Friday, September 18, 2009

Shooting with a deadline

Hey, hey, hey now, it be me with another one of these. I could take you through everyday individually but this all took place in June and I was too distracted to write in my journal(not a diary) to be exact so I'll give you a good culmination of the things that took place and the lessons you can learn from them. So get ready to get educated.

My main goal for right then besides learning everything as I go, was to get all of Yvonne's(actress) scenes shot before she had to back on tour in her musical, Spelling Bee.

So the next day, with the little sleep I had, I gathered up my non pro's and pro, got them breakfast despite the fact that I would be late meeting my DP at the location, got there and got chewed out for being late. Which I deserved.

It was supposed to be a simple scene that day since we were shooting a pool scene, makeup was not necessary and there were not many lines, but the thing was it was about to start raining so we had to rush to get the scene done.

Good thing about rain is it doesn't pick up on camera too well, so unless it's really fat rain you can shoot without it picking it up at all. The bad thing about rain is...it's rain. And worse was the fact that this rain would be on the heavy side.

The rain came and left, so we would periodically go out and film then go back inside and start over again.

With such a tight schedule we changed the following scene to an indoor scene without really sacrificing anything.

We filmed till about midnight. The next day we started all over again.

We filmed and filmed from early in the morning till about midnight. I barely even had time to feed my cast and crew, due to how much footage we had to get shot with the deadline we had.

I could also tell that my host house that we were shooting in was beginning to get a little annoyed. It's fun at first, but once you've got fifteen people walking all around your house with equipment on top of forcing you to stay in one room as quietly as possible, it takes a toll on hospitality.

One of my main duties as a director was to make sure that everyone was having a good time. When you're not handing out six figure checks to each employee you have to be resourceful and charismatic in order to keep things running smoothly.

Those two attributes come in hand with everything, from me obtaining my cast and crew, to securing the locations.

Which brings me to the final night of shooting with my actress. We shot at the movie theatre in the next town over, luckily I had gone to high school with the manager so he had no problem helping me out. It was actually a late matinee that night so it wasn't a problem staying there past 2 AM.

My DP had shot in movie theatre's before so it came out looking awesome. We had Wolverine play without sound on the projector so it would give us the authentic movie theatre lighting in addition to giving our actors something to work off of.

After a 15 hour day of shooting I drove Yvonne to the Little Rock airport two hours out of town, drove home and crashed, knowing that the toughest part was out of the way...or was it.

3 comments:

  1. Hi. I'm loving the blog by the way. Just one question. Are you going to need the rights to have Wolverine playing in your film? Or was it so out of focus in the background that it isn't going to be noticable at all?

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  2. This comment has been removed by the author.

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  3. Glad you like it. None of the angles showed the movie screen, it was just playing for lighting purposes.

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