Archives January 2017

Zombie Office

Inside Zombie Office Interactive Horror Video Game

Today we talk with Jean Francois Rouze. Jean is the co-founder of a video production company and a video game agency. The production company was founded when Jean was only 22 years old. Now they have over 10 years’ experience producing and developing entertainment content for Disney, Marvel, BBC and Porsche. Jean is passionate about video games and movies ever since he was a child.

We will be talking to Jean today about Zombie Office. We were so impressed with the trailer that was made for Kickstarter that we had to find out more. Zombie Office is shot like a movie to be played as an interactive video game. This is the modern day version of the choose your own adventure books we all had as kids.

Visit Zombie Office at http://www.zombieoffice.com

Follow Zombie Office @ZombieOfficeTW

Download the Zombie Office Interview

Imperfect Podcast on Soundcloud

 


 

Watch the Zombie Office Trailer

Watch The Zombie Office Interview on YouTube

Highlights of the Zombie Office Interview

Whats your background in making films?

I started a movie production company when I was 22 years old as I was graduating film making university. I was interested in starting my own business because I was not going to work for television or film industry. We started with advertising and collaborating with films in France and Spain as well as interactive content.

How did you find work that paid the bills so early on?

I had no clients when I started. I took my laptop and went to see clients to tell them I can make any type of video production for them. We moved into mobile and web video production in 2007. It was a good time to be in digital.

Who was your first client?

Our first client was L’oreal Paris. We started making advertising for their social media and eventually got more business for their television advertising. It was a big client and very exciting.

Where did you attend university?

I attended the University of Madrid. It was difficult because at that time there was not a lot of universities offering studies in film. Between 500-600 people applied that year and only 12 were accepted. It was a bit like Hunger Games. You had to fight for your spot. I was only 18 and had to compete with people that were much older. It was exciting and educational but I think the best school is going outside and shooting with a camera and sharing your projects with people.

Where did you get the film making bug?

Actually I never touched a camera before I arrived to school because my Dad never let me touch his video camera. It was a big fight at home. My uncle worked in the movie business and I used to read his scripts when I was a kid and I loved it. When I was a kid I wanted to be an actor like Maculey Culkin in Home Alone. I said to my Mom, stop calling Jean Francois, call me Kevin.

Then I went to a movie shooting and I saw a guy with a cap giving orders to everyone. I asked my uncle who that guy was and he told me it was the director. I said now I want to be the director.

Were you a fan of horror movies growing up?

That came later. Everything used to scare me when I was a kid. I started to watch them more and more and also the making of when I was in university.

What film makers inspire you?

This may be typical but Alfred Hitchcock is my favorite director. I remember a book written by a French director named Francois (XXXX). It’s an interview with him and Hitchcock. Francois asked Hitchcock why he made so many scenes without any dialogue. Hitchcock replied by saying, “If I can make people understand a scene without any dialogue, then when my characters speak they will only say what they need to say.” This was a big thing in my head.

I started to film a lot without sound to be sure that what I’m going to show can be clearly understood. I only add dialogue now when it’s necessary.

Where did you get the idea for Zombie Office?

Driving. It was in 2008 at the beginning of my video production company. The iPhone 3 had just come on the market and everyone was talking about apps. I was thinking about apps with interactive content. I was driving and I just thought we should make an interactive video game series with zombies because I like zombies. It’s an amazing subject for interactive content.

I went to my brother and told him the idea and he said okay, but we need developers and we have no money to hire a developer. He said we should go to the university and ask programming students if they want to help us.  We started like that and then the project just stopped on my desk for about 4 or 5 years because we needed more technology to develop what I had in my head.

When virtual reality, augmented reality and smartphones became more powerful all the pieces were ready to start the adventure again. Now we have a full team of developers ready.

[bctt tweet=”“Interactive Content With Zombies. Let’s Do That!”” username=”hecklerkaneinc”]

Has your video marketing skills helped you for this project?

Yes, we definitely learned a lot along the way. We are capable of making great scenes, even ones that are not in the market right now. It was great training. In the last 5 years we’ve made a lot of mobile apps for Disney, Marvel, and BBC Television. Every time it was a new challenge.

When we start to shoot for Zombie Office we are ready because we have touched so many pieces of the technology already. Now it’s a matter of merging different technologies with one purpose. To entertain the audience with great content.

What are the challenges in shooting an interactive game vs a film?

For the script and the producer, it’s a nightmare. For me it’s super fun. We have to theme up to three different paths and it all has to make sense. We need to put it all on paper so when we start filming interactive content. We take a big wall and start to design all the pieces of the tree which are the ways each character can go.

It’s a very interesting process but also exhausting when you’re filming and the script comes to you and says you just filmed option 1. Now you have to film option 2, 3 and 4. It’s like oh my god I forgot that.

Did you assemble a team specifically for Zombie Office?

It depends. We started with people coming from different universities in Spain. We also have people joining the project from the UK and the US as well as France and Russia. Some joined us when we launched the trailer and others were on board since the writing process. At the last count we have 15 different nationalities involved in the project.

When does Zombie Office begin crowdfunding on Kickstarter?

We had planned to launch the Kickstarter in 2016 and as you know we are in 2017. When we launched the pre-campaign with the trailer we had a lot of people excited about the project. There were companies contacting us about merchandising and how to make the project even bigger.  It was decided to delay the launch until February or March of 2017.  We care about the community.

Join the mailing list to find out when Zombie Office starts crowdfunding


Will the project be fully funded through crowdfunding?

We are confident in our project and think it can be 100% funded by the community. We are also very open to private investors and merchandising. That’s why we are still open before we make any final decisions.

Have you started shooting beyond the trailer yet?

We decided to film the first 10 minutes of the game and a 360 degree video because we are into virtual reality. We filmed virtual reality scenes with zombies and it’s also interactive. We also film with regular HD camera’s.

What are three lessons you learned from this project?

First, I never imagined that the zombie community was so active. It’s amazing how people got involved when they knew about the project. I’m very grateful for the zombie fan community. Everyone, including the actors who will wait 5 hours in zombie makeup for me to call action. Also, the people who watch the trailer and ask questions and take time to read up on your project.  I was not expecting people to be so engaged.

Second, I never imagined that from just the trailer it would get so big and we haven’t even launched the final project. We are still in prototype and developing and already have so much interest.

The third thing is never stop filming. With my company many times I have to stay away from the camera and manage the company and teams. For me coming back behind the camera and having a great time filming a horror was like going back to university. My advice is never stop filming even if its something small.

Rey Gutierrez Pitchfork Cinematographer

Rey Gutierrez Cinematographer of Indie Horror Pitchfork

Download the entire Rey Gutierrez Interview

Imperfect Podcast on Soundcloud

 


This week on the Imperfect Podcast we talk with Rey Gutierrez. Rey is the cinematographer of the indie horror film, Pitchfork. Rey has had an impressive career as the Senior Video Producer Specialist at PlayStation and now the Lead Video Specialist at Patreon.
With all of that experience, the shift to feature film maker was the next big step in his career. Connecting with producer and director Glenn Packard years ago, it’s a relationship that paid off for both of them. In this interview we dive in deep to what it takes to make a feature film on an indie budget. From lighting, to establishing shots, the crew and choreography, Rey gives us an inside look at the making of Pitchfork.
Pitchfork Pitchfork is a 2017 film festival award winning horror film and the directorial debut of Emmy award nominee Glenn Douglas Packard. It recently made it’s VOD debut on Friday January 13th.  The movies pays homage to the horror classics that came before it but with a modern look and storyline.

Watch the Rey Gutierrez Interview on Youtube

Rey Gutierrez Interview Highlights

How long have you been making films?

I’ve been making films for the last year and a half. Pitchfork would officially be my first feature film but I’ve been slumming it as a commercial, music video director for the majority of my life. I started doing what I’m doing since I’m 14 and I’m 33 now. I grew up as an only kid. I’m an introvert. My grandmother adopted me and I grew up in Little Havana with my grandma.

I wasn’t much into hanging out and doing sports so I played a lot of video games and lived in my own little world of imaginary friends. I was obsessed with Power Rangers and Godzilla and dudes in suits and watching Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles.  I wanted to create that. I remember watching Power Rangers and recreating my own episodes with my own toys and having a blast by myself.

Then I was a theater kid, a drama kid and stage nerd. I jumped into video production very early on in high school. Luckily I was part of an amazing program in Miami Senior High School. It was the art tech program run by Joe Underwood. He was basically the first man in my life that kicked my ass and said, “Dude you’ve got something special. You hate school and skip class to the TV studio and you’re creating awesome shit for the morning announcements. You’re running around with camera work and you’re really inspiring your friends and other students. You’re onto something.”

Just because I’m a Latino and because I was raised a certain way doesn’t mean I’m going to be this person.  I’m going to be bigger than that. I grew up watching Full House thinking I want that life!Where’s my Uncle Jesse dammit? I want his hair! To live in San Francisco and to have that reality now I’m like hell yeah! I just need my Uncle Jesse.

My rebellious attitude always opened doors for me before I barely graduated from high school with a 2.1 GPA. My professor was good friends with a casting director. His name was Ed Arenas from Unique Casting. He’s famous for Any Given Sunday, Bad Boys 2 and Pirates of the Caribbean and hundreds of music videos and national ads. He needed someone to cut a quick sizzle reel for a gift basket at some premiere. That’s how him and I connected and he hired me on the spot.

For 2 long years I was making $250 for every two weeks but I had access to music videos and Oliver Stone and I got to be on the set of Bad Boys 2. I got this immersive experience of what making a movie or running a casting agency is like. The behind the scenes, sex, drugs and rock-n-roll that nobody talks about, that was my career. I’m glad I had access to that very early on.

Unfortunately at that moment my grandmother passed away, the woman who raised me. She willed the house I grew up in to me and I finished paying it off. I spent a majority of my early 20’s just exploring music, music videos and falling in love with the Joseph Kahn’s, with what MTV was back in the 90s and having that certain look.

I grew up playing PlayStation. I grew up playing Super Nintendo. While my friends were playing Super Mario, I was playing Out of This World. While my friends were playing Final Fantasy I was playing Metal Gear Solid. I wanted a story. After playing Halo I would obsess over the making of Halo. I would be so obsessed with God of War and how they made it.  Then fast forward and somehow find myself living the dream and having this Playstation tattoo.  I spent five years of my life at PlayStation seeing how the sausage is made there.  Now I knew what the dark side of making a game is.

It was very appropriate to graduate from this dream reality I had built myself and say alright I think I’m ready to make a movie. I told myself I don’t want to shoot it on a Red. I don’t want to shoot on these fancy cameras. I don’t need a full crew. I just want to be able to shoot this movie like I shot it if I were a kid back in my bedroom. I want to be able to be flexible and move quickly and at the same time learn what it’s like to be part of a crew. I’m very prideful about being a loner and doing these projects on my own.

That’s what I’m really proud of Pitchfork for. It’s always been in my DNA. I’m still the same kid that plays with his Power Rangers and obsesses about Full House. It’s just scaled to a bigger level.

[bctt tweet=”It’s not a bigger crew, money or cameras. It’s just heart, ambition, passion and drive that motivate me.” username=”hecklerkaneinc”]

As a loner what is your relationship like with director Glenn Packard?

There are two types of directors. There are directors who understand the technicalities of how to get a shot done and then there’s directors who say I want this and then magically a team surrounds that vision and build that shot. Glenn is very much the creative director when it comes to Pitchfork. He had a vision for what Pitchfork was.

What was amazing about how we collaborated is that he knows I love music video and he knows I love theater. We never story boarded it. He said these are the sets, locations and structure of the script. Then I started painting and vibing the space, plotting out a ballpark scenario of where shots should be. None of the shots were throwaway shots like most horror films do these days which.

This person was walking in from the right to the left for a reason, there’s an establishing shot. These shots matter to me.  He basically said, “Rey play” and that’s what I did.  My job is to say this is what it’s going to feel like in the lense but at the same time I like to fill the lense with as much as I can. I want a nice beautiful shot which is why even at night there’s some sort of light breaking the shot. There’s some sort of activity.

[bctt tweet=”You don’t watch horror movies to see reality. You watch a movie to escape reality. ” username=”hecklerkaneinc”]

There’s a couple of shots I nudged in and directed. One of my favorite shots is the Spieldberg minute where Pitchfork is outside the door and the camera slowly pans and sits on the two windows and the two actors just play. The scene is playing in front of us. There’s no cutaways and the camera pans right back to Pitchfork and he’s been standing there the entire time.

What was the location for Pitchfork?

I like to call this film an autobiography. We shot this film where Glenn grew up.  This is the Packard farm. These were all real sets.

How did you get the opening shot for the film?

I take a lot of pride in that shot because I call that a fuck you shot. That’s me setting the tone for the film. If I don’t capture you in the first shot then I’ve lost you. It was actually a drone shot played backwards. I flew the drone backwards and on the third take I crashed it.

How important was the animalistic symbolism in the film?

When it comes to the creative aspect of Daniel and his performance of Pitchfork I would lean on Glenn for that because that was his vision. He always had the vision of what the barbwire around the wrists should look like. The character was envisioned ten years ago. If it becomes a trilogy its essentially going to be the Packard autobiography.

When it comes to Pitchfork in the frame I always had this black and white battle. There’s a lot of shots where I always envisioned Pitchfork as a wolverine, more menacing always crouching. I always thought he looked weak when he was just standing up as a man. I always leaned towards the more visceral animalistic nature of the movie.

Even stylistically when it’s about the humans I always shot that very clean and locked off, very pretty and vibrant. It was supposed to make you feel good. If you watch the movie on mute you can still tell stylistically what’s happening on screen. That to me is a huge win.

Every time there was a Pitchfork scene I had the camera hand held. I was always with him. A good example of that is the cornfield scene. Being one of the darkest days shooting it was a complete disaster. I grabbed our six lights and created a road map around this cornfield. We had two massive construction lights we used as moon lighting set back a mile or two away that we enhanced with some Party City fog.

Every time I would lock in with Pitchfork we would be this animal. At that point in the cornfield we were one. That’s where the movie production started to turn dark. We actually shot the film chronologically. It took 30 days to film Pitchfork. That half way point I shut off and stopped talking to people. I started going dark and I think it actually helped the film. You can see how I treat the camera and treat Pitchfork when I locked in with the camera.

What camera did you shoot Pitchfork on?

That was just a Sony a7s with a rig to a Shogun. I primarily used Zeiss lenses. I was bouncing between a 35 and 85. When I would call out lenses I would primarily call give me the wide, give me the prime, give me the 35. That’s what I pride myself in. I set my rules and discipline myself. Only six lights. I want you to be able to remove my air, my food and my oxygen and if I can still survive I can shoot this thing. In those opening shots as a director of photography, I wanted to people to really say is this an independent film?

All the equipment was under $15,000. I did it for free because I was a partner in the film. I quit my dream job at PlayStation to shoot this movie. I put my heart and soul into this film. I remember watching the premiere of the film drunk because I was afraid of what I was about to see. The first time I watched it in my home I truly enjoyed it for what it was.

I love the guys with the big cameras. I love the big toys but I’m like just give me an iPhone. My big protest to all these YouTube creators that are doing these amazing things but they’re blowing all this money on all this gear. They don’t need to do that. You can be storytellers and do these amazing things and they’re not and it drives me insane.

I take every opportunity I can especially working at Patreon. I want to inspire as many creators as I can and tell them you don’t need the big Hollywood guys. You don’t need some dude in San Francisco with VC money to say make me more money. You can make this on your own. All you need is some drive and passion with the right attitude and confidence channeled in the right spot at the right time.

How did you connect with Glenn and leave your dream job at Playstation?

I’ve known Glenn for close to 10 years. Him and I met back in Miami when I was living out there. I was 195lbs, I let myself go. I was in my early 20’s. I had my house, I was making cool shit living the life. I just didn’t care. When I met Glenn he gave me a reality check.

“Rey you have the ability to do these music videos with me, you have access to these amazing dancers, choreographers and producers. All you have to do is flip the switch and get in gear and be hungry again.”

One of our first projects, The Knockouts, is a live theater burlesque show at the racetrack in Fort Lauderdale. We met at the right time. He was leaving the world of choreography and diving into the world of directing music videos. This is why the movie looks so pretty beyond the shot. The talent glows because Glenn has quietly been casting this film for 10 plus years.

He’s always had me in his back pocket waiting for the right moment to shoot this film. The moment he said Rey it’s time to shoot this movie it happened and I knew I needed to leave everything. As much as I loved Playstation, I felt that energy I felt way back when I first met him and said we could do this. It was exactly what I needed. Shooting this movie was a step in the right direction for my career.

Tell us about the dance scene in Pitchfork

It was much shorter in the original cut and I love the extended version. We shot that entire scene in one night. I’m pretty sure the reason I lost most of my hair was from that night. I know what Glenn was trying to do. He was trying to flex his choreography muscles and all we got was this one shot up, down, left, right. I wish we had a little more time to really dive in there.

I almost feel the reason why people are liking or disliking this scene because it feels out of place because it’s shot out of place on purpose. It feels so abrupt because it was always planned to be this vignette of sorts. Because of music licensing the scene constantly changed. Unfortunately the pure vision of what Glenn wanted had to change.

It serves its purpose for fans that immediately get what we were trying to accomplish.  It’s a little wink and a nod and if you’re still with us then the real treat happens. We start chopping these people’s heads off. If you start to dislike these characters then it’s working.

Are you a horror movie fan?

I’m lucky enough to remember the good parts of the 80’s and 90’s. I always thought any movie in the 80’s and 90’s was a horror movie. If you look at Terminator 2 compared to whatever Terminator there is today, these films oozed with flavor the way they were shot. Even Bill Nye the Science Guy. His director of photography is better than anything on PBS today. There was so much love put into every frame back then. Today everything is so sterile and PG.

Was Pitchfork more PG than it needed to be for a horror?

That was all Glenn’s call and more power to him. He totally Will Smith’d the shit out of this movie. When Pitchfork is going at it and there’s blood splattering, that original shot was just Pitchfork doing something. I had to tell Glenn, just more blood, let me have it! That was the only time he started to let go.

I kind of appreciate the fact that for a horror film it’s pretty clean and not bloody. It’s just the right amount of blood. The only thing that was post was a lot of the effects, a lot of the blood splatter, a lot of the foley of course. Most of the stuff you see is clever light placement, clever covering of a fixture with an elbow. It’s all silly theater tricks I taught myself when I was a kid.

Download the episode on iTunes & Soundcloud to hear Rey Gutierrez talk more about lighting for Pitchfork.

How important was the music for Pitchfork?

This is a great question to end on. Christie Beu did an amazing job with the soundtrack. Christie and Glenn and Beu sisters have been friends for a lot longer than Glenn and I have been. They met through his relationships with Disney. Again, he called up an old friend and pulled a favor. He created great moments through music and that really helped move the scenes along. I think she did an amazing job. Ironically enough I was pumped to do the score to Pitchfork.

I’ve been working on this other project called Murder Palace that is essentially my Pitchfork. My dream baby. I wanted to start teasing Murder Palace into Pitchfork. The original vision as I was shooting this was well I’m going to let this scene play out because here I’m going to have music that goes this way. I was essentially writing the score while shooting it. In many ways it was very painful to just see me let the film go. It took me 4 months of falling in and out of love with this film.

Glenn was so patiently waiting for me to give him a rough cut and refused to have him sitting by my side. Him and I slept in the same bed for 30 days and 30 nights. Imagine having the worst and best relationship and then having the biggest fight and then having to go to bed with this person and you can’t fall asleep because you either had a fantastic or awful shoot. In many ways it was a necessary evil. I had to walk away from the film for about 30 days. About 3 months later I delivered the rough edit and couldn’t even imagine jumping in to do the soundtrack at that point.

What I know now is that I shot a movie with nothing. Maybe they don’t need to be 90 minute films. They can be 10 minute films. I can shoot them like Pitchfork and put them on my Patreon page and have episodic content under the Murder Palace name. If a music video and Black Mirror had a baby that’s what Murder Palace is.

 

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Author Juliette Miranda

Juliette Miranda – Author, Podcaster & Bourbon Lover

This episode of the Imperfect Podcast, we interview Juliette Miranda who is host of The Unwritable Rant podcast. The Unwritable Rant features storytelling, celebrity interviews, and bourbon. Lots of bourbon. She was kind enough to give us a quick review of Russell’s Reserve 10 Year bourbon during to kick off the interview. We get into her cast of characters featured in her stories like The Jackass, The Pinball Wizard and The Warden.Juliette is also the author of the book Morning Neurosis. Morning Neurosis is a mostly true story about rock ‘n roll, relationships, and reality.

Juliette is also a smooth operator when it comes to interviews. Her southern charm has been winning over audiences with conversational style of interviewing musicians, actors and authors. This past year Juliette interviewed actors and musicians such as Eric Roberts, Charlie Daniels, Ed Begley Jr. and Don McLean to name a few.

Connect with Juliette Miranda on Twitter at http://twitter.com/morningneurosis

Download The Unwritable Rant Podcast at http://morningneurosis.com

Download Juliette Miranda’s Book Morning Neurosis

Look for Juliette Miranda’s latest projects:

  • Featured character in the upcoming Snug Comics graphic novel “The Kindred” released in February
  • Appearing on “The Joey Canyon” show on Comcast/DirecTV in the coming months
  • Recently released the second best-of interview collection, featuring Eric Roberts, Charlie Daniels & more

Watch the full interview with Author Juliette Miranda

How’s that bourbon you’re having tonight?

First I gotta take a sip. This is a genius bourbon. It truly is. I’m having Russell’s Reserve 10 Year. It’s got this smokey sort of flavor to it with a little bit of vanilla and it’s so smooth. It’s from the Wild Turkey family which is surprising because necessarily associate a really high quality bourbon with Wild Turkey. This stuff, aged 10 years and so awesome!

[bctt tweet=”Writing is a big passion of mine. Hemingway, Fitzgerald those are my idols.” username=”hecklerkaneinc”]

When did you start writing?

I’ve been writing since birth I think. It’s always been a part of my life, whether it’s journaling or telling stories to friends.

What was the inspiration for your book Morning Neurosis?

It’s based on my experiences living in Los Angeles, working in the music industry and the events that let me back to Chicago. I say they’re mostly true stories because I had to change a few of the details to make sure it made sense. For the most part they are all things that have happened to me. It’s kind of like my podcast in book form.

Have you used your book as inspiration for podcasts episodes?

No, not at all. Some of the characters in the book have appeared in other stories on the podcast, but the book stands alone. I wouldn’t want to repeat the stories for people who’ve bought the book or want to buy the book. I like to keep separation there.

Download Morning Neurosis at Amazon

What year were you out in Los Angeles?

I can tell you that hair bands were having a moment. I was doing a little bit of everything. I went out there assuming I was going to be the next big thing on MTV and that never really happened. As a writer I was able to find tons of gigs. Writing rock reviews for magazines. Then I wound up doing publicity for a couple of record labels. I did PA jobs in TV. Whatever I could get my hands on to try.

Ultimately after being there for 7 years, I had been laid off from 7 different jobs. I hit a wall where nothing was working for me. That’s what brought me back to Chicago. I had opportunities out here that I didn’t have in Los Angeles.

Is there a hidden tape you auditioning to be an MTV VJ ?

 I do a lot of commercial work here in Chicago. If you’re watching late night TV you can see me in some random late night spots. One day you’ll be watching late night cable at 2am and be like, “I know that chick.”

Where were you born with a pen?

I was actually born in Chicago in the south suburbs. Everyone thinks I’m a southern gal but the closest I’ve come is the south side of the burbs. We spent so much time in the south though. I practically lived in New Orleans for a while. We’re in Nashville a couple months out of every year. It’s a place that I’m very familiar with.

What’s the theme song for the Unwritable Rant podcast?

He’s an independent artist. That one particular song is so New Orleans. It really sets up the vibe for the show. Just kick back and ease into this great conversation.

[bctt tweet=”I would kill for some gumbo right about now.” username=”@hecklerkaneinc”]

Tell us about your latest flambé incident in the kitchen?

I love cooking and I have had success doing it. I’m a good cook but the stories that are the most fun are the ones where things don’t turn out the way you want them to. With that particular story I went in with the best of intentions thinking that I was going to make this New Orleans style flaming Cajun shrimp dish. I was ready. I had my lighter with the pot sizzling in front of me. For whatever reason, those stupid shrimp would not catch on fire. It was one of the most frustrating things I’d ever been through.

I had this lighter in my hand, sloshing Cognac into the dish hoping that something would catch on fire. Finally, my guy had to wedge this thing out of my hands asking me to back away.

[bctt tweet=”I went to a casino and one of my exes was the dealer!” username=”hecklerkaneinc”]

His name was “The Jackass.” He earned that name

Give us a rundown of your cast of characters?

There is ‘The Jackass’ there’s the ‘Pinball Wizard’ and ‘The Warden’ and I have a new character coming up called ‘The Crazy Blonde.’ She was the one who accompanied me in the episode where we did that scavenger hunt with the Pinball Wizard.

How long have you been podcasting?

With 70+ episodes of The Unwritable Rant that puts me at about a year and halfish.

What was the inspiration for launching the Unwritable Rant?

It was two things. For starters I was feeling frustrated as a writer. The way the publishing industry works right now is that it’s incredibly hard. It doesn’t matter that I’ve already released one book. People aren’t reading the same way that they used to. Books aren’t being published the way that they used to. Creatively I was feeling a bit stifled.

My guy and I were sitting on the driveway having some cocktails and we were listening to Bill Burr. He’s my favorite comedian on the planet. His podcast was just so cool. It’s laid back and conversational. I’m thinking I can totally do that. I looked at my guy and said let’s give it a shot. He had some gear that we could use and we went from there.

Did you have a cocktail on your first episode?

Yeah, I did it on my first podcast just because I thought it would loosen me up a little bit. I was drinking it throughout the episode. I like bourbon and I like talking about it and I liked the way it lent itself to the conversational aspect of the show. If you listen to the shows please don’t listen to the first episode but if you do you’ll hear that it’s kind of rambling and crazy. They develop as they go along. We’re sitting down, having a drink and telling stories. I think it flows really well.

[bctt tweet=”My goal all along is to make it feel familiar.” username=”hecklerkaneinc”]

Who was your first interview?

That was my producer’s idea. He thought it might bring in some new listeners and it might be a cool thing for me.  We initially started talking to people who had written books.  My first interview was with Gary Wright who sang the song Dream Weaver. He also wrote a book about his relationship with George Harrison of The Beatles. From there we started targeting other authors.

After him came A.E. Hotchner who was Ernest Hemingway’s best friend. That is hands down my favorite interview. Talking with someone who went to Spain with Hemingway, who went to bull fights with him. Who has a book dedicated to him by Hemingway. He’s the man.  Then we started expanding. We started talking to musicians and actors and it just became its own entity.

What got you into film?

When I was living in Los Angeles I did a bunch of work in production. I was a PA in a couple of different movie sets. I worked with a couple of different directors as a personal assistant. I’ve always liked the process of making movies and I love the creativity of it. It’s all about storytelling in the end. Movies are just another way to do that.

What are your top 3 movies of all time?

Number 1 would have to be Midnight in Paris, the Woody Allen movie. It’s beautiful, set in the 1920’s and it’s got Ernest Hemingway in it and Fitzgerald. Beyond that I am a huge horror movie fan. I like the weird messed up horror movies, like the 1970’s exploitation style ones. Maybe the original Last House on the Left. Texas Chainsaw Massacre, the original is great. This is going to sound really weird after saying that but I love The Muppet Movie.

If you could interview anyone living or past who would it be and why?

I gotta say that would be Jim Henson. He was such an innovator. He came up with something that is beloved by people. What I love about The Muppets so much is that they’re kinda like regular people. They’re wacky, they’re crazy, they’re snarky and a little mean sometimes. It’s the best combination, with such heart at the same time.  Just the legacy that he left behind, I would love to hear his inspiration right from him.

You might also like our interview with Director David Bousquet

“The Lookouts” a fantasy short film

What was your experience like interviewing actor Eric Roberts?

It was crazy. Going into interviews where you’re talking to someone you’ve admired, whose work you’ve watched for decades, it’s a little daunting at first. He’s such a nice guy, open and friendly that you can just roll with the conversation. The moment I had to just pause and picky my jaw off the floor is when he did his character from Pope of Greenwich Village. He did this quick impression of him.

It was so incredible to know that I was talking to this guy and he’s telling me his stories. He’s telling me how he created this character. It’s moments like that where all the hard work, all the hours spent prepping for these interviews that just makes it all worthwhile.

What’s the reason for sharing so many of your personal stories with your audience?

It takes a lot of courage to put yourself out there that way.  I think it initially started off as therapy for me. My book kind of was. I was trying to work out the details of a really messed up relationship and I did a lot of that through writing the book. Now it’s just fun.

 

 

Horror Film Maker Harrison Smith

How to Make a Living As An Indie Horror Film Maker with Harrison Smith

Download How to Make a Living As An Indie Horror Film Maker with Harrison Smith

This week we interview indie horror film maker Harrison Smith. He’s the writer, director, producer of Death House featuring 28 horror icons including Dee Wallace. Death House is being called The Expendables of horror movies.

Harrison is open and candid with us, answering questions like myths about indie film making today and how Paranormal Activity caused damage in the industry. We talk casting, distribution, respecting your crew, budgets and more.

Harrison has a lot of anecdotes to share from his first trip to LA, getting money for his first script The Fields and how Jaws inspired his youth.

If you’re an indie film maker, screenwriter or horror fan enthusiast, this interview will make you a Harrison Smith fan.

Watch the Harrison Smith Interview

Where did you get the movie bug?

I started making movies when I was 10 years old. My uncle got me an old silent Super 8 Kodak camera and I started making movies. I did a lot of lawn work when I was a kid, so I saved up my money to get my film cartridges. I edited with scissors and spliced with Scotch tape and drew my lasers in by hand with needles the old fashioned way.

Jaws is the movie that made me want to make movies. Saw that when I was 8 years old in 1975. So I saw it in theaters with my Mom and I fell in love with it. I think Jaws was X-rated for anyone over 30. I’m naturally afraid of the water, it’s kind of a Chief Brody thing. I’ve always been terrified of water. In fact, I have the distinction of being kicked out of Red Cross swimming lessons when I was 10 for choking the instructor for trying to drag me into the water. It has nothing to do with sharks. I know there are no sharks in swimming pools. I think Brody summed it up best in Jaws, “Drowning!”

Have you had any formal training as a film maker?

I had a semester and a half at Penn State but I flunked out because I was too busy partying and messing around with the cheerleader down the hall. After blowing that tuition I came home and said to my mom that I’m going to move to Los Angeles. I bullshitted the secretary for Anthony Perkins at Universal Studios and said I was the editor for the Penn State Collegian doing a spot on Psycho 3 that was coming out.

She started talking to me saying that she also went to Penn State. It’s funny I was thinking about moving out there and she goes, “I’ll tell you what, you get me a Penn State hoodie and I’ll get you in to see Tony Perkins.” DONE!

I flew out at the age of 18 to Los Angeles, by myself. It was the first time I was ever on a cross continental trip and knew nobody. I had no home. My mom had said, “When are you leaving?” and I said Friday and she was asking me on Monday. So I flew out there, got off the plane and put all my stuff in a bus locker. I went over to the black tower and met with Jackie, that was his secretary and then I met with Anthony Perkins.

I showed him my VHS reel and he said, “You’re making movies, but are you looking for a job?” He ended up getting me a job as a paid production assistant on Murder She Wrote. By the way I had a job before I had a home. So I slept in a hotel room that night and got an apartment the next day. I lived out there for almost 2 years and I dated a girl from a soap opera.

Finally it was Howard Kazanjian, from Return of the Jedi and Raiders of the Lost Ark. I used to eat lunch in this once place where he used to come and he asked me who are you? What are you doing?

So I told him my story and he said, “You’re living out here, but all those movies you made back home. How much did you pay to film that scene in the mall?”  I said nothing. I remember him telling me, “You aren’t going to find that here.” He said, “Kid, go home. You can shoot all you want there and no one is going to charge you. Everyone out here has a script. Everyone’s a film maker. Nobody’s gonna do you any favors.”

I ended up going home and now here I am. As a filmmaker you don’t really need to be in Los Angeles. As an actor, maybe it’s a different story. But as a film maker you really don’t. With the internet and the digital age you don’t need to be there physically.

What did you do from there? Did you put together a team?

I really wish I could sound smart and say I did but I really screwed around. I ended up running a movie theater in the local mall, an 8-plex. It was a Loews Theater that become a Sony Theater. One day my old creative writing teacher came to the movies and was like, “What are you doing here?” I said, “I’m the assistant manager here but I got things going.” He wasn’t a jerk about it but you could tell by his attitude that he always hoped I’d be doing more.

Then I started working my ass off to get scripts out and taking advantage of the connections when Loews got bought by Sony Pictures. Making friends with the chairman of Loews Theaters Alan Friedberg and getting my name out there. I realized I didn’t want to run a movie theater.

After I decided I was going to go to college I got married and I got my degree in education and I taught high school for almost 15 years. I got scripts going and out to people and then one day this investor came to me and said, “I wanna make a movie, I have the money. I hear you’re the guy.” Howard Kazanjian was right, the local word spread.

The script called The Fields which was originally titled The Man which was based on a true story of what happened to me as a boy on my grandparents farm. Our house came under attack by these people that came out of the corn field after us. They cut the powerlines, they killed the dog, they smashed the windows in our house.

If you haven’t seen The Fields it’s on Hulu right now. It’s a true story. Cloris Leachman plays my grandmother. Tara Reid plays my mom and it takes place in 1973. This guy put money into it. After we made the film, I said to my wife, I think I really need to try this because if I don’t I’m going to be that guy when I’m 70 going, “I shoulda.”

We shot The Fields in 32 days and in 32 days I only missed 4 days of school. Tara Reid didn’t believe I was a teacher. One night we were out and I said I have to stop by my classroom and get tests run off for tomorrow. She said, “Get the fuck out. You’re not a teacher.” We pulled up to the high school at 2am and I get out and she says, “What are we doing at a school? You’re a producer.” I was like “I’m a teacher.”

She follows me in, goes to the copy room and back to my classroom and she turns to me and she goes, “You’re Batman!” She signed every one of my student’s tests. When I came back the day after one of my students said, “Hey Smith, did Tara Reid really sign our tests? I don’t care if I flunk or not, I’m keeping that test.”

How did the process work in getting The Fields produced?

Everything you want to know about film making you can learn from the movie Jaws. Every screw up, every mess, every catastrophe, every mistake was made on that film. You don’t need to go to film school. Just devour every book and every documentary on the making of that movie and you will learn how to make movies. You need to learn to fly by the seat of your pants and think.

The other thing is, I always modeled myself after John Carpenter and I don’t mean his films.  His four best films are Halloween, The Fog, Escape from New York and The Thing. Starman yes, but that’s at a different level. His original four indie films, he used the same crew over and over again. If you notice watching my films, the cast stays the same. I bring them back. The same with my crew. I’ve been with the same crew now for almost seven years. That’s a big deal.

When this guy came to me and said I want to put some money into things, I contacted a few film making friends and they said to me we know these two guys. I didn’t feel like I was up for directing. I wrote the script and I was just learning producing. It’s kind of like what Captain Kirk said in Star Trek II The Wrath of Khan, “This is why you need to know how a starship works. You need to know everything that goes on.”

From taking out the trash to dealing with SAG (Screen Actors Guild) I needed to learn all of that. So I was not up for directing at that point but I had two guys that were recommended to me.  I watched their first film and I felt it was very atmospheric and I thought they’d get it and wouldn’t turn The Fields into a slasher horror film.

I made contacts in Philadelphia. Composer John Avarese has scored all six of my films. John is scoring Garlic and Gunpowder as well. You find out who’s a fit and who isn’t and you go from there. The goal is you always treat people right. You stay up front and transparent and you work your ass off. That’s really the secret sauce.

Relationships, work your ass off, get it done and don’t talk about it. We live in a generation where everyone needs to talk about everything. Stop talking and go do it. That’s why when you see these people online saying, “We’re going to review the latest trailer today.” What the hell is that? Reviewing trailers? Let’s judge the whole movie on 30 seconds.

How did you decide to make the jump from teacher to film maker?

When you realize your biological clock is ticking. I was just about 40. After The Fields had wrapped, I had a student who said to me, “So what are you going to do? You said to us this is what you always wanted to do since you were a kid.” I said but life got in the way and I don’t know. Let’s see how The Fields does and he goes, “Yeah, just like my old man says, those who can’t do teach.” I said what do you mean? He said, “Well you stand up here and tell us to follow our dreams and so you had this dream and you’re just going to put it on a shelf?”

Then I really thought about it and I went home to my wife I think I really need to do this. We were in a financial position where we could. When we first got married basically I worked the first two years and she discovered herself. It was kinda like the Mark Twain thing. Give me two years. If I can’t make money at what I love then I’ll go chop wood. So then I’ll go back to education. She allowed it and said go for it and then I landed 6 degrees of hell in six months.

Camp Dread was finally when I decided I’m going to direct this thing and the investor said the same thing. I don’t want anybody else directing it but you. Everyone says it’s a tribute to Friday the 13th. It really isn’t. It’s a tip of the hat to Psycho 2.

How has casting worked for all of your films?

I did the casting for all of them. That’s what I mean, you learn. You can’t text a casting request to an agency. You gotta know how to talk to people. This isn’t Facebook and Snapchat and Instagram. You have to know how to talk to people. To get through a door in an agency, especially to a gatekeeper where they decided if you’re going to talk to an agent or not or if your project is good or not. But you need to learn how to talk to people.

Do you consider yourself an entrepreneurial lone wolf or a team player?

I’m a team player, I’m not an entrepreneur. If I were, I’d probably be like Ed Sanchez or somebody like that. I’m not a business man. One thing I was always good at since a child was getting people together and doing things.  In 7th grade I got all the kids in my neighborhood to put together a haunted forest so we could raise money for the ASPCA. I was the class president in high school and that’s a story in itself of what we did to raise money for our prom. If you saw Risky Business and merge that with Wolf of Wall Street you get a good idea.

Forming a team it’s about finding people that saying they’ll do this for you and most of all treating them right. You really need some talented crew along the way. Man, you hate coming to them with low budgets. All this talent and all I can pay you is this and that sucks. No one is holding a gun to their head either. They can say no and some have. Some have a bigger gig and I understand that. No hard feelings, maybe we’ll catch you on the next one.

Any time I can get the budgets up high, I mean Death House was a $1.1 million dollar budget. Camp Dread was $350,000. When you start working with people and they see that you’re working your ass off to stay loyal to them, then they’ll do some things too. My gaffer, Wes Carrier of Carrier Lighting and Sound, I’ve used him since 6 Degrees of Hell. I’m not saying they do it all the time but every once in a while when you get close to that over time a lot of times they say don’t worry about it. How about a couple cases of beer for the boys? You can’t take advantage of that though. They got bills to pay too. It’s that give and take relationship.

What do you do for distribution?

The first couple of films I worked out the distribution deals. Again, I’m not an entrepreneur so that’s really not my thing. With the change of the digital revolution it’s all up for grabs.

Have you had any theatrical releases?

Yes, The Fields had a theatrical release and 6 Degrees of Hell had a limited theatrical release. Camp Dread did not. It was straight home video DVD, streaming, Netflix. The same with Zombie Killers and we’ll see what happens with Death House. Right now the feedback from buyers on Death House is extremely positive. The majority have entertained some type of theatrical release which is what we want. What you have to be careful of in distribution is, a lot of people say they want their movie out on 5,000 screens. Sure, if you have a $50 million dollar marketing campaign.

What caused a lot of damage was Paranormal Activity. Paranormal Activity caused damage because it created this urban legend that you can go out with your Prosumer camera and make a $7k to $15k film and make $450 million on it. You’re not going to. That’s not going to happen and I don’t care anybody that’s listening right now or watching says “Oh yes it will” I’m gonna tell you “Oh no it won’t.”

What people don’t realize is when I was selling The Fields, I went to LA and met with one of the distributors interested in the film and they also had Paranormal Activity first. I asked him how it feels to be the company that last Paranormal Activity now that it made all this money. He goes, “I stand by it. The movie is a piece of shit.

Let me tell you the real story. The media likes to print the movie was made for $15k and now it’s worth $450 million because of the sequels and spin offs. It’s a Hollywood success story. So everyone with their Prosumer camera and Final Cut Pro is out to make the next Paranormal Activity.

What really happened was the movie sat around, Speildberg was going to do something with it then he got side tracked. Paramount had the rights to this movie and figured what the hell, let’s Blair Witch it. So they setup a viral campaign. Remember the demand it thing? They didn’t really say it was true but they didn’t say it wasn’t. That’s just what Blair Witch did. Then they brought all these people into the studio lot at Paramount with night vision. Out of 88 minutes of people sitting with their hands on their face, there were 4 minutes of jump scares. They edit all that into the trailers and the previews and now you have the must see movie of the year. And they sunk $45 to $50 million dollars in marketing into it.

I’m not saying what they did is bad. What I’m saying is the fallout from that is people don’t know that reality story think they are just gonna go shoot some movie and then I’m going to make $450 million dollars. No you’re not.

When can we expect to see Death House?

Pretty soon. It will definitely be 2017. I can’t give you an exact date. Could be March or April.

Is Death House your biggest budget to date?

To date yes.

What was the inspiration behind Death House?

The story came to me through Rick Finklestein and Steven Chase of Entertainment Factory. They came to the screening of Zombie Killers in Los Angeles. They said they had a script by Gunnar Hansen and he wants a rewrite. Long story short, I read Gunnar’s script, I called Gunnar, we ended up talking and met with Gunnar face to face. He was very unhappy. Another writer came in and did a second draft of the script that was basically torture porn.

Gunnar had this story of a bunch of documentary film makers go into the bowels of an abandoned asylum and hilarity ensues. It wasn’t really lighting any fires. Gunnar knew this and he felt that it needed a fresh take but there were several elements of the script he wanted to see remain. I took a stab at it.

While writing the treatment I was in a bar one night where I like to go to write. The preview for Jurassic World came on. It was around the time of the Super Bowl. Suddenly it hit me. Why does it have to be an asylum? Why can’t it be like this prison where the worlds worst criminals are put in. I came up with this idea that two up and coming federal agents are taking a tour of the prison. It breaks down and monsters get out.

If you watch the trailer for Death House it’s very much like Jurassic Park without the dinosaurs. The big thing I want to convey about Death House through this podcast is, it’s less a horror film than it is a science fiction action vibe like Escape From New York. That’s what we were going for. That’s why the effects were very 80’s. All the blood, gore and violence are practical. The visuals we wanted to have an 80s feel to it.

That’s dangerous to do because you have a whole audience out there that don’t even know who these people are. They don’t even know that Friday the 13th, there even was an original 1980s film. They think it was the remake in 2008. The same with Nightmare on Elm Street.

It’s funny we have all this information at our fingertips on the internet yet nobody knows anything.

In a recent Cynema blog I put up an article by Martin Scorcese where I agree with him that there is too much content out there. Movies have lost a little bit of their muster. I think part of the problem is showing too much behind the scenes. We’ve made mini-experts out of people who have no business being mini-experts. The magicians have shown too much behind the stage.

You got guys sitting back saying, “I know how they did that.” My response is always, where’s your movie? Oh that’s right you just sit on your YouTube channel and just talk about them.