Here is our latest video for l.a. Eyeworks - just in time for Halloween. We had a total blast shooting this one and clearly let our fevered imaginations run wild. You might need to watch this more than once to catch it all.
Director • Bryan Jackson Director of Photography • Quyen Tran Music Composer • Joe Wilbur Art Director • Michael Hofeldt Editor and Visual Effects • Brian Baugh Crew Gina Chun Brian Baugh John Pulliam
Friday I did a three feature marathon of new film from Hong Kong at the ID Film Festival. The easy standout was Citizen King - which seems to encapsulate much of the heartbreaking vibe of the entire film festival - not getting what you want (or clearly deserve) and instead learning to make something out of what you actually have left. I guess this really is the year of painful life-lessons. Contentious or insightful, I enjoyed the film entirely.
Jason Tobin's amusing Cut Short plays out the ultimate actor's revenge fantasy all the way to the messy end. TheThree Narrow Gates slips casually into seriousness, and while it ran a bit long, it achieves a sense of dread at the prospects of tackling the collusion between corporations, media, and the government. King of Spy was mostly for laughs, and while hilariously thin - it was made for $800 - it grew weary by the end. However I did really like the confusion created when the dedicated cast was endlessly recycled to play good & bad guys.
The ID Film Festival opened on Thursday night with a rare screening of Sunsets - a film co-written and directed by Eric Nakamura & Michael Aki. While the film might have arrived at the end of an era of grainy, edgy indie film - see the Class of 97 - it still has the ability to hold your attention. Ultimately Sunsets achieves a sense of looming dread as the terminally bored neighborhood hoodlums continue down destructive paths of their own making. The outsider-style cinematography by Nakamura has some beautiful moments of vista-view contemplation and an almost Bruce Weber-like meditations on skin, ink, and white tank T's.
There is so little discussion of anything anymore where substance wins over brevity. Watching Bill Browning from the Bilerico Project interviews with the legendary Cleave Jones was completely refreshing. Take time to watch both parts!
Last night I caught the OUTFEST premiere of David Quantic's terrific new film transatlantic in the Makin' Moves program. While already a fan of Dave's, his newest film is a breakout work. It is beautifully photographed with a D90 and has no dialogue. The refreshing camera work makes all the narrative connections visually, and the score is lean and effortless (in a good way). There are lovely candid moments between lovers, joyful exchanges between friends in a cafe, and the film truthfully achieves those hesitant moments in the afterglow of love. The entire Makin' Moves program is quite solid, and surprisingly and wonderfully diverse. It plays again on Monday night, and I encourage you see it.
Sadly, here is yet another meme neutered via hostile corporate takeover. This is a corporate commercial posing as flashmob and it signals the death knell for Flashmobs. Hammer Pants is a weak promotion for the A&E's Hammertime reality show. I did my own investigation and found out the dancers were hired, costumed, and directed. The Live! On Sunset store was rented for the shoot back in early May. The shoppers are all actors.
Such a lame ending for a form with it's historical roots in actual activism.
I attended an excellent rally tonight in West Hollywood. The rally was in response to the mixed ruling today from the California Supreme Court. The standout speaker had to be Lt. Daniel Choi. He spoke with conviction, determination, and heartfelt zeal - his leadership training & courage under fire could be a real asset as we take this back to the polls in 2010. Finally tonight, we heard voices from actual Gay families, and it was a such simple, powerful moment. It suddenly seemed so adult, so compelling in a very different way.
Both Time Magazine & the LA Times declare it's time for TINY HOUSES by Mimi Zeiger! Time Magazine features Zeiger's new book in the special The Green Design 100 bookshelf section. The LA Times features a big slide show covering the book and 15 of the great houses featured inside it. And of course, there is also TINY in Time Out New York as well. Way to score the press MZ!
I am quite excited to share the just completed webvid 'STREET BATTLE' created for Susan Feniger's STREET - her new restaurant features street food from around the world. Watch as Susan Feniger goes head to head against Rob Tsai and Chuck Maa from the Instant Noodles Crew in this most incongruent of battles.
We shot this back in December, while the restaurant was in the middle of construction. Despite the the cold temperatures and occasional rain, we had a great shoot.
On Sunday we shot the video for Susan Feniger's new restaurant STREET. The shoot went very well (despite the cold) and I cant' wait to get started on the editing.
Above is a work-in-progress pic of the backdrops we painted for the shoot.
Yesterday was a pretty amazing protest at the gates of the Mormon Church in Westwood, Los Angeles! The protest started at 2 p.m. on Santa Monica Blvd. and then evolved into a march around the sprawling grounds of the church. I have to say that the people who were in their windows, on balconies, and doorsteps clapping, waving signs in support were absolutely great - especially the parents and students at the school we marched by who were all shouting and waving their support. The best moment was when we stopped for a short speech by Lorri L. Jean. When she announced a new wesbsite (where every donation includes a postcard sent to the president of the Mormon Church telling him the donation was made in his name) people rushed up and started handing her cash. Let's get ready to lick those stamps!
Once that long and peaceful, if loud, circle was complete, the action on Santa Monica seemed like it might quiet down. But suddenly the massive crowd began to march down Santa Monica Blvd and then turned north up Westwood Blvd. There were some tense moments on Westwood Blvd. between a group of guys in a truck and a about 20 protesters, and then at Ohio when the LAPD tried to keep the protesters from proceeding up the street. Eventually the traffic was cleared and the march continued up to the middle of the intersection at Wilshire & Westwood. While the police kept the protesters contained they cleared a path east on Wilshire. To make a long description of a long day of marching shorter, we marched into Beverly Hills, turning at Wilshire & Santa Monica and took it back to the Mormon Church for a final rally at the gates of the church. I left shortly after 7 p.m.
It is an amazing display of action and peaceful but angry protest today here in Westwood at the Mormon Church. I will post lots of pix when I get back home.
Despite feeling overwhelmed and under-the-weather, I headed to the NO on 8 rally tonight to vent some rage and connect with people who were feeling the same. On the bus ride over, as the traffic slowed to a crawl, a smile grew bigger and bigger on my face as the bus inched closer and closer - all-the-while knowing that the rally had stalled traffic and people were being inconvienenced because we were protesting the mob-rule-run on our rights. I hopped off the bus and glided effortlessly towards the energized crowd overflowing with love. It was a great event with speakers, spotlights, news channels, and when helicopters buzzed repeatedly overhead the crowd went into overdrive!
Join us Thursday at 2pm for a little conversation we are planning to have outside the Mormon Church - which provided the primary financial backing for Prop 8.