Archive for the ‘Film writing’ Category

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Oh So Pleasant

January 29, 2010

Harvey and I Sit in Bars

Harvey and I sit in the bars… have a drink or two… play the juke box. And soon the faces of all the other people they turn toward mine and they smile. And they’re saying, “We don’t know your name, mister, but you’re a very nice fella.” Harvey and I warm ourselves in all these golden moments. We’ve entered as strangers – soon we have friends. And they come over… and they sit with us… and they drink with us… and they talk to us. They tell about the big terrible things they’ve done and the big wonderful things they’ll do. Their hopes, and their regrets, and their loves, and their hates. All very large, because nobody ever brings anything small into a bar. And then I introduce them to Harvey… and he’s bigger and grander than anything they offer me. And when they leave, they leave impressed. The same people seldom come back; but that’s envy, my dear. There’s a little bit of envy in the best of us.

I love Harvey. It might just be my favourite film. Sure its take on mental illness has errr, well, a special kind of cookie cutter schmaltz, but with every viewing the truth of Harvey, the giant rabbit comes into sharper focus.

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I Heart Baby Directors

January 27, 2010

Which is why, for the last couple of months I’ve been working on the Young Director Award blog with comrade and ex-boss Lyndy Stout. It’s a platform for newbie filmmakers to put on their prettiest frocks, tie their hair up in ringlets and show off. We’ve also got a few established music video and commercial filmmakers to offer their own words of advice, starting off with Tony Kaye which was.. er.. interesting.

Anyway, here are a couple of my favourite films:

Sam Wall: You Know Too Much

Jean Julien Pous – Seeking You

To view the blog go to http://youngdirectoraward.wordpress.com/

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Hero Worship – interviewing Zhang Yimou

November 6, 2009

Now I’ve interviewed a few directors over the past two or three years, Bafta winners and everything, but – amazing and talented though a lot of them are – until today I don’t think any of them could be described as a personal hero. Zhang Yimou – also the director of Hero. Coincidentally.

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Neill Blomkamp – Evolution of a Director

September 2, 2009

LWLies | 01.09.09

He dropped from the sky, naked, marched into a bar and demanded ‘your clothes, your boots and your motorcycle.’ A traceless robot visitor from the not too distant future, here to create alien-inspired feature films with a grimy CG style.

Judging by much of the mainstream coverage, District 9 director Neill Blomkamp seems to have arrived onto the film scene from nowhere, with nothing but some vague fallen-through Halo project to his name.

In fact, the South African-born director who studied at the Vancouver Film School, spent the late ’90s honing his craft as a 3D animator on the likes of Stargate and Smallville. And for the last few years, Blomkamp has, in fact, been building a name for himself as a heavyweight commercials director….

To read the rest of the blog – which has lots of exciting embedded youtube clips to accompany the witticisms and insight – click here.

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Purchase Brothers

August 25, 2009

In the latest issue of shots, I interview The Purchase Brothers. They’re the sibling directing team shot to fame with their digital film experiments ‘Coke Babies’ and the hugely successful Half Life-inspired Escape from City 17.

Brothers in Arms

Brothers in Arms

Check out the story here: http://tinyurl.com/purchbros

Escape from City 17:

Coke Babies:

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Trailer Trashed – Little White Lies feature

August 18, 2009

Many moons ago I wrote a feature for Little White Lies on movie trailer mash ups.  Not  your bog standard ‘check this cool shit out’ kinda thing, but there was a bit of history, interviews and everything – including the head of the AICE (US editors association), Addictive TV and Luciane Piane who remixed *that* Christian Bale rant.

Trailer Trashed

Trailer Trashed

Anyway, just found it on Little White Lies’ Issuu page  here: http://tinyurl.com/trailertrashed

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Lance Acord on Where the Wild Things Are

August 17, 2009

lance acord on where the wild things are

(an interview I did a couple of weeks ago for www.shots.net)

5 August 2009

shots runs wild with the Hollywood DP and Park Pictures director Lance Acord

“And now,” cried Max, “let the wild rumpus start!”
After years of delay and rumour, Spike Jonze’s adaptation of Maurice Sendak’s 1963 classic storybook Where The Wild Things Are is finally ready to hit the big screen. Wearing his cinematographer hat, Lance Acord was part of the team who spent the best part of 2006 bringing Sendak’s ten sentence story to life.
Originally due to be released by Universal in the early noughties, director Jonze took the project to Warner Bros and by 2008 gossip-pedlars were spuriously claiming that the whole film was to be re-shot.
And the end product of this long and arduous process looks set to be a finely crafted piece of fantasy; dreamlike, raw and shamanistic. The trailer that leaked online earlier in the year revealed the naturally lit beasts – evocative of a nature documentary and 80s fantasy film in equal measure.
According to Acord, the main inspiration for this distinctive look – which runs counter to the elaborate CGI slickness that overpowers most kids’ films these days – was the humble wildlife documentary. This involved using natural light wherever possible, handheld cameras and low coverage – fewer cameras and plenty of wide shots and group shots. The stunning south Australian countryside provided the suitably wild backdrop but where the nature documentarian cares only about getting the all-important shot of a rare animal, Acord also had things like continuity, plot and dialogue to consider.
“When you take a wildlife documentary as an example, it’s really made up of moments; a moment when a creature comes out of the woods to drink water from a stream; a moment when two creatures are playing or fighting. All you really need to do is put the camera on it for that instant, you’re not having to deal with the larger challenges of continuity or the screen time it takes to shoot an entire scene. We always wanted to be open to the lighting possibilities and the weather that the day afforded – it could be rain it could be wind. All these different things that you encounter we wanted to incorporate into the film, in keeping with our approach.”
One particular influence was Werner Herzog’s film Grizzly Man, which played out the relationship between man and beast as well as giving Acord a few ideas about more technical aspects such as lensing.
But when you’re working from a source material as beautifully illustrated and emotionally resonant as Where The Wild Things Are, finding inspiration isn’t too difficult. Like many Americans, Acord’s relationship with the book is a profound one that goes back to his childhood.
“I grew up with that book. Where The Wild Things Are and In The Night Kitchen [another Maurice Sendak picture book, this time about a naked boy who gets baked into a cake] were really important to me, the illustrative style of both those books was an integral part of growing up for me, ” he explains. “My parents were quite young, it was the early 70s, and in the US there was that kind of hippy culture. Younger families really embraced the work of Sendak because it always had that slightly trippy quality to it and the structure of the stories was quite open ended.”
And Acord says that this open-ended structure and dreamlike quality has been respected by Jonze and his writing partner Dave Eggers, who have resisted the temptation to pin down the free floating narrative with tacky, tacked-on plot tricks. “They were very respectful to the intelligence of the kids who would see this film and trust that they would find something in it that they would connect with without having to include devices like a treasure chest and all that crap. It’s playing up to your audience rather than playing down to it.”
Elsewhere in the film, Jonze and the team have shown faith in their young audiences by electing to forego de riguer CG characters in favour of large, hairy puppets and bodysuits. “Younger audiences really respond to the tactile element of the puppets. There’s something really special about them that CG characters can never really quite capture,” says Acord.
Max Records, who plays the main character Max, was an untrained non-actor, spotted by Jonze in Portland and having the gigantic Wild Things on set to jump on, play with and climb over meant that Records’ reactions and interactions would be as real and believable as possible.
The body suits and animatronics used to create the beasts were built by The Jim Henson Company – a driving force behind the 1980s puppet-heavy fantasy films such as Dark Crystal and Labyrinth. “These films were definitely something Spike grew up with but I don’t think there was any film in particular that would be a reference for the film. I think if anything he wanted to reinvent the way you could work with live action puppets, do it in a way that hadn’t been done before.”
Forrest Whitaker and James Gandolfini were among the cast voicing the Wild Things. Their performances were filmed – complete with blocking and props – and Jonze and editor Eric Zumbrunnen cut the tapes together to create a skeleton edit of the film. The Australian actors inside the suits were then given the tapes to study, to improve the nuances of their performances.
And the giant creatures weren’t the only wild things on-set. Given the length of the eight month shoot, many members of the crew (including Acord) moved their families down to southern Australia for the duration. The children all attended a local Australian school and in the afternoons, they were encouraged to hang out around the set. “Max was the same age as a lot of our kids, and he got breaks on set to play with them. With all the different things going on on-set it’s a lot of fun for kids. It was really good for Max. If we were having a hard time getting a scene – and it’s really tough for a kid to deliver these performances day in, day out – you could tell he jest needed a break. He could just go and run wild with the rest of the kids.”
Since moving back to the States, Acord has been working mainly on directing commercials, although he is currently developing his own feature projects through Park Pictures. Acord is one of those fortunate few who can move easily between commercials and feature films and he reckons that working in commercials gives him the freedom to work on none but the most creatively fulfilling movies. In the past he has been cinematographer on films like Lost In Translation and Adaptation. “I would much rather do commercials than do a really commercial film.”
Where The Wild Things Are is set to premier on October 16, 2009
For more information and background on the film, check out the official production blog <A TARGET=”NEW” HREF=”http://www.weloveyouso.com”>www.weloveyouso.com
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“And now,” cried Max, “let the wild rumpus start!”

After years of delay and rumour, Spike Jonze’s adaptation of Maurice Sendak’s 1963 classic storybook Where The Wild Things Are is finally ready to hit the big screen. Wearing his cinematographer hat, Lance Acord was part of the team who spent the best part of 2006 bringing Sendak’s ten sentence story to life.

Read the rest of this entry ?