All posts in films

tuesdays with tara – volume five [movies week edition]

special thanks to miss tara for being gifted enough to indulge my night-before-hey-can-you-do-something-with-movies request.

she’s the cupcakes, our Lady Noble.

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I think it goes without saying that Sam Mendes is a fine director.  American Beauty, for my money, was nothing short of a masterpiece.  And even though I didn’t personally enjoy Revolutionary Road (it made me feel like a teenager who had locked myself in my room because I was scared of my parents’ fighting), I had to admit that it was beautifully shot and thoughtfully framed.  Mendes bears the mark of a confident director who knows exactly what he wants out of a shot and always manages to get his actors to carry out that vision.  He clearly knows what he is doing, but he doesn’t seem to be adled by an overly-inflated ego, either.  In that regard, it’s not entirely surprising to learn that he comes from the stage.  Yes, many years before the glossy big budget movies he would put up on the silver screen, he was directing Cabaret, Company and Little Voice back in London.

And it’s this Sam Mendes that we feel in Away We Go.

This is not a movie with an especially ingenious plotline. It does not exude its own star power like so much sexy sweat.  It almost feels home spun.  It wouldn’t have surprised me to find out that it had been made by a girl I went to high school with on a budget of 200 thousand dollars.  I think these are all reasons why it works the way it does.

Sam Mendes was no doubt thanking his lucky ass stars when this movie wrapped.  The actors in this movie did a truly amazing job.  The chemistry, especially between the two lead actors (John Krasinski and Maya Rudolph),  is so genuine that you buy everything that they are selling.   They are all (this movie has a fantastic supporting cast!) utterly natural, believable and sometimes even so recognizable, it makes your heart ache.

This is a movie about two people who literally don’t know where they are going in life.  And being 34 years old with a baby on the way makes it all feel especially distressing.  It is as much about self discovery as it is about the dynamics of different kinds of families and support systems.  In other words, there’s a little something for each and every one of us to relate to in this sweet movie.

At one point, Maya Rudolph’s character, Verona, leans into John Krasinski’s Burt wearily and asks, “Are we fuck-ups?”  And that instance feels like walking out onto the porch at a house party and accidentally interrupting a bittersweet moment between two lovers.  You almost feel like backing away and apologizing, it feels that intimate.

There’s also an all too realistic messy-family-plot-twist wherein Burt and Verona rush to Burt’s older brother, who has just discovered his wife has left both he and their young daughter behind.  The brother has an especially heart-wrenching monologue about how his little girl’s future is about to become irrevocably damaged having been abandoned by her own mother.  I had more than a little difficulty getting the lump in my throat to subside during that scene.  And it’s only one gem of many.

Being a music fanatic, the soundtrack is very important to me.  It’s really something that can make or break a cinematic experience for me.

Choosing Alexi Murdoch to helm the soundtrack of this film was a further stroke of genius for this production.  Alexi was born to a Greek father and a Scottish mother and he lived in both countries before eventually making his way to America.  He seems like a rather unassuming person given his obvious skills as a musician.

The story goes that not long after moving to Los Angeles, he ran into KD Lang in a grocery store and handed her a demo tape.  She called him back two days later wanting to work with him and he simply told her that he wasn’t ready.  After receiving radioplay on KCRW, he sold 50,000 CDs on CD Baby.  But he turned down every major label offer that came his way in the interest of maintaining creative control over his own work.  He eventually self-published, again for CD Baby, in 2002.  But it wasn’t until 2006 that he would release a full-length album  (Time Without Consequence) and he did so under his own label, Zero Summer.

The accompanying music to this movie is as organic as the work of everyone else involved. It is tender without being cloying, complimentary without being overbearing or distracting.

If you have not yet seen this movie, I highly recommend that “away you go” to your Netflix queue;)

Alexi Murdoch – All My Days

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catch all of ‘tuesdays with tara’ here. and all the rest, the most, of tara here.

5 of the best films you’ve never heard of

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A mental hospital, a traffic accident, and a bank robbery all play elements in the question of coincidence versus fate in the untraditional love story, The Princess and the Warrior (Der Krieger und die Kaiserin, 2000).

Sissi, a nurse, is convinced that she and Bodo are destined for one another when their paths momentarily cross in a life or death situation. Taking the chance to break out of her monotonous ritual of a life, she pursues the stranger. A melancholy and grief-stricken ex-soldier, Bodo believes he is not the one for her and emphatically rejects her but is faced with her when their paths continue to cross in strange ways. Both characters, even with completely different mindsets, face the same challenge of “shit or get off the pot.”

Directed by Tom Tywker, this movie is an antithesis to his previous Run Lola Run. As chaotic, frenetic, and loud as Lola is, The Princess and the Warrior is calm, balanced, and tranquil. Using lush cinematography and an ambient sound, the film is a surreal, vivid, dream-like encounter that has some twists and surprises lurking, just like in real dreams.

This movie is a favorite because it has a completely original story line and both the characters have such transparent emotions, even when they are in conflict with each other. You hear them breathe and almost hear their heartbeats in your head. With their hearts and souls so bared, you want to will them together, even when we have barely seen them hold hands, much less kiss.

Mara Dearing – ‘Okie Transplant’, NYC

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A few years ago I worked in a web company in Dublin with a Czech designer, Pavel. He was a fan of a Czech animator: Jan Svankmajer. It just so happened that Little Otik, his newest film, was showing in the only (9 years ago) art house cinema in Dublin. Pavel gave a few friends and I a few shots of slivovitz and talked us into it.

The film is an updated take on a Czech folk tale. A childless couple go on holiday up in the mountains to recover from the news of the wife’s infertility. The husband finds a root that resembles a baby, cleans it up, and presents it to the mother who quickly accepts it as a real child. She dotes on it so much that it comes alive.

This is where Jan Svankmajer’s animation background comes in. Rather than going for animatronics or CGI he goes for good, old-fashioned stop motion. The scenes with a spindly, wild root crying and writhing like a baby are both hilarious and creepy, an effect I don’t think he could have accomplished with CGI. The thrust of the film doesn’t begin until they bring the “baby” home to live with them in their bleak apartment block in the city, which is, Pavel assured me, full of the kinds of people that turn up in your average Czech neighborhood. From there, mammals of various sizes begin to go missing.

It’s a truly original film, with a wickedly dark sense of humour.

Dylan Bryne - Shanghai Tattoo, Shanghai

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“Local Hero” is a treasure. That’s not a word I normally use to describe a film, or anything else really, but it fits. The screenplay is brilliant. It takes careful listening or several viewings to catch some of the more subtle gems; even so, it’s a very easy movie to watch. The characters are wonderfully quirky, and convey that with their lines as well as facial expressions (another reason to watch closely). It’s warm, affectionate, funny, surprising, touching and memorable. Sometimes I try to decide what my favorite line or scene is, but I never can.The Scottish scenery is lovely and sometimes stunning and the music is – it’s Knopfler; it’s amazing.

Mary Claire Coffey – Washington, D.C.

Yuppie from Houston travels to a small Scottish town in order to buy it and make everyone wealthy so his oil company can put a refinery there. The rest is pretty much a wacky comedy of small town manners, a hilarious Burt Lancaster as the owner of the oil company, the warmth of relationships there compared to the impersonal Houston and a very clever ending. On top of that, the soundtrack by Mark Knopfler (Dire Straits) is brilliant. In fact, the theme song from the movie is played as Newcastle United takes their home field. It has a 100% fresh rating on Rotten Tomatoes and was picked as one of the top 100 movies from the 1980s by Premiere magazine. Both Siskel and Ebert loved it!

Steve Misha – San Diego, CA

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La Vie Revee des Anges (Dreamlife of Angels), directed by Erick Zonka, is a stunning portrait of suicide wherein two young girls attempt to navigate their way through a life of little opportunity. In the town of Lille, France, Isabel and Marie move in together hoping that their hapless situations will change. When Marie falls for a boy of a higher social status the stakes are instantly raised, and she believes her life will change drastically if they stay together. Soon after she finds him with a more suitable mate, and her hopes of a different life are shattered. She no longer cares to live. Leaving Isabel behind, Marie takes her own life and Isabel attempts to find solace in a job at a local factory. Beautifully directed and acted, La Vie Revee des Anges will surely haunt those who see it for years to come.

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Hannah Phillips-Kaplan – Daughter, Wife, Mother… not a hipster, Los Angeles

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hands-down, the greatest film I’ve ever watched. every aspect. if I start writing, it’ll go for thousands of words, so do yourself a favor, absorb the opening sequence of Emir Kusturica’s Underground and then I’ll leave you to it.

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me

this week is a big week. it’s movies week!

I love the pictures.

so much I’m dedicating an entire week to ‘em.

here’s what we got:

2 interviews with 2 indie film directors

the top 5 best films you’ve never heard of

my 2 acting debuts

[and something good to follow that - trust, you'll need it.]

hurray for movies!

hurray for movies week!

tuesdays with tara – volume four

I’ve known Tara a little while longer than most of you.

yet, since we started chatting

and comparing music notes,

I began trying to put my finger on what it was she had.

‘moxy’ made her sound outdated.

‘hip’ would give our present zeitgeist too much credit…

and then it hit me:

girl’s got soul.

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I’ll come right out and say it: I’m white bred. I’m so white-bred that one of my favorite room mates ever (who happens to be black) affectionately refered to me as his “little cornapple”. I don’t actually know what a cornapple is, but it sounds country.

There’s just no denying that I am the result of a middle-class middle-American upbringing. I was a cheerleader. I played soccer on a team called the Panda Bears. And like most suburban teenagers, I was as self-absorbed as humanly possible.

Well, that all changed quick fast in a hurry in 1989. There were three men (actually, one a boy) responsible for that bubble burst:

Clay Masterson, Spike Lee, and Chuck D.

Clay was a neighborhood buddy. He and I established a trio one summer along with his best friend, Wesley.

Wesley and Clay had an interesting friendship. You see, Clay honestly couldn’t understand why he had been born white. He felt black inside. He felt completely alienated from his white family. No one seemed to take his feelings seriously, either; except Wesley. Wesley actually is black, something Clay was very jealous of. So I guess you could say that Wesley adopted Clay in a way, taking him under his wing and allowing him to express his hidden blackness. I didn’t really get it. Nobody did. It was just “their thing”.

Clay and Wesley unwittingly changed my life that fateful summer. Clay called me and asked if I wanted to go see a movie that afternoon. It was rated R, so we’d have to sneak in, but Wesley knew a guy who worked there, so he figured he could get us in.

That movie was Do the Right Thing. And that movie knocked my teeth out. It felt like Spike Lee put his hand on top of my head, looked me dead in the face and screamed, “OPEN YOUR EYES, GIRL!” It was unrelenting. I think we sat through the whole thing bug-eyed and slack jawed, barely breathing.

Then Chuck D entered the arena. “Fight the Power” felt like getting jacked in the stomach, full on. That voice may well have been the voice of God or Buddha or Mohammed for how it affected me.

We stumbled back out into the daylight and it seemed forever before any of us could get a word out. We had all been stunned in our own ways. The point is that that movie, and that song, had burst our collective bubble. I don’t think any of us felt like kids anymore. We felt we had seen too much.

Clay was the first to buy It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back. He made Wesley and I each a tape of it. I listened to my copy until I had memorized every single word and nearly driven my parents insane.

The funny thing is that for the longest time, my love of rap was a dirty little secret that I shared only with Clay and Wesley. My other friends were all punk and goth. I never would have admitted to liking Yo! Mtv Raps more than 120 Minutes. (gasp!)

Public Enemy was just the tip of the iceberg, as it turned out. The following years would bring me to L.L.Cool J, Eric B and Rakim, Gang Starr (Guru!), KRS-1. Later there were my East Coast brothers De La Soul, A Tribe Called Quest, Jungle Brothers. Later came Das EFX, Black Sheep, Wu Tang Clan, Nas, Black Moon, and 3rd Bass. By the time I hit university there was the West Coast explosion: NWA, Dr.Dre, Too Short (“Life ain’t nothin’ but bitches and money”), Notorious B.I.G, Tupac.

I would like to point out that the reason I kept my love of rap hidden was pure teenage cowardice. I was afraid that people would think a middle class white girl who listened to rap was playing at some kind of game. And because it was precious to me, I didn’t want anyone to take that away.

I later learned that music is a place where you can truly be yourself, with no regard for what others might say. It can also be a place that brings us together and therein lies the magic.

This track takes me waaaay back and I think this is what it was meant to do. David Dallas grew up on hip hop and R and B. But he always thought that nobody would care about a white rapper from New Zealand. I’m glad he finally changed his mind. I hope this brother blows up.

Somewhere, Biggie is smiling.

David Dallas – Indulge Me

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volume one

volume two

volume three

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about tara

weymouth photo of the day – 15

there’s something about a U.K. record shop on a rainy Saturday morning.

it’s something.

you should read High Fidelity.

yes – I know you’ve seen it, but as good as the film is,

the book takes you there – here – right inside that red door.

I’ve never owned a record player.

my parents had one – motown, The Beatles & Perry Como’s Christmas.

and I remember at a very early age them taking such good care of their collection.

they also scare me, these record shops.

filled with people who know a lot more than I do,

who thrive on being asked for advice.

and give it loudly.

they’re like the people who intentionally make friends with older people

so they can talk all about their older friends.

‘________ is going to spend allllll day with her 89-year old friend, Sam’.

these kind of people…

you know what I mean.

fuzz.

this is a go-to film when I need a laugh.

and this is a go-to track when I need a quick laugh.

enjoy.

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up! dates.

hi.

I’m well.

saw the photos of my soon-to-be nephew today and almost started crying,

but a good cry.

but it’s my little brother.

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music, well, have had Mumford & Sons on repeat since being pointed towards it.

as well as this, a very, very dangerous track if you’re in a foul mood.

and a fantastic Blur bio was on last night which got me back into them – here’s a dangerous track if you’re in a great mood.

2 out of those 3 were brought to my attention by my gal, Tara Noble.

so good, in fact, she accepted my plea to have a weekly slot here called ‘tuesdays with tara’ – you’ll learn a lot, I promise.

also, a friend of my sister’s is running a well-versed site of his musical favorites – although, the big brother in me would warn any sibling of the dangers of those who own more than 2 Joy Division albums.

but…hey.

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the cable went out today, which was good.

I’m not a huge television fan,

but am addicted to television.

‘Top Gear’ might be the finest show made today – and I’m not even a car fan.

I am a fan of Nigella, she calls to me.

shut up, she does.

and ‘Friends’ is still funny.

shut up, it’s good.

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and life is good,

how lucky am I?

no money in Africa, fly to England and – hey! we need loads of work done. can you stay?

can I stay?

I love staying!

so here I sit in a 4-bedroom overlooking the ocean.

and will be paid, in a few months, in boat – more on that later.

more on other stuff later.

great.

the streets of Luxor.

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look, I’ve been hard on the pyramids and vocal about the pain that is the tourism sector here.

but have also had a few adventures here-and-there.

this one might top the list.

Egypt winning the African Cup was insane.

as you can see.

and I gave into the vibe and jumped on a horse-drawn carriage to celebrate.

you can also see that might not have been the best of ideas.

the friday cinco 6 – tim hey ['avatar' compositor]

I first met Tim Hey the second day I landed in Los Angeles – and when you meet someone who’s both humble and successful in the industry, you know you have a rarity. He stayed with Lori and I off-and-on a week or so, and, save for the mass shootings outside and a pension for lychee margaritas, it was fun.

Tim has been in the film industry now for nearly 20 years. First starting a Summer job at his local cinema tearing tickets and moving onto projectionist and engineer. About 9 years ago He decided he should do what he’d always wanted to do and play more of a part in making films. He went to the National Film and Television School in London to study compositing. After graduating, he got his first job on a film called Blade 2 doing prep work such as painting out wires and rigs that were in shots. Within a year he went freelance and started compositing. Between then and now he’s worked on such films as Harry Potter 2 and 3, Aliens vs Predator, Kingdom of Heaven and Superman Returns among many others. He then went to New Zealand initially for 3 months to work on King Kong, but that was 4 years ago, so I’m guessing he liked it.

…oh yeah, one last thing, he just got done working on a small-budget indie flick called ‘Avatar’ or something like that – be a peach and try to see it if you can.

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what exactly do you do?

I am a compositor at Weta Digital in New Zealand and have been for about 4 years.

what is a compositor?

A compositor is an artist who brings all elements together for a final shot. For example in “Avatar” we have shots with multiple layers of jungles, skies & clouds, creatures, explosions, water, tracer fire and of course the na’vi characters themselves. We then have to make it look as if the shot was filmed with the same camera on the same day. Along with all the elements we add real artifacts you would find if you were filming with real cameras. Lens flares, lens distortion, focus pulls and atmosphere are a few of the added things which make a shot look more natural.

For this project I was a lead compositor so in addition to compositing it was making sure everyone on my sequence was kept up to date with status of shots, ensuring continuity between shots by establishing the look of a sequence alongside the 3D lighters and visual effects supervisor. It also involves liaising with the supervisors and producers and check we were meeting deadlines and flagging any problematic issues that may come up.

how long does each of those frames take to process?

Depending on the amount of data used in the shot and how many elements are used, a single frame can take anywhere from an hour to a couple of days. If you remember there are 24 frames in 1 second that’s a lot of data. Added to that on “Avatar” each frame was rendered twice (right eye and left eye). Luckily the way we and a lot of other large visual effects companies process – or render – frames is we use multiple processors over a network. This leaves us free to do other work and proceed with other shots. Once a shot is rendered it is then reviewed by the visual effects supervisor for any changes that need to be made before the shot is sent to the director to be reviewed.

how long you been working on this?

I’ve been on the show for around a year. however the project has been running a lot longer. Some people at Weta Digital have been working on it 3 maybe 4 years. Because this is literally creating a whole new world, everything has to be built and nothing from the real world can be used. That’s every plant, blade of grass, creature, bug, character, environment, object and vehicle that has to be created from nothing. Usually a film from being awarded to being delivered takes between 6 months and a year at most so that kind of gives you an idea of the scale of Avatar and the work that has gone into it from all the artists involved.

be honest. what’s it like to work on a James Cameron film?

I think that’s the most common question I get. This director is pretty good to work for. What makes it easy from an artists point of view is he has a definite vision of how the whole film and every individual shot should look like. Therefore the artists aren’t bouncing between versions and various different looks which can take up valuable time. On “Avatar”, especially as the show went on, shots we delivered for first look usually only needed polishing and tweaking before the shot was near final status. There were a few occasions where we would show him a version of a shot a few months after he first saw it and he would remember exactly how it looked and what changes were made.

what, if any shots appear in the trailers that you composited?

For the teaser trailer that was released in August I had about 8 shots. Mostly of the Thanator chase in the jungle and Neytiri in the forest surrounded by fire and smoke.

how many people worked on “Avatar”?

We started with around 300 people which is the usual crew for Weta. As the show went on and more scenes were being sent to us from production we ramped up to a maximum of between 800 and 900. Put it this way, it was a heck of a wrap party!

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…at the time of writing, ‘Avatar’ netted $232 million on it’s first weekend. that’s a lot of money.

passion

for reasons unbeknownst to be, a lot of people visit my little blog. a handful of you email, others comment, but going off the stats, only about 0.02%. which is fine. but what I’m going to need over the coming weeks/months is your help with something…let me explain:

here’s what I have: a computer. a camera that shoots video. a good pair of boots.

here’s what I don’t have: money

here’s what I want to do: see a few things before it’s all over

…so, as you may or may not have read over the past few days, I got a bit of a shock when I found out that the $ I had coming in wasn’t there yet. it might be, it might not be, but it was going to be used for an adventure. but maybe the adventure begins because I don’t have it. so I spent the past few days worrying, thinking, moaning, blaming – lots of things that end in -ing, but few that ended in peace. in excitement.

but no one really has any $ these days to do anything.

that shouldn’t stop the adventure – it should start it.

so, here’s my idea:

passion

wait that might have come across wrong, me mentioning having a camera and ‘passion’ being the answer. there’ll be no adult films, but what there could be are films about adults.

lemme ask you – if someone was willing to shoot a short 2-3 minute film on what you were passionate about, be it your work, a story you have, your charity, your hometown, anything, would you give ‘em a place to sleep and a bite to eat?

I think you would. I think anyone would.

the tricky part is that I want to do it in countries I know nothing about. people I don’t know how to speak to. etc.

but time-and-time again, I’ve met those who comment on how lucky I was to have English as my mother-tongue – and could surely find someone, somewhere along the way who could help.

so, here’s what I need – advice.

how could I do this? what am I not thinking of? is it even possible?

help me with this initial set-up and then I’ll start throwing out the places I want to go…

it would start with Turkey.