30 June 2012

Le bois par suite des arbres


La Femme du Vème (The woman in the Fifth)

Crit
Oh, of course: it's a roman numeral, and we're talking arrondissements; that was a puzzler for me until right before the film started.

What a delightfully dark, enigmatic, odd piece of work: American writer/English professor (Ethan Hawke, typecast) comes to Paris to reconnect with his 6-year-old daughter after some unspecified Bad Event has cost him his marriage and, apparently, some time in an institution either penal or psychiatric, depending on whose story you believe. His ex-wife is unsympathetic to his plight, but the Romanian-French translator widow of a Hungarian novelist (Kristin Scott Thomas) is not, and neither is the Polish waitress (Joanna Kulig, of whom let's see more, please) at the café/pension whose owner extends him credit but then forces him to participate in a mysterious but clearly sketchy enterprise.

And then things get weird, like Poe via Hitchcock. Or maybe Coover, as it finally seems to be a narrative about narrative, which probably explains why a lot of people on Rotten Tomatoes hate it but I quite liked it.

29 June 2012

Simian I am


Monkeybone

(2001)
An amusing enough film with good special effects and some spectacular physical comedy by Chris Kattan but ultimately a fairly unimaginative treatment of the id-superego battle at its center. Three times is enough for me; somebody else's turn.

Small change

Moonrise Kingdom

Crit
OK, maybe someone besides Shakespeare has done underage love better, but not this year. This is beautiful without being pretty, sweet without making your teeth hurt, innocent but not ignorant, blithely unconcerned with realism but grounded in its own reality--and equally comfortable with Benjamin Britten or Hank Williams carrying the soundtrack. Cinematic virgins Jared Gilman and Kara Hayward are--and I know I use this adjective too much--perfect as the star-crossed 12-year-olds Sam and Suzy, and among Wes Anderson's usual suspects and happy first-timers, Bruce Willis deserves special mention for giving us all his customary charm and none of his customary smarm.

Moreover, since I can never again watch movies the way I used to, I have to rave about the camerawork (Robert D. Yeoman, DP for all of Anderson's live-action films), most notably the opening 360-degree pan that both paints the inside of the island house of one of the young lovers and establishes the tone and mood of the whole narrative.

Favorite film of the year so far? Yeah, I think I'll say that.
Trailers
  • The Great Gatsby--Baz brings a thrilling Deco look to the story, but the trailer suggests that he's not much interested in Fitzgerald's language, which is disturbing. I'm open-minded but leery.
  • Argo--It's Wag the Dog in reverse: in order to spirit 6 escaped hostages out of Iran, American intelligence stages a fake movie. Based on actual events, they say.
  • Lawless--Another great-looking one, with Depression-era moonshiners battling nasty, corrupt cops.

26 June 2012

Scary rearview


Scary Normal postmortem

So that happened.

Yesterday the director and the DP reviewed all the footage and the script supervisor jotted down a few continuity notes, but as of today the baby is pretty much in the care of the editor and the sound designer. I'm much less sad than I was a day ago, though still pretty empty-nesty. At the same time, I'm ready to get back to Mets games, and to Philip Roth, and to the Times crossword puzzle (well, OK, I've done most of the past 20 days' puzzles, but on a catch-as-catch-can basis rather than as part of a daily routine).

And I suppose I'm ready to get back to my day job--or if I'm not ready, I'd better get ready pretty quickly, as I'll be at my desk in less than 48 hours. And I can't deny that I'm better suited for and more skilled at that job than at the one I've been performing the past 3 weeks. As eager as I am to see the finished (or even rough cut) film, I am trepidatious about the inevitable forehead-slapping continuity errors--how many will there be?

Apart from that, though, I am as happy with the experience, and with the film we made, as I could possibly be. As I've probably said before, my expectations were high and were far exceeded by the actuality. And leaving the cast and crew behind will leave a hole in my heart the like of which I never would have imagined. That the screenwriter could produce a script filled with smart language and real people was no surprise--I've known for a long time that she can do words. But how did a first-time director manage to put together such a professional group of (mostly) young people on both sides of the camera? "Professional" in the sense of their approach to the work, that is--with a budget of {mumble} thousand dollars, she couldn't afford to pay anyone what he or she was worth, but it's hard to imagine a better film being made for that kind of money.

Proud, happy, enormously impressed, eager to see the results, and ready to commit to the next project in advance--and I'll be better at my job next time, I promise.

25 June 2012

Scary wrap


Day 18, and there is no more set of Scary Normal

PPD, and it wasn't even my uterus. We wrapped last night with the final scene in the film, a raucous celebration that was stressful and exhausting for everyone involved and kept us going until past 1:30 a.m. I hope to be able to say something worthwhile later, but right now I have sufficient energy only to write that this is good, very good, I believe.

23 June 2012

Scary interviews


Not on the set of Scary Normal, but rather at the director's house, where there is Tanqueray, and tonic, and limes

Gin-soaked excerpts from cast & crew interviews . . .
Cheeseblab: Laura, today’s scene was brutally emotional, and you had to perform it repeatedly. Were you ever tempted to grab the knife from the other scene and kill everyone else on the set?
Laura Anne Welle: No; however, I really did want to make Finn [Dallas, who played her character's brother, so it's really not as mean as it sounds] cry.
OK, that was uncomfortable . . .
CB: Sean, did you intentionally time the halts for sound issues to coincide with the emotional zeniths of Laura's lines?
Sean Whitsitt: No, it had to do with my gas, probably.
Yeah, OK, that makes sense . . .
CB: Kyle, as an award-winning producer, what’s it like to have to take orders from a first-time director?
Kyle Loughrin: Jen and I have talked about how she’s mostly done theater work, and I’ve done only film. There's an interesting contrast between her knowing how to deal with actors and my ability to use the camera--I can’t deal with actors. I don’t want to deal with people at all.
Yes! That's what I'm talkin' about! . . .
CB: Boss, you had a budget of $48.37; how did you make it happen?
Jen Bechtel: The best advice I’ve gotten on working on a low budget is to feed people, and we were able to do that essentially free, because people have donated food and service. And my executive producer has added gin and tonics to the mix.
I can testify to the accuracy of both of those statements.
CB: April, you had your throat cut in the comic scene today--
April Cleveland: That’s right, and it looks like a big, droopy--
And that's all we have time for today, but seriously, go to the Scary Normal Facebook page and like the hell out of us, yo!

Viscera


On the set of Scary Normal, day 16

The last emotionally grueling scene this afternoon, after a lighthearted one this a.m. We're taking a break right now from the gruelster, and I, for one, am hearing the call of the juniper berry that waits at the end of the day. And no work tonight, because we worked hard last night (did I mention that half a page took us 2 hours?), so there!

22 June 2012

Home stretch


Day 15 on the set of Scary Normal

Long day on a single long scene today, and tonight we're going to steal an outdoor night scene that was scheduled for tomorrow, as insurance against rain and exploitation of finishing the day ahead of schedule.

Exhausted, exhilarated, happy. Even got to steal a few minutes with my siblings (and Wyatt, a favorite great-nephew).

20 June 2012

A tale of two


Day 13 on the set of Scary Normal

On an 18-day shoot, with a cast of a couple dozen, the good-byes start soon after the hellos, and we've already bid adieu to several actors who have strutted and fretted--OK, very little strutting, actually, and not a whole lot of fretting--their few minutes upon the stage and will be heard no more until editing, and each parting has brought a little sweet sorrow.

Today was a good-bye day, the last day for an actor in a small but critical role who brought tons of talent and great comic chops to his performance. Almost the same thing could be said about an actor who departed a few days ago, except that his role was much smaller, two scenes, only a couple of lines. Both will remain nameless here, because it seems unfair to name one without naming the other, and to name one would be tantamount to character assassination, or at least an indelicate description of his own character suicide.

The actor who left a few days ago, after arriving a day ahead of his first call, having driven almost 500 miles from his home, was wonderful in his two scenes, but his contribution to the project goes far beyond what you'll see on the screen. He was, in his brief time here, such an enthusiastic member of the team and brought such manic energy to the bit of physical comedy his part required that he is still here in spirit, and his ad libbed lines in that sequence have provided catch phrases (e.g., "Ooh, rub it on my face!") that the actors and crew members have gone to multiple times every day to loosen one another up, to lift the burdens of fatigue or excessive humidity, just to steal a laugh when a laugh needs to be stolen. Without a single exception, this young man who was on the set for a day and a half and will be on the screen for seconds is loved--mention of his name or his shtick is a guaranteed smile producer.

Then there's the guy we saw the back of today. The guy who failed to show up on day 3 called the director last night at 8 p.m. to say that he wasn't going to make his 9 a.m. call today, that he would be an hour and a half late because he missed a bus. (Yes, right, coming from Chicago, he missed an evening bus and so could not be in Champaign by 9 a.m.; I don't understand either.) So for a second time we had to change the shooting sequence to accommodate him (though to be fair, the other time he showed up late we didn't have to work around his tardiness) . . . and then texted shortly before his revised ETA to report that he'd missed another bus and wouldn't be here at all today.

Stern conversation follows, in which he is ordered to rent a car and bring us the receipt. A half-hour later, he reports that he's working on renting a car, comparing prices. Stern conversation follows, in which he is told to rent whatever he can get the quickest. And we work around him for as long as we can. And then, like those who would escape the Nazis via Casablanca, we wait. And wait. And wait.

At 3:25 a call: the Urbana native has missed the proper exit from I-57. And so we wait. . . .

And now, 3½ hours later, that one is gone, and a rousing cheer has risen to the thespian gods. Unsurprisingly, everyone else on the project--all of whom have been inconvenienced, made to wait, made to rearrange their schedules, had scenes pulled out from underneath them because of his solipsistic disregard of his responsibilities to the team, . . . well, perhaps "hates" is too harsh, though it is a word that has been used. As with the universally loved guy, he is quoted, but not fondly: "I'm gonna do some pushups."

Let me end with an in loco parentis moment. Actor number 1, I predict, because he already gets the importance of teamwork and shared effort, will be a success as whatever he becomes, whether actor or bricklayer or federal judge. Actor number 2 . . . well, maybe he'll mature, maybe he'll develop a sense of responsibility, maybe he'll discover that he's not the only person in the universe. Maybe.

19 June 2012

How do you close a park?


On the set of Scary Normal

Kicking so much butt that we GET TOMORROW OFF!

18 June 2012

Early acceptance

On the set of Scary Normal

I quote the director:
It is official! While we will be doing a soft premiere in Champaign-Urbana sometime in late January/February for cast/crew/invited guests, our official public premiere will be at the MBLGTAC conference At Michigan State University in February 2013. I am so excited!


Awesome--guess we'd better finish the damn thing now!

Scary famous

On the set of Scary Normal

Nice ink in the University of Illinois' newspaper, the Daily Illini. And meanwhile, we shot a 4-page scene in about an hour and a half this a.m., less than half the time you'd expect.

Making magic

On the set of Scary Normal

OK, I really really really really really need to be asleep now, but I can't go to bed until I rave about the fantastic work tonight by everybody. The scene, an early one, is one of the most pivotal in the film (can there be degrees of pivotal-ness?), a long, complex, beautifully written scene, which puts a huge amount of pressure on the actors. It's a nighttime shoot, outdoors, near roads with inexplicably noisy Sunday night traffic--thus severe technical problems, especially for the sound crew.

And yet the work done tonight was some of the best yet, I think, and while some of it remains to be shot, I am 100% confident of completing a scene that will pull in any audience members who had so far resisted. Because, seriously: irresistible.

17 June 2012

Feeling a cop


On the set of Scary Normal

A moderately productive day after yesterday's drainer. Lots to shoot tonight, possibly getting far enough for the director's husband to get his closeup as a police officer. The bad news is that if that happens, I'll have to spell him on the childcare front and won't be able to see his performance live.

Today is day 10, and we remain comfortably on schedule, so it's abundantly fair to say we are more than halfway home, which seems impossible and exhilarating and a little sad.

And now, dammit, I'm going to try again to make Blogger display a photo, a continuity shot I took of the camera-beloved April Cleveland (Danielle). Here goes . . .

Nope, just won't do it; I guess if I ever want to post another photo, I'll have to download stupid Google Chrome, but I refuse. In the meantime: here.

16 June 2012

Fahrenheit 451


On the set of Scary Normal

OK, you who don't know how this works might think that the director's cancellation of tonight's shoot represents a retreat, a loss of scheduling ground, but you would be wrong. Here's what we dealt with today:
  • a day that was in the 90s with high humidity outside--except that we weren't outside; we were in a small garage with film lights burning and multiple 98.6-degree bodies pumping up the ick;
  • one little yippy dog in the neighborhood yipping on and on;
  • a recurrence of the broken boom, requiring superglue treatment;
  • loud thunder (and equipment-threatening rain);
  • a separate canine incident involving multiple postpubescent (or at least lower-pitched) dogs;
  • unwonted (as well as unwanted) heavy-truck traffic in our residential Urbana;
  • a buzzy fly;
  • and an ominous wasp.
Oh, and did I mention it was really hot and sweaty?

And yet we prevailed, and the scene will be beautiful, and the rest that the exhausted actors (and incidentally, have I even mentioned the awesome April Cleveland and Laura Anne Welle?) and crew will enhance the beauty of what we shoot tomorrow, and anyway, we're really essentially ahead of schedule, so get off our case, OK?

Damn, that gin was good. And the shower that preceded it. And the sleep that will follow soon will, I am confident, also be good.

Standup comedy


On the set of Scary Normal

I think it was Napoléon (let's agree to ignore for a moment how easy it is to check such a supposition these days) who said that an army marches on its stomach. Well, so does a film crew, and when a production is operating on not just a shoestring but a shoestring for maybe a 4-year-old's shoe, with only 4 eyelets, some of the most critical support comes from people who donate meals and those who volunteer to transport those meals so that they magically appear on the set when we break at midday and early evening. Our cast and crew of dozens (well, for some shots) has been consistently well fed, and for that the director and the exec producer are most grateful.

And, abandoning our Bonapartean metaphor, if food is the fuel for the cinematic engine, then sleep is the oil, and it turns out that just a little bit of lubricant gets the job done, as long as the crankcase is not allowed to drain completely. I've been averaging about 4, 5 hours a night--got nearly 7 the other night and woke up tireder than ever. I was going to post a great photo here that the director took of uber-gaffer Sean O'Leary, DP extraordinaire Kyle Loughrin, and sound maven Sean Whitsitt postprandially recharging, but Blogger as recently suckified by Google won't permit it. Here, see whether this works.

14 June 2012

Not particularly scary Flag Day (seven)


On the set of Scary Normal

Ahhhhhhhhhhh!

For the first . . . wait, again: ahhhhhhhhh!

For the first time in the seven days of shooting, we have no night shoot; the director has asked the script supervisor (or perhaps the executive producer) to supervise two sleeping urchins and a bottle of gin so that she and her husband can get an evening together out of the house, and that seems like a plan to me.

Today we shot the high school dance sequence and the puking-in-the-bathroom scene. The latter was shot in the downstairs bathroom chez director, and since that's the exec prod's bathroom, adjoining his bedroom, he felt a little violation of personal space, but he got over it. The good work just keeps on coming, along with the little bumps in the road, which the director navigates us blithely past. The awesomeness level remains high.

Oh, that reminds me: I should go to the Champaign parking authority's site and pay a couple of parking tickets for the talent.

I'm thinking about a couple of antihistamines and 8 hours of sleep, which is pretty much double what I've been getting. Life is good.

13 June 2012

Here comes the scary sun


On the set of Scary Normal

Tough early afternoon shoot today, with our two lead kid actors, Finn Dallas (who is a better continuity guy than I, I confess) and Jaysha Dunn (who made me awesome wallpaper for my laptop the other day) melting under a relentless sun while the director and the techies tried to deal with the challenges of the shot. To paraphrase Faulkner's Nobel acceptance speech, the kids did not just survive, they kicked booty.

Can't wait to see this puppy. I knew Jen had written a good script, but I was frankly skeptical about being able to put together a professional-looking product on the shoestring budget she has to work with. Almost a third of the way through the shoot, to paraphrase Neil Diamond and the Monkees, . . .

12 June 2012

Mile 8 of the marathon


On the set of Scary Normal

The kids were great today; they laughed really hard.

True fact.

But also, shot the critical breakup scene today, and Laura Anne Welle and April Cleveland made me tear up on each of the first two takes before I manned up.

So that happened


On the set of Scary Normal

Listen, OK? I don't as a rule make a gin & tonic because I need something to get me past a horrible experience, but ace DP Kyle Loughrin and sound ace Sean Whitsitt and I are ginitiating ourselves as what we're calling the marsupial samurai. Don't ask. Really, swear to god, don't ask. But be assured: (1) it had to be done; (2) we did the best we could; (3) it had nothing to do with the shoot, which went remarkably well. There is not much else to be said; tomorrow is another day, for most of us.

11 June 2012

Scary larceny, day 4, scene 2, take 2

On the set of Scary Normal

The director is so awesome that she actually recovered the stolen car herself. Well, OK, no, but the police found it, apparently intact. And the director dealt with the weather by moving an outdoor scene in. Moving on.

Larceny diary, day 4


On the set of Scary Normal

Whoa, here's a serious Oblivion moment: one of the lead children in the cast is down here in safe, chill Champaign for the shoot with her mom, from their home in big-shouldered serious city Chicago . . . and we just got word that their car was stolen. Naturally, she's called for all the early shots today, but it's kinda hard to prioritize the inconvenience to the director over the bummer for the family.

Also, it just started to rain heavily, contrary to the forecast until this a.m. As is her wont, the director is dealing.

Scary diary, day 3


On the set of Scary Normal

Ahhhh, deep breath. Late call today, so I will actually have a chance to disperse some stress with a good long workout, as soon as the director gets home & passes off her house key to me before she passes out altogether for a bit.

Yesterday pretty damned amazing. Confronted by a roadblock such as we slammed into, I would have gone ballistic, then probably catatonic; Jen just dealt, rewrote, moved on. Some nice symmetry and a couple of funny bits had to be sacrificed, but as she put it, what was lost was icing, not cake. She kept us on point and on schedule; she is my hero.

And with as much objectivity as I can summon, I gotta say, I think we've got something here. I already knew and liked the screenplay, of course, but this has been a pretty thrilling object lesson in seeing smart direction and sharp acting breathe real life and humanity into the pages. I expected this to be one of the most rewarding experiences of my life, and regardless of what happens days 4 through 18, I can put a checkmark next to that.

OK, time to go sweat.

10 June 2012

Scary diary, take 2


On the set of Scary Normal

Our second Living in Oblivion moment: an actor fails to show for a scene. I was going to write "the unflappable director is even now in the next room rewriting him out of the scene so that we can keep moving," but in the time it took me to write the first sentence, she put that verb into past tense; a nice piece of action is unavoidably lost, but we're moving on, and it'll all be fine.

Scary diary


On the set of Scary Normal

OK, seriously, this slavedriving director is working us around the clock; I have time for this post only because I don't work out on Sundays, and I'm writing this under the covers while pretending to still be asleep before going upstairs to get my Sunday muffin & then walking to the New York Times store.

Two days in, we've had our first disaster and survived; we've stayed on schedule and put about ten scenes in the digital can; and no one has died. I have been--no smarmy Chambollywood bullshit here--stunned by the professionalism and the high skill levels of the actors and production people, and overwhelmed by the complexity of the script supervisor/continuity czar's duties. I was lots better at my job on the second day than on the first; I'm hoping to ease my way to marginal competence by the time I fly home.

Anyway, if you have no idea what I'm talking about, click on the title link up there and go read about the film and the director's philosophy. There aren't many things I'd give up three weeks worth of going to the movies for, but I'm am even more proud and excited than I am exhausted (though it is early in the shoot) to be involved with this project. I'll let you know more if I have time sometime.

03 June 2012

Dwarf dreams

Living in Oblivion

(1995)
Yeah, I don't know: watching a film about the disasters that can undermine an independent film seemed like a good idea right before heading to Illinois to help my daughter make an independent film. What better way to learn how, as director Nick (Steve Buscemi) puts it, to "just roll with it"?

A habit that sticks


Få meg på, for faen (Turn me on, dammit!)

Crit
Alma is a delightful, horny Norwegian 15-year-old with the misfortune of having spent her early years in such an armpit of Scandinavia that she and her friend Sara flip off the town-limits sign every time they pass. Sara has a plan to get out: move to Texas and work for the repeal of capital punishment. Alma's only escape is phone sex with the sympathetic Stig. Then the schoolmate she fancies, Artur, pokes her fully clothed thigh with his dick outside a party at the social hall, and when she reports (not with outrage but with bemusement) this episode, he denies it and she becomes a pariah.

At this point, the film could have taken a dreary Scandinavian turn, but instead it retains its good humor even as it gets sadder. Notwithstanding an unconvincingly simple denouement, this is a lovely coming-of-age story--the sort my daughter is about to tell in a film the making of which will take me away from the movie house and probably the blog for the next 3 weeks.

01 June 2012

A hard rain's gonna fall


Key Largo

(1948)

Sorry, I've been distracted, and I have to get up early, so I don't have time for much, so two things. First, this is probably good enough to keep anyway, but there's no way, given the second thing, I'm deaccessioning this.

Two, a trivia quiz: name the boat that Edward G. Robinson's Johnny Rocco forces Humphrey Bogart's Frank McCloud to pilot his gang to Cuba in. If you know me well enough to know what has distracted me tonight, it'll be pretty easy to guess.