film

ComLink Superhero Short Film

The non-for-profit organisation ComLink recently commissioned us to create a series of videos for their organisation. One of these was the one you see above – a fun, silly short film showcasing a day in the life of a ComLink driver.

I was thrilled when they greenlit our superhero idea, and was pleasantly surprised with the amount of creative freedom we had with this thing. It was a great to be able to get some experience with fast, action stuff, as well as practice comedic editing. Not to mention the fun we had on set shooting so many crazy ideas, half of which sadly couldn’t make the cut.

But I am quite happy with the final result and proud of the work we did.

Gary’s Surprise Wedding Video

With the help of Gary’s friends and family, I made this short film as a surprise for his wedding day. It turned out much longer than I expected initially, but turned out well.

It was a lot of hard work to pull of in such a short space of time, but was so much fun shooting and editing. A great learning experience too!

Prisoners Workshop

Posted on May 29, 2017

Earlier this month I had the pleasure of directing a short film workshop for an old script I had found from a few years back, titled Prisoners. Joanna had recently acquired a new camera (Sony A7s) and wanted to shoot some test footage to try it out. We decided we could try a few scenes from this script and she organised a couple of actors to help out, Danxia Yang and Jimmy Sky (who we had previously worked with on Nightfall).

We prepped to shoot the middle scenes of the script (simple dialogue between two characters), totalling around seven pages. On the day, we only had a few hours to setup, rehearse and shoot, and there wasn’t much notice given to the actors, so it was big ask for them to learn seven pages of dialogue. Nonetheless, they picked it up really quickly with minimal rehearsal and we began shooting.

We were able to get through it quickly, with a couple of camera setups for each scene. I didn’t bother with coverage for the second scene as we were short on time, and I wanted it to feel more intimate anyway, so we just did a two-shot, with two takes back-to-back. It would have been nice to have a bit of coverage and some inserts to help with editing the two takes together, but I managed to scale the two-shot image up to become a close-up for each character, since we shot in 4K, so that helped hide cutting between takes.

This was a great idea by Jimmy, to have Sam sitting here. Really helps show how trapped he is too.

For the final scene, I wanted it to feel more energetic and unstable, so we shot it mostly handheld with a moving camera. I did want an angle on Danxia with the tripod, so she felt stable and in control, until the turning point in the scene, which is when we swap to handheld for her as well.

Why so serious?

After the shoot was done and I got back home, I began reviewing the footage and began the edit. Firstly, as always, the boring stuff. Organising video and sound files, syncing audio tracks (luckily PluralEyes handled most of that for me) and setting up the timeline. We shot 4K at 16:9, so I just used that for the sequence and added my own 2:39 overlay.

The edit itself was fairly straightforward. I just worked on the scenes sequentially, cutting together the best of each take, though we only had a couple of takes for each setup which posed some challenges for certain moments. One small, but annoying thing, was a continuity error with the background in this shot.

The right side of frame has the beads tied up.

After this take, Joanna suggested putting the beads down to help cover the obvious kitchen behind and provide a cleaner, less distracting image. I also wanted Jimmy’s leg in the foreground to add some depth. It definitely improved the shot, but meant it kept changing when cutting between the two takes. I didn’t want to only use take two footage, as there was great stuff in the first one, so I opted to just composite the right side of frame from the first take, on top of the second. This was simple for the most part in After Effects, since both shots were done from a tripod which didn’t move, so it was a simple copy-paste with a mask on top.

The magic of VFX!

The only issue was when Jimmy walks across the frame in one shot, so I had to rotoscope his legs out, but that didn’t take too long.

Rotoscoping is the data entry of VFX.

Early on in the edit, I was playing around with Lumetri to see how much I could manipulate the colour, as I had never shot on this camera/format before (S-Log), and the initial image is super duper flat. Turns out, it is very pliable, even though it’s not a RAW format, which was a great surprise. I actually stumbled upon the grade for this film accidentally. I had started with a much less aggressive day-to-night and colour palette, instead just trying to add contrast and a little colour.

As I was trying things, I accidentally duplicated the Lumetri effect on the shot so it was applying it twice. As I was about to undo my mistake, I noticed that it actually looked really cool, and was far more aggressive than I had even considered trying. I didn’t think it would have been so easy to make it seem so dark when I first reviewed the footage, but the footage held up really well. I changed my grade to match the doubled-up shot and it turned out to be a pretty convincing dank, dark room, as opposed to a bright happy apartment.

My initial testing grade vs. the doubled up effect.

You copy that grade across all shots, make some tweaks where needed, and you have a stylin’ film!

Before and after colouring.

Once the grade was done, all that remained was the final sound mixing, which I did in Audition as usual. Some of the levels were a little low for Danxia’s shots, but I was able to boost them well enough. A bit of noise in the background, but definitely high-quality audio for a simple workshop. I am very grateful that Jo was willing and able to provide and operate the lavs, as well as camera.

Editing timeline for Scene 1.

Then all that was left was the final render! I did have a bunch of issues with that though, as Premiere decided it didn’t want to export properly, but I got there in the end and the final result is embedded above. Watch, enjoy, and hopefully it makes some sense to you, even though there are two scenes missing, one before and one after this excerpt. Hopefully I’ll have the opportunity to shoot the entire film for real sometime.

Huge thanks to Jimmy and Danxia for coming out for this shoot and lending their talents and time, as well as one-woman-band Joanna for doing lighting, audio and camera. Couldn’t have done it without you all, and I’m super pleased with the end result. A great learning experience for me and a good trial run for the future. Special thanks to Billie as always for her hospitality and for all the fruit!

48hr Film Project

Over the weekend I went to Brisbane to participate in the 48hr Film Project in Brisbane, where your team is given a genre, a prop, a character and a line of dialogue and you have 48hrs to create and deliver a short film. Through the magic of the internet I was fortunate enough to make contact with the team at Blue Moon Art House Productions and secure a role as part of the crew (thanks to Billie’s sixth sense).

It all kicked off Friday night at 7pm when the genres were assigned and the required elements revealed. We were assigned Drama and Period Piece. Luckily we could choose to just do one and opted for Drama after brainstorming ideas. We also had to include a measuring tape, a character named Steve or Stephanie Villner (a paint enthusiast) and the line of dialogue, “Oh my god! This is the answer I’ve been looking for!“.

Friday night was spent brainstorming as a team until we had an idea we liked and agreed upon, followed by the script writing. It was a late night, with only a couple of hours of sleep and then it was up again to make it on set by 6:30am.

We shot most of the day at a restaurant the team had organised previously, though it was still open for business and had a lot of customers which created some challenges, especially for sound (poor Gabe). The shoot went smoothly though, and I was working as 2nd AC (Assistant Camera), clappin’ dat slate. The restaurant provided morning tea and lunch for us and we wrapped shooting at that location in the afternoon.

After packing up, we headed back to the apartment to shoot the final interior scenes. Everyone was exhausted, but soldiered through until we wrapped production at around 9pm. Thankfully I was able to sleep once we had packed everything up (about 10:30pm), but our editor Michael was deep into editing.

By the morning, the edit was almost done and I was able to relax a bit while other people worked. Once the edit was locked, we all headed over to Gabe’s house to deliver the edit for sound mixing and do some ADR (Additional Dialogue Recording), as the restaurant had been noisy and the dialogue recordings might not have been clean.

While the sound was being mixed, the few VFX shots needed were being done and again I was able to just observe and learn as others worked. We were on schedule for a 7:30pm delivery time and moving along at a solid pace.

With the VFX completed, it was time for colour correction and grading. Our director Michael was nice enough to trust me with that job, and I set to work with Joanna to correct each shot to match one another, before applying the stylistic grade to the scenes. Michael wanted a subtle green tinge for the most part, sliding into yellow during the final few shots. There were a couple of flashback scenes too which looked quite cinematic and pushed into red and purple (major props to Tiffany and Lily for the lighting and production design there – looks really cool).

Soon after the grading was done, Gabe delivered the final sound mix. Oddly, when imported into Premiere it was playing at twice the volume it should have been. Michael tried re-importing it, but now it wasn’t playing at all. It worked outside of Premiere fine, but inside it didn’t want to play at all. We tried transferring it over to Gabe’s computer, and it started working! However, it was still twice the volume it should have been. By this point, time was running out and we only had about 30mins to drop off the final film at the drop-off location (which fortunately was 30 seconds from Gabe’s house).

After trying a bunch of fixes, he found the issue and managed to get the levels back to normal (the levels slider for the audio track in Premiere was turned up). However, now the audio was sounding really crackly. 20mins left.

Re-export the audio track from Pro Tools, re-import to Premiere. Still crackly. Play directly in VLC, works fine. 15mins left.

We all left the room to reduce the pressure and left Gabe to work his technological magic. I walked over to the drop-off site with Joanna to await the final film. Not only did they have to fix the issue, but they then had to export the entire film and copy it to a USB and run it over. 10mins left.

After a few more minutes of uncertainty, Billie comes running down the hill, USB in hand and we deliver the film with just minutes to spare!

We made it!

We made it!

After that, went back to the house to screen the final film (unfortunately didn’t have time prior to submission) and it was great to see the culmination of everyone’s hard work. Then it was off to Macca’s for a celebratory meal. I don’t really like Macca’s, but after such long hours and little food, it was pretty damn good.

Credit to Gabe for the magical photo

Credit to Gabe for the magical photo

The night wound down and it was time for sleep and the journey home. Overall it was a great experience to be a part of and I feel very grateful to have been invited. I’m looking forward to the opportunities this experience will bring and glad to have made a bunch of new really cool friends.

The final film will be screened at Event Cinema’s in Brisbane, on the 10th of October and is titled “Bump in the Road”. Excited to see it on the big screen with an audience and see all of the other submissions as well.

Special thanks to Billie and Joanna for being so accommodating and to Agapetos who captured the BTS photos.

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