Lee Stokes
October 14th, 2009, 09:54 AM
With four of meeting weekly for the past year or so, we never have trouble with getting a crew together for a one day shoot. The issue is generally agreeing to and committing to a specific project, and the case was no different this time.
Shortly after the theme announcement was made, we met to decide on what we'd do. After many ideas were suggested, we decided on a specific idea, and left Sanjay to write it.
After a couple of weeks of Sanjay banging his head against the wall trying to write the original concept, he went with one of the other ideas we’d thrown around, which was "Delivery", an idea that might have fit in with the trailers seen in the Tarantino/Rodriguez Grindhouse movies.
Sanjay wrote the trailer script in about 2 hours, rewrote it, then sent it back out to the group. The script for the original concept didn't get written.
We met about a week before the shoot to discuss other ideas and finalize things, and only at that point changed focus from our previous idea to “Delivery”. We broke the script down, Sal to work on props, Sanjay to gather actors and Lee to create storyboards & shot lists. We decided to use Sal's place as the location. We also got commitments from two others to be part of the crew, so we ended up with 6 crew members total.
On the night of the shoot it quickly became apparent that the actors would be the problem. Not having them, specifically. Lee wanted at least 10 for the party scene, but as we gathered, only 1 person was there specifically to act. Hardly the makings of a "raging party" the script called for! Sanjay and the Devindra made frantic calls to friends to see who could make it to act. They ended up getting two people and also adding Lee's girlfriend, we ended up with three actors, so the crew had to also act in the group scenes.
Thank goodness for the shot list. And thank goodness for quick and dirty set ups. We ended up shooting around 22 set ups in a little under 5 hours. Almost all set ups were pretty much based on the storyboards. Looking at the final cut, almost everything included was on a storyboard!
We did about 3 takes for every shot, just to make sure we had footage to work with. The most difficult shot to get was the one with our gaffer running in front of the car, he had to do the running bit about 6 or 7 times, he was getting pretty tired!
The blood bit was done by placing our fake blood in a syringe and the director tapping the bottom of it in time with the slasher's hand. It turned out better than any of us anticipated.
We shot using the Devindra’s trusty HD100 in 720p 24p (still a workhorse after three years). We did as many scenes hand held to save time. We shot on a Wednesday night, Sanjay did a rough cut on Friday in FCP 6 keeping the footage HDV. Then Saturday night Lee and Sanjay fine tuned the edit. While doing so, Lee and Sanjay agreed that what the piece needed was a voiceover, after originally intending to just place music over the piece. Fortunately Sanjay has the set up to do ADR work, so Lee wrote up the VO in about 15 minutes ("Guys, give me some pizza puns, quick!") and had Devindra record the voice over. Kai and Sanjay tweeked the VO a bit to make it more ominous (and cheesy). Kai composed the music that night. The film is uncorrected save for the shot of blood on the wall the in bathroom.
We had a blast doing the whole thing, and save for a couple elements are pretty pleased with the final product. I don't know if the trailer makes you want to see the whole film, but hope you enjoy it anyways!
Shortly after the theme announcement was made, we met to decide on what we'd do. After many ideas were suggested, we decided on a specific idea, and left Sanjay to write it.
After a couple of weeks of Sanjay banging his head against the wall trying to write the original concept, he went with one of the other ideas we’d thrown around, which was "Delivery", an idea that might have fit in with the trailers seen in the Tarantino/Rodriguez Grindhouse movies.
Sanjay wrote the trailer script in about 2 hours, rewrote it, then sent it back out to the group. The script for the original concept didn't get written.
We met about a week before the shoot to discuss other ideas and finalize things, and only at that point changed focus from our previous idea to “Delivery”. We broke the script down, Sal to work on props, Sanjay to gather actors and Lee to create storyboards & shot lists. We decided to use Sal's place as the location. We also got commitments from two others to be part of the crew, so we ended up with 6 crew members total.
On the night of the shoot it quickly became apparent that the actors would be the problem. Not having them, specifically. Lee wanted at least 10 for the party scene, but as we gathered, only 1 person was there specifically to act. Hardly the makings of a "raging party" the script called for! Sanjay and the Devindra made frantic calls to friends to see who could make it to act. They ended up getting two people and also adding Lee's girlfriend, we ended up with three actors, so the crew had to also act in the group scenes.
Thank goodness for the shot list. And thank goodness for quick and dirty set ups. We ended up shooting around 22 set ups in a little under 5 hours. Almost all set ups were pretty much based on the storyboards. Looking at the final cut, almost everything included was on a storyboard!
We did about 3 takes for every shot, just to make sure we had footage to work with. The most difficult shot to get was the one with our gaffer running in front of the car, he had to do the running bit about 6 or 7 times, he was getting pretty tired!
The blood bit was done by placing our fake blood in a syringe and the director tapping the bottom of it in time with the slasher's hand. It turned out better than any of us anticipated.
We shot using the Devindra’s trusty HD100 in 720p 24p (still a workhorse after three years). We did as many scenes hand held to save time. We shot on a Wednesday night, Sanjay did a rough cut on Friday in FCP 6 keeping the footage HDV. Then Saturday night Lee and Sanjay fine tuned the edit. While doing so, Lee and Sanjay agreed that what the piece needed was a voiceover, after originally intending to just place music over the piece. Fortunately Sanjay has the set up to do ADR work, so Lee wrote up the VO in about 15 minutes ("Guys, give me some pizza puns, quick!") and had Devindra record the voice over. Kai and Sanjay tweeked the VO a bit to make it more ominous (and cheesy). Kai composed the music that night. The film is uncorrected save for the shot of blood on the wall the in bathroom.
We had a blast doing the whole thing, and save for a couple elements are pretty pleased with the final product. I don't know if the trailer makes you want to see the whole film, but hope you enjoy it anyways!