Category Archives: Film making

Continuity Lesson

And now it’s on the Mac…

And now it’s cut up into bite (but not byte) sized chunks and logged and checked and… And, no, it wasn’t a very bright idea to replace Lionel’s original poster featuring The Scream with one featuring a picture of Lionel because he’d lost it. Because it looks very different.

It especially doesn’t have a rich red background at the top. And it’s the only thing in the shot apart from the actor in close-up. And I listened to Andy Martin when he said, “Let’s frame it so the whole thing’s in the frame rather than chopped off like you had it before.” So it’s even more of a blatant continuity error than it might have been.

Maybe no one will notice, except you, now that I’ve told you. Everyone should be watching the actor, shouldn’t they? And maybe I can cut out the other shots which feature the other poster so it all matches up.

You live and learn.

The rest of it cuts together pretty well, by the way. Just in case you were wondering.

It’s In The Can

And now it’s on the Mac. Just two days later, it’s on the computer and ready for me to edit. Unbelievable. And it all looks perfect too. The shots I thought were overexposed have a beautiful range of colour saturation, contrast and depth. I think they must have graded them a bit when they did the trasfer to videotape. Plus the sound is good and that’s from my previously inexperienced sound recordists. Okay, they had television and editing experience, but not ‘sound recording on a DAT’ experience. And Michael, the actor, is superb.

Je suis un auteur.

Okay, okay–so there is such a thing as too much smugness. One shot at the end with an extreme wideangle lens (the equivalent of a 16mm if this was 35mm photography) has lost the corners (vignetting). And the titles are a little bit soft in the focus department, but they can be redone on a clockwork camera (which I can borrow for free). Now, let’s just hope it all cuts together.

Oh, and Simon is making inquiries into getting a licence to use “Gone, Daddy Gone” for festival screenings, which would be uber cool.

Chikka Chikkaaa, Oh, Yeaaaaaahhhh!

Pick Ups Day Two

Ruth came out and did the sound, Michael (the actor) did the clapperboards himself and I did everything else. It was a glorious sunny day and we got the shots. Everything is now packed and ready to return. The logging sheets have been tidied up and are ready for the lab, editor and whoever else. The sound has been transferred to the Mac as a back up.

It’s in the can.

Pick Ups

Sarrett is as barking mad as ever. Simon greeted a passer-by with a cheery “Hello!” and received a look which informed us all that he’d just fed this person their own dead mother in a sandwich. The shoppers all desperately tried to get a foot closer to the shop doorway to park on the otherwise empty street. The four-wheel drives won by mounting the pavement. Even then, they scowled.

We started the day with battery problems. The DAT recorder batteries I’d charged up last night held their charge for about ten minutes each before running out. We switched to mains power and got set up for the first shot. By 10.30am we were ready to turn over except Lionel, writer/art director (graphics) wasn’t there and he had the posters for the police station.

Lionel phoned. He had run out of ink and went to buy some. We waited some more with an annoying beeping interrupting us every ten minutes or so. Simon tracked it down to a drawer full of digital watches–clearly lost property or confiscated from pupils at the school where we were shooting. All the alarms had been set by some schoolboy prankster to go off every ten minutes. We removed them and carried on messing about with lights.

At around 11, Lionel phoned again. He’d bought the wrong ink cartridge and it didn’t fit. He was going back to the store. I faked up a poster on my PowerBook featuring Lionel’s head and a caption saying “Please… don’t have nightmares” Simon took my keys and went round to my flat to print it.

At about 11.30, we were ready to shoot. “Roll sound… Roll camera…” and nothing. The camera didn’t roll. Why? I was told yesterday the batteries were all charged, so it couldn’t be that. What were we missing? We phoned Andy’s focus puller friend, Neil. Nope, no suggestions. We tried plugging mains power into the camera–and, guess what? It worked. The batteries were, as it turned out, all flat.

Now we had another problem. We only had one mains supply and it could go on either the camera or the DAT but not both. And while it was on either we couldn’t charge up batteries for the DAT. We shot our scene. “I’m getting T4,” said Andy, checking his digital exposure meter. “I’m getting 2.8,” I replied. I opted to overexpose like last time and shoot at T2. Andy had to rush off at that point to film a play his daughter was in. Meanwhile, Lionel arrived.

Six takes later and it was all going swimmingly. I had re-shot the close-ups previously affected by lens flare and squeezed in an extra hand-held wacky shot of the actor too. Pete, the stills photographer had arrived and offered to go and fetch fish and chips for us all. We were ready to shoot the credits. I patted myself on the back for staying up until 3am last night making graphics for the closing credits and not leaving it to the art department…

“Give me plenty of light,” I told Olly, the gaffer, “I want to get as much depth of focus as possible.” Olly obligingly doubled the number of kinoflos lighting the shot. My light reading remained the same: T2.8. ‘Seems odd,’ I thought and pushed the meter right up against the lantern. Still T2.8. Hmm. Then I did what I should have done at the start of the day–I pressed the Battery Test button. It was dead.

Lionel and Simon were duly dispatched into the wilds of St Albans for new batteries. I wasn’t worried too much as I was only one stop out from Andy’s digital meter on the essential close up and I felt sure the film stock could cope with that. (note: Andy backed this up later, saying the lab could print it down). Pete returned with lunch.

Eventually, this nightmare shoot concluded and I got the closing credits in the can. We visited Sarratt and got some more picks before the light faded and everything seemed fine. Now I just needed to get a couple of the crew to come back tomorrow (Sunday) for a quick close up in Michael, our lead actor in Pinner. Nope. No one available. I have camera, sound, lighting kit, stock, location and actor but no one to clap the board or record sound.

Back home, I spent the next four hours on the phone, long past ready to pass out, because I am a producer extraordinaire and never say die. I drink Coca-Cola until my eyes go like pinpricks and speak to various crew members’ answerphones. Anyone who is in, isn’t available. The main excuse is Mother’s Day. Hey, it’s not just for greetings cards after all and my mum is going to be unsurprised at my lack of participation or card even. I feel a twinge of guilt but still have to get this film made because if these things aren’t shot this weekend, I have no more time left.

I leave messages everywhere and speak to people who feel they’ve already done all they need to do on this film by turning up for the main shoot last year. I learn about people’s lives, editing via firewire drives and a new trend in celebrity answerphone voices. Hahaha, I think. Very funny. No, they aren’t. And you weren’t fooled, were you?

Eventually I get a call back from Ruth Tidmarsh who I met through Pete last year and works as an editor. She’s playing in a band tonight until 3am but is willing to come out and help. She might get someone else to help out. Meanwhile, we have a crew of two and Michael tomorrow.

I unload the exposed stock from the magazine and it doesn’t unravel in the changing bag where I can only feel what I’m doing. I’ve never unloaded a camera before but there’s no else to do it, so I get on with it. Sandhya has warned me that the Arri’s have a ‘collapsable core’ which means that there’s nothing in the middle of the reel when you take it out and I need to be very careful. Somehow I manage to get it into a bag and into a can. I clean up the log sheet, attach it to the can and pop it in the fridge.

It’s been a looooong day.

And I almost forgot, Lionel also got stopped for overtaking someone on the inside lane (illegal in the UK) and speeding at 64mph in a 50 zone. He now has points on his license and a fine to pay. Poor guy has had a really bad day.

But at least he got to work on a film.

Gettin’ Wired

Sandhya caught the train. But missed St Albans Station. So now she’s in Harpenden, further up the line, and waiting for a train back.

I’ve done the titles and credits in Word which hates me. In fact, it hates being used as a word processor. Why does it keep changing the font to Times at random every so often? No rhyme nor reason, it just does it. Anyway, I nabbed some colour paper from work so I’m printing credits out on sheets of that now.

No word from Lionel. Has he redone the opening title or hasn’t he? Oh, the excitement of waiting to find out. I can hardly begin to express, to emote, to make my eyes go all buggy with the intensity of it. Probably that last. No, definitely.

I’ve got all the camera and lighting and sound kit, though. It’s all over the flat, weighs tons and is probably destroying my suspension when I drive it around. Jaffa’s buying this car in a couple of months. I think he knows what I cram in there.

Okay, time for another pint (Imperial pint, that is) of “Symbol of Free West”–Coca-Cola (sugar free).

Uh oh, phone! Gotta go…

Wot No Crew?

A free ad has been placed on Shooting People’s mailing list for the essential crew…

Always more useful if they actually print your free ad and send it out in the mailing list, I find. Yes, that certainly would help.

Maybe tomorrow. Meanwhile Andy Martin gives me a quizzical look when I say I don’t have a camera assistant yet. Or a loader. “They’ll turn up,” I say knowingly without the foggiest idea of how they will.

But just how am I going to get that film into the camera? Uh, oh.

****

Sandhya (pronounced Sandy) phones at 11pm and is available on Sunday, so that’s that problem solved. Phew. Everything else is icing on the cake now.

****

Next day…

But now she can’t make it. But she’ll help me load the camera magazines on Friday night. And she’ll try to come along on Saturday afternoon.

And Olly phoned to say he could be gaffer for the day. And Hannah can come and do sound. And Kathryn can come and do everything else, like boom op, logging and continuity. So we have a crew.

****

And There’s More

We have some lights, thanks to Simon (writer) and a camera and some stock but no sound kit…

Silly me. The simple answer was to phone Four Corners and see if they had a DAT and a microphone, which of course they do. So we’ll be using that.

A free ad has been placed on Shooting People’s mailing list for the essential crew and Mike/Charlie has bought new sunglasses but now he wants some expenses. Well, whatever.

Now I think all we really need are some sarnies. And nice ones too. Not the overly margerined ones like we had another time but I can’t complain because I didn’t make them or pay for them. Except they weren’t, erm, ‘more-ish’.

Oh, and Andy wants a copy of the rough cut on VHS. And somehow I really ought to try figuring out how to make a DVD tonight so I can enter Cannes which has a deadline on Monday so that means doing it today. And then I could send it to Dani too and he might do some music. And and and…

Art For Art’s Sake

Tomorrow I’m off to Screen East to see if they might give me some money towards a print based on this rough edit.

Glad they could pencil me in for an hour to tell me they aren’t funding short films unless they’re shot on digital video. What the freak is that all about? “Too expensive” and “Short films only benefit the director” were two of the choice phrases. Oh, they could be part of a slate of films which include features???

Looks like I made the right–and only–decision to fund my own work on celluloid in order to learn what it can do. Digital film–an oxymoron for the 21st century.

Yes, it was well worth spending six hours on the road to get up to Screen East’s headquarters and back again. No, really. Especially that bit sat in a traffic jam for an hour, moving forward one mile only to find the A11 was blocked by an accident and there was a diversion. A thirty-two mile diversion. No. No.

Still, managed to get two very good ideas for running a training course for other directors and spent an hour sat in my car editing The Car on the laptop. I’ve now seen more Norfolk scenary than I ever realised I would. And it’s amazing how many radio plays the BBC puts on the air during the afternoon…

====

Today has been spent adding music for which I’ll never be allowed the rights. Or rather, which I’d never be able to afford. Shame. ‘They Did A Bad Bad Thing’ and ‘Gone Daddy Gone’ are just *too* perfect. The Violent Femmes track even changes to a marching drum tempo in exactly the right place.

And After That…

Simon now has the rushes for The Car and should have started work on them by now. I’ve completed a rough cut on my Mac and I’m really pleased with it. Lots of audio work, but it’s coming together. It’s also useful to edit myself as I’m discovering exactly how many extra shots I really should have got to (a) give myself some options and (b) dig myself out of holes.

Tomorrow I’m off to Screen East to see if they might give me some money towards a print based on this rough edit.

And Then…

The follow up.

Couldn’t get hold of Simon over the weekend to deliver the rushes. We spoke today and I couldn’t face the hassle of driving around Notting Hill in the middle of the afternoon looking for parking. So…

So I got the address for where Simon’s working and put the tapes in the post.

While I’m waiting, I’ve started having a go at cutting things together on Final Cut Pro. It is *so* easy to destroy everything in the edit and doing it yourself makes that abundantly clear. Must persevere. Must keep trying.

Someone gave me another copy of ‘Who Moved My Cheese’.

Must sell it.