Thursday 2 December 2010

The difficult second movie, and maybe a third to be optimistic.

Whoops! I've not made a blog entry in around a month, that's bad. I've been so busy with actually working on promoting "Night is Day" and corporate video work this kind of slipped my attention. Sorry! To be fair I don't even know if anybody reads this, or if it's even useful for anybody.

Just in case I'm going to make this a three-point blog, so I hope you enjoy it.

NIGHT IS DAY THE MOVIE
Recap: "Night is Day - The Movie" is a Superhero movie set in Scotland. It follows Jason Mackenzie (Chris Summers) as he uses his powers of foresight and lightning to protect the city against demons, gangsters and villains. The Caillech (Catriona Joss), who once formed the hills and landscape of Scotland, returns to the world and tells us that in 3 days everything will end. Jason has to team up with cops Superintendent Sloan (John Gaffney), Detective Chief Inspector Mullan (Steven McEwan) and Inspector Munro (Clare Sheppard) to stop this from happening, while evil businessman Mr. Philips (Tam Toye) and his assassin Frank Stone (Mark Harvey) will do everything they can to help the Caillech destroy the world.

The film started pre-production in January 2010 and with no funding whatsoever, using support from friends and family as well as sponsorship of our main characters, we cast the movie in January and shot it at weekends in the Summer from June until August. 

The movie is now complete and the first edit is finished. The movie is currently at 1 hour 52 minutes, and going by the notes from our producers the movie should go down to 1 hour 40 minutes. We then plan to send it off for special effects, sound work and scoring. We will then take it to festivals, film markets, conventions as well as holding special screenings to secure a sales agent or a distributor - whatever comes first. 

A 10 minute "sizzle reel" has been edited together and being worked on so we can show it at the Glasgow Film Festival in February. For more information go to http://www.nightisday.net and the trailer is at http://vimeo.com/14298694. 

We have a Facebook so please join us at http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=237674711930.

Here is a production still from the movie involving Jason protecting a young girl from an attacker:


All going well, we will sell Night is Day and people will be interested in our future projects, and on that note...

THE SECOND, AND MAYBE THIRD, MOVIE

Any filmmaker worth their salt, or at least in my case, won't just have one movie in them, or hopefully the experience of making their first movie wasn't so terrible that they decide to back in filmmaking and decide that a career in the circus, fast food industry or window selling industry is where there destiny really lies.

So of course I've got ideas for more movies. Ideally I'd LOVE Night is Day to be a trilogy. I wrote the characters and I love them all dearly (even those who don't survive to the end of the first movie!) so I would love to carry on with them and see where they end up...

Just not yet. I need out of the Night is Day world to prove to myself that I'm not just a Night is Day writer, but I am in fact a credible filmmaker that makes movies that people enjoy. 

Even before Night is Day I wrote two film scripts - one called "Space Defence" which is about three normal people from different planets who get super powers and become the protectors of the realm (aka the universe) and it was all about how they got their powers and became the protectors. I really liked that script, and I think I've lost it forever now.

The second was "The Journey" in which sword fighters from all over the world were given sponsors to back their campaign to enter the tournament - the last fighter standing won a 50 million pounds and got to walk away with their lives. My script focused on 3 of the fighters - we started pre-production, filmed a trailer and it was going well - but the funding never showed up and the film fell apart. Then I got ran down by a car and broke my leg and arm... I'm glad that happened - in a weird way - because then I made "Night is Day - The Series"

Now I'm writing a script that's going through two/three name suggestions but the working title is "Get Funded" and it's about 3 friends who went to a TV production college course (just like me) and they have the perfect script, but nobody will give them money, so they decide to rob and exploit people - yes, it's a comedy. So I hope, HOPE, that come next Summer, "Night is Day" will have been sold or close to it, and private investors will get on board "Get Funded" and we can shoot it next year.

I know you are all thinking "But Fraser, isn't two movies enough?" well, maybe, but not for me. I LOVE writing, I LOVE filmmaking and it's what I want to do! (For now anyway, ideally I'd love to be a showrunner for the BBC or STV, writing and executively producing a TV show ala Russell T Davis, Steven Moffat, Joss Whedon et all) and about a year ago I was in a computer game shop and I saw an X-Box game with the most brilliant title.

I'm not going to reveal the title, it will give too much away - but I racked my brain to see if it was feasible, and if anybody had done it before. Google tells me that a low-budget indie movie has attempted the genre, and it got pretty bad reviews, and sorry to the filmmaking team involved, but it sounds like cheesy b-movie porn. 

My filmmaking influences are Sam Raimi's "Evil Dead" and Quentin Tarantino's "Reservoir Dogs" (or as my girlfriend said to me "Reservoir Puppies", which was genius) - so one day I hope to do my Tarantino film and maybe with this 3rd film idea, I'll get to do my tribute to Sam Raimi and attempt two genres I never said I would do.

But first, I'll finish "Get Funded" and try to get...the funding I need to make it, while completing Night is Day and getting it sold, and writing my third, as of yet, untitled film. 

Now on to my final point of this unnecessary long blog post...

JUST DO IT (this one gets a bit ranty, sorry!)

Disclaimer - I am not claiming to be a filmmaking genius, I am not claiming to have made award winning masterpieces of cinematic history.

However I must, must say this. Recently a lot of people, well a few, okay, one or two people have been asking me how do they go about getting involved in films, how do I do it, can I give them work experience, or a full time, fully paid job on a film, or can I produce and make their film scripts for them.

No.

Is the short answer. 

The long answer is sorry, but I just don't have the time to help everybody. The filmmaking industry in this country, particularly Scotland, is in a really bad state of affairs. Yes, there are a few good films coming out every few years, but when you look at countries like Holland, Sweden and America, they are making 60 films a year - we're making around 6. And some of them stink. But give them their due, they are still making movies and in a way that's great.

So here's my advice to anybody who wants to write a movie, direct a movie, star in a movie, produce a movie - just do it. There's nothing stopping you. A lot of people are saying "But I'm too old to get started now" or "I don't have the training" etc. 

I didn't make my first short film until I was 21 - I didn't go to college until I was around 19/20 years of age, and I have just made my first feature film. Yes, have your influences - Sam Raimi was 19 when he made "The Evil Dead" but that didn't put me off filmmaking because I was older than he was and there are filmmakers now who are 17 and winning awards, and I haven't won ANY awards, but this doesn't bother me. Your audience is out there, somewhere.

Here's how I got started in this industry...

2003 - I was accepted onto the E-Force Training Programme at the BBC in Queen Margaret Drive in Glasgow (I really, REALLY miss that place).  I learned to be a "pleasant pest" and to stick in people's minds.

2004 - I was accepted on to the HND Television Productions and Operations course at James Watt College, despite not fulfilling the requirements of higher education certificates. I met a lot of like minded people and I attended the course for a year.

2005 - I wrote, directed and edited my first short film, "Night is Day - Dusk" - it was terrible but I learned SO much from that. I also made a lot of enemies unfortunately as this industry does create terrible egos in people, but we live and learn.

2005 - I went to Business Gateway with a Business proposal and was awarded grants and funds to start up "Silly Wee Films" 

2006 - I had my road accident and my first feature film, "The Journey", folded. I then wrote and directed "Night is Day" series 1 by going on Mandy.com and looking for the cast and crew. 

2007 - Due to lack of business experience and work, Silly Wee Films folded and I worked as a website admin assistant in Stirling and learned how to run a business. I then made Night is Day series 2 and several short films.

2008 - Silly Wee Films came back with a vengeance. I made another short film, wrote a movie script and moved to Glasgow. Business continued and life was good. Unfortunately any hint of success - articles about yourself in newspapers, your TV show being shown on the TV, will create a bit of jealousy towards you, spite and people bitching behind your back. People will take incidents that they weren't even involved in and spin the rumours out of control and sadly, even to this day, there are a lot of people who dislike me for what I do - but I have NEVER lied nor have I messed people around. I will always be honest and treat people the way I expect to be treated back.

There will always be negativity in this world and especially in this industry - ignore it - do your work, keep your head down and keep on going. If you are going to make it in this industry then the bad press, negativity and "enemies" don't matter in the long run. 

And to be super cheesy and quote "Angel", - "If nothing we do matters, then all that matters is what we do."

And I'm spent!

4 comments:

Macgyevr said...

There's 3 types of people in the acting/film type world, 1) back stabbing dickheads, 2) fauning people who are overly nice to everyone all the time and saying everything is brilliant but generally turn out to be a version of type 1, 3) the good guys. I've met you and a couple of the other folks involved with NiD once (well you twice but you probably don't/hopefully don't cause I wasn't cast remember that one) and your type 3. In some ways that makes it a bit harder sometimes, in others it makes it a whole lot easier in the long run. I have a writer friend with a similar attitude (he's actually working on producing too, slow going. Jon F. Merz, look him up) and he's proper kicking off now which is GREAT.

I'd also recommend Kevin Smith's Red State of the Union podcast which is about making his latest movie. Pretty educational stuff.

Macgyevr said...

Wish I knew how to correct that bloomin nick name typo...

squashn_stretch710 said...

I must say, hearing you say you're 21 and haven't won anything yet makes me feel better about myself (though I'm SURE you'll get something soon!)

Your second feature sounds fun, good luck :D

Ecossefilmmaker said...

Thanks for your kind comment guys - it's very much appreciated!