30 November 2011

I Slept Here #60: Coupland, TX

Coupland, TX


Filmmaker Lucas McNelly is spending a year on the road, volunteering on indie film projects around the country, documenting the process and the exploring the idea of a mobile creative professional. You can see more from A Year Without Rent at the webpage. His feature-length debut is now available to rent on VOD. Follow him on Twitter: @lmcnelly.

29 November 2011

I Slept Here #59: Mt. Ida, AR

Mt. Ida, AR


Filmmaker Lucas McNelly is spending a year on the road, volunteering on indie film projects around the country, documenting the process and the exploring the idea of a mobile creative professional. You can see more from A Year Without Rent at the webpage. His feature-length debut is now available to rent on VOD. Follow him on Twitter: @lmcnelly.

28 November 2011

I Slept Here #58: Mt. Ida, AR

Mt. Ida, AR


Filmmaker Lucas McNelly is spending a year on the road, volunteering on indie film projects around the country, documenting the process and the exploring the idea of a mobile creative professional. You can see more from A Year Without Rent at the webpage. His feature-length debut is now available to rent on VOD. Follow him on Twitter: @lmcnelly.

23 November 2011

5-0

We've had no wifi in days (and just drove 25 minutes to find some) and I've had no time to write a new update, but...

On day 4 of BEST FRIENDS FOREVER, the Sheriff said not to film until he came back.

So:





Filmmaker Lucas McNelly is spending a year on the road, volunteering on indie film projects around the country, documenting the process and the exploring the idea of a mobile creative professional. You can see more from A Year Without Rent at the webpage. His feature-length debut is now available to rent on VOD. Follow him on Twitter: @lmcnelly.

Scripts

Last night, Marty Lang and Damian Dydyn got to work and came up with an outline. Yes a whole outline. Already.

And I think if we're really going to do this, it's important to show people as much of the process as possible, so what we've decided to do is put the draft of the script online for your reading pleasure. That way, people can see how it changes over time and offer suggestions, because I'm sure we're not thinking of everything. The first version is up now. The 2nd version too.

Thoughts? Put them in the comments. But remember that AYWR doesn't publish anonymous comments, so keep that in mind.

I'm supposed to add: by commenting below you understand that your ideas may or may not be used in the final film. The amount used is up to our complete discretion. As is any credit given or withheld in any medium. You acknowledge that you are contributing without any promise of payment. So don't fucking sue anyone.


Draft 1 (Oct 1)

Draft 2 (Oct 1)

Draft 3 (Oct 1)

Draft 4 (Oct 2)

Draft 5 (Oct 2)

Draft 6 (Oct 3)

Draft 6, with notes from yours truly (Oct 28)

Draft 7 (Nov 23)

Draft 8 (Dec 15)



Filmmaker Lucas McNelly is spending a year on the road, volunteering on indie film projects around the country, documenting the process and the exploring the idea of a mobile creative professional. You can see more from A Year Without Rent at the webpage. His feature-length debut is now available to rent on VOD. Follow him on Twitter: @lmcnelly.

19 November 2011

With Our Powers Combined!



Well that was easy.

Well maybe not easy. Let's say it was "less hard".

Call today for BEST FRIENDS FOREVER was 3pm out on the desolate highways of Marfa, TX. Depending on where you're standing in Marfa, you either have 1 bar of cell reception or zero. Data is just as sketchy. Even if you have reception, it might not work. So for the last 10 hours of the "Save AYWR" Kickstarter campaign, I was more or less of a digital black hole.

But I was getting text messages. Lots of them from Wonder Russell, seemingly with every new backer.

Around 4pm, Brea walked over to ask how the campaign was going. I told her it was about $500 away, which was nothing. Last time we we're something like $5k away at the same point.

And then, around 5:30pm we had a company move. The text messages stopped. I couldn't get the Twitter app on my phone to work.

We took the grip truck to the production house to drop off the picture car, where I can usually get service. Nothing. Off to the next location--another desolate road on the other side of Marfa. Nothing.

Then, an hour and a half later, there were suddenly text messages from 12 different people on my phone. That could only mean one thing. Victory!

I put my phone away and went back to work helping set up the 12x8 frame and running stingers back and forth from the generator.

There was still a movie to make.

*****

It's kind of fitting, really, that I would be so absent for the final push. A Year Without Rent was always conceived as a project for the indie film community, the "Film Courage community", as Sean Hackett likes to call it. The thinking was that if it could, in any way, bridge that digital divide between people flung all around the world, we'd all be better for it. I think that in a lot of ways, this campaign shows that we've accomplished a little bit of that.

The campaign stems from a week back a couple months ago where I gave Victoria Westcott a ride from Seattle to LA to speak on a couple of panels on crowdfunding. There's this perception of what AYWR is on the ground, I'm sure. Hell, I had very different ideas about what my day-to-day life would be. Maybe it looks more glamorous on the internet. Working on a Matthew Lillard film! Filming in the desert outside LA! Lunch with David & Karen! Drinks with Wonder Russell! Hobnobbing with KingisaFink!

It's kind of a grind, though.

Maybe it was the 8 hour drive on the first day. Maybe it was the fact that I hadn't eaten in a day and a half when I picked Victoria up. Or maybe it was the 6 different steps it took to save $10 on a hotel room, culminating with sitting outside a McDonald's in a small town in Oregon, stealing their wifi. But somewhere in the first day, she came to the conclusion that it was pretty ridiculous.

So she put this on her back. I gave her a list of people to contact and she did the rest. It took Marty Lang about 5 seconds to get on board. Sean Hackett too. I was there for those parts. And then I went back to work, counting on karma and a film community I'd managed to help as much as I could to make sure I didn't get stranded in Iowa with $3 in my pocket.

Everyone involved did a fantastic job. I'm more or less blown away by the response. I've gotten a few messages from Gregory Bayne commenting on how the campaign is a testament to the impact of AYWR. I think it's a testament to the collective power of a community of people who've decided to take matters into their own hands.

Speaking of which, Mr. Bayne has a Kickstarter campaign running for his newest project. I know he'd really appreciate your support.




Filmmaker Lucas McNelly is spending a year on the road, volunteering on indie film projects around the country, documenting the process and the exploring the idea of a mobile creative professional. You can see more from A Year Without Rent at the webpage. His feature-length debut is now available to rent on VOD. Follow him on Twitter: @lmcnelly.

17 November 2011

Brea Grant on AYWR

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Video not loading? Click here.




Filmmaker Lucas McNelly is spending a year on the road, volunteering on indie film projects around the country, documenting the process and the exploring the idea of a mobile creative professional. You can see more from A Year Without Rent at the webpage. His feature-length debut is now available to rent on VOD. Follow him on Twitter: @lmcnelly.

16 November 2011

Day 3 of Kris & Lindy Boustedt's THIS IS OURS



When you show up for the final couple of days of a feature film, you run into one of two situations. Either the production owes 10 pages and is in an absolute state of panic, or they're on schedule and pretty much stuff is just winding down. The former is pretty damned entertaining, but the latter is a lot less stressful.



THIS IS OURS is the latter. Bad for page views. Good for the final product.



Spend enough time on film sets and you can pretty quickly figure out the chaotic ones from the organized. People know where they should be. There's a sense of calm, of serenity (if that's possible), that infuses everything. Everything just sort of clips along at a steady pace.

Today's the final day for THIS IS OURS, and the bulk of it revolves around a scene next to the RV parked in the driveway. Plus, there's a stunt.



The scene is primarily between our two male leads, an argument that turns violent. For obvious reasons, I won't get into specifics, but basically it involves one character getting the shit beat out of him with the cricket bat we used the day before on the golf course. Sure, you can try and use the same cricket bat to hit golf balls and beat up an actor, but actors tend to be fussy about such things, no matter how many times you assure them that Brando totally would have done it. And clearly, you can't hit golf balls very far with a bat soft enough to hit anyone, although considering how far they actual did fly, that probably wasn't something to worry about.



Basically, you have to have two cricket bats--a real one and a foam one. That way you can accomplish both objectives. But where does one even get a cricket bat, much less a foam one? I haven't a clue. I'm guessing the internet? Which is probably why they only sort of match. The foam bat is at least 4 inches longer than the wooden one and the painting isn't the same. But that's kind of one of the great secrets about film props--it won't matter. They're in different scenes. The mind of an audience, having seen a cricket bat established earlier in the film, will pretty much fill in the gaps of any subsequent cricket bat they see later in the film and assume it to be the same one, assuming it's even remotely close. Think of it like a type of optical illusion. The mind, in a lot of ways, sees what it wants to see, assuming you let it. Switch something out mid-scene and you have to be damned close. Do it a couple of scenes later and the audience will make the connection without even realize they're doing it.



So we beat the shit out of Ernie. But even a foam bat has some weight to it. After a couple of takes, he's sufficiently bruised and in a little bit of pain. So for the reverse, Kris steps in to take the punishment. We shoot it, then Mark and Wonder jump in the RV, gun it up the hill and onto the road.



And that's a wrap on THIS IS OURS.



But that's not everything. The cast and crew has been living in this house for two weeks, so the next day, some of us (including a very hung over Marco Scaringi) have the task of cleaning out the house. It's just mountains of garbage, as this house doesn't do garbage pickup. So we empty the AYWR vehicle and use that to ferry garbage from the house to a nearby dumpster. We then clean the house, pack as much gear as humanly possible into the RV, and hit the road back to Seattle.







Filmmaker Lucas McNelly is spending a year on the road, volunteering on indie film projects around the country, documenting the process and the exploring the idea of a mobile creative professional. You can see more from A Year Without Rent at the webpage. His feature-length debut is now available to rent on VOD. Follow him on Twitter: @lmcnelly.

15 November 2011

Marfa

We're on set with Brea Grant's debut feature BEST FRIENDS FOREVER. There's very little wifi and even less cell phone reception, but we'll get some photos up very soon. For now, this shall have to tide you over.













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And this is the car from WAYNE'S WORLD. Not the same model. THE. ACTUAL. CAR.

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Filmmaker Lucas McNelly is spending a year on the road, volunteering on indie film projects around the country, documenting the process and the exploring the idea of a mobile creative professional. You can see more from A Year Without Rent at the webpage. His feature-length debut is now available to rent on VOD. Follow him on Twitter: @lmcnelly.

10 November 2011

So Awesome

Over at the community-sourced Kickstarter campaign, Victoria Westcott and Marty Lang have been forcing convincing people to write blog posts and record videos about why they support A Year Without Rent.

Today was a travel day to Marfa, TX (which is where they shot THERE WILL BE BLOOD and NO COUNTRY FOR OLD MEN), and my phone blew up twice.

First, there were these kind words from MJ Slide:

Hey all, it's MJ Slide, 19 year old filmmaker and screenwriter, and a proud backer of A Year Without Rent - Thanksgiving. The fantastic Marty Lang asked me to say a few words about why I decided to put my money where my mouth is and back this sucker and I was more then happy to oblige. I feel like the vast majority of the gung-ho spirit that drives the success of certain indie films comes from the underlying idea that worthwhile endeavors require doing hard sh*t. I think it would be safe to say Lucas's undertaking of AYWR fits that criteria quite well. I've followed his journey, from the amazing come-behind win that his initial Kickstarter campaign was, through all the learning experiences, frustrations of some productions not "getting their sh*t together" and sleeping on random people's couches. It's been a very wacky ride.

To put it simply, in my eyes, he's dealt with all of the above to bring the Indie Film community closer together. Call me an idealist, but I truly believe that. I dig crazy people who go all out to help others and bring to light projects that deserve support. AYWR has done that and more. Lucas won't be at my table for Thanksgiving, but that doesn't mean I can't share some holiday cheer in the form of fundage. I'm not wealthy by any means (think shift leader paycheck at a small ice cream shop) but I gave what I could and unashamedly so. I want Lucas to succeed, and as much I want him to complete this journey for himself, I also want him to continue so we can all see what other wonderful films gain a spotlight because of his willingness to give up a whole year of his life. Cheers to you Lucas, and to every last person who backs this campaign.

I've been following MJ since she was 17, making films on her own in South Carolina. She's incredibly motivated, and I'm trying to figure out how I can get from Texas to SC in just over a day for her next film.

Then, came this video from editor Lee Rothenflue. It's fantastic. Really funny stuff. Just watch it.

Why I supported A Year Without Rent Project from eleven72 on Vimeo.


The update section of the campaign is full of these, with posts from Richard Jones, Charles Simons, Marty Lang, and more. It's really cool. Sometimes, when you're on the road like this, you kind of get the feeling that you're shouting into the wind, so to have the wind shout back is really, really something.

The whole thing it's just, it's fantastic. Check it out.





Filmmaker Lucas McNelly is spending a year on the road, volunteering on indie film projects around the country, documenting the process and the exploring the idea of a mobile creative professional. You can see more from A Year Without Rent at the webpage. His feature-length debut is now available to rent on VOD. Follow him on Twitter: @lmcnelly.

08 November 2011

Houser



It early morning on the set of THIS IS OURS. Coffee. Eggs. Bacon. Bagels. All in all one of the better micro-budget film breakfast spreads. I'm not really awake when the DP, Jonathan Houser, asks me if I want a code for this iPhone app called Storyboard Composer. It takes me a second before I realize that I already have the app. I bought it long ago, when I first got my iPhone 3G. I remember it being the first app I actually spent money on, and it's still the one I've spent the most on.

It wasn't even that hard of a decision.

download2


Basically what the app does is build storyboards using the camera in your iPhone. You take pictures, import them, and add whatever you need to the image to create the storyboard. Direction, movement, people, whatever. Put it in a Quicktime video with the proper pacing, export it to PDF, and there's your pre-visualization all finished.

download1


The concept isn't all that complicated, one of those "why hasn't anyone else thought of this already?" sort of things. If you watch the DVD extras for AMELIE, you'll see Jean-Pierre Jeunet essentially doing the same thing. This app is a natural extension of that.



But wait, why does Houser have codes for a free copy of it?

Because he created the fucking thing. It's his app.

Really, this shouldn't be all that surprising. Innovation in film processes is always driven by filmmakers who see a need they can fill, something that they possess the skills to make more efficient. This is how grip equipment gets invented. Hell, it's how Kit Boyer ended up putting a plunger on a RED lens earlier in the shoot. It stands to reason that a filmmaker would be behind something like a storyboarding app, but even then you assume it's a filmmaker working for someone like Avid or Apple who came up with idea, someone who makes films on the side. Not a filmmaker who gets steady work in the field.

But here the creator is, sitting in a crowded kitchen in Plain, Washington, working on a micro budget feature. It's kind of weird.

After the shoot, we meet up for drinks in Seattle. Houser tells me some of what they've got planned for future versions of the app--an iPad version, syncing with various other things you use in pre-production--but mostly we talk about how people use it both in pre-production and production. A lot of filmmakers will keep it on their phone and only use it for more complicated scenes. Others will use it for everything. My favorite use that I hadn't considered? Using it in conjunction with your script supervisor. Take a picture of the monitor for every shot of a scene. Load them into the app, then play it back before you move on, if for no other reason than to make sure what you just shot cuts together. It's a hell of a lot easier than going back to that location, or re-setting all those lights. Or worse: getting all your actors back a month after you wrap for re-shoots. It's not even extra gear to carry around.

And then who walks into the bar? Wonder Russell. Sometimes the indie film world is bigger than we think. And sometimes it's a lot smaller.

Check out the app for yourself:

mzl.orkagypj




Filmmaker Lucas McNelly is spending a year on the road, volunteering on indie film projects around the country, documenting the process and the exploring the idea of a mobile creative professional. You can see more from A Year Without Rent at the webpage. His feature-length debut is now available to rent on VOD. Follow him on Twitter: @lmcnelly.








07 November 2011

Day 2 of Kris & Lindy Boustedt's THIS IS OURS



The story of THIS IS OURS (as I understand it, not having read the script) revolves around 2 couples. The first, played by Ernie Joseph and Karie Gonia, are cultured and monied and established. The second, played by Mark Carr and Wonder Russell, are freewheeling in pretty much every way. They live out of an RV.

Today we're filming their introduction.



It's pretty simple. Ernie Joseph's character goes out for a run. He overdoes it, and gets rescued by Mark and Wonder in the RV. Easy. All we've really got to do is find a spot to shoot it on the roads near our home base. And since the woods are the woods, we pretty much have our choice of the back roads around here, which is all of them. Really, there's only 2 considerations: traffic and a place nearby to turn around the RV.

My thought is to send someone (i.e. me) down the road out of frame, to hold up traffic while the camera is rolling. It's the sort of thing you can get away with on a rural road, as you're really only stopping one or two cars at a time, and only for a minute or two. People are generally pretty understanding. We did this, for example, on THE SUMMER HOME and no one got hurt. But apparently, they've already tried it on this shoot and, well, let's just say they can't do it again.

So I guess the lesson there is, you might only get one chance on your shoot to break the law. Use it wisely.





The second issue is a little more practical. You can see from the pictures that these road are somewhat narrow with lots of really big trees on the side. An RV doesn't have a good turning radius. So you can just drive the RV past the frame, then turn around and do it again. Nor can you easily back it up like you could a car. So you need to find a spot where you can turn around easily and quickly in both directions, while still having the proper length of road for the wide shot.



We find it, sort of, and shoot the wide. But traffic is picking up, so we move to a different spot for the remainder of the scene (woods look like woods), which goes off without a hitch.



Then it's back to the cabin to shoot a scene with the RV in Ernie and Karie's driveway. It's not a complicated scene, in terms of blocking, but the light is too harsh. There's really no other place to put this vehicle, and it's kind of white, so the sun is bouncing off it and washing out pretty much everything. So DP Jonathan Houser naturally wants to put up some silks to cut down as much of the light as possible.

Enter Kit Boyer.

Kit stacks two silks in the same gobo head, which solves most of the problem, then throws up some frost. Only, the wind is creating too much noise (a silk is naturally quiet, but the frost make a crinkly sound), so Kit threads two bungee cords through an empty water bottle, which creates enough tension in the frost to cut down nearly all the noise. It works.



If you remember all the way back to yesterday, there was a discussion between Kris and Houser about how to shoot something on the golf course. Here's the scene:



Ernie and Mark are at a tee box, hitting balls. Ernie is dressed in business casual wear, hitting balls off a tee with a driver. You know, like you should. But Mark is dressed like someone about to head to a Phish concert. Oh, and he's hitting the balls with a cricket bat. Yes, a cricket bat.



You'd think that hitting a golf ball with a cricket bat is a pretty inexact science, and you'd be right. Most of the shots are veering very quickly to the right, in the direction of the houses just off the fairway. This begs the obvious question of whether or not we're going to break a window. We can't afford to break a window. We can't stop the scene, nor can we control the shots--at all. It's a short discussion, but it goes something like this: If you live close to a golf course, you have to assume that your window is in danger of being smashed. So, you either have that factored into your cost of living, or (and this seems more likely) you've got windows that can withstand a golf ball traveling at high speeds.



This seems logical.

Nothing breaks, and after a bit Mark starts to get better at sending the ball down the fairway. As the sun starts to go down, I grab the bucket and amble down the fairway to collect all the balls.

In the end, it turns out he never even got close to the houses.






Filmmaker Lucas McNelly is spending a year on the road, volunteering on indie film projects around the country, documenting the process and the exploring the idea of a mobile creative professional. You can see more from A Year Without Rent at the webpage. His feature-length debut is now available to rent on VOD. Follow him on Twitter: @lmcnelly.

06 November 2011

A Side Project

I've had very little wifi the last couple of days, so I've been working on a side project for our past films. Here's a look:

FAT KID

FLYWAY

FAVOR

this is ours


THIS IS OURS, by the way, is in the middle of a Kickstarter campaign. Check it out (see what I did there?)







Filmmaker Lucas McNelly is spending a year on the road, volunteering on indie film projects around the country, documenting the process and the exploring the idea of a mobile creative professional. You can see more from A Year Without Rent at the webpage. His feature-length debut is now available to rent on VOD. Follow him on Twitter: @lmcnelly.