Child of God is wrapped

Alejandro Adams‘ 5th feature, Child of God (which I did cinematography for), has finished shooting.  The film is about a theatre group in a small town that asks a local church if they can use their facility as a rehearsal and performance space.  The group’s risque, and sometimes downright raunchy, material presents a concern for the pastor and he assigns a widowed church lady to monitor their rehearsals and report back to him.  A power struggle over the show’s content ensues as the church lady attempts to join the group insisting on performing a hymn as part of their show.  [MORE TO COME about my experiences with this fine cast and crew.]

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L.A. Garifuna Film Project Week #3

Tonight we screened a portion of my film El Espíritu de mi Mamá for those unfamiliar with my work.  I took the opportunity to describe the smallness of my filmmaking process for El Espíritu, how I had shot it mostly with a crew of 2, myself on camera and one other person on sound.  I also cited that the improvisational opportunities could be greater this time around.  Although the dialogue in El Espíritu was mostly improvised, I still had to limit the takes carefully since I was shooting on 16mm film.  We will be shooting this new movie on solid state high definition video, which should give us more performance allowances.

Ruben Reyes has already written one storyline scenario that could become a part of the film.  It is about a Garifuna man who comes to New York after having previously been active in fighting for land rights in his village in Honduras.  We did a table read of sections of Ruben’s story.

Juan Martinez felt connected to the story and sang a song inspired by the reading, accompanied by drumming. 

 

At the end of the evening, GAHFU Garifuna School dance instructor Luis Martinez showed a video “Garifuna Minerva” from the New York Garifuna Celebration, in which he himself performs.  It showed a great variety of Garifuna cultural dances ranging from death rites and rituals to warrior dances.

Memories of Underexposurement: What I Gained as Cinematographer on Amity

Alejandro Adams‘ 4th feature, Amity (which I did cinematography for), finished shooting today.  The film is a day in the life of a divorced Air Force sergeant (Greg Cala) who decides to surprise his estranged daughter by showing up unannounced right before his daughter’s graduation.  She rejects him and he spends the rest of the night hanging out with the driver (Michael Uimari) of his rented limo.

The first scene we shot takes place near the end of the film where Greg has assembled an excitable group of party girls into the limo for late night existential conversation.  Lighting the inside of a packed limo at night is one kind of task.  Handholding a camera for a 64 minute continuous take is yet another.  I survived both.  Party girls, driver and passenger alike, I heard several of the actors describe acting in the limo scene as quite a vivid psychological experience.  For me, the process of doing something strenuous in a confined space for a long period of time without coming up for air can result in an enjoyable mini-trauma.  There’s an etching in my memory, not from the pain of backaches or trying to move in slow motion (have you tried that lately?), but the pain of separation loss when it’s all over and the limo empties.  Something powerful happened in there and we all shared it.  At a certain point I think we all forgot where we were, then remembered, and then wanted to forget again.  Sometimes when I’m on an airplane and everyone around me is motionless or sleeping, often this sensation suddenly comes over me:  “Wait a minute, this all seems very civilized on the surface, but I’m actually in a tin can hurdling through space!  This is crazy and dangerous!”  I want to shake the person next to me and implore them to think about the physics of what is happening.  And then I just forget about it a moment later and go back to reading Skymall.  The shooting of a scene like this is similar; at first I’m engaged for a while trying to “do a good job”, and then later I become conscious that THIS IS STILL GOING ON, and then still later I forget even what it is that’s going on, not even hearing voices properly, as I descend into an underwater wash of the experience of imagery.  It was hallucinatory, and left its mark on me.  But, the wound is only 64 minutes small; luckily they don’t make MiniDV tapes longer than that.  What’s that?  They do?  Don’t tell Alejandro.

We actually did shoot in an airplane, thanks to San Jose State University and Brandon Rose who brokered the location (he also played a sleeping passenger extra, whom I was tempted to shake), but no take was quite as long as the above in a single go. My sensations this day were of a more tactile nature, as the plane was a little dirty inside. It was also somewhat dim. I would have added more fill light but I assumed there wouldn’t be any electrical outlets in the sky so I didn’t even bring my lights. What was most notable about this day (besides the synchronicity of both cast members losing valuable personal items) was a manifestation of the “Filmdozer Effect”: the unapologetic momentum an (indie) production achieves at a certain point after it gets off the ground, wherein a confident attitude of unstoppability becomes the norm. We arrived to the aviation office early, grabbed all our equipment and started steamrolling toward the office door. Our liaison was not there yet. Who was there was an old timer electrician who was nervous about our presence because he knew nothing about it. “I really can’t let you in” he said, as he held the door open for us while we hauled equipment on past. Then he guided us to the hanger itself and unlocked another door for us, saying “I’m really sure I shouldn’t let you in here.” We did not comment and kept marching toward the plane and up the rear stairs. He tagged along with us up and into the plane, again reiterating that we couldn’t be there, yet still eerily bent to our will. After our liaison showed up, legitimizing our presence, our electrician was more at ease and hung around for a while longer recalling how he had witnessed the filming of scenes from “The Rookie” shot on the runway next to us some 20 years back.

I would have added more fill light at Alex’s 49er Inn (a sports bar in San Jose), but we were running out of time as the bar began filling up with patrons who, for a sports bar crowd, were surprisingly cooperative at keeping quiet.  But, I’d never hung out with a 9AM Sunday morning sports bar crowd before, so I don’t have a point of reference.  (I had no idea this underworld even existed.)

We also shot at a scene at Emile’s Restaurant in downtown San Jose, which proved to be engaging on several hallucinatory levels.  It’s the first time I’ve been on a film set where shooting was interrupted multiple times by a crank caller.  Once it finally dawned on us to unplug the phone, we shot with available light with the DVX cameras at f2.8.  My HPX camera is less sensitive but has a cleaner signal, so I pragmatically but surreptitiously set my camera to +3dB electronic gain to artificially sustain f2.8 alongside the other operators, crossing my fingers that any extra video noise induced would go unnoticed.  Don’t tell Alejandro.

We spent the final afternoon of shooting sweating inside an expensively cheap motel room where Greg prepares in the mirror how he will call his daughter and surprise her, while he waits for his limo driver to arrive.  In this and other scenes where he performs alone, Greg Cala shows a tremendous talent for creating fascinating character material without even speaking.  He is unrestrained in his experimentation, carefree with his anger, and transparent in his pain. 

Michael Uimari’s performance as a strong silent type was also fascinating to watch, as he provided the irritation of sensibility along with the benevolence of genuine regard.  His quietness tempts you to mentally turn up the volume, but then he gets you with a loud single blow up over Greg’s juvenile tendencies, pushing the seismographic needle off the charts.

I won’t even discuss any illegal driving maneuvers we used to get shots of Greg on his motorcycle.  Not that there were any of course.  Please don’t tell anyone.

L.A. Garifuna Film Project Week #2

At tonight’s meeting we reviewed the topics discussed earlier and voted on what topics were most interesting to us.  This is a mind map I created illustrating the topics we discussed as possibilities for a film.  The center blue and green topics were voted most interesting to us at our 2nd meeting, and other threads were placed on the periphery.

Jorge Garifuna, of GariTV, also gave a short preview of his upcoming documentary Historia de la Punta.

“I have seen CANARY twice and it has made my brain spin in uncomfortable new directions.”

says Michael Tully in review of the film at Hammer To NailCanary shows next at Fantasia International Film Festival in Montreal, July 9-17, 2009.

Carla Pauli as the Canary

The HPX170 and DVX100 Matched in Amity

Last weekend Alejandro Adams and I shot tests and actor auditions for his upcoming feature Amity, to be shot in the San Francisco Bay Area.  Alejandro has his reasons for continuing to shoot DV standard definition on what he refers to as an obsolete camera, the DVX100 (although Panasonic still manufactures it).  Always one for experimentation, Alejandro agreed to allow me to use my HPX170 (the DVX’s high definition successor) as one of the cameras on the film, even though the thought of tapeless-ness seemed to make him a little queasy. 

For what it’s worth, I did some informal tests, dropping the HPX170 to standard definition recording mode, to see how close the two cameras could match up.  My results showed they can be made to look nearly identical with minor changes to the settings.  That the successor cameras to the DVX seem to cling so closely to its same fundamental architecture, look and feel says to me there is nothing obsolete about Alejandro’s technical considerations.  For the technical (geeky?) details, click on the graphic below for a full sized image. Both cameras were set to the DV codec.

El Espíritu Vive Otra Vez

My film El Espiritu de mi Mama (which I shot, directed and edited on 16mm) screens at 2PM on April 25, 2009 at the Langston Hughes Performing Arts Center as part of the Seattle International Latino Film Festival. Information (206) 774-8373 or (206) 326.1088.

Watch the trailer!

Phil Spector is Misunderstood

With his trial ending soon, Phil wanted to break his silence and tell the world just how he feels, so he brought me into his studio to shoot this video (on HDV). 

Canary, Reviewed

One of the most talked about films at Cinequest 2009, Canary (for which I was co-cinematographer) has garnered a significant number of reviews since the premiere, many citing it as challenging and compelling, and even impossible to categorize

The film moves on to screen at Migrating Forms (migrated from the New York Underground Film Festival) on April 16, 2009 at 9:30pm at the Anthology Film Archives (32 2nd Ave, New York 10003; (646) 271-0833).

Canary World Premier at Cinequest

I’m going to San Jose to attend the Cinequest 2009 film festival. Canary, a film I did cinematography for, is having its world premiere this weekend. A dystopian sci-fi thriller, it was shot in a naturalistic style in SD on multiple DVX100’s under the direction of Alejandro Adams, a San Francisco Bay Area director. Alejandro worked without a script and often did not inform the actors what would be happening in any given scene until they showed up on set. The actors would mostly improvise in continuous takes that would last up to 30 minutes. This resulted in a lot of footage, but yielded some magical and genuine moments. Richard von Busack of Metroactive calls it ”Mysterious, elliptical, Bresson-like.” Watch the trailer at the Canary website. And see my other blog posts there!