SUNSET GARDENS
Life was picture perfect for John and Brittany Murphy, living in a quaint neighborhood, until the house next door was sold and a new neighbor moved in down the street.
Sunday, May 4, 2008
IM DONE
The problem with people wanting you to work for free is that film is such an exclusive way to make a living that kids that are trying to make it into the business are willing to work for nothing. They loose their self worth and their value because they want their foot in the door in a career that offers no guaranties
Chris Gore (author of Ultimate film festival survival guide) writes on this section. He believes that one of the biggest problems with entertainment is that the people in charge want slave labor, the people trying to break into film are willing to be slaves in the hopes of getting a job in the future.
He later goes on discussing that this was one of the main causes for the writers strike. The studios were taking the writers scripts and posting the episodes online and/or making them write a teaser or mini episodes for the web and did not want to pay them for their extra work (there is more to it but in a nutshell)
My biggest fear is there is no set guild lines of how much someone makes for the job the are working on. It all depends on the project. This means that sometimes to make connections you have to be willing to work for peanuts. But I would like to think of myself as having ethics. I am NOT a slave, I will NOT work for free because making a film is not charities work. But I understand that sometimes you have to take the low paying job to get somewhere better.
But I’m DONE WITH SCHOOLLLLLLLLLLLLLLLL!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Sunday, April 27, 2008
My Presentation
My film was going to be played after a documentary about Leukemia. The audience was crying and sad, then here comes Josh’s “romantic comedy.” The film started playing and instantly I got a lot of laughs. There was some random chuckles here and there, but the jokes that were written in went over well.
After the viewing we had a Q & A section. I got asked a lot of good questions, including how much of this was planned out and how much was just shot and good luck. I put a great deal of time into preproduction. I was on a very tight filming schedule so everything had to be thought out. Another one was were did I come up for the concept of the film. There is no flattering answer for this, so I danced around the fact that we were poking fun at a friends views.
I also got a lot of feedback, some of the people that were there were impressed with my ability to build sequences. I was told that my film was better the Jimm Needle’s, which is huge because he is so critical about film, and the stuff that he does really looks good.
I was a bit disappointed in the set up of the art show where we presented our projects at. We never really knew what to expect because people never communicated with us what the details were. The time was changed on us many times. It went from 6:30 to 8:30 then our film debut was to be at 8:30 so we invited people at 8:30 to come and watch the film. Then it was moved from 6:00 to 8:00 and we were still planning on showing our films at 8:30. In fact, the show went from 6:00 till 7:15 then our films directly following. Then because we told people to be there at 8:30 we had another viewing. I was furious with that because the people I invited showed up to see the film and there was nobody around. And when I got back and checked my phone a ton of people were calling to find out what the situation was. I think that the whole setup was poorly communicated to us, and we suffered because of it.
Another thing that bothered me was our advertisement posters had spelling errors in them. These posters were missing words and had words left out of them. They looked like a third grade kid wrote them. This reflects so poorly on us. My name is branded with these posters and there is spelling errors all over them. This is part of my senior research, and is suppose to demonstrate that I deserve, and have earned the degree from Westminster. Instead it makes me look like an uneducated buffoon.
Nothing is ever going to be perfect, but the night went well. I am proud of my film, and the next step is to send it to film festivals.
Monday, April 14, 2008
What I think
My senior broadcasting capstone is coming close to an end. This week I had to design a poster for my presentation for the Senior Art Show. This was very hard for me to do. I am not a graphic artist. I know the basics, but I am far from being an expert by any means. The posters turned out well, and overall I am happy with how they turned out.
The other thing that I have been working on is editing my film. Sifting through tons upon tons of video and audio tracks is a nightmare. But I am pushing through and it is coming together very well. I am 95% done editing. The next step is to add some sound effects and finalize all the video. It’s looking good. I am excited to see the final product.
I learned a valuable lesson, no matter how much footage you have you always want more. I have over 180 minutes of video and I still wish that I have more to work with.
Editing is a bit tricky, because this is the first time that any of us has ever acted on film we were not sure what to expect. There is a lot of motion before the take, and some scenes are very hard to edit because of that.
Mr. Weaver asked me the other day if another student wanted to do this project should he let them. YES! If the student is passionate about his/her project they are going to work a lot harder and willing to put in the extra effort. But I caution, keep dialog to a minimum, keep locations to a minimum, and work hard. There is a huge time constraint on working on a film during capstone, but where there is a will there is a way.
I have spent over12 hours of pre production over 20 hours of filming over 5 hours of voice tracking countless hours trying to think of topics to blog about, 30 minutes blogging , and another 20 hours editing the film.
This project has been a huge undertaking but I am glad I did it. The script is original, the music is original, everything about this is my own work, and I am extremely proud of what I have done.
Sunday, April 6, 2008
The Death of Originality
There is a saying that anything that can be done has already been done. I would like to add that anything that can be done has been done and will be done over and over and over again. Lets face it, for simple reasons when something works there are thousands of copycats that are ready to dig their hand in the pot and see if they can pull anything from this. The thought is throughout every medium of media. Don’t get me wrong I am not saying that this is a bad thing or me standing on a soapbox preaching to be original because I just found out that my film is a DIRECT rip-off of a film that was made about three years ago (and I did not know that it was not done). Yet I suggest that if you are going to “be inspired by another work” then take it and make it your own.
This thought is no more prominent then in “sampling” in the R&B and rap scene. Using beats and loops from music in the 70’s 80’s and today are put into new music for their purpose. And to be honest most of them are done very well. The trend died down a bit but in the late 90’s and in early 2000 it was rampit. Sean Puffy Combs, Usher, and Biggie Smalls, were masters of this. They took something old and pumped their own thought into it.
Another example is with South Park. They did a whole episode that was dedicated that everything on T.V. has been done. Butters, a goofy sidekick of the show, exclaims that “the Simpsons did it” as another character tries to do something original that the viewers have not seen. Going as far as developing a Goldberg to extract frosting out of donuts, when much to his shock, Bart Simpson was developing the same thing for that week.
Film is not exempt from this field. But my generation is a bit more oblivious to this fact. Many people in their 20’s do not know that Mission Impossible was a television show long before Tom Cruise was the star of the franchise that was pumped out; or that House on Haunted Hill was a remake from 1958 (http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0051744/).
None is more obvious then the Star Wars Trilogy. The films were first digitally re-mastered, but that feed fuel to the fire spawning a total remake of the first three films (which were the last three in the series) and then giving birth to the prequels to complete the series.
Recently the trend is continuing. The 1980 film Prom Night is being remade, this film was poor at best when it first came out, just remaking it does not make this film any better. I hold my optimism for a decent turn at the box office, setting no recorded, being torn apart by the critics, and disappointing anyone who spends the 8 dollars and up to see this.
But Prom Night is not the only film that is being remade. Get Smart is getting new breath blown into it, as Steve Carell takes on the roll of Maxwell Smart (a clueless spy). I do believe this will be done well. The show itself was Nominated for 2 Golden Globes. Another 9 wins & 7 nominations.
Overall there is nothing wrong with breathing new life in something old. It has been done millions of times, and ever William Shakespeare was not original. Take it and make it your own.Sunday, March 30, 2008
Apple vs. PC
There has always been a great debate and I find myself in the middle of it at this current moment. I am looking to get a new computer, because frankly my 5 yr old laptop is on its dying days. I have no internet, there is not a R key, the cd tray cover falls off and it’s now a separate attachment. It’s about time to do something about it.
The great debate that I am talking about is to go with a PC or a MAC. Mac has pushed their products and they are becoming better and better, while PC is much of the same just better equipment.
I want to use this computer for graphic images, editing and all sorts of things. So its making me really consider buying a MAC because they are very powerful and you don’t have to worry about the system crashing.
There are programs out there that allow MAC’s to run windows on them and it can change the operating system. But why would you buy a MAC to run windows… it’s a mute point to me then.
I am tossed between where to turn. On one hand a mass amount of graphic work is done on MAC. But is not an absolute and, in fact more people are moving back to PC, because any upgrade done to a MAC has to be external.
Overall I want a MAC but I’m just not comfortable to jump on the bandwagon. I think I am going to hold off and go with a PC still. I am far from loving the idea, but I think for me it’s the safe bet, but I’m still looking
Tuesday, March 18, 2008
Lights, Camera, Action
This week I filmed my capstone. I really don’t know what to say about it. It was a crazy experience. In all practicality I went from having a script last Sunday to filming 6 days later. It has been a marathon. But it is filmed!!!
Filming went smooth. There were no major issues with equipment, or any technical problems. The one thing that we did run into was while filming on a street the police stopped us. He wanted to know what we were doing, and wanted to make sure we were being safe. But not to worry because like a good camera man they kept filming during the interaction. So now there is video of me talking to the police with my co-star.
Using the locations that we used worked out great. The people there were more then willing to help us out in any way we needed. Including forcing one girl to be an extra for our film.
We have roughly 150 minutes of film. Majority of this was bloopers. It was very hard to keep a strait face threw most of the filming. So it took a lot longer, but was incredibly fun.
My friends and everybody who I asked to help out pulled through. If I didn’t have the support that I had, this would of fell flat on its face as well. A lot of people took a lot of stress off of my shoulders. But it is filmed and ready for post production.
The next step is to step into the audio studio and record some voiceover tracks. I am looking forward to that!
A new start
This post was suppose to be last weeks, but do to the fact the Westminster College is on spring break, and the school fails to recognize that students are still doing work, everything is locked up and did not give me the ability to get online.
Anyways
This week was “start from scratch week.” My original film script was not lifting off the ground at all. There was one road block after another, and I had to make a choice of cutting my losses and moving forward. Like I said before I did a great deal of pre planning and had a backup script with me.
I decided to keep my filming schedule and that gave me a week to do all of the preproduction. I dove head first into working on this script clawing away at it and trying to get all the preproduction done. Site location, talent, crew, story boars, music, the whole nine yards, and some how I managed to get it done.
The locations were a breeze. Every person that I talked to were more then willing to bend over backwards to help me out. The gave me the run of their stores and catered to any needs that I had. I cannot say how much of a stress relieve it was.
Music, my friend is a genius and after just giving him a basic rundown of the script he had an idea for music and already cut demos to most of the tracks.
Talent, well that was interesting. I don’t know how to piddle around this topic without giving the story away but let’s just say I had some very interesting phone calls with companies to try and borrow supplies.
Storyboards were worked out, shot and editing script, as well. I was just shocked of how well everything flowed together.