Monday, June 6, 2011

Interview With Brendon Fogle

Below is my interview with Brendon Fogle. You can follow him on Twitter @bfogle75 .





What is the current project you are working on?

I’m currently working on SYNC, my first short film. I wrote the script last fall, and embarked on a crowd-funding campaign last month. The cast and crew are in place, and we’re shooting in July.

Did you always want to be a filmmaker?

Coming out of college, that was my goal. Life took me in a different direction; finally, thirteen years later, I’m returning to my intended path…sort of. I teach high school during the day, and imagine I will continue to do so, unless I can somehow make a living as a filmmaker.

What inspired you to become filmmaker?

I have stories in my head, and movies are the way I want to tell them. I also enjoy visual arts, creating, and working with artistic people…plus there are so many talented people to collaborate with, and no one “right” way to make a movie, so it’s fun to explore all of the possibilities.


What is the best thing about being one?

I don’t know if I can call myself a filmmaker yet…but the best part for me is being part of a driven community, and seeing hard work come together.

What is the estimated number of projects you have worked on?

Two or three. I’m still a rookie.

Who is your favorite filmmaker?

Werner Herzog. He tells the stories he wants to tell, and they are always unique and compelling. I’ve yet to see a movie of his that I didn’t like.


How has your life changed since you became a filmmaker?

The biggest change has been in my daily routine. I'm a single parent, and I teach, so my filmmaking work is usually done early in the morning before my regular day starts. Consequently I don't stay up late or go out. It's hard to have a few cocktails, then get up early and be sharp. Maybe someday filmmaking will be my day job!

What is one piece of advice you can give to someone who also wants to make it in the movie business?

Work hard…consistently.

What are some of your favorite American films? Foreign films? Television shows?

American: Pulp Fiction, Magnolia, Wild at Heart, Herzog's Bad Lieutenant, A Woman Under the Influence. Favorite foreign: City of God, The Bicycle Thief, Man Bites Dog, Aguirre the Wrath of God, Woo's Hong Kong stuff. I don't watch a lot of TV. I do love Curb Your Enthusiasm, Human Giant, and The Office.


How would you describe your film education?

My film Ed has been a combination of reading books, watching movies, and YouTube tutorials for tech stuff. I majored in creative writing, and often refer to my back to the authors I read back then. I think too many writers now ignore classic literature. Your storytelling can be one dimensional if all you do is watch movies, and copy the same paradigm used by everyone else; especially now that most movies are copies of copies of copies.

How would you describe the film "scene" where you live?

The Northwest film scene is a small and tight knit group. It’s not at all Hollywood, and I think it has its own indie sensibility that’s unlike any other. Without access to the same level of resources that more prolific film towns have, Northwest filmmakers get the most out of what’s available. There are some cool local festivals to screen films too.

How has social media changed the independent film industry?

Social media has made it easier for filmmakers and artists to find each other, and share information. It’s a great tool, and those who use it well can successfully raise money and make films, with the support of the audience.


You could go back in time and see any classic film being made. Which film would it be?

Fitzcarraldo. I’d love to see Herzog shoot in the middle of nowhere, and get that damn riverboat over the mountain.

You could be any animal. Which would you be?

A honey badger…they’re badass, and they don’t give a shit.

You could have any super power. What would it be?

Flying.

What is your opinion on movie remakes?

I really don't like the idea of remakes…I think it's lazy filmmaking. Ernest Hemingway would've never considered rebooting Hamlet. If you're going to tell a story, tell your own. There are certainly elements common to any good story, and definitely use those...to create your own story. The True Grit remake was great, though.

What is your opinion on comic book adaptations for film?

It really depends. If they’re done well, like the Dark Knight and Iron Man, they can be great. Generally, though, they aren’t. As a fan of the Watchmen graphic novel, I’ll never forgive Zack Snyder for turning it into a marginal action movie. Watchmen isn’t terrible, but it doesn’t match the epic scope of Alan Moore’s vision. The story was perfect the way it was, and with any adaptation, if you change the story, you take a big risk.


Thanks for doing the interview Brendon. Check out Brendon's crowdfunding page for SYNC here. There  are a lot of cool perks when you donate to the campaign.

Interview With Rick Rapier



Below is my interview with screenwriter Rick Rapier. Follow Rick on Twitter @Rickrapier. For more information on Rick check out his LinkedIn page here.


What is the current project you are working on?

How to answer this goes to some of your other questions: A screenwriter doesn't just write as a part of his work, but also helps market himself and his work. So, while I'm writing a treatment for a reality TV show, one for a feature comedy, and refining other treatments as thoughts come to me, I'm also helping my manager focus on production companies that might be interested in some of my spec scripts. And dovetailing with my efforts as a writer, I am also pushing forward as a producer with a business plan I've been refining with the help of a venture capitalist and my partner in the production company. We hope to begin seeking funding in the next couple of months.

It's easy to imagine that once you've sold something or gained representation you just focus on writing while your representative sells you. Not in my experience. It's my career and I want to help shape it, as well as to help influence where my manager or agent takes my scripts. For a couple of years I've been trying to get my Ferris Bueller sequel into the right hands. Every producer who has read it wants to make it, but none have had the right connections to move it forward yet. So, my manager and I are targeting producers and production companies whom we believe would handle the material in the spirit of John Hughes, and who have connections to Paramount.

Did you always want to be a filmmaker?

I always wanted to be a storyteller, and that is the way I look at filmmaking. As a kid I wanted to be an actor, but it took a seminal moment for me to think filmmaking/ screenwriting was the right avenue for me to tell stories.

What inspired you to become filmmaker?

STAR WARS. That was my seminal experience. I felt absorbed into that world as a kid, and I realized I wanted to use stories to create that experience for others. But there were specific experiences later which refined the scope of that dream. The first was seeing AMERICAN GRAFFITI, and the second was seeing FERRIS BUELLER'S DAY OFF. Both of these films accomplished the same escape/dream mode for me, but showed how that could be done in a more real world setting, the world I inhabited in flyoverland.

What is the best thing about being one?

Telling stories that entertain and engage people.

What is the worst thing about being one?

Working so hard yet appearing unemployed most of the time!

What is the estimated number of projects you have worked on?

I've written approximately 25 features and several shorts, along with dozens and dozens of treatments. I've written features for hire and sold specs that have yet to be produced, while several other features have been optioned. I recently wrote and co-produced a 16-min. rom-com short that is making the festival rounds (LATTE TROUBLE) and am seeking funds for our first feature, a thriller titled FOOTSTEPS.

Who is is your favorite filmmaker?

Through my teens, it was a bit of a tie between George Lucas and Steven Spielberg. But as many who know me would guess, hands down, John Hughes, which took hold when I was in college. Hughes became a hero of mine, for many reasons. I count many of his films as among my favorites. I'm from the midwest of the U.S. and I think that he had his finger on the pulse of flyoverland, of a vast audience that has gone under-served for many years. (Many try to serve us, but they don't understand us, so miss the mark. PIXAR gets flyoverland, and they reap the rewards.)

How has your life changed since you became a filmmaker?

I've lost the respect of friends and family and seen my credit score plummet. *barum-boomp!* Seriously, I've never felt more fulfilled. I think it's in my DNA: My daughter made short films and even co-wrote a screenplay with me, all before she was eight.

What is one piece of advice you can give to someone who also wants to make it in the movie business?

Don't expect it to happen overnight. Tenacity is key, but the best advice I ever got was that no matter what your day job is, when you meet someone and they ask you what you do, tell them what you love to do, as if that's your job. At a party an actor doesn't say she's a waitress. A screenwriter shouldn't say he's grade school teacher. When I got over my reservations that I couldn't say I was a screenwriter until I'd sold something, I finally started making connections. I stopped saying I was a copywriter or a whatever. It made a big difference internally as well. You just never know who knows someone who knows someone, and if you don't believe it, who else will?

Another thing I would offer is that a contract is only as good as the people who sign it. Unless you have the money and the inclination, suing people is a fruitless endeavor. So, carefully choose the people with whom you want to involve yourself and your work. All the contracts and clauses in the world are worthless if the ones who signed lack integrity.

What do you like to do besides filmmaking?


Before I had kids I did a lot of exercising and enjoyed hosting get-togethers with friends. Now that I have kids, I spend most of my extra time with them and my wife. I've actually become a reader because of them. I used to avoid reading fiction, not wanting to steal by osmosis. But now I read aloud with my son and daughter for enjoyment. It's a great way to share the power of story with them. (And we watch a lot of movies too!)

Have you had any other jobs before you decided to become a filmmaker?

Yes. In college I studied Advertising and Marketing because John Hughes had apparently parlayed that into a film career. (I was slightly wrong about how he ended up where he did.) After college, loaded with student loans, I took the first good job I could get, in commercial print management. That actually helped me get my first copywriting job a few years later. So, after that, I worked in advertising for several years while I wrote screenplays on the side. When I placed in a couple of big competitions (the Nicholl and Spielberg's Chesterfield Film Project), I decided it was time to make a move. Within a few months I had sold something to Miramax/Dimension.

In there someplace I was also a junior partner in a prodco with funding and a distribution deal. But after a couple years of development, the deals fell apart and none of the scripts I wrote made it to the screen. That was tough. So, it hasn't been an easy road since taking the leap of faith, and I've had to take day jobs to pay the bills, but it's always been with an eye to my goals.

What are some of your favorite American films? Foreign films? Television shows?

There was a time when I would have thrown in films that I've seen that I'm supposed to like, if I'm worth my salt. These days, I'm more comfortable with the honest truth. I think I'm clearly a populist and always have been.

American: STAR WARS, CLOSE ENCOUNTERS, BREAKING AWAY, AMERICAN GRAFFITI, FERRIS, PLANES TRAINS & AUTOMOBILES, NAPOLEON DYNAMITE, THE DARK KNIGHT, SIGNS, RETURN TO ME, JUST FRIENDS, SLING BLADE, GET LOW.

Foreign: SHALL WE DANCE, AMELIE, ABOUT A BOY, LOCAL HERO, SON OF RAMBOW, SLUM DOG.

TV: I don't watch much narrative form TV. "iCarly" and "Good Luck, Charlie" (with my kids), both of which I think are funny; "The Office" with my wife. I used to love "The Sopranos" though.

How would you describe your film education?


Cobbled together. College and seminar stuff, lots of reading how-tos and screenplays. But what I discovered was that I already had the structure ingrained from watching so many films. And I found that writing short stories and poetry helped prepare me in a lot of ways for the concise, evocative voice needed for screenwriting. I personally think that novels are a terrible analogy to screenwriting.

How would you describe the film "scene" where you live?

It tends to be pretty lively, mostly with micro-budget direct-to-video features, being made by very passionate filmmakers. There's a community college here abouts that is considered one of the better film schools in the States: Scottsdale Community College. How that came about, I don't know, but I think it helps give the community here some added energy.

How has social media changed the independent film industry?

I'm not sure how it has changed the content, to be honest. Digital video seems to be a more powerful change agent to me. But I do see that some projects gain a great buzz and following through social media, which creates grassroots PR. But I don't have any experience with crowd-funding, though it seems to be a good thing for funding shorts.

I have gained a lot of contacts that I think would not have been available to me otherwise. One of my scripts is being considered for production by a top prodco in NYC through a Twitter contact. A couple of others were on a short list for production through an exec I met on LinkedIn. I've had scripts read through connections I've made on Twitter, LinkedIn and Facebook. I came by my current manager through a Twitter introduction. So, social media seem to have broken down some of the walls of separation, allowing people from all over the country to connect despite physical distances. I hope it pays off for lots of writers and producers around the country.

BTW, I can't remember the last time I snail-mailed a hard copy script to a producer.

What is the casting process like?

I've only done casting on LATTE TROUBLE, and it was a real learning experience, especially as a writer. Unfortunately we didn't get to that point when I was partnered in that prodco. Anyway, in your mind's eye, you see these characters, but despite how strong their images are, it can really be challenged by the actors who are available. Someone might really look the part, but not give the right read.

For LATTE TROUBLE, I had imagined a sort of semi-good-looking nebbish, a kind of Jason Biggs type. But in walks this tall, amazingly handsome guy of Pakistani descent. Just a few lines into his read, I knew he was the one. Kasim Aslam. Blew me away and forced me to change my mind about what that character looked like. (I think he's going to be a star.) I loved the results. Same thing happened with a side-kick whom I'd imagined as a sort of Jack Black type. Ended up casting a slim Greg Renfro, a very gifted African-American actor. I loved what he did with the part. (I think he should do feature films too.)

And while screenwriting is a solitary effort, working with another producer, a casting director, and a director, hearing their input, how they perceived "my characters" and the actors who auditioned -- it was really enlightening and a great experience in collaboration.

How does independent film differ from the mainstream?

In my experience, independent strives to be more artful, more about self-expression and less about storytelling, less interested with the audience and entertainment. For me, I aim to use the independent approach to make classic, entertaining films for audiences. Angst was something I'd put into my short stories and poetry. I don't think most audiences want to lay down their hard-earned money to hear me whine by proxy. If I can entertain them with an artfully told story, fine, but I think movies should be for the sake of audiences, not for the sake of those who make the movies.

You could go back in time and see any classic film being made. Which
film would it be?


FERRIS BUELLER'S DAY OFF. One of my life's greatest regrets, and I mean this sincerely, is that I never got to meet John Hughes. I believe I owe him a great deal, and I would have liked to let him know that and to thank him. And there is something about that film in particular, about the chemistry among Hughes, Matthew Broderick, Mia Sara, and Alan Ruck that I would love to have been witness to, or better yet, a part of.

You could be any animal. Which would you be?

A sasquatch.

You could have any super power. What would it be?

Flight.

What is your opinion on movie remakes?

If they are well-made, I love them. Theater has done it for years. No one slammed Olivier for doing the hundredth "remake" of "Hamlet."

I love a well-made sequel too. To me a sequel is like another piece of great pizza. I want the next slice to taste like the first. If I bought a slice of Chicago deep-dish pizza and loved it so much I wanted another, you better not freakin' hand me some crispy brick oven stuff to throw in a twist or add your own flair. Listen buddy, I'm the one paying for the pizza. Put me first. There are people who love crunchy, but you'd be wise to save it for your next order.

What is your opinion on book to movie adaptions?

As mentioned above, I think novels are a terrible analogy to film. I remember having an argument with a screenwriting professor about this. My position was, and is, that a short story makes for a better adaptation. Their forms are very similar, I think. Yes, they tend to need embellishment, but better that than slashing whole swaths out of a novel in order to adapt it. Novellas, of which there are few, are perfect for adaptation, I think.

* Anything else you'd like to add?

Thanks, John, for asking me to be a part of your blog.


Thanks Rick for doing the interview. Good luck with your Ferris Bueller sequel. It should be noted Rick added the last question in the interview. Thanks for that Rick. If it's OK I'm going to use it in my future interviews.

Saturday, June 4, 2011

Interview with Sarah Lotfi

What is the current project you are working on?

I'm in post production on Waking Eyes a short film that explores the overlap between fantasy and reality, as a son tries to reconnect with his mother before her passing. It's an artistic piece that explores time and space through the subconscious. In a few weeks we'll start submitting to festivals for a 2011-2012 run.

Did you always want to be a filmmaker?

Yes. Since I was a child. I was fascinated with how filmmakers pulled off their techniques, it was wasn't enough for me to know they were "camera-tricks" I wanted to learn how to create the same effects. Directing appealed to me because you get to have your hand in each department, conducting the collaboration of others into one vision.

What is the best thing about being one?

The meeting of minds. When you get the right mix of people together and their ideas flow or compliment your own, it makes for a very fulfilling production. You have dynamic behind the scenes and a very powerful project in the end.

What is the worst thing about being one?

Politics, drama, and competition. When ego gets in the way of art, it can really burn productions and set-back collaboration.

What is the estimated number of projects you have worked on?

About 20. I've been a part of 3 features, 3 music videos, 11 shorts, and 3 infomercials.

Who is is your favorite filmmaker?

I don't have any one favorite, I admire different filmmakers for different reasons. I am in awe of John Cassavettes for what he did for independent filmmaking. I look up to Katherine Bigelow for producing recognized films from genres that defy pre-concieved stereotypes for her sex. I like a lot of Ingmar Bergman, David Lean, Billy Wilder, Jean Luc Goddard, Frederico Fellini, and Alain Resnais.

What is one piece of advice you can give to someone who also wants to make it in the movie business?

You have to persevere, yourself, no one can do that for you. A passion filled vision will speak volumes to the people who count. So do your homework and take a humble approach, but at the same time emanate confidence, and in the end the right people will take your side. A lot of people in the 'business' are movie-buffs to a certain niche - so geekery pays off in the end I think.

What are some of your favorite American films? Foreign films? Television shows?

What filmmaker from this day and age hasn't been awe-struck by the original Star Wars trilogy? Orson Welles' Citazen Kane. Ian Softley's K-Pax (2001), Darren Aronofsky's The Fountain (2008).

My favorite genre is the historical epic so classics like The Seventh Seal (Sweden,1957), A Man for All Seasons (UK, 1966), The Lion in Winter (UK, 1968), Grand Illusion, and Ballad of a Soldier have directly inspired my work. Coming from a Persian and Chinese heritage, I have really been impressed by Majid Majidi's The Color of Paradise (Iran, 1999), Shirin Neshat's Women Without Men (Germany, 2009), and Yimou Zhang's To Live(China,1994), and Kar Wai Wong's 2046 (China, 2004).

In television I'm most loyal to BBC and HBO. I was fortunate enough to intern on HBO FILM's Cinema Veritae: The Saga of An American Family (2011) last summer. I witnessed firsthand the meticulous care HBO invests into their product. They choose great content, from Band of Brothers, to Elizabeth I.

How would you describe your film education?

It's been a cross between practice, research and theory. When I was younger it was just what I could read up on the web, learn from featurettes, and gleam from filmmaking books. In college between my two majors I've had production classes to learn the technical skills, and courses on film theory to learn the context of how cinema came to the place it is today. Each project is an education, I don't think I'll ever stop learning about filmmaking.

How has social media changed the independent film industry?

Social media on one hand has made news very accessable on a global level, but at the same time there is so much information through it I think a lot of independent film is buried deep in. As a filmmaker social media is an exciting tool to use, but it takes so much time and effort to really make the most of it.

How does independent film differ from the mainstream?

Mainstream films are business ventures. They are productions invested in on the basis that such a concept has made money off in the past. More often than not, I find mainstream cinema in my generation to be recycled stories and themes. Independent films tend to be independently financed, and take more risks, garnered for festival exhibition and independent distribution.

You could go back in time and see any classic film being made. Which film would it be?

Fred Zinnamen's A Man for All Seasons. I'd have liked to been on set at all the locations and see Robert Bolt in his prime. Social activist, playright, and screenwriter Robert Bolt was a man of his time in the counter-culture movement of 1960s.

Thank you Sarah for allowing me to interview you. I'll be sure to tell people about your film . For more information on Waking Eyes visit the official site here.

[vimeo http://vimeo.com/23534944]

Below are some production stills from the film.

[slideshow]

Interview Padrick Ritch

Below is my interview with Padrick Ritch, the filmmaker behind Limbus.

Enjoy :)

 

What is the current project you are working on?

A: Currently, I am one week out on the start of production of my thesis film for my MFA from Boston University. It’s a 15-minute to 20 minute short that mixes narrative and surrealism.

Did you always want to be a filmmaker?

A: No, at first I wanted to be a professional basketball player, but I stopped growing after the ninth grade.

What inspired you to become filmmaker?

A: I don’t know that it was ever one thing. Film or digital cinema is a unique medium of entertainment and art that combines everything from writing and photography to animation and sound / audio production.Really, it a combination of a bunch of things that I have always been interested in and film lets me explore all of these at once… That and Star Wars.

What is the best thing about being one?

A: The gap that separates the end of production and the beginning of post production. It’s the one moment when you feel you have accomplished something huge, and there is a lot of excitement you feeling not yet started to edit.

 What is the worst thing about being one?

A: Pre-production…$$$$$$$$$$$$

What is the estimated number of projects you have worked on?

A: 35-40.

Who is your favorite filmmaker?

A: It depends in what mood I am in: Kazan, Lynch, Hawks, and many more on any given day, but Gondry is one of the few I am always in the mood for.

How has your life changed since you became a filmmaker?

A: It really hasn’t. I mean the best life-changing event has been meeting my fiancĂ©. The real question should be how her life has changed since dating one.

What is one piece of advice you can give to someone who also wants to make it in the movie business?

A: Have thick skin. I don’t mean that sarcastically and with any type of cynicism, but we live and work in an industry where we all put incredible amounts of effort, passion, and love into films and there is always going tobe people who don’t like it… And generally those people will tell you this.Also, it’s just like anything else in life in that you are going fail far more than you succeed, but you have to live for the success and not sweat the lesser ones.

What are some of your favorite American films? Foreign films Television shows?

A: The long Goodbye. Amilee. Tosh.0.

How would you describe your film education?

A: It’s what you put into it in my experience. If you are generally interested in something then you are going to want to learn about it. For me, I do this because I love it, so for the most part it doesn’t seem like work to me.

How would you describe the film "scene" where you live?

A: Boston is great. We have big budget films, independent films, and schools like Boston University and Emerson, who have great programs.

How has social media changed the independent film industry?

A: It’s changed how many people can know about your film and is in the midst of revolutionizing distribution. The problem is more with the festivals. If you want to screen the festival circuit, then you have to hold your film off the Internet.

What is the casting process like?

A: One of the best and worst parts of filmmaking. It’s great getting to look at a group of talented actors and find the ones that fit your film. At the same time it’s also the most judgmental part of filmmaking.

How does independent film differ from the mainstream?

A: I mean I could go on about this for a while, but at the end of the day we all want to tell stories and entertain people to some extent. I guess the one thing I would say is that I tend to look at experimental and avant garde filmmakers as some of the few “indies.” Stan Brakhage is one of my all time favorites.

You could go back in time and see any classic film being made. Which film would it be?

A: Cleopatra… and I want to see all seven years of production!

You could be any animal. Which would you be?

A: Are dinosaurs acceptable? Stegosaurs.

You could have any super power. What would it be?

A: To teleport anywhere.

What is your opinion on movie remakes?

A: Why make something again? Sequels are no better.

 

Thank you Padrick for a great interview. Good luck with your thesis. Keep me posted on your future projects.

Friday, June 3, 2011

Interview With Filmmaker and Professor H.D. Motyl

Below is my interview with filmmaker and professor H.D. Motyl. He's got a lot of things going on right now. Find out exactly what those are by reading the interview below.



What is the current project you are working on?


I'm working on two projects, actually.  One is in Post-production.  The other is in Pre-production.



I'm in the middle of the final edit of Cowboy Christmas, a feature-length documentary about professional rodeo cowboys.  A crew and I went on the road for three weeks to follow 4 steer wrestlers to figure out why these guys do what they do . . . why the rodeo is so important to them.  Why they continue to do it (one of the cowboys is 52) and what do they hope to achieve?

The other project is a short narrative, The Secret Ingredients of Pancakes. It’s about the moment of falling in love. Or, at least, the moment when a man allows himself to fall in love.
And I'm going to shoot an experimental piece later in the summer, Nudes Descending a Staircase #1, which will be part of an installation with two other Nudes . . .

I guess that's three, not two, projects.  And I won't go to four but I am going to shoot another experimental short called Bless Me, Father,  this summer also.  But I guess these last two are in Pre-pre-production.



Did you always want to be a filmmaker?


Hmm.  Did I?  I have been fascinated with film since I was a child but I think I first wanted to act in films and TV before I decided that I wanted to make films (and even TV.)  I became fascinated with non-mainstream film early on, and especially in the stories that were told and how they were being told.  At one point, I decided I wanted to write for film, and then, I decided I couldn't give up the stuff I had written to someone else, and I had to direct it myself. (Btw, I've been acting a lot in the past few years, in student films made at Southern Illinois University, where I teach.)

What inspired you to become filmmaker?


I loved, loved, loved to read when I was a kid, even into high school.  So, I was always being transported through words to other places, into other people's lives.  Early on, when I went to the movies, it kind of mimicked that solitary experience of reading a book.  Sure, you're in a room full of people, but it's dark and you're alone with images on the screen.  I loved the idea of writing, but it was seeing stories coming alive on the screen that inspired me.  And so many different kinds of stories.  So, it was the stories, at the movies, and the telling of those stories that inspired me to become a filmmaker . . . although these days, I call it a mediamaker.  I haven't shot film in years and years.

What is the best thing about being one?


Being able to create your own reality.

What is the worst thing about being one?


Finding the money to make your work.

What is the estimated number of projects you have worked on?


30 something . . . from films, TV, documentaries, experimental work.


Who is is your favorite filmmaker?


It's not that simple to say one is a favorite.  Here's a list, and I'll try to keep it short, of people whose work has touched me, emotionally and/or psychically:  Francois Truffaut, Sidney Lumet, Robert Altman, Alan Rudolph, Joseph Mankiewicz, Krystof Kieslowski, Pedro Almodovar, Michael Haeneke, Ernie Gehr.




 How has your life changed since you became a filmmaker?


I'm sure my life has changed, but I'm not sure how . . . I think it would have changed had I decided to be a cab driver, but I don't know what that change would be either. Our lives change, in different ways, depending on the choices we make, and that's every choice we make. I think we can only speculate on way things could have been, if we had made a different choice.

What are some of your favorite American films? Foreign films? Television shows?


These are in no particular order . . . after their category.  And tomorrow, I'll think of others.


American films: Badlands, All About Eve, Choose Me, Dog Day Afternoon, Howard’s End, Short Cuts, The Stunt Man, Body Heat, A Walk on the Moon, Auntie Mame, Bonnie and Clyde, Bringing Up Baby, Roman Holiday, Prince of the City, The English Patient, Deep Cover

Foreign(-language) Films:   Jules et Jim, Code Unknown, Breathless, 8 1/2, All About My Mother, Live Flesh (Carne Tremula), Pather Pachali, The Passion of Joan of Arc (silent, but foreign), The 400 Blows, Day for Night, Wild Reeds

Television:  The Decalogue (presented in US as film but originally TV), Lost, Raising Hope, 30 Rock, Parks and Rec, Modern Family, Grey's Anatomy (yes, I said it.)



How would you describe your film education?


I watched movies.  And then, I went to grad school for an MFA in Film/Video Production at Northwestern University.  It was a wonderful mix of Production, Theory and Criticism, and History.  Loved it.

How would you describe the film "scene" where you live?


I teach at a university where there is a Cinema-Photography department, and a Radio-TV department.  That's our scene . . . we're in a rural setting, basically, so it is the university that provides the non-mainstream films.  We don't have theatres that  show foreign films or indies.  But we also live in an era where all those films are available on our computers, aren't they?

How has social media changed the independent film industry?


Helped tremendously in getting work out there, if it's short enough, but also helps tremendously in promoting a film.  Getting it seen.  Getting support and advice from other filmmakers.

What is the casting process like?


I love casting.  I love auditioning.  I love seeing what actors bring to the script that I think I know inside and out.  And, inevitably, I am surprised at what the actors find in the words, what they will put into the words, and how they make the work better.  You'd think I wouldn't be surprised by this, but I always am, and delightfully so.

How does independent film differ from the mainstream?


Better stories, more depth, more human, and humane.

You could go back in time and see any classic film being made. Which film would it be?


All About Eve.

You could be any animal. Which would you be?


A leopard . . . and be in Bringing Up Baby.

You could have any super power. What would it be?


I'm stealing this from someone else who was featured on this site.  And it's a superpower I'd never thought of.  Sleeplessness.  As much as I love to sleep (perchance to dream), I'd love it if I didn't have to.  Imagine how much more you'd get done without sleep.   So, yes, sleeplessness.

What is your opinion on movie remakes?


I waver on remakes.  I'm usually like, boo, bad, and, most importantly, why?  But then, a friend mentioned to me that in theatre, plays are often re-staged in new productions, why can't films be re-staged, too.  There is a small flaw in this argument, in that theater is ephemeral.  When the run is over, that production evaporates, except in the memories of those who saw it.  So, it makes sense that there are new productions.  On the other hand, what is brought to those new productions, something contemporary, something new, a keener insight, new technologies . . . something.  And so, why can't film remakes have the same opportunities? But as I said, I waver on this subject.



Thanks for doing the interview H.D. Keep me posted on the other projects your working on. In the meantime, readers can check out photos from Cowboy Christmas below.

[gallery]





Thursday, June 2, 2011

Interview John P. Fleenor




I got the chance to interview filmmaker John P. Fleenor. His current project really intrigued me.  The connection between humans and animals is remarkable.  I myself have  two cats (brothers who are rescues) and I can attest to that bond.  Read on to find out more about John's current project, his favorite filmmaker and a whole lot more.





What is the current project you are working on?

Well, this particular project is a feature-length Documentary
titled “Unconditional Companion”, a project that has its beginnings around the turn of the century (1999 I believe). In its current form, it consists of about 50 mini-DV tapes of all makes, created on about 6 different types of cameras and has no real sustainable story line, look or theme.

As I recall, there was a phone call from Heidi Huebner, a Producer and Animal Lover friend of mine asking me if I wanted to go to Seattle with her and another Producer named Carl Peoples. What sealed the deal for me going on the trip was the fact that I would be shooting with my Cinematography Mentor, Jeff Orsa. Our original goal was to just capture a story about a local Veterinarian who twice a month ran a free clinic to homeless people who had pets however, over the following few years that grew into an orgy of ideas and concepts, all of which took on their own momentum and “Unconditional Companion” took a back seat.

There might, at one time, have been some sort of rough edit, but nothing useable and all of the tapes ended up in an Agent friend’s office at UTA for years, Ruthanne Secunda I believe it was. Around 2004 I approached Heidi as to the whereabouts of the original tapes, the “uncompleted project” was gnawing at me really bad. We retrieved the tapes and I poured over them, searching for the story (a backwards approach to be sure) but it was clear that the “story” had not yet been captured. At that time, the entire project had been self-funded and the pockets were growing very empty and it was then when I came up with the idea of doing a Photographic Gallery show. The show would feature still images of homeless people who had pets, a 5-minute cut of “Unconditional Companion” as a teaser and all the proceeds from that show would go towards the making of the Documentary.

Well, to wrap this up, the show was a huge success but failed to generate the funds we wanted. Fast foreword a couple of years, we have now teamed up with Kickstarter to raise the necessary funds to finally shoot this story in the way it has always needed to be told and I couldn’t be more excited about it. You can follow us here…




http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/49526936/unconditional-companion

Did you always want to be a filmmaker?

I never knew what I wanted to be. If ADD had been “discovered” in the
80’s when I was in grade school, I would have been a textbook case. I
liked drawing, daydreaming and watching movies and TV. In Art School,
I became obsessed with the screenplay format, it was just the coolest
damn thing I had ever seen, so I started to write shorts (on a thing called a Word Processor) and they all sucked as stories, but looked super cool. My first Professional job was (and still is) a Photographer. Filmmaking is very similar to the Photography process, it’s all about the process and collaboration, one giant, silly mess that somehow ends up being a completed project.

So to answer that question specifically, no. I did not always want to be a filmmaker.

What inspired you to become filmmaker?

The desire to tell a story in a visual way, besides waving my hands around and drawing “air-pictures” is the main reason I make films. It’s a sexy job that touches the lives of just about everyone on the planet, yet at best, only about 2% of people have any clue as how those movies and TV shows they are watching are made. Public as the whole business is, it’s still a giant mystery… something about that makes me smile.

What is the best thing about being a filmmaker?

The absolute best thing about being a filmmaker is working with the super talented and dedicated craftspeople who actually make the project for you. There is nothing a good crew cannot do.

What is the worst thing about being a filmmaker?


Convincing people that your project is worth investing time and money
in, I would say, has to be the absolute worst part of being a Filmmaker.

Pitching projects ranks up there with getting a root canal, it’s not going to pleasurable on any level and leaves a lingering, lifeless pain.

What is the estimated number of projects you have worked on?

You can see a good chunk of my “projects” on imdb…
http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0003379/
However, imdb doesn’t show Commercials (I’ve done about 12), Music
Videos (I’ve done about 8), PSA’s (I’ve done about 4) and all the hundred’s of “friends” projects that you do over the course of your career. I have been in LA working steadily since 1998; there really are a bunch of projects I have totally forgotten about.

Who is your favorite filmmaker?

Orson Welles… Someone else has made films?

What is one piece of advice you can give to someone who also wants to
make it in the movie business?


There is one thing that working on a ton of shows over the years has
taught me, it’s what NOT to do. Watching other’s fail miserably due to lack of communication, horrible people skills and simple poor planning is a big eye opener. As with any endeavor, the more you know about how it’s done, the better at doing it you will be. Watch how the great ones, or the people who you like their style, are doing things. There are several ways of becoming a filmmaker, but knowing the basics of the process is a must. I’m not saying go out there and PA on 50 shows to build up your chops, but at least have a fundamental idea of what you are doing. I swear, I have worked with Directors who scream “Action” before the camera is even rolling. That story is not as funny when you are into hour 16 of a Monday and you know that by Friday, call time is going to be 8pm.

Things I have picked-up along the way to become a great Filmmaker, use them or not. A) Get a good Crew and trust them. No one wants to be on a crappy show and they will go out of their way not to let it happen. B) Trust your Crew. More than not, they have already done what it is you are looking to do and they know how to do it quicker/safer/better. Think about it, people on the Crew go from show-to-show-to-show, sometimes working with 15-30 different Projects/Actors/Producers/Directors a year. How many shows does a normal feature Director do a year? 1? 2? 3? I’m not suggesting you abandon your shot list, storyboards or scene, just allow yourself to have an open ear. C) The person on the Set who knows the least is the person yelling the loudest. Don’t be that person. D) Trust your gut.

How would you describe your film education?

My real film education began the day I drove out to LA and went right to work on a “freebie” for 2 weeks. I started off as a Grip/Electric (why does every Producer think that those jobs are the best for inexperienced people, I mean, really?) and by the end of that week I was the entire Crew, literally everyone had quit except for the Director, Actors, DP and me. That was the best education in “Guerilla Filmmaking” ever. For someone to break into this business, you have to be quick and smart. Now I’m not saying you have to know everything, but just seem like you do as you are secretly figure it all out. To this day, I still see something new or different on set and I love that, it keeps me waking up the next day for more.

How would you describe the film "scene" where you live?

I live in LA, that’s all there is in my world. “Did you hear about XYZ?” “Did you know XYZ is going to be in the new XYZ movie?” “You know they are making another XYZ!” “XYZ is on set.” “XYZ just stuck his/her fingers in the m&m’s and I saw him/her come out of the honey wagon and they didn’t wash their hands.”

How has social media changed the independent film industry?

Like everything else in the new tech world, social media has allowed the small voice to be heard by many people, instantly. Being able to cover the world by just making a few posts is amazing and powerful. Not having to have a VCR/DVD player, TV, all the cables, remotes and crap with you at all times to show you project is HUGE! Fear it and die! A great person once said, or I’m making this up, “There is nothing wrong with Shameless Self-Promotion.”

How does independent film differ from the mainstream?

What a great question. I have always joked about how much “passion”
there is on the Independent Film sets vs. that of the larger gigs. Usually once you go beyond the “Independent” line with your film, many, many, many different hands grab hold of your project and it isn’t allowed to stay true to your original vision. Not having “heavy hands” on your project allows for much more creative freedom for filmmakers (Docs still seem to be the most free). There is nothing wrong with creating a modest film that most likely will never be seen by anyone outside festivals, I know because I have worked on MANY of them. I mean seriously, the difference is night and day. Show “A” has a $45K budget or show “A” has a $65 Million budget, do you think there is going to be any change in how you go into Pre-Production on those?

You could go back in time and see any classic film being made. Which film
would it be?


Casablanca

You could be any animal. Which would you be?

A Pelican

You could have any super power. What would it be?

Flying

Thanks to John for taking the time to do this interview.   Good luck with documentary I hope to get the chance to review “Unconditional Companion”

Wednesday, June 1, 2011

Interview Jennifer and Victoria Westcott Of Elgin Road Production Company






[caption id="attachment_143" align="aligncenter" width="199" caption="Jennifer left, Victoria right
Photo: David Bukach"][/caption]

I got the opportunity to interview the sisters of Elgin Road Productions. They are Jennifer and Victoria Westcott.  Find out what the independent film landscape is like in Victoria, British Columbia.  Find out what the sisters think about movie remakes.  Read below to find out more.

What is the current project you are working on?

Jennifer: We start production on our first feature in a week. So exciting!

Victoria: It's called LOCKED IN A GARAGE BAND. A coming of age comedy about a high school garage band on the brink of breaking up that gets locked in their garage for a day.

Did you always want to be a filmmaker?

Jennifer: God, no. I started screenwriting five years ago - I decided to try directing my own work about a year ago.

Victoria: Nope. I'm an inner city school teacher turned entrepreneur turned producer. Never would have predicted this path, but I love my sister and her scripts and producing is pretty fun - just like teaching really. You plan, plan and plan some more - and then have to be super flexible when those plans don't go the way you wanted them to.  I like that kind of work.

What inspired you to become filmmaker?

Jennifer: It seemed like the next logical step.

Victoria: The opportunity to be scared out of my mind at the same time as super excited while working with my sister - that's all very cool and keeps me going every day.

What is the best thing about being one?

Jennifer: I like working with actors. It's creative and fun and I love the collaboration - they have great ideas that make mine even better.  I can't imagine a better job.

Victoria: I love movies and I love working with my sister.  We're totally different - I like asking people for money and free stuff and get a kick out of that challenge, whereas Jen gets hives just thinking about it.  She loves writing screenplays & seeing the movie come to life - which frankly, totally stresses me out. What I love more than anything is that we're really well matched as a team - I produce, she writes/directs. I don't think many sisters can say that they work so well together, so I'm grateful that we can.

Plus, we have a kick-ass team of collaborators - the DP, our editor, our sound guy, our line producer, all the actors, our casting director, the production manager, the cook- it really takes a whole community to make a movie.  I love that!

What is the worst thing about being one?

Jennifer: The endless script rewrites.  You're working alone, the initial high of having a new idea that you can actually flesh out into a full story is long gone and the end product of a coherent, well-structured script seems so far off.  It sucks.  But you have to go through it, I guess.

Victoria: The emotional roller coaster, but it does go up so...I guess it's necessary.

What is the estimated number of projects you have worked on?

Jennifer: I've written twelve screenplays and directed one teaser. This is my first real experience on a film set.

Victoria: Zip, except the teaser.

Who is your favorite filmmaker?

Jennifer: It depends. I love Edward Burns and Francis Ford Coppola and Kevin Spacey and Joseph Gordon Levitt for what they've done (and continue to do) to encourage young and/or new filmmakers. I love Kathryn Bigelow and Nancy Meyer and Amy Heckerling and Jane Campion and Sarah Polley for being kick ass female directors that I can aspire to. I love theCoen brothers and Woody Allen for their bodies of work.  I love Peter Berg for creating the tv series Friday Night Lights. My favourite movies include Little Miss Sunshine, Lars and the Real Girl, Death at a Funeral and The Incredibles. I love good stories well told most of all.

Victoria: The indies that share information on twitter - Marty Lang, Lucas McNelly, Karen and David of Film Courage, Edward Burns, Wonder Russell, MJ Slide - there are so many inspiring filmmakers on twitter, I can't name them all, but every conversation we have helps.

How has your life changed since you became a filmmaker?

Jennifer: My house is much, much dirtier and my kids watch a lot more tv.  It's been a crazy year.

Victoria: I'm way more grateful for everyone that's still in my life - it's like getting married, or giving birth for the first time or meeting a guy that you just can't shut up about - I'm completely absorbed by the movie and really appreciate the friends that are putting up with the constant movie discussions.  I'll come out of it at some point, I promise!

What is one piece of advice you can give to someone who also wants to make it in the movie business?

Jennifer: If you love what you're doing, then you must not quit.

Victoria: Find people who have been successful in the way you want to be, and listen to them. Ignore everyone else.  Loads of people will give you advice (whether you ask or not) and the best thing to do is thank them, be grateful that they cared enough to share, and then ignore everything they've just said.  Only listen to the ones that have taken the path you plan to take.  Sounds harsh, but ... it works for me.

What are some of your favorite American films? Foreign films? Television shows?

Jennifer: American movies: Little Miss Sunshine, Lars and the Real Girl, The Incredibles, The (original) Stepford Wives, Brokeback Mountain, Stand by Me.

Foreign: Death at a Funeral, Bridget Jones' Diary, Il Postino, Diabolique.

Television Shows: Friday Night Lights.  It's spectacular story-telling and performance. I love it more than anything else and never tire of watching it.

Victoria: Damn, Jen took all of mine. I'll add: American -  The Big Lebowski, The Bourne Series, The Holiday, The Hangover, Kick-Ass, The Breakfast Club

Foreign: I'm going to pick all Canadian films, since they're foreign to the states, but not to me: Cube, Highway 61, Roadkill, The Red Violin.

TV shows: Friday Night Lights, 30 Rock, Community, Walking Dead, first few seasons of Lost, first few seasons of Six Feet Under, Heroes before it went downhill (first season was awesome, such a shame...), Freaks & Geeks, The Inbetweeners

How would you describe your film education?

Jennifer:  I learned how to write in university - I have an MA in History. Nothing teaches you to use as few words as possible and to write clearly and coherently like a History major. I believe it prepared me for screenwriting like no other education could.  I've read a ton of books on directing and writing. Actually I read a ton of books, period.  And I have very little social life (having three young children does that to you), so I inevitably consume movies and television like there's no tomorrow.  I also belong to an amazing on-line writer's group - I've learned more through workshopping my scripts there than anywhere else.

Victoria: books, workshops, twitter.

How would you describe the film "scene" where you live?

Jennifer: In Victoria, BC? Limited. Lots of docs. Vancouver's a different story - lots going on, tons of actors, great crew available, great place to be. Too bad it takes us six hours to get there.

Victoria: Six hours is a bit of an exaggeration - we have to take a ferry to get to Vancouver and Jen hates waiting in the ferry line. It's really only a couple of hours away, but add the wait and traffic...and yeah, we live on an island.  Filmmaking is much bigger on the mainland - just the way it goes I'm sorry to say. We set our first film on the island, but we're filming it on the mainland, where most of our cast & crew live.

 How has social media changed the independent film industry?

Jennifer: I've only ever experienced the independent film industry through social media and the internet. I can't imagine what it would have been like before Facebook and Twitter and Zoetrope and Triggerstreet. My writer's group is online. My filmmaking friends are online. We communicate with our cast and crew through Facebook and email.  We raise our money through Kickstarter. We apply for grants and festivals and make contacts with corporate sponsors all over the internet. It's everything we do.

Victoria: Everything Jen said and more. I absolutely love the openness of the filmmakers that embrace social media - I learn so much from the community and feel supported in being new and taking a leap in making a feature film.

What is the casting process like?

Jennifer: We hired an actor who I knew who was looking to get into casting as our casting director and thank god we did. She knew agents, she knew industry protocol, she could spot a diamond in the rough, she was invaluable. Because of her, the casting process was AWESOME.  I know if we'd gone it alone, we would have been up the creek without a paddle. If you can scrape together the money to hire someone (and we paid her far, far less than what she was worth - but like I said, we knew each other and she knew my writing, so she wanted to be involved) you definitely should.  Next to your script, your cast is the most important element of your film - get the best people you possibly can.

Victoria: Kristina Agosti was our Casting Director and I honestly don't know what we would have done without her.  I looked at headshots and skimmed resumes, whereas a CD knows the training and the teachers in Vancouver so she could read much more from the resumes and know who to call in based on their experience and training.  Find some money and hire a Casting Director.  Best advice I can give.

How does independent film differ from the mainstream?

Jennifer: Well, I haven't really experienced the mainstream, so I don't really know.  There are great mainstream movies, there are great independent movies. There are shitty mainstream movies, and shitty independent movies. That's all I know for sure.

Victoria: It's all about the script - whether it's an indie or a big Hollywood budget.  Only difference is the amount of money flying around.

You could go back in time and see any classic film being made. Which film would it be?

Jennifer: Citizen Cane, definitely!

Victoria: ET. It'd be cool to see Drew Barrymore as that little kid.

You could be any animal. Which would you be?

Jennifer: Any flying bird.

Victoria: A lion. Roar.

You could have any super power. What would it be?

Jennifer: Flight.

Victoria: Telepathy.

Do you believe on life on other planets?

Jennifer: Yep.

Victoria: Definitely. Jen used to read books about aliens and freak me out when we were teenagers.

What is your opinion on movie remakes?

Jennifer: Well, if they could all be as good as the Coen brothers' remake of True Grit, I'd be a-okay with them.  Mostly, though, I just think, "Why?"  Just watch the original.

Victoria: There's room for us all. If someone's willing to buy the ticket, then someone will make the film. Doesn't mean I will buy a ticket, but to each their own.   I'm not bothered either way really.

Thanks to Jennifer and Victoria for allowing me to do the interview. I hope I can catch LOCKED IN A GARAGE BAND at a festival near me. I'd love to do a review.