Making a Film

So, many things have been afoot.

One of the most significant was that we made a film in 48 hours. Yes, yes, we’ve been making films for about a year now so what’s so important about that? Well firstly, we actually finished one. Fully edited, sound FX, music track, grading, the lot. It seems that setting yourself constraints can really make things happen. You don’t procrastinate, you make sure you have the time set aside and you don’t keep suggesting improvements that mean you keep re-shooting.  Secondly it was a proper film challenge, being up there with our peers. A chance to check out the competition and not only feel a part of it but also feel immensely proud that a) what we produced is pretty damn good in all respects and b) realise that what we produced was on the right level, in the right ballpark and, actually, very good given the limited size and experience of our team.

So how was it? Cool. We filmed in 2 locations – in an aeroplane at Speke Aerodrome and Moore Nature Reserve, near Warrington- one of which was very cramped on a wet and windy day, the other a lovely sunny day in the wide open with a tent. Our actors performed admirably and a horde of extras and supporters helped us through. Tim (DP) worked tirelessly as DP and editor, lugging around his massive new camera rig and case of lenses on a hot day as well as working wonders in a cramped cockpit. Matthew not only handled sound duties with his new sound rig (Edirol R44 sound recorder, gadget porn fans) but stepped up to the plate when an actor crisis hit and delivered a great performance as Technical Officer Pantall in the spaceship scene.

What did I do? Well, I wrote the script, obviously. Which was, whilst not as wordy as many things I have written, still fairly wordy for a 5 minute short. I also tagged myself nominally as director, something of an emerging role that I don’t think any of us have a great handle on yet. I storyboarded the script to show Tim what shots I thought we needed. I worked with the actors to rehearse and guide the performance. The pre-production planning and the editing was done collectlvely and worked well.

Did it come out the way I wanted? Certainly the play of the visuals and framing of the shots  was what I wanted. The acting delivered in the right way and the edit runs smoothly to deliver the way I saw it in my head. All of this of course is within the constraints of time and circumstance.

Mostly though I was pleased with the way it worked as a team. The idea isn’t to be a Kubrick production where everything revolves around one guy but a devolved team where you paint the vision and let the experts get on with it. I think that’s important because we’re a group of people who all want to push things and learn a lot about our chosen areas, not just enact the creative vision of one person. I don’t think Joss Whedon single-handledly put together Avengers. He got together a group of talented choreographers, graphic and sound designers, cinematographers and so on, painted them a vision and let them go away and play, giving nudges of guidance along the way.

What it does comes down to though is the need to have a guy that makes the final decisions and, whilst in a devolved model that should mainly come down to focusing on guiding the performances and saying when you’ve got the right one in the can, it still means that all across the team, from wardrobe to edit, to sound and to music someone will, at some point, need to step in and say, ‘this is what we are doing.’  It requires so much deeper levels of thought and visualisation about all the aspects of production, because you can’t make an assured decision until you have. There’s a lot to learn in that space and its important to go through it. Being a director requires doing a lot outside of your comfort zone but what does make it more comfortable is recognising it is another skill to be learned and that each mistake, difficulty or challenge moves you further along that path.

Most of all though. The feeling of sitting down and watching a film, based on word you wrote, is just epic.

Toys for More Filmmaking

This weekend I will be mostly filming.

Due to some successful long term planning -that has unfortunatly meant I’m away from home more than I would like this week- my crew and I will be filming. (much as I love the sound of that they are much more than crew, we have a DoP and Production Sound Mixer  with the remaining roles of Director, Producer and Talent(!) being allocated based on who is standing where or has the best idea at the time. Editing is multifarious and depends on who was quickest with FCP or who took the SD cards home. I insist on trying to hold onto the title of Screenwriter because It Was My Idea.)

Some of us have gone a bit mental. In the same way that you can go Shopping As Pocrastination, it seems you can go Shopping As Anticipation. New kit we have is:

  • Boom Pole (to go with the new Shotgun Mic)
  • Sound Stabiliser
  • Dead Cat Wind Muff
  • Dual lighting rig
  • Smoke Machine
  • Strobe lighting

It is all much appreciated and should be very cool.

As is the hot tub to hold script meetings in. So cool that my wife does not believe me when I say I will miss her.

But I will.

New Short Film

We’ve been doing some filming of a script I wrote, called ‘Galactic Council’. We filmed it once before on HD camcorder, as a learning experience. Now we’re trying to up the ante, by filming in 1080p, using DSLR‘s with nice cinematic depth of field and really working on the editing, using cut aways and multiple camera angles. We might do it again, or just another script, using some real actors from college or Shooting People.

It’s tough finding time -seeing as we all work and have families- especially when moving filming to the next level really takes an exponential increase in hours.

Fortunately we’ve managed to find a good chunk of weekend -and a new lighting rig and shotgun mic- where we can do some filming -as long as we don’t spend too much of it drinking, mucking about on guitars or hearing the siren call of the hot tub (wow that sounds soooo rock n’ roll) – and I am seriously excited.

So excited that I really wanted it to be here now, rather than later. So, inventing a whole new category called no-script, one-take cinema, I filmed a new short, called ‘300 Hours’.

I’ve posted it on YouTube, have a look.

iPhone Cinema

The Gadget Show on Channel 5 likes to style itself as Top Gear for Toys, regularly featuring challenges where presenters face off using the latest tech. This week’s Moroccan challenge saw the presenters having 2 weeks to produce a tourism video for Morocco, using only commonly accessible consumer video gear.

Canon EOS 5D digital SLR camera with Canon EF ...

Image via Wikipedia

The first presenter, Polly, used a familiar gadget, the Canon 5D SLR; pretty much the camera that started the whole digital guerilla filmmaking revolution. The 5D is a full on prosumer camera that can shoot in full 1080p, with a full frame sensor, as well as having all the advantages of SLR such as lens range and quality, depth of field and so on.

So far, so fair enough. Its not cheap but it is a bloody good camera that, in the right hands, can give studio level kit a run for its money at, for cameras anyway, a pretty ludicrously low cost.

Ortis (pronounced Otis, I assume as part of some Equity name duplication) pulled out a pretty wierd combo. His chosen platform was the iPhone 4, set in a special surround case featuring handles, roto light and attachment mounts, called an Owle Bubo Video Kit. Adding an Encinema Adapter allowed Ortis to add a Nikon SLR lens to the kit.

So how did it work? Not brilliantly if you ask me. The presentation was jazzed up as a bit of video/music syncopation but you couldn’t avoid the fact that the picture looked pretty crap. Lets face it, whilst it looks cool, he’s put together a rig that gives a quality lens and a nice bit of lighting to an iPhone. An iPhone, whilst supporting HD recording, has a sensor considerably smaller than my little fingernail – I only say that as I can’t think of anything smaller to compare it to. Add to this a SLR lens that is being reduced in quality by trying to present light through a hacked tube onto a piece of glass that normally hangs around in someone’s jacket pocket.

Add to this the cost – iPhone (£400), Video Kit (£275), Cinema Adapter (£150)- and you’re talking over £800 for a hacked solution with a poor picture. For the same price you could get a Canon 600D, or even 60D, with some form of lighting. That might even include a lens and give you top quality footage with great low-light performance. If you’re going to use an adapter, get a 1080p SLR and an adapter that’ll give you access to all the old FD lenses off ebay, for 10% of their original price.

I know they’re trying to show the diversity of solutions but I don’t think the Gadget Show are showing us real things to consider. The Gaui 330X-S quadrocopter mounting a 7D for ariel footage was cool though…