Showing posts with label amateur. Show all posts
Showing posts with label amateur. Show all posts

Monday, August 31, 2015

New Home Page!


I've finally revamped my old, sad home page, with a big help from my buddy Daniel Blohm. It's still a work in progress, but a little at a time I'll get there. Go check it out HERE :)

Thursday, January 1, 2015

"The Other Gods": Filming Cosmic Horrors In a Tiny Green Room


First of all: Happy New Year! Let's help out making 2015 a really swell year. Unfortunately, 2014 was almost only work, work, work for me, and not of the fun kind. But never mind that now; new year, new possibilities.

We're off to Lovecraft Land again with my latest video effort. This is another of my projects that's been lingering on for a couple of years, bit which is finally getting to the finish line with editing and effects work.
First a few words about the actual story. "The Other Gods" is apparently an early effort by weird fiction master H P Lovecraft. Scholars say that it's an example of the influence of Lord Dunsany's lyrical and mystical tales on Lovecraft's imagination. This one is sort of a moral tale, with a couple of characters sticking their noses into business they'd better leave alone. Barzai the Wise and his disciple Atal climb mount Hatheg-Kla to spy on the dancing gods of the Earth, but find out too late that they do not dance alone..


My stalwart buddies Håkan Håkansson and Björn Hansson tackled the moderate challenge of portraying Barzai and Atal, and my equally reliable voice-over artist John Hutch supplied the narration, providing the gravitas that only a genuine English accent can create.
We filmed the whole thing in one 2013 afternoon, in my crammed green screen room.


Håkan looked suitably sage in a fantasy astrologer/astronomer outfit..


...And Björn might actually pass for Sinbad the sailor in his get-up. Something that got me thinking regarding future projects.

All the scenes were pieced together in After Effects. I now subscribe to software in Adobe Cloud, and therefore have access to all the tools I need for my creative digital work. Or almost all tools. The standard AE plugin Keylight is very good, but since I almost never get the ideal quality green screen shots I always think I'll get, I need stronger stuff to pull a good enough key. So I coughed up the $799 Red Giant want for their Keying Suite, which includes Primatte Keyer, Key Correct and Warp. I'm very happy with the results I'm getting, so for me it was certainly worth every penny.


Here's how the opening shot of Barzai in his tower looks when finished. I'm still sticking to a not-quite-real look, which is inspired by both Ray Harryhausen's fantasy films as well as more experimental auteur's like Karel Zeman. 


Here's how the full background image looks. It's created in Photoshop and consists of 22 layers. The various bits are photos from Wikimedia, travel photos from friends and other sources. I love creating my "sets" in Photoshop, since the possibilities are endless. There are, in fact, no limits to what you can stitch together for your film.


Since the background image is so big, I could flip it and use bits of it for close-ups of Håkan. The telescope is also just a photo collage.


All in all, there were only three background images created for the tower interior. In some shots we actually used natural sunlight coming in through a window to light the green screen set-up. It worked better than I at first thought it would.


Walking in the desert might seem like a difficult thing to do, when you only have a green screen with a length that will allow for about four steps. The solution is simply to film each actor in two separate shots, and then combine them in AE. And have them walk very slowly.





You can even climb mountains, though your green screen studio feels like a closet. You only need a few seconds here and there to convey each part of the story.


And, of course, you have to prod your poor actors to crawl around in scenes which they have no idea how they'll turn out in the end. This little studio is history now, since the building is being renovated. Now I'm using another space, which I have to pay a small rent for since it's at a school, and I'm not the only one using . Ideally I'd love to have a big room just for myself, but that'll have to be a future project. It's on my dream list.


Without giving too much away (if you haven't read the story) things don't go too well for our heroes. Here's Björn with scratches and sores made up with fake blood and bread crumbs.


Barzai's fate is a grim one indeed, and it's probably correct to say that he's the first in a long line of Lovecraftian protagonists that meet a sticky end. So what is Barzai actually looking at? Well, since the story is called "The Other Gods" it's presumably clear that it's not the beings he climbed the mountain to have a peek at. More about those in a coming blog post, but here are a couple of dancing monstrosities to hopefully tickle your fancy.



Friday, February 24, 2012

The Shadow Out of Time: The Teaser Trailer


Yet another little trailer for yet another Lovecraftian film project. Hope ya'll enjoy it!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QdHBgdewN1Y&feature=channel_video_title

I'm making this film with Christopher Johansson and Daniel Lennéer; you can visit his page HERE!

Monday, July 11, 2011

Save Prince Plutonium on YouTube!



So, here’s the finished little epic. It took two years to put together, mostly due to interference from ”real” life. For instance, this spring my little studio, an old boiler room connected to my house, was flooded due to melting snow. It was the start of endless problems and very expensive repairs. It’s still not over, but I’m getting back to something similar to ordinary life. About six months were eaten away by this problem. It’s tough keeping your spirits up when you have a lot of worries to take care of.

I also made a little behind the scenes film. It’s very compressed, but shows some of the process behind putting this project together.

Friday, April 22, 2011

Save Prince Plutonium Trailer!

The poor people who appear in my films are almost always in for a long wait to see the finished piece. I sort-of film first and then later try to figure out how to make the film hold together. I've also learned to film WHEN people are available, and stock up on footage. Anyway, for the young actors in "Save Prince Plutonium", my space movie, I put together this little trailer as a "Happy Easter to you" message. Hope you enjoy it too!