If you're just tuning in, Beach Town is officially finished!
I'm working getting it out into the world. The slow-but-steady film festival application process can have quite a delay between application and the festival itself.
In the meantime -- please enjoy our lovely trailer below! And, as always, if you know of any venues that might dig a rock and roll beach movie of the mind, send them my way.
Beach Town trailer from Erik Hammen on Vimeo.
Monday, November 10, 2014
Monday, October 27, 2014
Beach Town officially complete
sign courtesy of Sweet Art Attack |
The skies are blue and the air is warm, and film festival application has begun in earnest.
Who's up for a rock and roll beach movie of the mind? Let's find out.
Many many thanks to my good friend Kevin Tone for his work on the audio mastering!
What's next?
From now on, I'll only be posting here about festival screenings and related news.
Of course, the festival application process happens many months before the festival itself
... so stay tuned.
And hey -- if you personally happen to know of any film festivals that'd like a rock and roll beach movie of the mind on their plate, let's talk!
In the meantime, I'd be delighted to share your photographic company! I'm on Instagram.
Sarah Winsor is currently in Blood Countess, the Elizabeth Bathory bio-play that's showing at the mighty Annex theater. She plays The Victims (plural). The show runs through Nov 22.
Steven Stern is appearing in Samuel Beckett's Endgame, opening this Friday (Oct 31) at the Ballard Underground. He plays Nagg. There's a singular name for you. The show runs through Nov 12.
Steven is also directing two short plays this coming weekend! Corn King (written by Jennifer Dice) and Open Carry (written by Scot Auguston), and they're playing back-to-back at Seattle Public Theater starting Nov. 8th at noon. They will be a guaranteed laugh-riot.
Personally, I'll be seeing all of these shows. Hope to see you there!
Tuesday, October 7, 2014
Color correction complete
Uncorrected still photo by E. Hammen |
What is color correction? (or, "What would possibly need "correcting" about all those beautiful images?")
Color Correction is the process of balancing slight discrepancies in the hue, brightness, or whatever, of each shot -- and at the same time making sure the individual shots look good side by side with all the other shots in a scene, which may have been taken in different light, on different days, with different filmstock, and so on.
The result is that the film as whole flows well visually. It's movie magic. The illusion!
Anyway, Ahren did an awesome job and color correction is officially finished
Next up: the final sound mix -- so that the audio flows nicely.
Then we're done.
Social hour: I ran into Kenna Kettrick and Amanda Keogh at the theater and talked to them for a bit. Great to see them both! Also worked a bit more with David Thomas to tweak some music.
Wednesday, September 24, 2014
Quick update on Beach Town; color correction in progress!
linkage photo by E. Hammen |
Color correction is in progress! It is lots of fun to work with Ahren Buhmann and frankly, an exciting process.
Picture lock is one thing, but when you balance all the little pictures that you've locked against each other, it gains cohesion. The result is greater than the sum of the parts; it's something new. And that something is the final film.
Coming up: I'm meeting with David Thomas for a bit of updating to a particular music track, and I'm making plans on getting the final audio mix worked out.
Exciting!
Monday, September 15, 2014
Picture lock is nigh
photo by E. Hammen |
Last night I was working on the film and thinking, "Well, I'm not touching the opening credits anymore, they're ready for Eric Anderson to work on font and layout."
And then, I looked at the credits this morning... and I thought the same thing!
Picture lock is nigh.
This morning I also looked at a pretty major (actually very minor) last-minute shakeup I did to a little scene, and lo and behold it looked spot-on.
I'm meeting with multi-talented and very patient Ahren Buhmann the week after this to start color correction.
"Nigh" is a funny word. It seems like it has to be connected to "night" but the etymology references I've seen imply this is only a coincidence.
Today's photo is also not related to Beach Town, but it might as well be. Long n' low is the angle here.
I love sidewalks and I love grass in sidewalk cracks. Is anyone up for making a feature film entirely about this? It'd be called "Grass in the Sidewalks". Or maybe "Flaming Grass", just to spice things up a bit. Or maybe "Grass -- and I Don't Mean the Kind You Roll up and Smoke, I Mean the Kind that Grows between the Cracks of your Sidewalk!" I'm sure Kickstarter revenues would be boffo.
Social hour:
I saw costumer Barbara Blunt in the coffee shop last week! Great to see her out of the theater and walking around in the daytime. Also heard from Iain Dalton, who has been working on music videos recently -- very cool!
I love sidewalks and I love grass in sidewalk cracks. Is anyone up for making a feature film entirely about this? It'd be called "Grass in the Sidewalks". Or maybe "Flaming Grass", just to spice things up a bit. Or maybe "Grass -- and I Don't Mean the Kind You Roll up and Smoke, I Mean the Kind that Grows between the Cracks of your Sidewalk!" I'm sure Kickstarter revenues would be boffo.
Social hour:
I saw costumer Barbara Blunt in the coffee shop last week! Great to see her out of the theater and walking around in the daytime. Also heard from Iain Dalton, who has been working on music videos recently -- very cool!
Labels:
Ahren Buhmann,
barbara blunt,
beach town,
Iain Dalton,
picture lock
Tuesday, September 2, 2014
Beach Town labor day update
(photo by E. Hammen, and not Beach-Town related) |
This penultimate pass, which I'll be finishing tonight, addresses all the post-test changes that I already made -- makes them nice n' graceful -- and addresses how those changes affected the scenes around them, and the film as a whole.
For example, I added a little bit of music to a scene that previously had none. The scene before it had music, differently motivated, so the transition between scenes needed to be timed differently (music dictates the beats rather than the ebb and flow of ambient sound in this case) . Then the cut to the next scene needed to be re-timed for the same reason, and also accounting for the change of feeling that the music gave the previous scene. And the ambient sound below the next scene changed a bit because it didn't have to compete as much with the ambient from the previous scene anymore.
It might sound boring and more of the same, but since I'm so far along in the process is pretty groovy and all about unearthing interesting new things and perfecting existing things. Affirmation and proclamation. The one-hair brush instead of the big flat wall-painting brush. And the drum of spackle has been officially retired.
I've still gotta look at it as a whole again, but it's really gelling!
I also worked with David Thomas last week for some more mixes, both to new music and for a few tweaks to some existing tracks. David finished those over the weekend (!) and those'll be going into this cut as well.
Man, the music and thank-you credits on this movie are gonna be extensive. I don't want to mention any names, but perhaps, on this crazy little DIY film... perhaps a certain someone was collaborating?
Oh yes he was!
Lastly, but not leastly -- Happy trails, Riley!
Labels:
beach town,
david Thomas,
erik hammen,
riley neldam
Monday, August 18, 2014
When is a lock not a lock? When a door's ajar. Beach Town movie update
I'm getting closer to picture lock. Not quite there yet, but close!
Here's where we're actually at:
Completed -- audio levels pass. Also made a few more cuts in the process.
Completed -- spotting for possible new music bits. Also made a few more cuts in the process.
Completed -- ambient sound. I think! But just in case, here's a little joke: Q: How much ambient sound does one picture need? A: more.
Added -- a few new music bits. One of the songs I was able to pull from my massive outtakes file. And, by beautiful chance, I also got the new record from the mighty rock n' roll band Horns of Ormus via USPS, and a couple of their tracks happen to work very well in the other spots! (Thank you HOO! Uh...we'll talk!)
But I still might need one more music cue...
Might is the key word here.
There's this one scene... People have said as much...
But I'll tell ya, so far I've hated what music cues do to this scene, and to the rest of the sequence around it! I've been going back n' forth on this one ever since the test screenings, and I spent most of the day yesterday just addressing this one issue. Man, I tried a hundred things. I couldn't even find temporary, unattainable music that'd work. Rolling Stones, you will not be getting a call from me. And I went to bed having not figured it out.
However, it's been said that your subconscious works on problems while you sleep, and when I woke up at 3 am to listen to a big rattly train going by outside the window, I think I may have come upon the solution.
Social hour
Besides working tirelessly to finish the film, I've been out and about, and over the weekend I caught the riotous 14/48 festival, which featured a short play by Beach Town set dresser Jennifer Dice and a performance (in a different play in the fest) by Steven Stern. They're also doing another original play at SPT this weekend "The Spear Carriers". Check it out.
I also saw Sarah Winsor while I was downtown waiting for my car to get fixed. It was great to catch up; she has a big show coming up this fall at the Annex Theater that sounds exciting.
Here's that good old Beach Town trailer again.
Beach Town trailer from Erik Hammen on Vimeo.
Here's where we're actually at:
Completed -- audio levels pass. Also made a few more cuts in the process.
Completed -- spotting for possible new music bits. Also made a few more cuts in the process.
Completed -- ambient sound. I think! But just in case, here's a little joke: Q: How much ambient sound does one picture need? A: more.
Added -- a few new music bits. One of the songs I was able to pull from my massive outtakes file. And, by beautiful chance, I also got the new record from the mighty rock n' roll band Horns of Ormus via USPS, and a couple of their tracks happen to work very well in the other spots! (Thank you HOO! Uh...we'll talk!)
But I still might need one more music cue...
Might is the key word here.
There's this one scene... People have said as much...
But I'll tell ya, so far I've hated what music cues do to this scene, and to the rest of the sequence around it! I've been going back n' forth on this one ever since the test screenings, and I spent most of the day yesterday just addressing this one issue. Man, I tried a hundred things. I couldn't even find temporary, unattainable music that'd work. Rolling Stones, you will not be getting a call from me. And I went to bed having not figured it out.
However, it's been said that your subconscious works on problems while you sleep, and when I woke up at 3 am to listen to a big rattly train going by outside the window, I think I may have come upon the solution.
Social hour
Besides working tirelessly to finish the film, I've been out and about, and over the weekend I caught the riotous 14/48 festival, which featured a short play by Beach Town set dresser Jennifer Dice and a performance (in a different play in the fest) by Steven Stern. They're also doing another original play at SPT this weekend "The Spear Carriers". Check it out.
I also saw Sarah Winsor while I was downtown waiting for my car to get fixed. It was great to catch up; she has a big show coming up this fall at the Annex Theater that sounds exciting.
Here's that good old Beach Town trailer again.
Beach Town trailer from Erik Hammen on Vimeo.
Tuesday, August 5, 2014
Beach Town official trailer
Happy August everyone! If you're just tuning in, I'm still working on getting the film ship-shape after our test-reviews, but in the meantime --
A public trailer is ready! I hope you dig it -- please share with anyone and everyone.
Beach Town trailer from Erik Hammen on Vimeo.
A public trailer is ready! I hope you dig it -- please share with anyone and everyone.
Beach Town trailer from Erik Hammen on Vimeo.
Monday, August 4, 2014
Trailer tomorrow!
I'm still working on the film, but tomorrow I'll put up the official public trailer for Beach Town.
Saturday, August 2, 2014
Beach Town!
Beach Town
I changed the name of the film -- the old title seemed to imply that our Rock and Roll Beach Movie of the Mind was one of those "mondo" films.
This new page redirects from the old site, please adjust your Favorites to point to this page.
More to come very soon!
I changed the name of the film -- the old title seemed to imply that our Rock and Roll Beach Movie of the Mind was one of those "mondo" films.
This new page redirects from the old site, please adjust your Favorites to point to this page.
More to come very soon!
Monday, July 21, 2014
Update... of the mind
1922 color film test, with Mae Murray |
It's worth spending time to properly process test audience comments. What happens is you hear from person A, person B, and person C. And while A and B love everything except for one little bit that really bothered them, person C thinks that one bit is the best part of the film.
All very smart people, just different aesthetics. How does this film fit into that? And what's person D going to say that's going to affect what A,B, and C said?
That said, person Z, who I talked to last week in real life, had just one major comment and a suggestion, and that suggestion actually addressed a major element across the film that I'd been stumped on. Digging into the film now, the changes I've made based on this new suggestion have been coming out great.
I watched a few other films over the week, specifically to see how they used their score music. I haven't done that in a while, it's always very interesting.
I'm also thinking a lot about color in this go-round, hence today's picture, which is not from our film, but of lovely Mae Murray, in an early color film test (1922!). A long time ago I thought it might be cool to shoot a beach movie in black n' white, but calmer heads prevailed and instead we have glorious Kodak color. Everyone knows that B&W is great -- hell I've made as many film that way as in color -- but sometimes you wanna use charcoal, and other times you need oil paint. Whatever's best for the project. Right? Right!
Sightings: Anna and I saw Kenna Kettrick at the theater over the weekend, and just a few hours ago I ran into Riley Neldam out on the street, working on commercial shoot. It was great to see them both!
Monday, July 14, 2014
Test audience results (mostly), title change, trailer
I am coming out of my cave to report!
A big huge thank-you (once again) to Gordon Modin, of Gordon Modin Video Production for his help in finalizing the test audience preview DVD and review-only streaming content.
Gordon is a great guy who knows everything and has helped me with my last three films.
That leads to a second huge thank-you to my anonymous test audience for their candid, thoughtful, and thought-provoking comments!
Not much of which I can talk about right now (though I am very, very happy with the overall reactions) but one of the things that came from this was....
Trailer
I am putting together a trailer for the film, and as soon as it's done (and the new title is finalized) I'll post it on YouTube and Vimeo for all to see and share. It's gonna be awesome.
A big huge thank-you (once again) to Gordon Modin, of Gordon Modin Video Production for his help in finalizing the test audience preview DVD and review-only streaming content.
Gordon is a great guy who knows everything and has helped me with my last three films.
That leads to a second huge thank-you to my anonymous test audience for their candid, thoughtful, and thought-provoking comments!
Not much of which I can talk about right now (though I am very, very happy with the overall reactions) but one of the things that came from this was....
Trailer
I am putting together a trailer for the film, and as soon as it's done (and the new title is finalized) I'll post it on YouTube and Vimeo for all to see and share. It's gonna be awesome.
Monday, June 30, 2014
And after that
Quickie screencap, Play bar is non-functioning |
The warehouse was huge and the guys spent most of the day driving forklifts, and moving palettes of stuff in and out of trucks at the loading docks and around the warehouse. Everyone called the forklifts "tow-motors", a term I've never heard since.
The guys worked alone a lot of the time, way off in the warehouse. So when their paths would cross, they'd always have to yell something to each other as they drove by. Sometimes there was a current event to talk about (someone fucking up, a new joke from one of the truck drivers, the boss being stupid, etc.) but most of the time they just hollered one of a handful of standard phrases.
"Fraaaankly, Scarlet" one of them would yell. Then the other guy would yell back "fraaaankly Scarlett!" and they'd laugh and disappear into the warehouse for another 45 minutes.
The joke here, of course, was a take on the famous Gone with the Wind line, "Frankly Scarlet, I don't give a damn." Except that their delivery was more like Edward G Robinson than Clark Gable, and with their New England accents it sounded like "Fraaa-nkly Ska-lit".
One of the guys apparently hadn't actually seen the movie, because he said "Frankly Charlotte."
But that was beside the point ....they didn't give a damn.
Sometimes, it got really hectic at work. Then they'd start yelling, "And after that!"
"And after that!"
All this stuff to do! Do that thing over there. And after that, get back on the tow-motor and do that other thing there! And after that... It never ends!
What does this have to do with Beach Town a rock n' roll beach movie of the mind?
Most of the test audience still has not seen the film, because I haven't figured out how to get it (looking decent) onto a secure, online link and/or DVD. I've tried this, then that, then the other thing after that, and after that, this and that and the other thing. My particular in/out/version editing software setup is complicated enough to have befuddled me and at least one tech-expert type who graciously did his best (thank you Andy Dopieralski!).
I'm making a trip to see a man in West Seattle on Tuesday, though, and I'm fairly confident that after that it'll be ready.
After Tuesday.
Unless, after that, I have to do something else...
Monday, June 23, 2014
there's no audience like a test audience
Hey look, there's Gidget, the original Surfer Girl.
I read this book years and years ago. I've never seen the movie or the TV series.
The book was not as much fun as I thought it should've been. Maybe because it's so dated, or maybe because it was never much to begin with, and just happens to have been made into an iconic Sandra Dee/Sally Field vehicle that seems sort of quaint 50 + years later.
But what a great cover on this paperback edition, yeah?
Anyway, I finished the pre-test version of Beach Town last night. I'll be sending preview DVDs out to my Test Audience this week. This gang of mysterious, unnamed suspects are a few reliably unbiased and thoughtful people who each have a specific perspective that always comes in handy.
They've been hand-picked by me for exactly that reason. Whether or not they like the film can even be beside the point.
In Hollywood, they have a company that handles test audiences.
The way I hear it, (taken with a grain of salt), a randomly-chosen audience has to fill out long questionnaires about a film before they can leave a stuffy, Tuesday afternoon screening. The questions tend to reinforce the insecurities of the moneymen... such as "Did you find the running scenes boring?" for a movie like Chariots of Fire.
With these data in hand, a war of the wills begins between the studio -- whose job is to understand and mitigate risk involved in making money by financing and distributing a variety of disparate films -- and the filmmaker -- whose job can be any number of things but ultimately whose professional reputation is on the line for the artistic decisions that lead to the critical and financial success of this one film.
Show + business = show business.
Here's a true story I heard recently, (though I've fudged the numbers) about an independent filmmaker whose finished film was picked up by a big distribution company.
Under a big distribution company, a film can be shown nationally, even internationally, on the big screen in front of real theater audiences, and there will probably be some kind of payday for the filmmaker to come from this.
So that's all very cool.
"We'll open the movie at 1100 screens nationwide," the distributors said.
"But first, we'd like your permission to run it past a test audience."
"Or," they said, "if you'd won't use our test audience, we can open on 11 screens."
What would you do? Take a chance that the test audience will love your film and that the distributor won't ask for even more concessions, such as cuts or even reshoots, to try for a better test? (Multiple re-testings are not uncommon). Or do set your jaw and choose the "option" of the handful of theatrical screenings, hoping that word-of-mouth and great reviews will inspire the distributor (whose test screenings you rejected) to take another chance with a "difficult" filmmaker and open the movie across the nation?
What if you make a few recommended cuts, add a T&A scene, and the film tests well, and then it opens to an average of 45 on Rotten Tomatoes and is gone from 1000 of those 1100 screens after the first week? What if you don't make any cuts, the film gets good reviews, but no one can find it at the local mall and it closes in a week from the 11 arthouse screens to make room for the new Wes Anderson film.
Anyway, I haven't heard how this dilemma turned out for the filmmaker in question.
But I'd be willing to bet that the distributor would not go for the idea of modeling the movie poster after a scribbly-looking children's book cover.
Monday, June 16, 2014
June update #2
L-R: Ahren Buhmann, Iain Dalton, Kat Brede on set on Beach Town. (photo by David Thomas) |
And the sun just came out after a dark couple of days.
There's a nice little study in profiles here in today's photo, taken outside Cairo on our one, long day there.
There are two groups: Iain and Kat are setting up the tripod (up up up), while Ahren stands talking to Kenna Kettrick and I, both OC.
Now then. Which of these two groups is the yin and which is the yang?
Or, is it actually that both groups together are yin, while the sunny area around is yang?
Or, is Cairo, with its illustrative t-shirt in the window, actually itself the yin, while nearby Top Pot Donuts is the yang? Perhaps... Yet Top Pot Donuts was clearly on the shady side of the street!
Either way, I promise more info on the film next week.
Monday, June 9, 2014
June 9 update Beach Town
Extras: boys on the beach, on location for Beach Town. In the background: Emily Purington and Beach Town crew (photo by Karin Rathert) |
Pacing is the order of the day. Without pacing, what've you got? I think I've established that: it's just a series of scenes.
Of course, this process also surfaces new ideas for ways to make the film better at the scene-level as well.
The view of the forest makes some trees stand out.
Here's an example: The screenplay calls for a short, single shot at the end of a scene where a bunch of the characters are hanging out after a show, at night. The scene was originally going to be in a bar, but the logistics and scheduling involved for getting everyone into the particular place I wanted all at once, at 10 at night, were not ideal. (Improbable at best.) So early on, I went out and found this weird little spot by the public dock near the location where we were already shooting that evening.
It was pretty dark in this little spot, but there was something undefinable about it that I kind of liked and I figured it'd make a contrast to the overall sunny palette of Beach Town.
Anyway, the little shot we're talking about acts as sort of an end-cap to a fairly long scene; the last in a series of similarly-paced shots. Watching this scene the other day in context of the whole film, I realized that it was playing differently than I'd intended. And that maybe this new vibe was better.
And that maybe, there were some more things I could do, to make it even better.
So I started digging around in my files for ideas and almost immediately stumbled on an MP3 by this band "Quakers on Probation" that Graig Markel had turned me on to a while ago. I loved this song when I first heard it -- LOVED it -- but I couldn't find anywhere that it'd work in the film. Just in case, I tried sticking it under our little end-cap scene.
All of a sudden it clarified this new impression I was getting of the scene. It went from a slightly wistful, remote feeling, to a very specific wistful party feeling. Which was a million times better.
(A huge thank-you to Daniel Craig of Quakers on Probation for permission to use their song in the film.)
But wait, there's more! Watching the end-cap again I remembered a film clip I had in a different scene that might make the perfect companion shot for this new approach. And by coincidence, I'd actually been thinking of removing that clip from the other scene anyway, but wasn't quite sure so I'd just left it there for the time being.
I put that clip in front of our end-cap-with-new-music, and lo and behold, it worked perfectly, and the new effect is that the scene "opens up" the little world they live in very nicely.
Then I just had to trim and move the beginning, and end, of each clip and the clips around them, and the music, to get it exactly right.
And maybe get rid of the ambient sound track that'd been there.
Or maybe not.
Whew! Well -- I know that's some pretty exciting stuff to lay on you on a Monday morning. But this editing machine will not rest!
And, as they say in sculpture -- it'll be done when it's done.
Monday, June 2, 2014
Beach Town update
photo by Erik Hammen |
A girl moves to the beach
and spends a lazy summer
exploring the ramshackle beach town
and falling in love with the wrong boy.
Beach Town, a rock 'n' roll beach movie... of the mind.
I think this understates the issue, but dang -- if anyone's got a better way to say this in one sentence, let me know. Artists are the people least-qualified to describe their own work.
I'm at the point in editing where it's pass after pass over the same material, looking as much at overall flow as little details. But of course, the better it flows the more the little warts stand out. Then when I stop and shave off the warts, the flow is changed. What? yes.
That said, there's nothing like hanging out with other artists to invigorate your own work. I spent the weekend in Minnesota, eating and drinking with a whole bunch of fine and lovely people and arts-types, some of them even 'Beacho or film-related, including:
Thomas "Folkadelic Two-step" Wold. His song "Downstream" is in the film and whose new, third record is just about done.
Paul D. Dickinson and Jessica Raymond (from The Last City in the East, the film I made back in 2011). Beers. Laffs. Paul has a new project boiling up but I probably can't mention it yet. Happy birthday, Jessica.
I also had dinner and more drinks with experimental/narrative filmmaker Rolf Belgum, (Driver 23, Atlas Moth, She Unfolds by Day) and his clever and lovely fiancee Heather. I even got to see a few clips from his long-gestating and still untitled new film! Fantastic!
Back in Seattle, I'm looking forward to a very productive and sunny week this coming week.
Monday, May 26, 2014
Memorial Day post, Beach Town
Yessir, it's time for another random-seeming Beach Town update.
But the posts reflect the process, which at this point is not smooth or predictable, it's organic.
It's a living thing, man!
I keep retooling the opening of the film. It's very, very important to start your film out right. Enough cannot be said about this.
In fact… the opening is so important…
(how important is it?)
I'll tell ya! The opening is so important -- it's unbelievable.
(That one goes out to Steve O'Neil)
Anyway, I'll be working on that opening scene right up to the last minute.
When is the last minute, by the way?
I don't know yet.
It'll be done when it's done.
That's what they say in painting.
Right now, I'm typing this foolishness instead of working on the "band practice" scene, which is about a quarter of the way through the film.
Just before I broke for dinner, I realized that scene needed to be put together differently.
It actually looked quite good as it was -- but that was in the context of itself.
After I watched the whole film before it up to that point, all of a sudden it was clear the approach needed to be different.
The film informs the scenes.
The screenshot above is from a different scene, the "gig scene". We shot that at Heartland, a DIY club that actually had its final show last night. They're closing up due to losing too much money. Heartland made a good run of it. Beach Town got two bands from them due to me going to see shows there: Punishment and Thee Samedi.
Good bye, Heartland!
I saw a good movie at the Seattle International Film Festival today. "My Year with the Nuns". That Matt Smith is some storyteller.
And, the movie was playing at the Egyptian Theater, which closed down earlier this year and was possibly going to go away altogether, but SIFF has decided to take it over and rehabilitate it.
That's the second single-screen theater they've rescued this to. They bought the Uptown a few years ago. It'd probably be knocked down for condos by now, if not for them.
That, my friends, is how a film society should operate. Hell, if that's all they did, I'd be a supporter.
In other news, my short film The Last City in the East is opening for Modern Times (that's right!) in Minneapolis this week. Are you in Minneapolis on Tuesday, May 27 at 8:30? Check it out!
But the posts reflect the process, which at this point is not smooth or predictable, it's organic.
It's a living thing, man!
I keep retooling the opening of the film. It's very, very important to start your film out right. Enough cannot be said about this.
In fact… the opening is so important…
(how important is it?)
I'll tell ya! The opening is so important -- it's unbelievable.
(That one goes out to Steve O'Neil)
Anyway, I'll be working on that opening scene right up to the last minute.
When is the last minute, by the way?
I don't know yet.
It'll be done when it's done.
That's what they say in painting.
Right now, I'm typing this foolishness instead of working on the "band practice" scene, which is about a quarter of the way through the film.
Just before I broke for dinner, I realized that scene needed to be put together differently.
It actually looked quite good as it was -- but that was in the context of itself.
After I watched the whole film before it up to that point, all of a sudden it was clear the approach needed to be different.
The film informs the scenes.
The screenshot above is from a different scene, the "gig scene". We shot that at Heartland, a DIY club that actually had its final show last night. They're closing up due to losing too much money. Heartland made a good run of it. Beach Town got two bands from them due to me going to see shows there: Punishment and Thee Samedi.
Good bye, Heartland!
I saw a good movie at the Seattle International Film Festival today. "My Year with the Nuns". That Matt Smith is some storyteller.
And, the movie was playing at the Egyptian Theater, which closed down earlier this year and was possibly going to go away altogether, but SIFF has decided to take it over and rehabilitate it.
That's the second single-screen theater they've rescued this to. They bought the Uptown a few years ago. It'd probably be knocked down for condos by now, if not for them.
That, my friends, is how a film society should operate. Hell, if that's all they did, I'd be a supporter.
In other news, my short film The Last City in the East is opening for Modern Times (that's right!) in Minneapolis this week. Are you in Minneapolis on Tuesday, May 27 at 8:30? Check it out!
Monday, May 19, 2014
Hurry up and wait, Beach Town
photo by Erik Hammen |
I did see a lot of relatives this week. Quite a few of them are crazy artists just like me. That's always nice to remember.
Also good to remember is that I need to come up with a better pitch for the film. How to explain it to the uninitiated. "Beach Town is a beach movie of the mind. ... " what else? Umm.... I don't know, but do you wanna hear about this awesome edit I made by removing two frames from a clip and adding three from a totally different scene that matches?
The least qualified person to describe art is usually the artist. The smart ones don't say anything. I fall into the other category. If anyone's got a good way to describe my film, please let me know. ( but "not yet done" is already taken)
Monday, May 12, 2014
Update May 11, in brief
Erik Hammen, Riley Neldam, Ahren Buhmann on set (photo by David Thomas) |
I'm about 2/3 of the way through the final cut, working on the scenes like the one in downtown Ballard, out on the water, and outside Surf Ballard with Maya and Sarah.
Digging up buried treasure everywhere. Who buried it? Me.
Today's photo is from the scene we shot at Lect's Soup Stop. (Lect's is actually not featured in this photo. )
Our window of time to work at that location was very small, and it started shrinking the minute we started to shoot. If I recall correctly, I had to "drive solutions with proactive detail-oriented problem-solving." Put that phrase on your resume, it'll double your take home pay. Just kidding.
Anyway, I love that scene now. I worked it last week, and it came out great.
In other news, I had lunch with Steven Sterne on Friday, it was great to catch up. He's been very busy acting these days.
Last summer, my kids were extras in a non-beach movie, called "My Year of the Nuns", and it's playing at the Seattle Int'l Film Fest this month. I'm pretty sure this is not a "Nunsploitation" flick, but the director is Bret Fetzer, who also wrote the play "Lollyville" that Sarah is currently in, and the writer is this guy Matt Smith, who I saw acting in another movie once, and he was pretty funny. So I've got high hopes for it.
Monday, May 5, 2014
May 5 update
Sarah Winsor makeup test (photo by Mel Cafe) |
David Thomas and I finished mixing the rest of the internally-created music. I'm putting the finished tracks in place as I go, and suddenly everything looks 20% better. Good sound = good picture. This is solid math.
I also go up through the coda of the post-theater scene in the edit. I'd thought that coda was pretty much set in stone -- three nice shots, then out we go -- but true to the nature of this cut, it was now very clear that one of those shots had to go. In its place, I'm using two other clips, which were previously discarded from their original places in the film.
So maybe I'll end up using this newly discarded clip for something else as well.
I hope so. In an ideal world, the shot/Use ratio is ideally 1:1 -- that's good math.
In other news... hey look, there's Sarah Winsor in today's photo. I think it's a makeup test photo from the set. Anyway, Sarah is starring in a stage play right now over at Hugo House called Lollyville, which I saw over the weekend and highly recommend! The show runs through May 24th.
Monday, April 28, 2014
Final cut begins!
Old Rocky Point amusement park dining hall. Home of the Shore Dinner (Best in the World). |
It's worth noting that the rough cut is not actually rough -- the idea is to get as close as you can to perfect.
Then, you take a break (for music, in our case) and when you come back for the Final, you can concentrate on the performances without having to worry about structural issues inherent in the process of assembling a film from a million different parts.
It's all about going from good to great.
So it's pretty fun, and exciting to see things working out so well.
Working all the way through the bike scenes over the weekend, I have to say that I am feeling a lot of love for the actors.
I also spent a lot of time on the ever-important opening title sequence. Moved a few things around , and laid in the newly-mixed opening song, which sounds great (thanks David!!).
I also badgered my (Emmy Award-winning) friend Eric S. Anderson with questions about font choice, size, opacity, kerning, leading, etc. My own know-how in that area is limited to what occurs to me randomly, but nuance and subtlety are the order of the day.
Eric is a trained professional and a cool cat, and ... he offered to do the work on them. What? Yes! Thank you Eric!
Also over the weekend, I walked downtown and grabbed a half-dozen more ambient audio tracks, and spent some time organizing and cleaning up my files, including removing some remaining AfterEffects artifacts, and adding that AE stuff to my list of things to do with Ahren Buhmann when the cut is finalized (in addition to color correction-- thank you Ahren!) I don't want to spend time farting around with AE and failing at it when Buhmann can figure it out in a few minutes.
In other news:
Time of the Robots, one of my previous films, got a few screenings in Chicago. There's still some life in that old, strange warhorse!
Jennifer Dice and Steven Stern have another play over at Seattle Public Theater next Saturday (May 3) at 12:00 noon. It's called "Maria Morova", and has got something to do with BabaYaga. It's going to be great -- I'll be there.
This week's photo comes from the (now gone) awesomely hand-built Rocky Point amusement park that my family used to go to when I was a kid. Apparently there's a place now that serves the old timey Rocky Point food. I wonder if it's any good?
Labels:
Ahren Buhmann,
bikes,
david Thomas,
eric s. anderson,
erik hammen,
final cut,
rocky point,
time of the robots
Monday, April 21, 2014
April 21 update, music music music
Fence in downtown Coupeville, WA (photo by Erik Hammen) |
2i were a fantastic band out of Minneapolis that were known for their totally unique sound and awesome live shows. The two songs we're using are actually from one of their live recordings.
Thank you Sharon Kaniess and 2i!!
I also sent three more new songs to David Thomas, all footage-tested and ready to mix.
So... as of this writing I have one more song to finalize (tonight) and one more to either find, or more likely, to write -- but I've got a pretty good idea of how it's going to go.
In other words, we are inches-in-time away from starting the final cut with music!
Monday, April 14, 2014
April 14 update - Beach Town
Ahren Buhmann on set for Mondo Beacho (photo by Mel Cafe) |
It's a great shot, though. I like the whites that Mel gets from that DSLR of his.
Anyway. April may be the cruelest month, but so far we are doing great in the music department!*
To wit-- last week, I was turned on to a new band, the mighty Wet City Rockers. Their work is absolutely perfect for a bunch of stuff we need, so I contacted them immediately. They are very cool.
And -- they are willing to contribute four songs to the film! That's a lot of songs. (Thank you Wet City Rockers!!)
I've also been composing a lot on the 8-track, and I've been listening to a whole ton of great stuff from other folks--nothing else has quite clicked yet but sometimes it takes a while.
To wit again, I completed a song last night that I'd had in mind and then dismissed for one part of the film, only to realize that it might work great in another part.
Then I woke up in the middle of the night and wondered if that song is right after all and if so, maybe it could be a lot better.
The middle of the night is not the best time for objectivity, so I'll have to look at it again and reevaluate.
On that note, if anyone knows of any traditional disco bands out there that are not shackled to Sony or Warner Bros, please let me know.
*Actually I think part of the cruelty of April is the illusion of joy early on, a set up for you to be absolutely crushed by the end of the month...
Labels:
Ahren Buhmann,
disco,
erik hammen,
mel café,
music,
reggae,
wet city rockers
Monday, April 7, 2014
Update Monday, April 7. Beach Town
Silent-era stars Dorothy Sebastian and Joan Crawford on the beach |
This picture reminds me of post-production music work in many ways. I too eat sandwiches!
Last week, I completed two new songs and sent them to David Thomas to begin mixing.
I also roughed in three other songs, and I'm hoping to complete at least a couple of them during the next week. I tried out some alternate guitar tunings on one of them. (But not the Curtis Mayfield tuning... yet).
Beyond that, I also spent a lot of time trawling around and listening to local bands via various online resources to find like-minded individuals who might want to Collaborate with me.
There are a lot of good bands out there. And of course, I want to Collaborate if at all possible.
But it never fails to amaze me how a song can seem like it'd work perfectly for a scene, but then when you actually go into the picture and put it over the scene, it's no good for reasons that aren't clear until you see it.
Nuance is the key thing.
Nuance is a nuisance.
But it's also the difference between good and "okay".
Roasted and burned.
Bleu cheese and rotten.
Monday, March 31, 2014
Beach Town local report March 31 - amassing songs
L-R: Erik Hammen, Sarah Winsor, Ahren Buhmann (photo by David Thomas) |
It was kind of gloomy here in Seattle, but the sun finally came out yesterday and I went out for a run. On my new route, I passed right by the area you see in the photo on the left, where we shot a few scenes last summer.
I spent a lot of time talking over email with Greg Wharmby this week. Greg is one of the handful of great musicians around the country (including but not limited to Graig Markel, Punishment, Thomas Wold, Fermentation, and Thee Samedi) that I'm working with on the huge variety of tracks we need to complete the soundtrack for Beach Town.
It's a lot of people, I'll tell ya what.
In fact, one might say that as usual, I'm doing a lot of "collaborating"!
Here's the tricky thing about movie music. It's more about feeling than melody. And, in Beach Town, most of the music is presented as actual songs motivated by a specific source (usually the radio), as opposed to traditional omniscient soundtrack cues.
So in addition to being great tunes, these songs have to be specifically-atmospheric, the right tempo, and sound right with the rest of the film, and not get in the way of dialogue or suggest the wrong thing through lyrics.
In other words, the music has to serve the movie, not vise versa.
I have very high hopes for my musicians, because any gaps left over will have to be filled in by me. Unfortunately, I have to fill the gaps first, then backfill with new tunes as they come in.
I generally like to work on songs one at a time, but I've found with the amount of material and the sort of material I need to crank out, my burnout rate is a lot lower I actually have a bunch of pieces in progress at once. So I blast away on one song until I can't get any farther with it, and then switch over to a different one and keep working. Ultimately, it's headphone-fatigue that makes me stop for the day.
Speaking of studio tricks, I'm also working on getting together with David Thomas, to go over the mixes he's done of all the performance material, and today, I'm sending out release forms to all the musicians whose music is already baked into the rough cut!
Very exciting.
Friday, March 21, 2014
Beach Town rough cut complete. Cue music.
I finished the rough cut on Tuesday. Posting early this week, got stuff to do...
I've also gone through the film and noted all the cues that are currently filled by temp music.
(Keeping with that theme, the picture here is also a temp picture, albeit a cool one.)
Anyway, there are a lot of music cues to take care of.
But the sun is out, I'm really happy with the way the picture is looking, I'm already working with a couple people on music ideas, and the road ahead seems very rosy from where I sit.
I've also gone through the film and noted all the cues that are currently filled by temp music.
(Keeping with that theme, the picture here is also a temp picture, albeit a cool one.)
Anyway, there are a lot of music cues to take care of.
But the sun is out, I'm really happy with the way the picture is looking, I'm already working with a couple people on music ideas, and the road ahead seems very rosy from where I sit.
Monday, March 17, 2014
Rough cut getting close
L-R: Riley Neldam, Kenna Kettrick, Ahren Buhmann, Sarah Winsor, and John the extra (photo by Jennifer Dice) |
We're on the beach -- Golden Gardens -- for the bonfire scene. Shooting with a permit, in front of a slightly unpermitted fire-pit constructed of an old Smokey Joe with its legs yanked off, buried in the sand.
We had a fire captain -- Jennifer Dice-- whose job was to make the fire bigger.
Foom! Up it went.
Do people sing around bonfires anymore? They do where I come from. Last time I was back east visiting my brother Bret and his family, we had a bonfire in his backyard. My niece Freya lent me her plastic cowgirl guitar, and we were able to squeeze a few tunes out of it.
Group singing is good for the brain.
The world-famous St. Olaf Choir holds hands when they sing, the whole lot of them. It helps them function as a single unit. The vibrations and empathy are transmitted directly. They don't have to worry about holding a guitar, though.
Or a beer can.
In the editing room, the bonfire scene had some unusual challenges. Honestly, I was stumped for a couple of days over the best way to cut it. But I cracked the code yesterday afternoon.
Now that I've got a grip on the whole thing, I hope to finish the rough cut this coming week, and then start on the remaining music tracks immediately after.
I'm pretty excited to get going on the music.
Labels:
8-track recorder. Ahren Buhmann,
erik hammen,
golden gardens,
kenna kettrick,
riley neldam,
Sarah Winsor
Monday, March 10, 2014
Beach Town update, daylight-savings edition
I got a lot done this week. Worked on the rest of the record store scenes, then on to the Georgetown Trailer Park Mall, and beyond that to our little scene on 1st Ave. S. near Slim's Last Chance.
A lot of locations on this film.
A lot!
You wanna know what one of the primary rules of indie filmmaking is? It's "limit your locations".
The process of packing up, moving, unpacking, and shooting over and over and over is costly, time-consuming, randomizing, and exhausting.
Limit your locations! It totally makes sense.
In a bean-counter sort of way.
But dammit, I love locations and I'm doing it the same way on my next film.
Locations are key to your mise-en-scène! It's not "adding stress" to bring your cast and crew to places that inspire everyone and gives you beautiful images as well, it should be part of the expectation. That's Cinema, baby.
I do wonder sometimes, in the dark of the night, whether the I-know-better "punk rock" approach to filmmaking that I love so much maybe won't come out so charmingly rough-edged one day...
But this week? Once again, everything fell gloriously into place like I hoped it would.
Ha! Vindicated!
A bit 'o editing magic, it is. A little shell game, made possible by tons of pre-production planning, and then --- crucially -- by working with excellent actors and excellent crew.
I'm sure I'll have to eat my words some day in this regard, but what's the point of being in the arts if you have no conviction?
Anyway... Moving right along...
Now that we're getting close to the end of the rough cut, I've started getting distracted by the upcoming music phase of post production.
I need to reel back that distraction until the rough cut is done.
Last night, for example, I got a bee in my bonnet that I needed to figure out a particular piece of music right now, so I switched gears and tried to crank out a new brand new song -- with no real ideas per se and using kindergarten-level tools (re: apple Garageband) -- right there on the spot.
That was a big fat waste of time. But it did remind me that I'm gonna need to invest in one more (ahem) piece of software not too long from now....
In other news:
The Criminal Element, written by Jennifer Dice and directed by Steven Sterne, at Seattle Public Theater this Saturday, March 15th, at noon. These Dice/Sterne plays are a blast, I highly recommend them. I'll be there, I hope to see you too.
And don't forget to Spring Ahead today.
Monday, March 3, 2014
Beach Town report for the first Monday in March, 2014
Emily Purington, on set of Beach Town (photo by Mel Cafe) |
'Getting toward the home stretch now, at least for the rough cut.
This week's photo comes from the makeup test, I think, for one of the scenes I was cutting this week. Emily Purington is dressed for the Georgetown confab by Barbara Blunt, makeup by Juel Bergholm.
Beyond that Georgetown bit, I also put together the rest of the water scenes and another Shilshole Ave sequence, and ended up on the roof of Surf Ballard, a place where the cast and crew spent more time than we ever thought we would...
... Actually that's true about Shilshole Avenue as well.
... The great thing about working with talented actors, in this case Sarah Winsor and Maya Briller, is that they are able to reproduce their performances again and again, each time as if they were brand new. Despite (or "in spite of" -- is there a difference?) some unexpected technical challenges.
Hooray for acting -- wotta fine profession!
Here's something funny: I got derailed about halfway through editing the Shilshole Avenue bit when I realized that I'd forgotten we had music for that scene that was baked into the script. See, I'd already edited the whole thing to a temp track instead. Hilarious!
I think I've just had this particular tune in mind for so long that I took it for granted.
Upon recutting, it was amazing once again how powerful all that stuff is... Music.... Editing.
Anyway, special thanks to the patient Thomas Wold for the use of his lovely, summery hippy folkadelic tune. Recorded on machines so old they don't even exist anymore, from what I'm told....
Speaking of music, once the rough cut is done, the plan is to set the picture aside to cool off, and re-commence work on acquiring and/or composing the remaining music for the film. Because for expediency's sake, a handful of scenes are currently scored with temporary tracks, which have copyrights owned by giant, reeking corporations, the kind that charge licensing fees that exceed the entire budget of the film x2 for each tiny, forgotten song.
(What percentage of that fee goes to the artist? My guess = 0)
After the music is finalized, I can go back to the rough cut, put in the final tracks, cut to the new music and tighten the whole thing up for public consumption. (note the metaphor follow-through here....)
In other news:
Sarah was in another play this weekend which I missed, but will also be in Macha Monkey's Lollyville, playing at Hugo House in May!
Steven Sterne seems to be working non-stop -- beyond his directing duties at SPT he's now working with the Young Playwrights on a read-through series...
Alyssa Kay is in Charlotte's Web, opening March 21 at the Second Story Rep.
Labels:
Emily purington,
erik hammen,
Maya Briller,
Sarah Winsor,
shilshole avenue,
surf ballard,
Thomas Wold
Monday, February 24, 2014
Beach Town update Feb 24, lots of progress to report!
Lots of progress on the Beach Town edit this week!
First off, many thanks to Eric S. Anderson for nifty little editing tip that helped get me out of the record store scene where I'd been stuck for a lot longer than seemed reasonable. It was at the point where I was basically "in a quagmire"...
Also thanks to Anna Forse, for a suggestion for the title scene, which I thought I'd gotten past on this initial cut but it'll be worth checking out for sure...Yes!
Yes... Anyway, where was I? Oh yeah: lots of ground covered last week.
Back on the bikes, for the lovely little scene that we shot up north by a manicured strip mall in Shoreline, WA. ( ... a strip mall? In a beach movie of the mind? .. Yes! ... Intentional! )
That done, it was back to Georgetown again, at Lect's Soup Stop. It was roundly agreed that the soup at Lect's is awesome.
Ease-of-location? Not so much. We pulled that one out of the fire just barely at the time.
But at the end of the day (aka last week) it cut together pretty well.
After that, I worked on a nice long scene that combines the first scene we shot on the film -- down by the rocks on the beach -- with one of the very last things we shot over in Ballard proper.
Also good stuff, but I'll definitely need some more ambient sound for that one. And it'll need to be quiet ambient sound.
Especially after those Georgetown scenes.
Quiet ambient sound! It's harder to get than you'd think. The thing is, your brain edits out a lot of sound around you, so something that you think is pretty mellow is actually picked up by the recorder as a big screeching, rumbling hunk 'o racket.
There's also a little touch of music in one part of the Ballard scene, though, and many thanks to Greg Wharmby of the band Horns of Ormus for the music tracks he sent! One of them is looking very good for that bit.
Finally, it was out on the water for some more canoe-camera shots, which I believe will comprise the second surf yoga scene but...
But the truth is these second shots came out really, really good. So good, that I'm doing some serious considering behind the scenes what I want to do with them for sure. Because there are several options.
(And, by "behind the scenes", I guess I really mean I'm just going to think about it and no one will know either way. And, is it really behind the scenes if I'm blabbing about it on this blog...? Considering my likely readership, I'd say yes. )
Last week, I also picked up some more ambient sound, and like I mentioned earlier, I have come to realize that I still need a lot more. I can't go out in the rain, it won't sound right, but my to-do list now has a stack of outdoor jaunts on it. When the weather's right, I'll start carrying the recorder everywhere. Successful ambient sound recording seems to be a combination of luck and perseverance.
This week's still photo is from the bike shop, which is where we began the shoot day that eventually took us up to Shoreline. I don't know what Riley and I are saying in this shot but you can tell it was a laugh riot. (Will seems to be tuned-out, but he's probably just in character)
First off, many thanks to Eric S. Anderson for nifty little editing tip that helped get me out of the record store scene where I'd been stuck for a lot longer than seemed reasonable. It was at the point where I was basically "in a quagmire"...
Also thanks to Anna Forse, for a suggestion for the title scene, which I thought I'd gotten past on this initial cut but it'll be worth checking out for sure...Yes!
L-R: Riley Neldam, William Poole, Erik Hammen, and Sarah Winsor at Dutch Bike, Ballard (photo by Mel Cafe) |
Back on the bikes, for the lovely little scene that we shot up north by a manicured strip mall in Shoreline, WA. ( ... a strip mall? In a beach movie of the mind? .. Yes! ... Intentional! )
That done, it was back to Georgetown again, at Lect's Soup Stop. It was roundly agreed that the soup at Lect's is awesome.
Ease-of-location? Not so much. We pulled that one out of the fire just barely at the time.
But at the end of the day (aka last week) it cut together pretty well.
After that, I worked on a nice long scene that combines the first scene we shot on the film -- down by the rocks on the beach -- with one of the very last things we shot over in Ballard proper.
Also good stuff, but I'll definitely need some more ambient sound for that one. And it'll need to be quiet ambient sound.
Especially after those Georgetown scenes.
Quiet ambient sound! It's harder to get than you'd think. The thing is, your brain edits out a lot of sound around you, so something that you think is pretty mellow is actually picked up by the recorder as a big screeching, rumbling hunk 'o racket.
There's also a little touch of music in one part of the Ballard scene, though, and many thanks to Greg Wharmby of the band Horns of Ormus for the music tracks he sent! One of them is looking very good for that bit.
Finally, it was out on the water for some more canoe-camera shots, which I believe will comprise the second surf yoga scene but...
But the truth is these second shots came out really, really good. So good, that I'm doing some serious considering behind the scenes what I want to do with them for sure. Because there are several options.
(And, by "behind the scenes", I guess I really mean I'm just going to think about it and no one will know either way. And, is it really behind the scenes if I'm blabbing about it on this blog...? Considering my likely readership, I'd say yes. )
Last week, I also picked up some more ambient sound, and like I mentioned earlier, I have come to realize that I still need a lot more. I can't go out in the rain, it won't sound right, but my to-do list now has a stack of outdoor jaunts on it. When the weather's right, I'll start carrying the recorder everywhere. Successful ambient sound recording seems to be a combination of luck and perseverance.
This week's still photo is from the bike shop, which is where we began the shoot day that eventually took us up to Shoreline. I don't know what Riley and I are saying in this shot but you can tell it was a laugh riot. (Will seems to be tuned-out, but he's probably just in character)
Labels:
ambient sound,
anna forse,
editing,
eric s. anderson,
erik hammen,
lect's soup shop,
mel cafe,
riley neldam,
Sarah Winsor,
shoreline,
willliam poole
Monday, February 17, 2014
Beach Town update Feb 17, post-valentine's day update
Not enough time to post properly this week so let's look at a few pictures!
L-R: David Thomas, Riley Neldam, Maya Briller, production morning. (photo by Mel Cafe) |
L-R: Erik Hammen, Maya Briller, Ahren Buhmann, Sarah Winsor on set. (photo by Mel Cafe) |
L-R: Ahren Buhmann, Iain Dalton on set, Georgetown Records. (photo by Mel Cafe) |
Brian Wolbert on set, Cairo. (photo by Mel Cafe) |
Labels:
Ahren Buhmann,
brian wolbert,
david Thomas,
erik hammen,
Georgetown records,
Maya Briller,
riley neldam,
Sarah Winsor
Monday, February 10, 2014
Beach Town Update Feb 10, 2014
L-R: Erik Hammen and Steven Sterne, on the Beach Town set. (photo by Mel Cafe) |
It snowed last night in Seattle, so who's thinking about Beach Town, a rock 'n' roll beach movie of the mind?
Hint: me
On Sunday, I finished up the gig scene and the post-gig codas, including a bit of cloudy day, and then started on to the next record store scene. (Over on the right is Steven Sterne, spinning the wax and that's a fact. )
It was a very busy half day of shooting at the record store. We were up before dawn and had to be out before 11:00 AM. In putting together the clips for this scene, I realized that we missed a shot.
I went into the vault and reviewed all the footage from that day, and we got a lot done. The footage goes and goes and goes.
Not a lot of takes, though, and as time got tighter toward the end, we started consolidating shots. Instead of a master and two singles, it'd be a master only. But we definitely missed one shot all together. Welcome to the glamorous world of independent film.
However! I think I know how to solve the problem.
Maybe it'll even be better than the original idea.
That's why editing is fun.
L-R: Ahren Buhmann, Emily Purington, Riley Neldam during production. (photo by Mel Cafe) |
Back to the gig scenes -- I gotta say those came out as good as I could've imagined. They're fun and entertaining, but seem "real" as well.
It was quite a puzzle though, getting it all to work together like it needed to. I mean, you'd think I'd have learned something from the other band scene, which I put together not that long ago.
But not really, no.
All I did was relearn my weekly mantra -- the hard way.
Speaking as the resident expert, in a Rock n' Roll Beach Movie of the Mind you gotta keep the "mind" part very present. So intellectual exercises, or "doing things the hard way" are an important part of the process.
Today's second photo was taken at the production house, during that vague period between Makeup and Shooting on the day of the gig shoot. Riley and Emily are waiting.
Waiting, waiting, waiting.
Labels:
beach movie of the mind,
editing,
Emily purington,
Georgetown records,
indy film,
riley neldam,
rock n' roll,
spinning the wax,
Steven Sterne
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