Saturday, July 11, 2009

A FILM IN 48 HOURS: The Making of TURN THE OTHER CHEEK Part 1


6/26/09

Today is the first day of the 48 Hour Film Competition in Atlanta, Georgia and even though I’ve known many people who have participated in the event in the past, this will be the first year I participate. On a whim I decided to be the lighting designer for the Interstate Films production team being lead by Ondie Daniel and Gary Hamrick, Jr. both of whom I am currently working with on the vampire anthology film Last Call.
This being my first competition I don’t want to work too hard i truth be told this experience will dictate whether I ever do another one again.
Today is Friday, June 26th, 2009 and the production crew will get all the competition specifics in order to begin production on the competition film. This includes picking a genre, getting a character, a particular prop, and receiving a phrase that all needs to be incorporated into the film in order to qualify.
I’m not part of the writers group of what so much will happen on the first day. I show up to meet & greet everyone else on the team. The writer’s council takes place at the condo of Luisa Casas, who is an actor in the film and a co-editor on the production.
In what can be called the recreational room of Casas’ condo complex, Daniel and Hamrick gather together the writers in order to hammer out a script as soon as possible. Because the nature of the competition is to write, shoot, and edit a complete film in 48 hours we are not going to wait for anything. The sooner we have a script, the sooner we cab begin filming.
The group lucks out by getting comedy as the genre as that seems to be the writers’ greatest strengths. A rough draft of the script is quickly put together long before I arrive.
Due to some financial difficulties and having to run all over Georgia not only for equipment (located in Peachtree City from a fellow filmmaker who is letting me get a hold of his HDV camera for the film shoot) but to acquire the money to even be able to do the film, I don’t make it to the location until close to 10pm at night which ends up being fine since I walk in just as the production crew and cast are about to take a production photo.
When I arrive I can tell the group that Daniel & Hamrick has put together is a good one as I see the camaraderie coming through in the pix that are taken. This just makes me believe that I have chosen a good group of people to do my first 48 Hour production with.
After taking the group photo (which is during a break from writing the screenplay), I meet a few of the people involved with the production (even though many are leaving since it is decided we are not going to be doing any filming tonight).
I stay in order to talk through a possible shot list with the director once the script is finalized. This is not going to happen as Hamrick (who is slated to be director) steps down in order to let Jim Adams be director on the project. Hamrick has no problems stepping down as he has very little experience in the comedy genre unlike Adams. While Adams and Hamrick and Daniel help finalize the script, I spend most of my time discussing the whole process with Casas.
This being my first production away from Southlan-Films or CenterSeat Entertainment I want to get the lay of the land. Speaking with Casas leads me to the conclusion that many people working on this production are filmmakers just wanting to network and do what they love to do regardless of the hardships of indie film production. None of us are getting paid and we are all there because we want to be, not because we have to be.
This puts everything in perspective for me as it has been a long time since I’ve participated in a project in which I am not the production manager, producer, or someone in charge of every little aspect of the production.
I can actually sit back and enjoy myself for once. Enjoy the reason why I got into filmmaking in the first place. I enjoy that evening (even if I don’t end up leaving until close to 2:00 am in the morning) and it remind me that filmmaking can be fun.

With a finished script in hand we are ready to begin production on our short film Turn The Other Cheek at 8:00 am in the morning at our first location – a Mexican Restaurant.
Much fun will be had.

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