Tag Archive for 'bright black'

In Case Of Emergency, Break Continuity

I’ve been having an extended panic attack for a couple weeks now. It started when I looked at the footage for Bright Black.

There were lights and crew members in some of the shots, but that’s what CGI is for. There wasn’t nearly as much frenetic camera movement as I wanted, but that could be simulated in post. The problem was that in our rush to get Jesse Pieper’s shots done the first night (he couldn’t make it back the next day), we forgot all of the establishing shots of the thugs.

There is literally zero footage of the thugs not looking in Jarod Bright’s direction. Therefore, there are no shots that would be usable before the Interrogator gets killed. This means the thugs would just appear out of nowhere, as the viewer has no idea that they were in the scen until then. It would effectively push the film beyond “silly” and into the territory of “amateurisih.” As in, it would actually, legitimately suck. But it’s impossible for it to not be terrible, since we don’t have that establishing shot.

Unless I decide to go all non-linear on yo’ ass.

So, that’s what I’ve decided to do. The film will be completed in time for its previously alluded to May 8th upload date. It will start with a shot of the interrogator and end with a shot of Bright watching Clarisse leave. Everything in between will be in a completely different order. And it will be even more ridiciulous than I imagined.

The problem is that I don’t particularly love that idea. It’s not being done because I’m excited about the idea, nor that I think it will work very well, but that it’s pretty much the only way the footage we got would work correctly. Also, the entire cast would hate me forever if I decided not to finish the movie because I didn’t like it. Especially Shannon Mary Burgess, who would probably cut my testicles off with her fingernails.

Well, it’s certainly been a learning experience for me: I am much better at getting what I want from animation than from live action. Working with action-focused videography of live actors is not something I should do when I have to devote half my time to unrelated homework and classes.

Also tapes. I hate tapes, with their dropped frames and broken timecodes and gahhhh. I’m not shooting a scripted production again until I have a memory card video camera.

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Bright Black: The Best Panic Attack Ever

I called the shoot for 10 AM on March 21st, expecting we’d get everything done by around 6 PM. Wow. In hindsight, that prediction was hilarious. Regardless, even though we had to pull two unanticipated 16 hour days, and Shannon was rather late to day two because she passed out in Penn Station the night before, I think it went well overall.

Of course, had we continued the way I originally planned, it wouldn’t get done because my cast and crew weren’t available for the next 197 hours straight. We did three shots on the film stock and realized that film is infuriating. Fortunately, my director of photography had the foresight to bring her digital camera and shoot those first three shots on DV at the same time. It looked beautiful on the digital display, and the view through the Arri 16mm camera showed that the film might possibly get exposed if we were lucky. So after those first three shots, I came out of my “but I spent money on this film stock”-induced denial and decided we’d go forward on digital.

Oh no, not high definition, how terrible, ewwww. Well, at least it’s a low resolution beautiful image, as opposed to a 1920×1080 pixel image of black.

There were a ridiculous amount of things that made me insane, afraid it wouldn’t get done, afraid I’d smash my head against a wall too many times before it would get done, etc. But we finished the shoot around 10 PM on Sunday. And I think it’s going to be fairly awesome once my head clears enough to import the footage.

Some logistical issues caused two of the thugs to have an abrupt change in casting on the day of the shoot. David Tufano, originally supposed to play Purple Thug, had to cancel on the morning of the 21st because he’d been sick for several days and hadn’t gotten better. Having not known this, I didn’t make any plans for an understudy, but fortunately I had a second David on hand doing production assistance. So with a quick change in character from nerdy thug to burly manly thug, the wonderful David Lanz fit nicely into the role. He was quite knowledgable at how to cough and twitch on the floor as he died, being a forensic science student and all. The second change occurred because Blade Rogers had to go before we ended up taking a single shot of Orange Thug, so I swapped in Dan Clifford, another production assistant. Blade did help a tremendous amount with lighting before he had to disappear, though.

Oh, and one of the plugs for a light socket exploded. Nobody was hurt, but it did mean we had to finish the majority of the film with only two black lights. A third would have been nice for some shots, but we managed.

But now that all this has happened, I have two personal goals: Get a Red camera, and never shoot on film again. We had lights configured so that my eyes were in pain looking at the bright glow in front of me, and the light meter wasn’t even moving. What an incredible waste of my time and money that attempt at film was.

On a more positive note, I have now completely come to terms with the fact that good filmmaking cannot be done by one person. That may seem obvious, as someone has to act in front of the camera, of course, but what I really mean is that if it weren’t for my DP, Claire Ensslin, and my sound guy Gregory Wells, this entire shoot would have fallen apart.

Oh, yeah, and the cast. Them too. I love you all.

Will Rosenberg, who played the Interrogator, set up a YouTube channel exclusively for Bright Black. At first I thought that was a bit redundant, but it’s probably best not to clog my Plankhead account with a ton of different videos; he already uploaded some of the B-roll he took with his pocket camera thing. I leave you with a short clip of our celebratory last shot: Clarisse smashing the bottle on Orange Thug’s head.

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Fixing NYC Firearm Posession Laws in Post

Unrealistic gun color
If you’ve read the most recent revision of the script for Bright Black, you’ll notice that it still requires a gun as a prop. This may seem odd, as one of the main reasons for rewriting it with katanas instead of guns was because it’s illegal to possess a realistic looking prop gun in New York City, for obvious reasons: the NYPD is very sensitive about mistakenly believing someone has a firearm. Therefore, in order to get my hands on even a black-colored rubber gun, I’d have to contact a very expensive rental company who issues permits and on-set weapon supervisors.

So the most realistic prop gun I’m legally allowed to purchase or possess in this city is yellow. In theory, I could spray paint it black and hope that nobody reports me, but since we’re shooting under black light, there’s a much more fun and infinitely more legal solution.

It’s quite simple: spray paint it MORE YELLOW!
Awesome gun color

That awful, disgustingly blurry photo was taken by my cheap point-and-shoot camera that can’t cope with the pressure of shooting without a flash. But it gets the basic idea across: yellow prop gun + black light + yellow black light paint = really, really yellow. And that’s a very helpful thing for post-production. Continue reading ‘Fixing NYC Firearm Posession Laws in Post’

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Bright Black Fight Choreography

Yesterday, I met with some of my cast to choreograph the fight scene in Bright Black. My DP couldn’t be there, and nor could one of the actors, so I taped it. For the masses, I edited that footage down to a short “making of” style video:

None of this footage was slowed down; the reason some parts look like a Zack Snyder film is because we never managed to do the entire thing full speed. It would probably take a lot more rehearsing for everyone to do this perfectly at full speed, so we’ll compensate by shooting from a lot of angles and focusing on bits at a time.

Needless to say, everything you see is just a “sketch” of what it will all eventually look like.

(I’m currently exporting a version of this video where “Roy Mulhall” is spelled correctly, so that’ll be fixed)

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Brighter Black

I decided to do a complete rewrite of Bright Black. The old one made Bright look like too much of a psychopath as opposed to a guy who’s just having fun.

Also I got writer’s block trying to write the gunfight, which is where I stopped writing the original. Because of this, and becuase getting realistic prop guns in New York City is expensive when legal, I decided to replace the guns with shurikens and lightning. Well, okay, just shurikens. And katanas!!! It’ll all be very Snow Crash-y; Jarod Bright actually is kinda similar to Hiro Protagonist if I remember the novel correctly.

When is Snow Crash going to get adapted into a movie or video game already? Actually, to be really meta-weird, someone could code a Snow Crash action/RPG in LSL and put it on Second Life. It would be like…Third Life.

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