Saturday 23 October 2010

We have a movie!


Mark the date and time - Saturday the 23rd of October 2010, 11.40am. Fraser Coull completes the first cut of "Night is Day - The Movie".

I sat down this morning and blitzed through the last few scenes, having spent a week editing 3 fight scenes that intercut. 

I am so unbelievably happy that the first cut is complete. It's 1 hour, 52 minutes long, at the moment. The cutaways are still to go in, and then it will be sent to Lindsay and Gavin, my brilliant producers, and we will sit through the movie together and suggest changes, maybe trim the length too.

Then once we're all happy we can send the movie off to be scored, have the special effects worked on, sound effects and probably some ADR too. 

The movie will also need to be coloured and graded to match up the two different cameras we used, and then we can organise a cast and crew screening before deciding what to do next and trying to get the movie sold! 

Thank you SO much for everybody who gave up their time and used their brilliant skills to make this movie.

Here's to it's success!

Friday 15 October 2010

Night is Day The Movie officially becomes a movie

The 70 minute mark!

Night is Day - The Movie has officially become a feature. In order to be classed a film, the feature must be 70 minutes or longer.

And a week ago we hit that mark with the first cut of the film, and a screencap of the scene that made it, is above. No spoilers of course. Please note that this scene is ungraded with no widescreen bars etc etc, it's just for a bit of fun.

I'm now fast approaching the 100 minutes mark too, as I head into the final section of the movie. I've got to move house in 4 days, so that will hold up getting the first cut finished, but as I won't have internet for a week, I've got plenty of time to get the first cut finished and onto a DVD to send to my producers for feedback.

All going well we'll be able to take the movie on a tour next Summer for fans, sci-fi and superhero fans and movie goers to see the movie before we take it to distributors. 

Wish us luck!

Also, be sure to see the latest Night is Day Confidential at http://www.vimeo.com/15136619

Enjoy!


Friday 8 October 2010

Edit, write, edit, write, edit, write...


Making a movie in Scotland is much like hanging from a ledge. You keep holding on, hoping something will happen and save you, and then you realise it's not going to happen. Regardless, failure is not an option as this is a path I have chosen to go down.

I've worked as a cashier in Ikea, a sales representative in GAME, a junior administrator in an office and a BETA tester for computer games. Oh, and I worked as a web content developer for an SEO company.

But NOTHING compares to filmmaking.

You get to do something different everyday, meet a lot of like minded people who become your family, and there is something so amazing about seeing your words being acted out on the screen, and in front of you when you are actually filming it.

Scotland has a LOT of talent. I know, I've seen it. A lot of my friends are filmmakers,  writers, actors, directors, editors, camera operators, special effect geniuses, composers, makeup artists, costume designers, producers, the lot, and they are all amazing. 

All they want to do is make films and TV - Monday to Friday, from 9am til 5pm... but of course that can be 7am til 12am, depending on the shoot :p 

It's just a shame that there doesn't seem to be too much support for filmmakers at the level we're at. Nobody seems to want to take a risk on our level of filmmaking where people are making romantic comedies, gangland dramas, superhero movies just to name a few.

Instead the money goes back to those who have already made their big movies, made their money, and would have no problem getting backing elsewhere to help them.

Congratulations to Shed Media, whose web series, "Being Victor", was picked up by STV and is now being shown on a Thursday night. If there are any STV people reading my blog I've got a web series too - 13 episodes to be exact, two seasons, with the 2nd season having 7 episodes running for 25 minutes each and you can find out more at www.nightisday.co.uk. 

I've now edited 61 minutes of Night is Day - The Movie! 7 more minutes and it becomes a feature film officially (for a film to be classed as a "feature" it must be 70 minutes or more - "Jonah Hex" starring Josh Brolin, made it, just and no more with a run time of, yep, you've guessed it, 70 minutes!) and there's a LOT more editing to do.

Without giving too much away I'm at a scene where Mr. Philips (played by the brilliant Tam Toye who channels a little bit of William Shatner) is discussing the world of demons to his demon-racist assassin and I suppose closest friend, Frank Stone (Mark Harvey, who can flawlessly impersonate Johnny Depp, Eddie Izzard and Mr. Mackay from South Park - trust me - we've got it on film!) when The Caillech (the wonderful Catriona Joss) appears and asks Mr. Philips to assist her in her earth-shattering scheme.

The Caillech however only speaks Gaelic. So that'll be fun for me to edit :p

Once the film is edited I'll send it to my lovely and talented producers, Lindsay and Gavin for them to go through it and suggest changes and then it's off to Philip Martin who will start to work on the score with live musicians, Jack Ashley will start to look at the sound and what needs fixing with Gillian, and Mathew Crisp will start the hard work of special effects, making it a superhero movie with special effects.

All going well we can take the movie on tour of Scotland - Glasgow, Aberdeen, Stirling, Edinburgh, Inverness, Dundee, Greenock - for all the fans, movie buffs and sci-fi fans to come and watch it - before taking it to the film markets and trying to sell it so it can be released in cinemas and on DVD world wide.

While this is going on I'm writing my next feature which has a budget of around £50,000, so I may pay my cast and crew. Now, to find the budget...

I hope the filmmaking industry in Scotland gets better.