Not a great filming day
April 4th, 2008Well, as one of the students said, “It was bound to happen!”
The first Tuesday we filmed went great-we are limited to our time to film to less than an hour per week, so we are having to run through shots at a pretty good clip. We are following our friend’s advice (who is a filmmaker in NYC), and taking three shots of each scene-the master shot, then up a bit closer, with a final shot of the characters or scenes up close. This is time consuming, but certainly leaves us with more material to choose from to edit. So, the first week was fine.
However, this last week, everything seemed to go wrong (Spielberg should have such a day!)-costumes, props, and even the DVD’s to film on were all forgotten. Then, we had the challenge of students who did not have the lines down. Obviously, this was a challenge. We were able to film only one of the five or so scenes we had to get done.
It was discouraging, I think, to most of us involved, but at the same time there is something to be said for understanding that the Lord saw all of this coming. To teach the students a Biblical view of film and culture, I know we must start with teaching them how to trust the Lord, and believe He is good in all circumstances. So, onto next week, with a lesson learned that somehow this must work out for our good. :)
Filming begins
March 4th, 2008We have begun filming our movie for our co-op class, and it is going well. I have five of the students doing acting, and one adult (we are using a pastor from our church-Keith-who was in our last movie).
Working through the details of a shot
We are filming a story which primarily takes place in offices, and have been fortunate to be able to use a building where it looks like the offices are located in different buildings.
Filming
Waiting, while shooting other actors
I have really appreciated the input from the students, although I would probably appreciate more. They are a good group, and I have only had a bit of a challenge getting them motivated. Once they get rolling, they are doing well with thoughts on camera angles, script continuity, and also I was impressed with one of the props especially. I had said, “I want it to look this way…” not knowing how it would come out (being that I didn’t know how well I had communicated it on my side), and the student came back with a fantastic prop! Very nice.
It has also been very encouraging to have the writers strive very hard to stick to a consistently Biblical storyline. There are some great touches added by the student writers, where there is an obvious connection to the parable’s point of how Jesus was speaking to the Pharisees. I was impressed with not only the desire of the students to reflect the truth of the parable, but with the creativity shown there.
Script
February 18th, 2008We have been continuing to write and prepare for our project, which currently has the working title of “Callahan and Sons”. The students have done a good job with the story line, with us working as a team to hash out inconsistencies. We will move into storyboarding soon, and set up to film-locations, props, and costumes.
We should be able to cast this, and begin filming in March.
January 2008
January 15th, 2008As a class, we decided to go ahead and re-write a parable for our Spring Project. Inasmuch as I was hoping to have an original story from the students, I believe I have learned the lesson as the teacher to slot more time for this! We did have a working story in December, and I was very pleased with the students input and storylines, but I found the technical sides of it (location, time to film, the need for more actors than we had-even after a casting call to the co-op) to be too much of a challenge by mid-December. If I had the student working on the story earlier in the year, at the same time we had been studying films, then I think I would have been able to hash out these details better. Lesson learned for me, we will start earlier next year.
We chose the parable from Luke 20:9-18-the parable of the bad tenants. The students are doing a great job of pulling this into our century, and we are working out the dialog. More later on the script, story line, and film locations.