Archive for November, 2008

24
Nov
08

Where the Water Meets the Sky

Movie Screening:  Where the Water Meets the Sky
Where:  Ex’pression CollegeScreening room 563
When: Thursday, Dec 4
Time:  5-7pm Movie is about an hour long and Q & A after the movie

MSV in the BUSH
Camfed Presents Where the Water Meets the Sky
A film narrated by Morgan Freeman. Read more, Visit the Press room

Where the Water Meets the Sky is the inspiring story of a group of women in rural Zambia who learn how to make a film as a way to speak out about their lives. Produced in partnership with Camfed, all funds raised through the film will support Camfed’s work to educate girls and invest in economic and leadership opportunities for young women in Africa.

Where the Water Meets the Sky Trailer: http://www.watermeetssky.com/

Film for Social Change

Camfed began training women in filmmaking in 2003 as a way of empowering them to tell their own stories, in their own voices. African women are often presented to the rest of the world by outsiders, through the lens of poverty, illiteracy and illness. Camfed’s filmmaking initiative reverses that model, transforming them from subjects into authors. It provides marginalized women, who have virtually no outlets for expressing their views, with a way to challenge injustices in their community and advocate for change.

Through the dynamic medium of film, their stories have the potential to reach thousands of people. In sharing those stories with their community, they foster dialogue around sensitive issues, and stir compassion where once there was judgment. In sharing them with an international audience, they subvert misconceptions, sow genuine understanding, and call for action.

Camfed has launched filmmaking initiatives in both Ghana and Zambia, and for the women involved, the experience has been transformative. Their voices have become bolder. Their ambitions have grown. And they have developed the courage and confidence to achieve their dreams.

wtw-poster_remix

Where the Water Meets the Sky – website

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24
Nov
08

Stand-Out Graduate Michael Coleman

Star Shooter

  

Photo Courtesy of Michael Coleman

Video producer Michael Coleman has filmed some of our brightest stars, including such talents as comedian Robin Williams, rock bands Aerosmith and Counting Crows, and Food Network chef Tyler Florence (right, with Coleman).

“The cool thing about my job is that I get to work with a lot of interesting people. Robin Williams has been one of my favorite projects so far,” says the Emeryville-based filmmaker, who shot Williams for a video about Israel’s 60th anniversary that was shown in New York’s Times Square. “True to form, he was very funny in person.”

Coleman cut his teeth in Aerosmith’s studio, shooting the recording of the band’s acclaimed 2004 Honkin’ on Bobo blues album.

“I graduated from college on a Friday, and the following Monday, I was in the studio working with Aerosmith,” says Coleman, who grew up in Martinez. “It was an eight-month crash course. Steven Tyler called me ‘The Kid.’ ”

Coleman scoffs at the notion of moving south to L.A., to the heart of the filmmaking industry. Not with his client list: KFOG, Apple, Industrial Light and Magic, and UC Berkeley.

“I’ve never had a reason to leave the Bay Area—some of the most exciting and innovative companies are right here in our backyard,” says Coleman.

Watch Coleman’s music profiles at www.kfog.com.
Original article from Diablo Magazine.

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21
Nov
08

Special Effects and San Francisco!

Special Effects and San Francisco!


I am back in Regina after a whirlwind week in San Francisco (and yes, I took the above mandatory Golden Gate Bridge shot on the trip).  
It was a fantastic week! I got to work with Don Wood again (the actor playing Tom Sukanen), as well as David Cramer and Stephen Pocock (actors from the bar scene we shot last year in San Francisco). They’re all good friends so it’s always a treat. I also got to get back on set with Sisu DP Andrew Schlussel, which is always super fun, and audio engineer Brian Webb, which, as it turns out, is also always fun. I also got to work with Sisu Visual Effects Supervisor Brian Andrews in person for the first time; all of our collaboration so far has been through email and other internet technology. Brian’s great too. The wonderful folks at Expression College for Digital Arts are helping on post production in many ways, from visual to audio. 

an untextured render of the CG ship modeled by Nic Dunbeck and tricked out by texture artist Luke Graves

First, Brian Andrews, Andrew Schlussel and I met to go over the shots we needed to get. We spent about an hour in the Ray Harryhausen Lab at the Expression making sure we were all in agreement about what needed to be done on the green screen. Because our dolly shot was the mirror movement to the actual animation, it was kind of an abstract brain puzzle, and we had to talk it through a few times. Here’s where my background in mime comes in handy…

l to r: Visual Effects Supervisor Brian Andrews, Director of Photography Andrew Schlussel, Writer/Director/Producer Chrystene Ells    

 

It was a little complicated figuring out the dolly move…
…even with boards and the model we spent a lot of time in discussion before getting to the set.

Setting up the shoot was fun; I really love being on set and after all these months alone in front of the computer editing it was great to feel like part of a team again, even though we were just a tiny crew of three and Don was the only talent.

“Hang on, can we look at those plans just ONE MORE TIME?”  “I THINK I remember how to set up a light…” 

 

“…or do I?”
“Done! Wait, there are three more??”
We were trying to match this shot of Don from the summer 2007 shoot in Saskatchewan, not only in how Don was posing, but also in terms of lighting and even the costume. We spent some time getting the asymmetrical suspender clips just right

… while Brian measured out the green screen and made gaffer’s tape marks for reference markers that will come in handy during the match move work later.

The scene is one where the CG ship banks to the left and then sails off with Tom on board, so we had a dolly move that went straight back from Don on the green screen, then veered camera left away from the action.

The DP always gets the cush jobs.

I cut the footage we shot into the rough edit and I think it’s going to work. Of course ultimately the green will be removed and the footage of Don, as well as the animation of the ship, will be composited (superimposed) over an actual environment. Sneak peak of the raw footage below; check it out!

 We also did a very nice pick-up shot that we never quite got satisfactorily on set, of Tom out on the prairie against a black evening sky, which we cheated by shooting against black duvateen (thanks, Roy).
Night sky, right? Right! It’s movie magic!

Other friends dropped by as well, and is often the case on shoots, empty hands were given work, so Roy Miles, Cat Foster and Brandon Foster all carried gear and helped with shots. And those who stayed long enough got burritos! Sorry, no pictures of lunch. We were all too busy devouring Mexican food. But here’s what they looked like (mmm…):

There’s nothing in Regina like a Bay Area burrito.  The shoot went from 9 am to 3:30 p.m., and then Don and I relocated to the Sound Department to work on audio. We could only book the studio from 4pm until midnight, so we were only half done with our day by the time we got started on audio. David Cramer and Stephen Pocock joined us, while Brian and Andrew went home (after Andrew transferred all of the morning’s footage to DVDs for me). 

 

“If we nail it before midnight, will you let us out before our coach turns into a pumpkin?”
We needed to re-record the dialogue from the bar scene we shot last year in San Francisco, primarily because of the fire trucks that were doing drills on the half-hour down the block.

l to r: Stephen Pocock (bartender), David Cramer (old man), Don Wood (Tom Sukanen), Brian Webb (audio engineer extraordinaire)

It was great to see Brian Webb again, who ran the audio on location, and to meet Justin, who I hope will be continuing to help out with the audio over the next couple of months.


Justin Valerio is AWESOME.  
“Now if you actors can stop being FUNNY for just ONE MINUTE we might get out of here in 8 hours!”
 

 

You can tell by the intense looks of concentration how tough this is.
But when you’re just standing around watching yourself in the movies, how tough can it be?
Eventually the three goofballs in the booth settled down and then we got some serious work done.

The actors did a great job! ADR is not easy; you have to match your onscreen lip movement, as well as the timing and performance, as precisely as possible, but if anything I think we have some line interpretations that are even better than the originals. Justin and Brian W. are terrific to work with and even took over directing Don’s ADR work when I went out with Stephen to get — yes — our second meal of the day of burritos.

It was a long day, and by midnight I was pretty exhausted. Don had to be twice as tired as I was; he was performing all day long.

In addition to the green screen shoot and the audio work, Brian A. and Andrew sponsored a pizza party for students at Expression, both to give those who are already working on the project an idea of what the whole film is about, and also to recruit a few new students for the final push on the visual effects side of things. I did a 30-minute talk on the film and screened a few scenes, which was a little painful for me because the sound is rough and none of the effects shots are plugged in yet, but we got a good response and a few new digital artists came on board, which is terrific.

The rest of the trip was great; even though this is a production journal and not a personal one I just want to mention that I also got to see many wonderful friends who I really miss a lot, including my old pals from those lucrative puppeteering days, Howie and Mark at ILM (George Lucas’ effects house in San Francisco, Industrial Light and Magic), where I took a few obligatory photos…

the awesome Yoda fountain at the ILM main entrance
hanging out with Han

“Are you my mummy?”

Now it’s back to Regina and full throttle back into post production. Audio and 2D animation, here I come! Meanwhile, the CG work is going full tilt at Expression College, Dave Lawlor and friends are working on the score here in Regina, and I am in the process of lining up some audio voice recordings of Russian and Finnish native speakers. The Toronto Finnish Theatre Company very generously prepared some voice-over auditions that could be heard online, and will be contributing airfare to the film to fly an actress to Regina for the recording session. Brian Webb and Justin Valerio have graciously offered to help with the surround sound audio mix, which is incredible news and a huge weight lifted, and Roy Miles has ideas about color correction when the time comes. This is also a big piece of the puzzle and something I know nothing about.

As usual, Team Sisu continues to grow and I can only be in awe of how Tom Sukanen’s story has inspired so many people to contribute to this film. If anything it has become much bigger than my own personal project and is a true collaboration, as well as an interdisciplinary and international art project. It’s a new way of looking at it for me and I feel ever more humbled by the amount of love and energy and money and time that has come from so many different people and places.

I just hope that in my final job of tying everything together I can produce a film that everyone will be proud to be part of.

Until next time, SISU!!!

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21
Nov
08

Alumni Rico Loverde, Rondo Bros., MC Lars

Hello out in Rondo-Land! 

We are honored to report that we have recently completed not one, but two records with the amazingly talented MC Lars. He was kind enough to include us in his next solo album due out in the spring, entitled “This Gigantic Robot Kills” – and in the meantime, he’s recorded another album of 100% pure Nerdcore called Digital Gangster  – and it is available now!

MC Lars is one of world’s most brilliant sweethearts and his music is fresh like organic strawberries and whipped cream right from the cow.

We also were honored to recently work with the RunDmc track “Xmas In Hollis” – we remixed the song for Sprint Palm Centro, as well as made a FAT new version with one of our favorite rappers, Motion Man, who is all over youtube.

Lastly, we just spent the last week working with an amazing group called the Kin, from Australia. They already have alot of love on myspace, youtube, etc., so check them out. Our studio was also graced by the record’s producer, Jack Douglas, who is a master and taught us many new ninja moves. We added drums, keys, shakers, bass, and vibes to their record… out next year sometime.

Rico Loverde

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18
Nov
08

Ex’pression Student Showcase

 

Ex’pression Student Showcase III

home-photo-sf

Meet the creative gurus of tomorrow, as students from Ex’pression College for Digital Arts showcase their portfolios, featuring everything from animation, to game art design, motion graphics, and sound arts.

Come see how students from Ex’pression have utilized Apple technology in creating their impressive artwork.

 

Where: Apple Store Theater, San Francisco 
When: December 11th, 6 – 8:00 p.m.

Driving Directions & Map

For any questions please send an e-mail to: soup at expression.edu

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18
Nov
08

Ex’pression College in L.A. Times

Read the full article here: Los Angeles Times – Video Game Schools

gad

Majoring in video games.

One of them is Ex’pression College for Digital Arts in Emeryville, Calif. Founded in 1999 to teach computer graphics and sound design for the movie industry, the school decided to create a separate course for video game designers last year after seeing so many of its graduates jump into the profession.

Read the full article here: Los Angeles Times – Video Game Schools

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12
Nov
08

ILLGENETICS Label Showcase

ILLGENETICS Label Showcase

Ex’pression College, Meyer Hall, Friday December 5th7PM to 10PM.

ill_genetics



12
Nov
08

Generica Film Festival

Ex’pression College is a co-sponsor for the East Bay Express Generica Film Festival. The entry deadline has past, but you can see the revue at the Oakland Museum on November, 18th, from 6:30pm – 9:30pm.

Generica Film Festival

East Bay Express

05
Nov
08

House of Cards

Working at a Digital Arts College, I’m not as easily impressed as I once was with animation and visual effects. Needless to say, the Radiohead video “House of Cards” is amazing. Okay, maybe I’m a fan (I actually saw them at Berkeley’s Greek Theater a couple years ago), but regardless if you like the music or not… and if you’re into visual effects and computer imaging… check this out. There’s also a nice accompanying “making-of” video, too.

http://code.google.com/creative/radiohead/#data-visualization

05
Nov
08

Music Business Seminar

Music Business Seminar: Legal and Business Skills for your Music Career

Where:

Ex’pression College for Digital Arts

East End Lecture Area

Saturday, November 15, 2008




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