just setting up our production office and starting to prep the film. What actually got me thinking about it was setting up the building that we're using for our post production.  It sits separate from the main house, only about fifty feet or so away ...

During the production it was used for various purposes; to store wardrobe and to change in and out of, the AD's used it to print their paperwork, props to store some items, sound to do some voiceover work, and various other things I'm probably not even aware of.  Somewhere along the way it got nicknamed 'The Love Shack'.  Now right off the bat, I sensed there had to be a logical reason to call it that.  And of course, my suspicion was there were things going on in there that I obviously knew nothing about.  But to me the nickname probably gave it away ...

Now on about every production I've been on there are always the rumors of such happenings.  And sure, boys and girls, or men and women, will be, well men and women.  So such going's on should be expected and no big deal.  On our production I did become aware of such 'activities' during various stages of the shoot, and really paid no attention to it.  By the end of the shoot I got the 'scoop' on several other 'situations' that I was totally unaware of.  And I imagine there are others I will never be aware of.  So be it.  It's truly none of my business.  It would only become so if somehow the work was affected.  As far as I can tell, that did not happen ...

So, why concern myself with this now?  Well, I am officially retiring the 'The Love Shack' and renaming it 'The Post Pad'.  It somehow seems more appropriate and up to date, even though I'm hoping Bob (our editor), the hopeless romantic he is, will of course continue to pour a little more love into the project ...

Jerry

 

 

Want to comment? Email me and I will put it up, along with name,  handle or anonymous.  (No email address will be posted)

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