Category Archives: Thoughts

And the Fall Cast is Done

Ext:
A turn of the century warehouse in Hannibal, MO

The Last Day of Cast Shooting In Hannibal.

And with a BANG! shooting with the fall cast is done. We had just a few shots to do, that required a lot of setup, but after a late start due to having to pack up a huge prop, that had to be partially disassembled, we headed for Hannibal. I know what you’re thinking… “You guys… start late…. impossible.”  But alas, it is so.

This was one of those days that I knew was going to take a while to get ready for, but it was also one of the most enjoyable days of filming.

Jeff, Julian, Rhonda and Devin were ready to roll. Two big scenes. Getting people in makeup and props in place took some time, and after seven hours of prep work, all that for what would wind up being roughly five seconds of finished footage and only one chance to get it right. And that was the real fear. Having to do it again. There were several local store owners that came out to watch. Without giving too much away, we got the scenes shot, they are incredible, and everyone was in a great mood. We wrapped up, and took pictures with everybody, a round of applause for the Fall Cast, and there were hugs and goodbyes as the cast left Hannibal for the last time.

There’s a weird thing that happens when you start working on a project like this. You start to feel like there’s two of you. There’s the Monday through Thursday you, with concerns and issues just like everybody else you know. But come a filming day, the movie is all you care about. It becomes the center of the universe. And then the shooting days are over, and you have to readjust to Monday through Thursday you. As excited as I am about this project, I guess that’s why I don’t talk about it much outside of the circle of people involved.

There’s a real rush that comes along with it, and a real crash. Those weekends of rushes and crashes are almost over. There’s only four filming days left. Most of those are interiors. It will probably seem a bit anticlimactic on wrap day. But there’s a real joy in this whole process. Despite the hours spent driving, and setting up, for just a few seconds of film here and there, there is a real sense of accomplishment, not just by me, but from the crew. They braved the heat, the cold, the water, the snow, the heights. All that to get this done. So here’s a shout out to Mike, Karen, Tina, Kelly, Tim , Maria, and Justin. Each and every one of them has earned so much respect.

I’m rambling, and I’m still exhausted from the weekend, so I’m calling it a night.

More soon.

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Lovin’ Me Some Freaky Weather

Julian and Clark in action

Ext:
Hannibal Missouri

There’s an old joke about Missouri.  “If you don’t like the weather, wait 15 minutes.”  After a week of sunny skies and 60 degrees, a lot of stress and even more antacids being taken, a lovely freak weather pattern answered my wishes. Regardless of the sunny and soggy weather outside, as luck would have it, Hannibal got hit by a freak snow storm with 6 inches of glorious white fluffy snow in 12 hours.  And this worked for us two-fold: 1) we couldn’t actually film the last scenes for fall, because they are exteriors, and everything was covered in snow; and 2) but we didn’t have to lose the weekend because the gentleman who is letting us film in our Hannibal location was going to allow us to film on his property.  So after much organizing and phone calling and arranging we packed up the van and headed to Hannibal with Winter cast in tow.  (Actually Mandy met us in Hannibal, but you get the idea….)

When we got to Hannibal, Chad had news.  He spoke to his neighbor, and his land is much flatter, and easier to access, so he got us permission to film there.  Needless to say, Chad rocks!!!  And a big thank you to the Gary Denn for permission to film on their property and his sons Dillon and Dalton who pitched in and helped us move props and equipment.  (Sorry about almost waking the baby.)

So after taking a guided tour of the property, we figured out where we would be shooting which segments, and got started.

First up, reshooting the intro scene with Mr. B.  “Do you have anything like an open field with tall grass?”   A few minutes walk and Dillon took me to a perfect spot that matched what was already in the can,.  So that one went like clockwork.  Mr. Barrister shot his scene and retired to his trailer, and we moved on to the next items.  (Mr B is a nice guy, but he has a serious stick up his ass!)  …. Sorry…. inside joke.

I have to give all the credit here to Clark and Julian.  They showed up prepared, were ready to switch gears at a moments notice, and were able to just concentrate on the performances.  If it wasn’t for them both being quintessential professionals, we would never have been able to get this done this fast.

At the end of the day we wound up getting everything but two brief sequences shot.  The snow wasn’t the problem.  The cold was.  We had some technical difficulties because of the cold, the o-rings were not sealing and holding pressure, so we called it a day.

We’re pretty much home at this point. I can finally turn off the 3 AM circus that keeps me awake.

Sunday gave us a sudden rise in temperature, and almost like it never happened, the snow was gone.   We spent Sunday prepping the interior location for shooting.  Moving stuff we’re we need it, cleaning up, and getting the location ready for dressing.  But I’m looking most forward to this weekend of shooting the last bits of fall this weekend, and then moving to the winter interior stuff.

In other news, the rough cut of Summer is done, and the rough cut of Fall is started.  So we’re quickly nearing the finish line.  There’s so much going on at the moment I’m having trouble keeping it all straight.  Lot’s more to come.

 

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The Doctor is Out.

Int:
A turn of the century warehouse in Hannibal.

Tim Lantz as Doc

Sunday was exactly what I expected it to be.  A lot of set up for two very short sequences being filmed.

There was a lot of driving, a lot of standing around, and a lot of gabbing, smiling, joking, etc.  The last day you film with any of the major actors is always a big deal.  This was Tim Lantz last day on the set, and it was fun.

We got to the warehouse in the afternoon, and after some confusion with getting in, we got all the equipment up on the third floor and started setting up.  There was a lot of wardrobe to situate, and setup to be done, and Karen and Tim jumped right in.  I feel a little guilty about it now, but while they were busting ass, the rest of us were mostly chatting and goofing off.  We could have helped, but last days no one wants to rush…

Just a few short weeks ago we were scrambling to recast Doc.  And here we are just a short time later, and we’re all done.  Tim did a great job with the character, and I couldn’t be happier with the end result.  Fall was tricky.  With the wrong cast, it could have been the act that sunk the rest of it, but Eric, Rhonda, and Tim gave it 110 percent, and as I start editing, it’s quickly becoming my favorite act.

Julian came along, and got a very different take on things as we shot the few bits in fall that his character appears in.  I don’t quite think he knew how to take it, but I hope he enjoyed his first day in Hannibal, even though he really didn’t quite know what was going on.

One more shooting day with Rhonda and Julian, and some of the other background characters, and we’re all done.  Only winter left.  I’d say more, but I can’t.  All I know is we have one hell of a mess to clean up.

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Warm and Sunny with No Chance of Snow

Ext:
Vandalia, IL

Sunday was a nice relaxed pace.  Julian and Clark are again on their A game.  The temperature is supposed to reach the mid 50’s, but we get there earlyish, and there’s still plenty of snow on the ground.  Karen and Maria get the tent set up and ready.  They sort props, wardrobe etc.  and then a goodly amount of time is spent trying to get a smallish fire going.   It just needs to smolder.

Things pretty much go exactly as planned, and when as we spend the day filming, Maria gets the chance to do one of her amazing “COPS” style action shots, chasing Clark through the snow, in platform boots no less… it really is the most amazing thing you’ll see.

At 4’11” every pair of shoes she has are platforms, just enough to inch her up to a mighty 5’2″.  I wonder how well she’d do in plain old tennis shoes.

As we shoot through the day, the snow gets stomped down, and we have to carefully move the tent just a little bit, so the melted areas don’t show up on film.  By mid day, the spots where Kelly, Mike and I are standing have turned into a swamp.  but we manage to frame everything just so.  And we get some amazing shots.

By my figuring, we have one day of shooting left with the Fall cast, one day of shots with extras, two or three more days with Clark and Julian, and some shots for the intro.  And that’s it.  We’re finished.

By 3:30 we’re done.  And I’m relieved.  And I’m worried.

We’ve got plenty to shoot that doesn’t require snow, but at the end of the day, we need one more good snow.  It’s February 17th.  Winter is far from over, but that doesn’t mean it isn’t gnawing at the back of my brain.  It’s supposed to be in the 50’s and 60’s for a while.

Just one more good snow.  That’s all I need…

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The First Day of Winter…Again

Ext:
A snow covered field in Vandalia IL

Saturday started early… Real early.  And it felt even earlier, because I can never sleep the night before a shooting day.  It’s roughly 50% adrenaline and 50% nerves, along with the last minute running around to get everything ready to go for shooting.  Batteries charged… check.  Cameras cleaned off and ready to go… check.  Sound equipment packed and ready… check.  Wardrobe. Props. Directions. Crew.  Cast. Script. Shot list.  It seems like a never ending checklist.  And by the time it’s all set and ready to go, 5:00 AM comes way too early.

We get going reasonably on time, and pick up Julian for the long drive.  I can see he’s as tired and anxious as we are.  It’s supposed to be in the 50’s all week next week.  The snow will be gone, and we have a lot to shoot.  No pressure Julian.   There’s only so much snow, and the forecast which originally called for 35 degrees is now calling for 44.  Oh well.  We’ll get done what we get done.  The upshot is we have Tim and Maria with us, so we can get more done, but Mike is absent which puts me back in the doubt zone.  Nothing I can do about it now.

Julian and Clark getting ready for a scene.

Kelly drives three passengers.  Julian, me and Mister Barrister, who’s greedily hogging up seating for 2.

Clark, Karen, Tim and Mr. Barrister standing around, setting up for a scene.

We arrive and Clark is his excited, chipper self, and Mandy is as great as ever.  I really do like the Pearson family.  Great people!  We saddle up, and get to the location.  And it’s on.  Fortunately the crew has done these shots before, so we can cut out a lot of the explanation.  Julian is set… and ACTION!

HOLY SHIT!

After working with four casts, you begin to get a feel for the different kinds of actors.  Some need a breakdown.  Some need answers.  Some offer suggestions, and some just feel there way through each take.  Julian and Clark just nail it, right out of the gate.  Honestly, this is the least amount of directing I’ve ever had to do.  They both just get it.  I can’t believe Julian has only had the script a week.  He has such a great feel for the character.  Other than a few tweaks to scenes, and a little bit of pacing, we fly through everything I wanted to get done.  And then we get to the moment…

Clark needs to have a very emotional moment.  It’s a scene that HAS to be right.  Mandy and I quickly discuss the scene.  She asks that we get set and ready to go, and she’ll bring Clark over when he’s ready.  We set up.  Mandy takes Clark aside, and they go through the scene.  When she brings him over, he’s ready.  I say “Action!”, and we go.

Damn it.  I need another take. And I feel like a jerk for asking for it…

And Clark again delivers. At the end of it, he stops, smiles and says… “I forgot a line”

I want just one more to make sure everything is right.  Mandy pulls Clark aside again, and in just a few minutes we go again.  And it is absolutely perfect.  When I yell “CUT!” Kelly is crying.  Julian just looks and says “That was intense.”

It’s flawless.

Clark smiles.  “What are we doing next?”  Mandy asks if we’re doing the next scene.

Nope.  That is plenty for today.

Grandma Pearson makes dinner again while we’re out shooting for the day.  She makes chicken and dumplings again.  Thanks again Grandma P!  I don’t think anyone is ever going to say “no” to your chicken and dumplings.  They are awesome!

We get home just after 7:00.  It’s dark out.  We quickly unload the van, and pull the footage immediately.  I do a quick sync so I can see what we have on that last scene.  We watch, and Kelly cries again.

Karen, Maria, and Tim get back a bit later, and I show them.  We all agree, it’s dead on.

Sunday is another filming day.  It’s supposed to get up into the 50’s. More on that to come…

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Winter Weather Worries

Int:
A Windowless Office

So I’m pouring over weather reports for most of Missouri, and they all seem to have one common thread.  The early end of Winter. And none of them show anything lower than 40 degrees through the end of the month.  Damn you Puxatawny Phil!   Grrrrrrrrr!  I know people are going to hate me for this, but I need snow!

As much as I’m looking forward to Saturday, and shooting with Julian and Clark, I can’t help but feel a little anxious.  I’m scouring through the winter script, and pouring over the shot list, trying to figure out exactly what we can get shot this weekend, while we still have snow on the ground.  Also trying to figure out what might need to be changed to interior shots.  What, if anything, can be faked; which I hate, because fake snow looks like fake snow to me….

So much to do, so little time.  Karen and I discuss options for shooting all of the exterior scenes.

It’s frustrating.  I can do a lot of things, but I can’t make it snow.

I know Julien is enthusiastic.  I can only hope that he’s prepared to shoot like a mad man this weekend.  I’d like to knock out three sequences on Saturday.  Maybe four.  And that the weather folks are wrong and we get a good heavy snow sometime in the near future.  Don’t hate me for this, but, fingers crossed!

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Winter on Saturday, Fall on Sunday

Scene
Ext: A snow covered field/ Int: an old riverfront warehouse

So in one weekend we’ve done a lot of driving.  A lot.  All I can say is I’m thankful for minivans, and for Kelly being back on the crew.  P.S.  The crew is exhausted, and I’m officially a week behind on the blog.  So I promise, I’ll get caught up this week.

It’s been a long six months of production, and it’s been a over a year since we started.  There’s been four casts, nine locations (so far) dozens of extras,  and thousands of miles driven to locations.  Anyone who tells you making a movie is a cush job is lying.

Saturday was our first day of shooting winter.  Opening with a few establishing shots.  We went with a skeleton crew of just Mike, Karen, Kelly and myself.  I just wanted to see what we could get done, and more or less gauge how much crew we were going to need.  No reason for everyone to stand outside and freeze their ass off.  And we gave shooting a dialogue scene with Ted and Clark a shot.  Sadly, a piece of audio equipment taking a spill in the snow cut that short, but fortunately, the equipment is fine.  FYI, if you ever drop electronics in the snow, pull the battery ASAP, pull any storage cards, and let it sit for at least 24 hours.  Where most folks go wrong is they immediately try to see if it will turn on.  This is when most shorts happen.

Following our cut short shooting day, Clark’s grandmother made us a lovely dinner of chicken and dumplings, which made the shortened day a lot less disappointing.  Thanks Grandma Pearson!

We’ve got our first shots of Winter done, and are down to our last shots for fall.  I’m so thankful that fall was a fun, stress-free shoot.  The location wasn’t quite as comfortable as I was hoping, but I think it makes the whole thing feel more genuine.  It’s beautiful on film, in a run-down, rustic way.

Tim brought it, big time last weekend, shooting four scenes where he had the vast majority of the dialogue.  His performance was spot on and even though it was our first weekend without Karen, who’s never missed a shooting day, I wasn’t sure how things were going to go without her keeping everything in order, and making sure all the details I never want to have to think about get taken care of.  Somehow, we managed to keep pace with the previous weekend’s shooting and wrapped up before 7:00.

I’ve spent every spare moment this week editing Summer, and we’re looking good.  And that’s it kids.  That’s all I got.  I’m exhausted.  Stay tuned!

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The Fork in the Road

Scene
Ext. An old warehouse in Hannibal

Sorry about the delay on this weeks blog.  I’m kinda all over the place this weekend, and I think this blog post will explain why.

Karen makes Eric look pretty for his intro scene. He's got a golden voice. If you offer him a dollar he'll record a radio promo or commercial for you, and you won't have to deal with sending him to rehab.

In only three shooting days, I’m stunned at far we are on the third segment.  A lot fewer headaches behind the camera now. But the weather has actually decided to cooperate, so we’re splitting shooting up for the first time this weekend.  Saturday we’ll be shooting with Ted and Clark, and Sunday we’ll be in Hannibal shooting with the Fall cast. It’s a hard choice, and I hate breaking it up like this, but for winter, we have to shoot when there’s snow on the ground, and in keeping with the tradition of shooting in the farthest reaches of the Midwest, we are shooting in Vandalia, IL.  The upshot is we only have to pack wardrobe.  No sets to dress.  Not yet anyway.  We’ll save the interior shots for when we’re finished with Fall.

Not much left now.

Every time that we have a change of cast and location, there’s always that new break-in period where everybody is getting used to the work flow.  But we hit that really quickly with Fall, and we’ve gotten so much shot, so fast that I’m still a little amazed by the whole thing.  The production at this point has taken on a life of it’s own.  It’s no longer lumbering to completion, but sprinting to the finish line.

We started last Sunday off early.  The hour and a half drive to Hannibal seems like a lot less now, and got set up and ready to go.  Shot Eric’s character’s intro scene, which required him looking really nasty.  Jeff Bateman, who has been our most loyal extra, we plugged into a speaking part.  He made the whole thing look too damn easy.

Jeff Bateman and Rhonda Husak block out a scene.

So at this point we have just four scenes left to shoot with Eric and Doc, and one with Marianne, and I’m hoping to knock out most, if not all of them this Sunday.  That’s all on Tim now… This is more like it.

Last weekend also had us shooting with one of the folks I was looking forward to working with.  The Chocolate.  Devan Hennesy.  Don’t ask…. Just remember to call him Chocolate Devan.  He was someone that we read for a role, but due to a scheduling conflict we couldn’t get him.  But he showed up for a much smaller part in fall.  I hope he and Fred had fun.  They both have two shooting days.  After the first shooting day, I’m sure they’re thinking  it’ll be hard to make stranger requests of them, but we will!    All of this is leading up to a last day that I just can’t wait to actually watch first hand… There are some things in this life that you never expect to get to see.  I’ll get to check one of those off my list after the final shooting day, and Devan, Fred and Jeff get to do it.

Damn I love this gig!

As usual, it’s the night before a shoot, and I can’t sleep worth a damn… so here I am updating away…

Just a few other quick notes:

Don’t forget to buy a shirt.  All the cool kids are.
and…
Nichole Fischer
updated her blog with her last shooting day stuff, and even more amazing pictures.  So by all means go check that out.

Oh, and Colby Raines was interviewed on the Benita Show, and you can watch that here.

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And the Production Rolls On…

Scene
Int. The same old kitchen.  Damn, it’s time to redecorate this place or something…

Eric was away in LA this weekend, and we had planned on shooting the few scenes that just require bit parts and extras, but because of circumstances beyond our control, that didn’t happen. But no worries.  It’s the kind of stuff we can shoot at any time, and doesn’t involve any of the primary cast members.

So what to do when you can’t get out in the field? Well, just about anything you can. Summer editing picked up speed, and I’m about 30% done with the rough cut. It’s going much faster then Spring, or I’m more caffeinated. Don’t tell me which.  I don’t want to know. And after a 20 hour editing marathon, it was time to show off what had been done. I’m loving how it came together, and can’t wait for the Wednesday meeting with the whole crew to show them.

Blocking out a scene with Eric and Tim.

Last weekend was our first weekend with our recast Doc, Tim Lantz, and he is fun, and funny and really nailed the character. There are three things you want in an actor. Someone who has talent, patience, and takes direction. Tim does all three well. Eric and Rhonda where wonderful as ever, and we had a lot of fun shooting.

We have almost everything prepped and ready to roll for Winter. Props and wardrobe are all set, we just have some location cleaning and set up that needs to happen. That will be going on most likely this week. In the event that we get a big snow, the working plan is to shoot exterior shots for winter when we can, and split that weekend shooting with Fall. Meeting with Ted for lunch on Saturday, we discussed his character Marcus in depth; going through his back story, and his motivations, and more importantly how exactly he wound up where he is as the Winter segment starts.   It was a detail I kept from Ted until now. Great meeting!

Finished designing and animating the title sequence. It’s a combination of creativity and tedium. It’s got to be short and sweet and visually memorable. I think we hit the nail on the head on this one thematically, and personally I’m loving it. Just wish it didn’t have to take so damn long.

Reviewed the fall footage that’s been shot, and couldn’t be happier with the end results at this point. We have some pick up shots to do, but what we have is rock solid, and our trajectory for building dramatically as we go is looking pretty damn good.

Eric can't hide his excitement about the upcoming scene.

So at 1:45 I sit here, writing on the blog, feeling a bit guilty about not getting this entry added last week.  Sorry about that.  Busy week doesn’t begin to describe it. I’m starting to feel a bit relieved.  So much got done.

And to top it all off, as we near the end of shooting on TYAI, we began to discuss what comes next. After a lot of thought, and getting a lot of opinions, it’s pretty much set in stone that my next project will be an adaptation from a short story that I wrote a few months back. Finally venturing into the science fiction realm. Sorry… but that’s all you’ll get from me.  At least for the moment.

Oh yeah, and don’t forget to buy a shirt.

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Busy busy week.

I haven’t forgotten about the blog… just been a busy busy week. We have recast Doc, and just finished our first day of shooting with Tim, and the other main characters in the third segment.

We’re moving along at a good clip on Fall, and I’m trying to keep nose to the grindstone on this one, but I will have an update before the end of the week. I’ve got the final concept for the title sequence in production, and I’m editing the rough cut of Summer.

If you can’t quite get enough of the antics that went on during the summer shoot, check Nichole Fischer’s wonderfully well written blog at www.nicholefischer.com.  She has some great behind the scene pics too.

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And We’re Rolling Again

Scene
Int: A turn of the century warehouse in Hannibal

So Saturday we did a casting call, and we’re still reviewing the tapes as of Tuesday night.  It’s a tough choice. I have to be honest. I love casting calls. It’s easily the most fun part of the film making process. Some come in, and it’s all business. They deliver their lines, take direction, deliver lines again, and then go on about their day. Others are friendly or funny. Some, when explained who the character is get that “are you serious?” look. And still others are so nervous, you can see there hands shake while they deliver the lines on playback. It’s a fascinating mixed bag. These are the ones I respect the most, and are a reminder that it’s not an easy gig to walk out in front of a bunch of people you don’t know, and just throw it out there convincingly.

We arrived in Hannibal on Sunday, and it was supposed to be a short day, but Maria explained it to the cast pretty well. “When he says two hours, it’s normally eight…” In my defense, it’s really more like six. I knew Sunday’s shoot was going to be a lot of set up. We had to get a bath tub set up, and filled on the third floor, with no water spigot. So bucket after bucket of hot water was brought up on the elevator.

Eric Warrington hops out of the tub, after finishing a scene.

But we got it set up, and we got it done. In between setting up, everyone huddled near the kerosene heater that looked like a jet engine trying to stay warm. Yeah, we were indoors, but it doesn’t mean you couldn’t see people’s breath. Eric had the luxury of sitting in a warm bathtub to deliver his lines, but by the time we got to Rhonda, we had to actually stop and give her time to warm up, so her mouth could form the words without her lips trembling or teeth chattering. She’s a trooper throughout, and we get done exactly as much as I expected to given the long set up.

At 8:00 we wrap it up, and I don’t think much about it. I actually kept waiting for something to happen. A waterline break, the bathtub to go through the floor, an alien invasion, a dinosaur attack, a meteor hitting the building…something. This is us. Lucky isn’t on the menu. But other than us kicking the circuit breaker while trying to run the lights and the heater, and having to find the panel, nothing does.

But come Monday, things are different. We had a nice easy shooting day by my estimate. But Karen tells me that Eric and Rhonda are chomping at the bit to get rolling again. They’re excited! This is a good thing. This is how it’s supposed to work. And now, I can’t wait to get back to Hannibal.

The snow has melted, so I can quit worrying about shooting the exterior shots for winter. At least for now.

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Seeing as it’s Christmas time and all…

So I wanted to take a minute, and share a little bit more of my Mom’s film influence on me.

This isn’t a movie that she introduced me to, but she is the person that introduced me to Katharine Hepburn and Peter O’Toole.  It’s one of my favorite holiday films, and I just wanted to share it with you all.  The movie is The Lion In Winter (1968).  It stars a very young Anthony Hopkins, as well as Nigel Terry (who went on to play King Arthur in Excalibur) John Castle, and a very, very young Timothy Dalton (in his first movie role at all of 17), and it’s one of my favorite films.

If you haven’t seen it, it’s set in 1183 AD.  King Henry II’s oldest son has died, and his other three sons all want to inherit the throne. They and his wife Eleanor of Aquitaine  plot to force him to choose.

Do not mistake this with the made for TV version with Patrick Stewart and Glenn Close.  This is the real deal.

So if you’re looking for a movie recommendation, here’s mine.  And it ain’t no “It’s a Wonderful Life”

Enjoy…and feel free to leave your holiday movie suggestions in the comments

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And the hits just keep on playing…

Scene
Int: of a truck, on a drive to Sullivan….

And with the choice of either waiting for January to start, or recasting…. we push into segment three, Fall.  So as we drive and go through the script and figure out what scenes we can shoot without one of the primary characters, while we block out the time to recast, it starts to snow.

The clock is ticking…

The upshot.  We aren’t weather dependent for Fall.  We can shoot whenever we need to.  But there’s always the fear that if we run long, we could wind up with scheduling nightmares that cause us to potentially lose cast.  It’s that itch you can never quite scratch.  You never feel completely comfortable until it’s all in the can.  And the only thing worse, is being in the middle of shooting and thinking “If we lose a cast member we have to throw out all of this footage.”

No doubt about it.  On this production, we’ve taken our lumps.

So we push forward, and plan to shoot what we can next weekend with Eric and Rhonda, and a few others.  We are Hannibal bound… but not til next weekend.

The bright spot is Mike and I met with Ted Jordan who plays Marcus for segment four, and with that cool smile and absolute confidence he reassures us, he’s in this to the very end.  A load off our minds.  We need a ringer to bring this whole thing home, and our fourth act has to have a presence that’s as absolutely charming and captivating as the lovely Trinka Crawford.  She really is this films center.  I try not to gush, but having just finished the second edit of Spring, it’s hard not to admire her talent.  And honestly I don’t brag on her enough.  She is truly wonderful in the role, just don’t ask her to open any cans.

Ted is the man that’s going to bring this whole thing in for the landing.  He has to be Trinka’s bookend.  I have absolute faith in him.

And as the ground turns white, and the roads get slick (literally coming millimeters away from a fender bender on the slick roads) all around us is a reminder that we are completely and totally weather dependent for winter.   No stress…

Grrrrrrrr

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Just about ready to roll.

Scene
Int: A large turn of the century warehouse in Hannibal Missouri

To say the warehouse was full from top to bottom is an understatement.  The crew, Tina, Mike, Maria, Tim, Kelly, Karen and I jumped in, and in just three days, I can say that warehouse is cleaner and better organized than it’s been in a long long time.  I can’t think highly enough of these people. It was a dirty, nasty, back breaking job, and not a single complaint.  Finally…trust.  No more questions.  No more “Why?”

Saturday wound down with the first viewing of the rough cut of Spring for the whole crew.  They finally got to see where we are going with this whole thing.  After a very open and honest critique session, where every one talked about what they liked and what needed tweaking,  the evening wound down with Rock Band2 and alcohol.  Lots of it.  The rough cut  must have been pretty good, because they dug in Sunday with gusto, even though most of them were hungover, and all of them were sleep deprived.  We got finished early, and started the drive back.

So now we wait for several of the prop items we have ordered to come in, and we are GO!  And we’ve cleared the hump.  Two segments left and the intro shots, and we are finished.  The hard parts really are behind us.

More to come.

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Finishing the rough cut, and prepping for fall.

Scene
Int:
A small corner computer desk

At long last the rough cut of Spring is ready for viewing.  It took three days to output all of the edited video, and the run time that I expected to be a little over 20 minutes is actually over 30.  I had hoped to get it finished over the holiday weekend, but prep work for Fall had us in Hannibal cleaning out a warehouse, which is exactly as much fun as it sounds.

We now have two areas pretty much prepped and ready for dressing, and a faux wall section to build, but we’re there.  Props are being delivered or being made and wardrobe is coming along. Either this is getting easier or we’re getting faster, but everybody is excited about getting started shooting fall.  The bright spot of the weekend and Fall, was getting Kelly back to help out, even if it’s just for a few days.

It’s no secret that segment three was the most difficult to cast.  The characters had to have the right balance, and because it’s very dialogue heavy, each character had to have a certain presence.

I’m excited.

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In Praise of Extras…

Scene
Ext: Bruns’ Bridge Franklin County, Missouri


We had spent weeks driving to remote locations looking for the perfect bridge. And when we finally found Brun’s bridge, our mind was made up inside of 20 seconds. It was THE bridge we wanted. And now all we had to do was shoot the scene.

So last weekend was the logistics nightmare that made me loose sleep. It was a series of shots that we had tried to film, and had to scrub once already..because we didn’t have enough people there to make it look convincing. After a sleepless night, and a lot of worry, we showed up, got the cast in wardrobe, and we had enough extras show up. We were GO!

Justin, Tina and Karen all did makeup, which took almost 5 hours to do foreground, middle and background zombies, we had shot the lead in, and we were ready to go.

First off, let me say, I admire my cast immensely. These are the people that are breathing life into these characters, and they are putting it all out there. Whether we do it in one take or eighteen. They are willing to deliver exactly what I have in my head, and I feel like a proud parent. I am constantly impressed with the depth of talent we have in the cast. There are some truly exceptional performances in this, and I when this is all said and done, I want all of them to be able to go on, and do any project they choose. I’ll be spotlighting several of them in upcoming posts.

But the extras. These are people that drove out to the middle of nowhere, to spend hours being slathered in latex and fake blood, and waited for hours to be included in this project, without knowing much of anything about the project. That is a whole different level of dedication. More than that, several of them have shown up multiple times. And they’ve been willing to do take after take, hold a mouthful of fake blood (which is just nasty tasting, even with the artificial cherry flavoring) until just the right second, and jump into freezing water. And all that for a few seconds on film, and their name in the credits.

Not only are they great for just showing up, but occasionally, you’ll get great stories.   This is an email we got from Jeff Bateman, who’s shown up twice to zombie out for us:

“I was coming into Union when i passed a cop..doing 50 in a 40…he immediately hit the lights and filpped his car around….I thought..”no freakin way am I being pulled over looking looking like I just hacked up somebody…smoked crack and then ate them!”..I pulled over in the gas station parking lot and the cop comes up..and i shit you not says..”what in THE fuck?”…I immediately blurted out that i was in a zombie movie being filmed here. He was like….”Really”….sarcastically at that… Anyway he turned out to be pretty cool and let me go without a ticket…we had a good laugh about it when I got out and showed my full zombie look….I wished i would have taken a pic with him..would have been good for the movie outtakes!!”

And just to round out the tales of Union Missouri Law Enforcement, when Tim and Maria came over on Wednesday night, they told us that they too had been pulled over.

Tim and Maria where driving on Hwy 50, and Maria told Tim to slow down.  They were coming up on Union.  As they came up over the hill, a police officer heading the other direction whipped around and pulled them over.

Tim pulled over, turned his engine off, and placed the keys on the dashboard of the car.

The officer came up to the car while Tim was searching for his insurance card.  The officer came to the window and asked “Do you know why you’ve  been pulled over?”

Tim answered, “I don’t. I’m not from around here, and I’m working on a film that we’re doing…”

The officer said’ “You were going 55 in a 45.”

Tim acted surprised because he was surprised. Tim was a bit nervous  as he told the officer “I’m getting a little freaked out here.  I can’t find my insurance card.”

The officer asked, “What kind of film is ths?”

Maria calmly explains, “A zombie film”

To which the officer says’ “Oh.  That’s cool.  I just pulled someone over that was in zombie makeup.”

To which Maria proudly responds, “Oh, that was one of ours!!!!!”  beaming with pride!

The officer starts laughing.

Tim asks, “Was his name Jeff?”

The officer responds, “Yeah, I think it was…. When I first pulled him over, I thought he had food all over his face.”

The officer said, “I’ll give you a warning. for speeding, and not having your insurance card.”

So thanks to the Union police department for letting what seems like half cast and crew off with a warning.  I’m sure he won the contest for the best stories as the station that evening.

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The Ride Home

Scene
Ext:
Hwy 141

Because luck is something we’ve never experienced, naturally,we got pulled over on the way home for having trailer lights out.  When packing up for  Sunday’s shoot, the trailer had popped off the truck, and destroyed the socket for the trailer.

Now, just to set the scene for you, we’re both exhausted, Karen is slathered in fake blood, we have 4 canoes and camera equipment, props wardrobe, sound equipment all packed into the truck, and the lights kick on. So I pull over to the shoulder and park. As the tired wears off, and I start to realize how this might look.

“Sir, did you know your trailer lights are out?”
“Yes sir, the socket for the trailer got ripped off, when we were packing up to come home.”  Karen hands me the socket, and I hold it out to the officer, who takes it examines it quickly, and hands it back.

“Do you have your drivers license and proof of insurance?”
I hand him my liscense, and my insurance card.

“Sir this is expired”
Oh shit… is what goes through my head.
Karen takes the card from his hands, and glances at it. “Oh, this is the old card, but the information on it is correct.”

The officer stands back. He rests his hand on his hip. Yes… right about where his gun is.
“Ma’am… What’s wrong with your hands?”
I can physically feel my heart push up into my throat.

Karen says “Oh, no. I’m fine. It’s fake blood.”
The officer furrows his brow.
“We’re making a movie…” she says.

He gets that ‘yeah, right’ look on his face. Relaxes a bit.

“Is that marijuana I smell in the vehicle?”
It occurs to me, that there’s a filter from a cigarette burning in the ashtray, and her and I both have been standing over a fire in the middle of nowhere, and a lot of the stuff in the truck is a bit soggy…. it actually does kind of smell like marijuana in the car…. oh fuck.

“No sir. I was just smoking a cigarette. But you’re welcome to search the truck if you’d like.”
He shines the flashlight around the truck.

“Have you ever been arrested sir?”

Can’t wait to see exactly how I look in an orange jumpsuit. Thank god James is a lawyer…

“um… nope.”

“Just wait right here.”
He walks back to his car.

I can only imagine the scenarios he’s putting together in his head:

I beat my wife whenever we go canoing…
No.
We’re stealing canoes, and she cut her hand during our speedy getaway…
No.
Karen is an axe-murderer who targets people canoeing, and I help bury the bodies, and she keeps the canoes as trophies.
That’s it! That’s what we’re getting booked for.

“Where’s the script and the storyboards?”
“Right here?”
“Good!”

A few very tense minutes pass. He comes back. “Here’s your license sir.”

“We really are making a movie.” I hold the script and storyboards up. He takes them and flips the binders open, then hands them back.  He realizes we really are telling the truth. “I’m not going to give you a ticket, but you might get one from someone else on the way home.”  I say thank you and shake his hand.  He could have been a jerk.  He could have gone through everything in the truck, and left us out in the cold to repack it.  So, here’s a big thank you to the Manchester officer who’s name I was too freaked out to get.  I’m sure he had the best story at the station Sunday night, at least in Manchester.

When he walks back to his car, I release the brake, and pull off. And as soon as we’re back on the road, Karen and I both burst into uncontrollable laughter.

But even this isn’t the funniest story from this Sunday…

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The End of Summer… Almost

Scene
Ext: The Reiker Ford Access Point

And at last, we come to the end with most of our Summer cast. James, Nichole, Ben, Elyse, and Derek have all finished their shots for this segment of the film. We now just have one scene and one shot left, and after that I don’t ever want to see another fucking canoe for as long as I live. I don’t want to be near anything with water, and I don’t think I’ll ever feel the desire to swim again. I’m pretty sure the rest of the cast feels the same way.

The last shot we have is a night scene, so as long as it’s warm enough that you can’t see people breathing, we’ll be done with one more shooting evening, and then… we’re off to Hannibal to start shooting fall.

This weekend was a lot of shuffling to get the last bits done. James and Nichole’s final shot in the segment involved driving for an hour and 25 minutes to location, to set up for 40 minutes, to shoot about 1 minute of footage. One take is all we had, and thankfully, one take was all we needed. They were in the water, and out, and up the hill to change in seconds. We should have brought a stop watch. Troopers from start to finish. Never a scheduling issue.  Always know their lines.  Terrific performances from start to finish. These are the kind of people you want to work with.

It makes me a little sad that we only have one more scene to shoot with them for the third segment.

After Saturdays long prep but short shoot, we headed out on Sunday in the afternoon to shoot the last few shots with the rest of the cast. And Elyse, our youngest cast member for this segment, shined like crazy. We did a reshoot of her death scene, and then she got herself cleaned up… and we’ve discovered that her hair is either steel or fiberglass, because there is no way to actually mess it up. I think it’s made of the same stuff that they use to make Tempurpedic beds, because no matter what you do with it, it somehow remembers exactly where it was, and it just naturally falls right back into place. I’m sure she’s probably the most hated girl in her school. That girl who has porcelain skin, with no blemishes, and perfect hair.

So after that quick reshoot, she washes her hair with bottled water, combs it out, puts her headband back on… and viola…like it never happened.

After all that, she patiently waited. And waited. And waited. And waited, for us to shoot a very quick scene, of her throwing up. Now, we’ve all seen people get sick a million times. And when someone throws up in your house, it’s very different than what you tend to see in the movies. It’s the typical, mouth full of mush, cough, cough spit. I wanted this shot to look real. So there she is, sitting in the canoe, in shorts and a t-shirt and it’s cold… like 35 degrees cold. And we do the first take.  Okay.  Eh.  Then a little directing, and Elyse is ready to go again. “Try to cover your mouth, and then throw up through your fingers….”

The best part of the take. Elyse, holding her finger up to say “one second” while she daintily takes her finger and wipes the corner of her mouth before diving right into this great spew of vomit… I tell you, there are days when I love this gig.

One  shot with the extras (okay, three, but who’s counting….), who have been patiently waiting in makeup for their moment, and we’re packing up to head home.

The only thing funnier and more fun than the evening of shooting. The ride home… more on that later.

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Dedication

Scene
Int: The same non distinct kitchen.

As Karen and I run around like idiots getting wardrobe and props and everything together for tomorrow, she answers the phone over and over and over again getting all the extras for tomorrows shoot.  This should be our last day time shoot for the Summer segment, and is by far the most complicated shots in the film.

While she’s busy doing all of that, I sit editing spring.  No… I didn’t get it done for Halloween.  That’s due to the flu that I got.  When the temperature broke I thought it was over with.  It wasn’t.  So I spent the majority of this week feeling exhausted or nauseous.  Fun!  That’s also the reason for the lack of updates.  I’ve dropped 11 pounds, and I really didn’t need to, so I’m a little woozy from the whole thing.  But fortunately I didn’t get anyone else sick, and I’d still rather be ill, than deal with all of the details that Karen had to deal with this week.

We tried to shoot this last weekend, but just didn’t have the extras we needed show up, so this weekend Karen went gangbusters in making sure we had enough extras to get the shots we needed, and so have the cast and crew.  Everyone is lining up people so we can make these last shots as good as they possibly can be, and I’m so pleased with the effort they’ve all put in.  It really is wonderful to have such a dedicated group of people working on this project.

Speaking of dedication, I want to give a mad shout out to Derek, with our very first behind the scenes video post.

Once you watch the video, you’ll understand….  So without further ado, I’d like to introduce our first behind the scenes segment entitled “What Does It Take To Be An Actor?”

Thanks again to Derek for being dedicated enough to let us get it right…

And we have almost 3,000 people following the blog now.  That’s unique visitors, not visits.  So hi and thanks to everybody that’s following along.

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The Crappy Weekend That Wasn’t

Scene
Ext:
The Rikerford Access Point

It was supposed to be a horrible wet crappy weekend.  So despite all of the horrible weather that was supposed to completely ruin the weekend for shooting, we watched the weather forecast until the last minute and went out with the mindset of we’ll shoot what we can shoot.

I didn’t sleep worth a damn.  Decongestants always make me twitchy.  We started the morning pre-dawn, I wasn’t feeling great.  Running a slight fever, and my head felt like a brick.  No time for being sick.  So I got up, medicated, showered and got dressed then went out to turn the truck around to hook up the trailer to it… Smash!!!   Backed right into a neighbors car that was parked in my blind spot. Yes, stupid, stupid me. I should have checked, but in my defense it was dark, and it was a black car.  This is not how you want to start your morning… trust me.

Got the insurance information taken care of, got the truck packed, get the trailer hooked up… and we’re off.

When the sun started to come up, and it looked overcast and ready to rain.  The hour and twenty minute drive to Union (yes Union, Sullivan has officially been left behind).  We got to the filming location, the sun came out, and not a drop of rain fell.  It was an absolutely beautiful day.  We shot all day Saturday.  All the way up til Derek took the first spill in a canoe.  No dry wardrobe, no more shooting…

So we went Sunday as well, with a similiar forecast, and again, not a drop of rain.

So much good stuff this weekend.  Even though by Sunday night I was running a fever of 102 (I’m sure standing in a cold river all day didn’t really help), but here it is Tuesday, the fever’s broke, I sound like hell, but I feel pretty damn good.

More on this weekend to come, just got to play catch up.  Plenty went wrong, but so much went right, it really didn’t seem like a big deal.

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