Archive for January 21st, 2008

Family

family.jpgEditor Monique Zavistovski was 8 months pregnant with her first child when she innocently agreed to cut Circus Rosaire. Director Robyn Bliley wasn’t a mother, so couldn’t have known just how optimistic Zavistovski’s commitment really was, or how central the Baby Chloe would become to post production. You’ll hear filmmakers talk about family—that’s how close things sometimes get making some films. But among filmmaker family stories, the making of Circus Rosaire, stands out. First, the documentary (screening at Slamdance) is about a family—the Circus Rosaire family, both human and animal. The director and DP Chad Wilson have been married for 10 years, in business together as the LA-based Progressive Productions for six.


Bliley had known the Rosaire family since she was 6 years old, so her five years of access to the family was an act of trust.


And then there was the edit. Bliley changing diapers in Zavistovski’s small apartment while the editor worked. When Zavistovski nursed Chloe, Bliley looked at cuts, or the three of them sat in front of the computer, Zavistovksi’s left hand around Chloe, right hand on the mouse. “Chloe didn’t sleep,” Bliley says, “she maybe napped a half hour a day—and that was my job, soothing her, begging her to sleep. She was so steeped in the sounds of the circus, the lions and tigers, the elephants, the monkeys, that those were some of her first words.” At a year old, Chloe sat rapt through the first screening, lulled by the familiar sounds of her own infancy. more

Baby Blockbuster

sleepdealer_rivera.jpgI overhear director Alex Rivera’s publicist telling him that my interview will probably focus on some technical aspects of the film. He seems to think he’s not the right person to address that topic. I’m thinking “ok not all directors are technical”’ Except it soon emerges as we talk that Alex cut Sleep Dealer himself on Final Cut Pro, built the animatic for the 400+ effects shots in After Effects and Photoshop, and even did a couple of final effects shots himself in AE (on his laptop). To him, that’s not technical. His fluency in editing and effects software is just how he gets the job done. No more technical than using Microsoft Word to write this post. more

Cheating Death

deathinlove_filmstill3.JPGJohn Lyons knew director Boaz Yakin from years ago on Uptown Girls. “I was on vacation in Woodstock, Labor Day weekend,” Lyons recalls. He said, ‘I want my film in Sundance, can you start Tuesday?’”


Yakin was shooting in NY and when Lyons showed up day one there were hours of footage sitting in the production office that no one had seen. No assistant on the film. Lyons thought he’d start digitizing, but the sound recordist still had all the sound on his PD6. So Lyons started digitizing picture—there really was no time to wait. more

Mind Meld

johnlyons.JPGWhen I meet John Lyons in the Filmmaker Lodge, on Saturday Death in Love has only been finished for four days; when they went to do the audio mix the previous weekend, 8 seconds were missing from the middle of the reel. That got fixed, and the film premieres tomorrow. So as nail biters go it was a medium one.


Lyons is here with two premieres, Boaz Yakin’s Death in Love and his first feature as an editor, Tom Kalin’s Savage Grace starring Julianne Moore. He cut Savage Grace first on his Avid Xpress Pro and thought he could live with digitizing at 28:1. “But when I saw it I was pretty sure Tom wouldn’t be able to stand it,” Lyons says. Post Factory loaned him a PC (HP) Adrenaline and he redigitized at 14:1. Kalin also cut—he used the Adrenaline, while Lyons cut next to him in the same room on the Xpress Pro on a G4 laptop. “We each cut half than flipped them,” he says.


With Death in Love, Lyons digitized on an OS9 Meridian at the Post Factory facility in NY. “It had been in storage and they threw it up in the reception area. I would digitize there then take it home on a Firewire Drive.” He cut on the same Xpress Pro system until Yakin told him he only had 7 weeks. “I bumped up to a software-only Media Composer.” Cutting in Yakin’s pool house (glorified garden shed) in Silver Lake, the 24-bit audio started to crackle for lack of ram and Lyons had to spring for a new dual core G4 or risk his director’s sanity. more

Sundance Institute Online

On Saturday I paid a visit to the production wing of the Sundance Institute Online, housed on the south end of Park Ave. in a century-old former miner’s hospital.


The festival’s daily newspaper has a home on the third floor of the same building, and the podcast department is in the basement. When I visited the second floor, a team of frazzled editors were putting the last touches on the interviews they’d shot the night before for the Live@Sundance video series.


The previous night, a team of Sundance videographers had shot three sequences between 10pm and midnight — it was the big U2 3D premiere. more

Blacked out

In Chimayo Friday night, when the blackout took down most of Main from for most of 90 minutes, people were cheerful in that resigned way that seems to be catching on all over. Of course the blackout only reinforced what every human in Park City already knows: there are more of us than ever. The Festival now sprawls across every logistical boundary, as the balance between people who are here to work and watch films, tips in favor of a limitless supply of people here for other reasons. For the last several years, this always comes up at the opening press conference as Robert Redford–in a kind of cheerful/resigned way–acknowledges the circus rings that orbit Sundance and says it’s still about the films. more

Newly Expanded FilmCatcher.com Launches at the 2008 Sundance Film Festival

AND ANNOUNCES NEW DIGITAL DEALS FOR DOWNLOADABLE FILMS


Press Release


Website Announces Digital Rights to 20 Highly Acclaimed Foreign Films from Pyramide International


Original Thinkers Deal for Short Film Series Including Linklater’s “Live From Shiva’s Dance Floor”


Partners with FilmAid International


FilmCatcher.com, which aims to bring attention to the freshest cinema while highlighting excellent and often under-appreciated films, debuts at the Filmcatcher Cyber Lounge in Park City, UT during the 2008 Sundance Film Festival. Hosting a newly designed home page, new community functionality and deeper editorial coverage, Filmcatcher.com becomes the destination website for discovering, viewing and discussing smart films with smart people. The site is devoted to all aspects of American independent and foreign language film and serves as a place where people can congregate and communicate about the best of past and present films. Composed of an experienced team of veteran indie film players, Filmcatcher.com has secured its first ever digital distribution deals with Pyramide International and Originial Thinkers and has partnered with FilmAid International. The curated site offers exclusive editorial coverage of art house films, on-camera interviews with cutting-edge filmmakers and actors, in-depth festival coverage, insightful reviews, unique celebrity picks and profiles of the independent film community. more

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SUNDANCE INSTITUTE ANNOUNCES NEW CREATIVE PRODUCING INITIATVE

Press Release


Park City, UT – Sundance Institute today announced the Sundance Creative Producing Initiative, a new Fellowship program for emerging American independent producers. The announcement was made today during the Producers Lunch at the Sundance Film Festival in Park City, Utah. Veteran film producer Paul Mezey (MARIA FULL OF GRACE, SUGAR) gave the keynote address at the event which was attended by more than 150 independent producers. more

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Sundance 2008 Short Film Patrol: MK12’s The History of America

mk12.jpg“Four score and seven years ago, to thine own self be true. I believe in rock n’ roll. I believe in getting high.”
- Cowman Kennedy’s infamous Gettysburg address


The Kansas City, Mo., art collective known as MK12 has been on quite a roll lately. The ingenious graphics that highlighted Will Ferrell’s routine life in Stranger Than Fiction were theirs, and Director Marc Forster utilized their animation talents again for the opening credits of his newest film, The Kite Runner. This year, Sundance spotlights their subversively fun short The History of America, which was one of 16 works chosen by New York magazine as the best online content of 2007.


A visually dynamic mix of rotoscoped live action shot against a greenscreen and the latest computer animation techniques, The History of America is not the typical sly condemnation of U.S. culture that its title might suggest, but more a hilarious celebration of distinctly American iconography. Were it not for the epic war between the cowboys (who reside in Las Vegas and work from the Cowboy Headquarters and Casino) the astronauts (who live in a space station on the moon), the U.S. may not be the great country that it is today.


This ambitious project has been about four years in the making. Before any animation processing was done, MK12 storyboarded. Then, they finished a live-action rough cut, complete with actors and set design, to see what they had. Even when the computer processing had begun, every part of the film was still hand-tweaked in some fashion. A startlingly orginal creation, it combines cutting edge slick graphic design with a worn-out third-generation print look. Read On and watch the entire film at Scene-Stealers.com

HBO Documentary Films has acquired U.S. domestic rights for Roman Polanski: Wanted and Desired

Press Release


HBO Documentary Films has acquired all US domestic rights for ROMAN POLANSKI: WANTED AND DESIRED, a documentary about the legendary director whose reputation became forever tarnished after his public conviction of unlawful sexual intercourse with a minor. The film is directed, written and produced by Marina Zenovich, executive produced by Steven Soderbergh and Randy Wooten and produced by Jeffrey Levy-Hinte and Lila Yacoub. ROMAN POLANSKI: WANTED AND DESIRED is in Documentary Competition at the 2008 Sundance Film Festival and is already a critics’ favorite. more

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The editors of Digital Content Producer and millimeter post live from the Sundance Film Festival as the news happens. Check back several times a day for the latest industry news, reports from press conferences, and product introductions.

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