2009

December 10, 2009 at 4:33 pm | In News | Leave a Comment
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2009 was a very good year for me professionally.

I was fortunate to get to cut several Coraline mini-documentaries for the web and IFC, as well as the HBO First Look on Coraline.

I also edited a Tiger Woods golf spot, several episodes of Aaron Rose’s Don’t Move Here for WKE, and a grip of sales videos I can’t brag about.

Behind the camera, Briana and I created a short art film for Kristan Kennedy. Kristan debuted the film along with other video art at the Ace Hotel in New York as part of a PICA event.

We also competed in the National Film Challenge with several friends (Gretchen Treser, Matt Holmes, Chris and Debra Hornbecker, Elisa Silva) and made a piece called “Unlocked” which is currently a finalist.

In the new year I’d like to direct more stuff, and get behind the camera more. Hopefully I’ll have new stuff to show soon.

-J.Lowe

December 3, 2009 at 11:41 am | In News | Leave a Comment

things i no longer use:

land line

myspace

ichat

videostores

(work in progress)

December 2, 2009 at 10:26 am | In News | Leave a Comment

FANTASTIC MR. FOX was great

November 30, 2009 at 12:31 am | In News | Leave a Comment

November 25, 2009 at 1:28 pm | In News | Leave a Comment

Happy Thanksgiving

November 24, 2009 at 9:49 pm | In News | Leave a Comment

It is not too late to keep a promise

November 24, 2009 at 12:53 pm | In News | Leave a Comment

Daniel Johnston

Some 50 years later, Kubrick is still being ripped off

November 10, 2009 at 9:37 pm | In News | 1 Comment
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I mentioned something about the Where’s the Wild Thing font to Tommy Harden, an editor here at Joint.

I have seen this font in use all over, in ads, on the sides of buses. On books. And not even related to the Wild Things movie.

I figured it was a newer font – maybe 10 years old, that suddenly everyone was using.

I was wrong.

Tommy showed me this.

What I’m listening to

October 29, 2009 at 11:40 pm | In News | Leave a Comment
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Janglin’ – Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeros

Glass –  Bat for Lashes

All is Love – Karen O and the Kids

Raindrops – Basement Jaxx

The Newark Airport Boogie – Electric Six

Possible Music soundtrack – Hal Hartley

Beck – Leonard Cohen covers with guests from Beck’s website

 

October 29, 2009 at 11:27 pm | In News | Leave a Comment
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When we are young we have the ambition.

When we are older we have the talent.

October 28, 2009 at 4:00 pm | In News | Leave a Comment

“That’s the way it should be. You should do this thing that you like, you should do this thing that you love. And that was what we took from punk rock, you don’t wait for someone to tell you it’s cool, you don’t wait for permission, you don’t wait to think this is going to make me famous, you just do it.”

-Wayne Coyne (Flaming Lips) on KCRW’s Morning Becomes Eclectic

Can you make a movie in one weekend?

October 28, 2009 at 9:50 am | In News | Leave a Comment
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Yes you can. I’ve done it twice now – and the excercise is nothing short of a mental marathon and a race against the sun.

UNLOCKED

Last Friday night our team (actress/producer Gretchen Treser, writer Elisa Silva, director of photography Chris and his wife Debra Hornbecker, Nike designer Matt Holmes, myself, and filmmaker Briana Bononcini) spent several hours on a conference call brainstorming. It was painful. We had received the genre DRAMA or HORROR as part of the National Film Challenge (you have 48 hours to write, shoot and edit a film up to 7 minutes in length).

We all generated several ideas. There was long pauses after each one was said. None of them were great. But they all contained bits of greatness. Matt had suggested we make a film where you are slowly trapped in your own house, the windows would be covered, the doors locked etc. That got us thinking about claustrophobia. Elisa and I had gotten obsessed with the baby monitor that was in the room with us. It kept making odd noises. That led us to a thought about a walkie talkie. There was talk of an older lady who lived next door to Gretchen. What kind of relationship would Gretchen have would a little old lady next door? The ideas jumped back and forth between psychological horror and coming of age drama. Our final idea ended up smack in the middle of those two things.

Gretchen Treser

Sometimes you have to throw a lot of stuff onto the wall, to get to the good stuff. Get all the bad ideas out of your system, and a good idea will emerge.

It was now Saturday morning close to 2am, and we had decided to make a film about an agoraphobic widow who develops a friendship with a 12 year old boy who leaves a walkie talkie on her doorstep.

I was woken up by the phone. DP Chris Hornbecker was downtown, had picked up gear and wanted to pick me up.

We didn’t have a child actor yet. We didn’t have a script yet. I threw on my clothes and got in the car with him.

We began scouting locations. I made some phone calls. By 1pm, we had two kids to choose from, a completed script (Elisa was writing right up to shoot time), and our equipment fired up and ready to shoot.

Jonah

Jonah Kellam was great. The kind of actor who gets it right on the first take. Our idea centered on us getting the right kid for the part and we were very fortunate to find Jonah. Gretchen had called an acting coach who put us in touch with his mom. Two hours later she was driving him to our set. Everything happened very quick over the weekend. It had to. We had to have our completed film in the mail to the National Film Challenge on Monday. The clock was ticking.

We shot into the evening.

To be safe we had Gretchen and Jonah read the entire script in a quiet room. We would use this audio for any over-dubbing we had to do. 

Because we had not chosen a simple idea, and because our script had many set ups, we had to shoot some of the scenes that took place in the day, at night. Chris did a great job of recreating the sun for a scene where Gretchen opens the front door to grab a package:

light

It's actually 10pm at night here

We wrapped around 11pm, after transforming the Hornbecker’s house into a set. There was gear everywhere. We had moved the furniture around. 

I decided to get a full night’s sleep, though I was tempted to head into the edit suite and start loading footage.

I slept for 10 hours straight. Woke up – went into the edit suite (around 10:30am). And didn’t come out until the next day at 4am.

editing

A lot of things came together in order for us to complete the film in time. Jeremy Wilkins of Allegra Gellar composed a song for us that helped give the film the proper mood. Chris Hutchinson designed awesome titles. Elisa was a huge help in the edit. Briana got her younger brother Deems to come in and help with some audio effects.

So yes, you can make a movie in one weekend.

If you get lucky.

Check back here in the coming months to see the film.

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