The trailer for my sophomore feature film, the psychological horror thriller DARK OF WINTER.
The trailer for my sophomore feature film, the psychological horror thriller DARK OF WINTER.
Got something in the mail yesterday.
I gotta hand it to the 48 Hour Film Project crew…it’s a lot nicer than I expected it to be.
Now all I need is a mantle where I can place it next to the BEST FEATURE award we won for The Quiet Arrangement. By the way, that seems like pathetic bragging to me…two awards, no mantle.
Weird.
Nice.
By the way, if you’d like to see the film that got us that honor, you can do so right here…
Trailer is cut…just waiting on some tech stuff and then we will present it to the world.
In the meantime, another frame grab…?
…capeche?
So, we made our new film as part of an unofficial challenge (that has seemingly gone by the wayside) wherein a filmmaker has two weeks from the first day of shooting to get a feature film (60 minutes +) to a fine cut (they left additional time in for color correcting).
I wanted to make a follow up to my debut film The Quiet Arrangement (still available on DVD!) and this seemed like the perfect way to do so. It’s a challenge, you know, so why not challenge myself as a filmmaker.
One of the original participants and creators of the 2wkFilm Challenge is Lucas McNelly, who has spent the last year traveling around the country helping other indie filmmakers on their projects and blogging about it, so I contacted him and asked if he wanted to make this film his final stop, since he was coming back to Pittsburgh anyway. He said it was cool and we set a start date: Thursday, February 23, 2012.
So, on Thursday, we would start shooting, and from that point I would have two weeks to finish the film; shoot it, cut it, done.
I just hit ENTER to render the final film out at 12:30 am, March 9, 2012. Thirty minutes past the deadline.
Shit. Really?
Yup.
Does it matter? Only to me, I guess. I still have a sophomore feature film (71 minutes!) and I got to work with some amazing actors that I’ve never worked with before. Of course, it also helped that the two real stars of the film, Kyle Jason (our lead) and Maura Snyder (our Producer and my lovely wife) gave it their all and made the entire experience as easy as a two week feature film project could be.
Lucas never showed (I still don’t know what happened there and I just found out that his A YEAR WITHOUT RENT project ended on February 18th, so what the hell?!) so I have to blog about this myself. I’ve been trying to get posts up, but when you’re under the gun, the last thing you want to do is post some shit about being under the gun.
Oh, well…it was well worth it.
Now all we need is for an audience to take the crazy journey that is Dark of Winter.
Come along, if you will…
…Feb 28th wasn’t the last day of principle photography. It was scheduled to be, but, things change, so…
We wrapped on Wednesday, the 29th. Kyle Jason flew home the next day. Nothing like getting down to the wire, right?
The editing has commenced. Rough assembly is almost finished. Not bad for a feature. That’s the beauty of doing longer takes. Easier to edit…