Saturday, 17 December 2011

Indies

Today I watched "Breaking Upwards", an Indie flick from 2009. They shot it for $15,000 in New York. The actors supplied their own make-up and costumes.

I love that! And they had great actors, including Olivia Thirlby from "Juno". Movies aren't about the studios anymore. There are niche audiences all around.

I was listening to a great podcast interview with comedian Chris Rock today. He was saying that the era of the mainstream is over, the best comics have their own niche audiences. We've seen it in music too since the mp3 took over.

The old timers are clinging on, packaging movies the old way, but things are changing. Films like "Breaking Upwards" are possible, we just need to believe it. "New Years Eve" was a surefire hit for the studios, but it flopped. And Scorcese's "Hugo 3D" was actually great, but also flopped. The marketing departments can't guarantee a hit any more.

A heartfelt film made for $1,000 is just as valid as a Hollywood blockbuster. Don't get me wrong, the indies can be just as shitty as the mainstream movies. "Breaking Upwards" only scores a '6' on IMDB and with good reason.

But what the movie stands for and the attitude of the team behind it far outlives the content. "The Puffy Chair" proved that films on zero-budgets can resonate. So did "Clerks", "Once" and "The Blair Witch Project."

I watched "Happythankyoumoreplease", another indie flick about white actors/writers who drink coffee and have no problems. This is the danger of indie flicks, too many people are just trying to remake "Garden State."

Life is about many things. "Breaking Upwards" and "Happythankyoumoreplease" were both about writers in New York, and it shows a real lack of imagination. It works when Woody does it, but that's because you can be a shoe maker in India and still relate, because what he did was universal. But some of these modern indies are about absolutely nothing at all.

There was a time when nothing-at-all was cool. But Kevin Smith nailed it and so did "Seinfeld". We need more to sustain us. That's why I really feel the time is ripe for an indie film revolution. We have the tools, and the talent is all around us. The films just need to be about more than coffee and hip soundtracks.

Too many people are waiting for the big break or joking around making zombie films that nobody is passionate about. The old paradigm of production and distribution made this the only way, but now the door is open. If your work resonates with people, you'll find them on Twitter and Facebook and they'll find you.

Ten true fans will go out and kill for you. Word of mouth rules everything. Even the studios offer sweeteners to bloggers and tweeters now, they want you to feel part of the club so you'll give them positive reviews.

But you don't need the studios. You don't even need that much money. Cinema is changing. Get a good story and you're golden. Find great actors and anything is possible.

We don't totally know how distribution is going to play out in the future. It changes every year. We used to hate the idea of people streaming our movies but now people's Mac screens are as big as the cinema.

So don't rule out anything.

Everything is changing, and the indies play a bigger role than people realise. For the first time in cinematic history, we have greater personal access to our audiences. It's like the Chris Rock thing I mentioned; niche audiences. You don't need the big break anymore, you just need to find the people who get you. That's what musicians and comedians do now, and film is starting to go the same way.

Care to share?

Friday, 16 December 2011

4am Miracle

I've had so many of them. Writing breakthroughs, insights about life, transcendent music listening experiences.

After a while you realise it isn't coincidence. Springsteen was right: "Show a little faith, there's magic in the night."

Too many good things have come from not sleeping. Sure, I feel like shit come the morning, but you carry on. Right now it's 3am and I'm up at 7 for an 8am call time. But its worth it when I've done some writing and had a profound experience listening to Pearl Jam.

Three weeks from now, who cares how little I slept three weeks ago? That's what always gets me about the people who leave early, I don't get it. They invented coffee, y'know. You can sleep the next night.

So much of sleep is based on societal norms. I still battle with this concept in my head that my sleep is abnormal. Abnormal to who? Why should I give a shit?

The night is so quiet. You finally get to be alone. No-one can tell you you're going wrong. There's no-one to please. It's an opportunity. The night doesn't judge you, it just sits quietly in the corner offering you a chair.

Care to share?

Creative Blocks

Are annoying, because we take them so seriously!

Have you seen the movies coming out of Hollywood? They're terrible! Chill out, relax, and write what you wanna write!

So you lack clarity? That's part of the process! Your characters lack clarity too, explore it with them!

Don't be oppressed by the gatekeepers. The producer/studio/teacher figure you hear in your head --- why give it so much authority? Why is the imner-critic so strong and correct? Your critic doesn't know everything, if it did, it'd have a three picture deal!

Become the gatekeeper! The strength and power and clarity of the gatekeeper is a part of yourself you disown. Own it! Be it! Sit like you imagine the producer sitting. Write your script from that point of view.

And don't sit there thinking I'm talking nonsense. Maybe I am, maybe I'm not. Creativity is about playing, finding different angles.

If you've been blocked all year, something is going wrong.

Don't judge other people's work so harshly! When you do,  you convince yourself you know everything. If you know everything, it means your script should be genius. When it's not genius you lose clarity and hide from the work.

Get off Facebook. The distractions will kill you. To be creative you have to turn the world off and focus on your work. Focus to the point where you forget the clock, your hunger, your body, your sex life. Truly focus. When you focus and do the work, you unleash your potential.

People will belittle your creative work. People will build you up as the next Spielberg. Both of these are harmful. The belittling makes you feel worthless, the building you up puts too much pressure on you. Realise that it happens because people aren't sure how to relate to you. They mostly mean well. Don't let them put you off. Shut the door and do your work.

Shut the door and do your work.

Care to share?

Recent viewings.

Harold and Kumar's Xmas movie 3D: Watchable but not great. 3/10

Hugo 3D: Magical. 9/10

Breaking Away: Coming of age flick from the late 70's. Intriguing. 7/10

Little White Lies: French, wonderful. 10/10

The Way: subtle, touching, Martin Sheen rules. 8.5/10

Moneyball: I worship Sorkin but didn't love this. I know I should. I'll try again on DVD. 7/10

Fear Me Not: Small Danish film. Ulrich Thomsen is amazing. 8/10

My Week With Marilyn: Enchanting. 8.5/10

50/50: At times touching, at times average. But mostly very good. 7.5/10

Care to share?

Thursday, 15 December 2011

The HOME ALONE Dialogues: Part 3

INT. RESTAURANT - EARLIER TONIGHT 

THE KID is sipping PEPSI through a straw. CARL is drinking PEPSI the normal way, and CRAIG doesn't have a PEPSI.


CARL 
You think it's the right time now to watch Home Alone?

THE KID 
Yeah, maybe. 

CARL
Yeah. 

THE KID 
I think you should watch 'Home Alone' on the 23rd, and 'Home Alone 2' on the 24th, Christmas eve. 

CARL
Yeah that sounds good. 

CRAIG 
What about if you're busy Christmas eve?

THE KID
What about it?

CRAIG 
Then you can't watch Home Alone. 


THE KID 
I'm talking about in an ideal world, the ideal time to be watching 'Home Alone' is in the days preceding Christmas. 

CRAIG
Does precede mean before or after? 

THE KID
Before or after what? 

CRAIG 
Before or after the thing you used the word precede for. 

CARL
So when should I watch 'Home Alone'?

CRAIG
Whenever you want.

THE KID
No, not whenever you want. 23rd, 24th. 25th is better, but you probably have to do family stuff. 

CRAIG 
I watched 'Home Alone' in November. 

CARL
Why?

CRAIG
It was on TV.

CARL
You should never watch Home Alone in November. 

CRAIG
Why?

THE KID
Because you should watch it in December. 

CRAIG 
It's just a movie. 

THE KID
No.

CARL 
No. 


You can read part 1 here. And part 2 here. Rumors that the Home Alone dialogues are being turned into a movie starring Ryan Reynolds are, at this point, not confirmed. 

Care to share?