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28 Feb12

ERGODIC CINEMA PROJECT INTERVIEW #10

Ergodic Cinema Project Interviews

Questions for Eric Lee, Filmmaker, Act 4

The Ergodic Cinema Project



Interviewed by Jennifer Sharpe (odilonvert)


This is the tenth piece in a series of interviews with each member of The Ergodic Cinema Project. Each member has been asked the same questions for these interviews. These are the responses of Eric Lee (Leefurfur), filmmaker for Act 4, Dogg Lesson:

JS: Tell me about your background in film.

EL: I’m going to school for film/video in Oakland and San Francisco. I really started thinking about making films after seeing Eternal Sunshine Of The Spotless Mind, and Me And You And Everyone We Know.

 


JS: What inspired you to get involved in The Ergodic Cinema Project?

EL: I just wanted to collaborate with people who were actually interested in film. The Ergodic project sounded like exactly what I was looking for.

JS: What is your segment’s relationship to other segments?

EL: Rebirth and death (metaphorically speaking) are the themes of my segment, which will be the third segment of the fourth act behind JP. Schmidt and before PolarisDiB.

JS: How has your experience with The Ergodic Cinema Project been so far? What do you find is good about collaborating over the internet, and what do you think is a challenge about it? Regarding challenges — any ideas about how to make it work better?

EL: It’s great! I like the people and their open-mindedness. I thank PolarisDiB for roping me into it! The challenge is that we don’t get to meet in person to talk about what we are trying to achieve. The advantage is that we get to do whatever we want and we have our own space to deal with our own challenges.

 


JS: Anything else you’d like to add about your participation in The Ergodic Cinema Project?

EL: Keep on keepin’ on, pardners.

0 Comments
08 Nov11

ERGODIC CINEMA PROJECT INTERVIEW #8

Ergodic Cinema Project Interviews


Questions for Max Slobodin, Filmmaker, Act 5

The Ergodic Cinema Project

 



Interviewed by Jennifer Sharpe (odilonvert)


This is the eighth piece in a series of interviews with each member of The Ergodic Cinema Project. Each member has been asked the same questions for these interviews. These are theresponses of Max Slobodin, filmmaker for Act 5 (as yet untitled):

JS: Tell me about your background in film.

MS: Ever since I was little, as far back as I can remember, I’ve seen films. Films have been partof some of my most treasured memories, an integration of profound symbiosis. An affirmation ofthe senses of wonder, imagination, and play nurtured by my parents. The possibilities becamemulti-foliate once I began to truly study films starting in high school and later in university and onmy own time. While my background is in general Art History and I would not consider myself afilmmaker per se, my indelible passion for the medium coupled with my visual vocabulary haveconspired in what Kandinsky would term my “inner necessity” to create.

JS: What inspired you to get involved in The Ergodic Cinema Project?

MS: The opportunity presented itself to me to join The Ergodic Cinema Project as one of thesegment filmmakers by happenstance. I had read briefly the various forum threads on the projectand was intrigued, already familiar with hypertextuality and the ergodic. Being that the projectwas already underway, I was resigned to be a vicarious spectator until a member had to drop out of the project and the slot was offered to me. Taking the reins, I indulged my predilection, myzealotry for experimentation and esotericism and channeled this energy like one of Reich’sorgone accumulators..


JS: What is your segment’s relationship to other segments?

MS: My focus is on the themes of the project itself, and being that my segment comes at theultimate act of the overall film, I elected to mold my segment’s superstructure as a culmination of,a continuing of, and a returning to all of the states of the other segments. Taking this to itsteleological endpoint, I made designs on a metatextual commentary on the ideas percolatingthroughout the gestalt. Being influenced by Eliade’s theological concepts of the eternal return and the axis mundi, I deigned to fashion this world as the nebulous terminous of the collectivepossibilities and routes the viewer could take. In this sense, my segment is the demilitarizedzone..

JS: How has your experience with The Ergodic Cinema Project been so far? What do you find isgood about collaborating over the internet, and what do you think is a challenge about it?Regarding challenges — any ideas about how to make it work better?

MS: This in and of itself presents an interesting opportunity for collaboration in the best sense ofcommunal enterprise. Having come in relatively late in the process, the conceptualization wasmostly complete before I even set mind to the task. The intrinsic necessity to tie my segment toothers proved to be a constraint, but one I was happy to oblige. Having taken creative writingclasses for years, I appreciate the immense value of constraints on liberating my creativity andthird eye from countless writing exercises meant to cultivate neuroplasticity. Moreover, it makescomplete sense for this collaboration to occur through the medium of the web, given the nature of the hypertext fabric of the film.

JS: Anything else you’d like to add about your participation in The Ergodic Cinema Project?

MS: I am tense with anticipation, impatient to see how the final product emerges and takes life.The delight is in sharing this work with others, and the exquisite joy of leaving a part of my soul on a passionately human endeavor.
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07 Oct11

ERGODIC CINEMA PROJECT INTERVIEW #7

Ergodic Cinema Project Interviews


Questions for Noel Gutiérrez (Santropez), Filmmaker, Act 2


The Ergodic Cinema Project

 



Battleship Potemkin

 

Interviewed by Jennifer Sharpe (odilonvert)


This is the seventh piece in a series of interviews with each member of The Ergodic Cinema Project. Each member has been asked the same questions for these interviews. These are the responses of Noel Gutiérrez (Santropez), filmmaker for Act 2, Bovidae:

JS: Tell me about your background in film.

NG: I became interested on film about three years ago when a friend of mine, who is also producing my segment Bovidae introduced me to some of his favorite movies. I thought I was starting to understand what film was all about, but it wasn't until I watched A Serious Man with my parents that I discovered the possibilities of this art. As we left the theatre and while everyone around me was speaking badly about the film, all I kept thinking to myself was: 'This is what I want to do for a living.'

JS: What inspired you to get involved in The Ergodic Cinema Project?

NG: I was the second or third to respond to the original thread, where the idea was pretty basic, and even though the participants were really few, I thought this would be a good idea to get my short film to be known outside Mexico. Little by little the project became what we are working on today.



Storyboards

JS: What is your segment’s relationship to other segments?

NG: The link between the Dandara's Act I film Missing and Bovidae is found in a newspaper, whose front page reads: 'After 25 years they are still MISSING' - which is an homage in Missing to 82 missing Brazilian political prisoners.



Test Shot


Que Viva Mexico!

JS
: How has your experience with The Ergodic Cinema Project been so far? What do you find is good about collaborating over the internet, and what do you think is a challenge about it? Regarding challenges — any ideas about how to make it work better?


NG: I'd say communication was a big issue at first, because not all of us had time to read what had been posted into the communications thread on the general forum, but now that all major decisions for the project have been made we can all focus on our segments, without losing touch with the rest of the team.



Man with the Movie Camera

JS: Anything else you’d like to add about your participation in The Ergodic Cinema Project?

NG: I'll add a mention about directors who have significantly influenced my work -- these include Servando González, Arturo Ripstein, Andrei Tarkovsky, Sergei Eisenstein and Sandro Aguilar.
0 Comments
05 Oct11

"HIS CONCEPTION" RESTATING THE IMPORTANCE OF PRE-PRODUCTION FOR MYSELF

by PolarisDiB

 
(still from “His Conception”, an Act V segment of the Ergodic Cinema Project)

The above photograph is a still from one of the closing shots of my short film “His Conception”, an Act V segment of the Ergodic Cinema Project. It is nicely symbolic of what I have to say about pre-production: that it is always unfinished(background) and ends up feeling like a car-wreck (foreground).

I was going to write my thoughts about pre-production for “His Conception” before production officially started on it, but that thinking just goes to show how bad I am at pre-production. Pre-production does not really end so much as suddenly segues into carrying a camera around and calling it “production.” By the time you have all the phone calls made and everyone is where they are supposed to be, neither parts of that previous clause of this sentence are any longer true. If that sentence felt weird to you to read, that’s what pre-production feels like after you are on set shooting something. By the time you have it all finished and are ready to shoot, you realize you have nothing finished.

At least, that is how it feels now. It might get better, but honestly this is why directors have producers with production offices behind their movies. The phone calls, deal making, and problem solving never ends. It is always last minute, and if your job is to be on set, you cannot run off to go pick up a prop that you lost. Not that that happened on MY set. Okay, yes it did. But I was able to cover up the mistake because one of the actors did not bring his required wardrobe like instructed and I had a shirt at the hotel that would work. Later I had to switch roles for the actor anyway because I did not properly audition the talent.

Nevertheless I do not really care to write an essay bemoaning all the problems that arrived because honestly, the shoot went well and though we had problems, most of them were resolved. Shooting has extended to an extra, third day, which is significant because I am actually paying my actors and with the cost of beingin Dubai, feeding everyone, paying for talent, and travelling, this shoot is costing me just short of a thousand dollars today. Keep in mind that this is a no-budget production and it is all coming out of my own pocket. That is the power of pre-production: good pre-production saves you a thousand dollar day of shooting on a no-budget film where almost everyone is working for free or lower than theirusual wages. Now make the production “professional” and pay regular rates and you see where that conversation goes. 

 
(It’s a pretty place but where’s the actors? Oh…damn, where’s my phone?)

The production is two-thirds of the way shot and I am still working “pre-production”. I have to find some stand-ins for the final scene. I have to get some sound equipment together and jerry-rig a makeshift dubbing studio. I have already rough-cut several sequences together so that I know what pick-ups andb-roll I will have to shoot, myself, after it is all done.

Of course the production “moves on” while all these concerns get met… or not. Thus why the no-budget filmmaker typically finds himself coming up with work arounds and secondary solutions, part of what is fun but also stressful of the style.

Since it comes as part of the fun, it is really not a complaint to look over your mistakes, laugh at yourself, and find another way of doing it. The only problem is the fact that in the end, you are still responsible for every single image that comes up on screen, so if the image ends up being something completely unintended because you didn’t plan ahead for it, you are not really going to be there with the audience to explain how you had some other idea but it “didn’twork out” so you “tried this instead.” They’re just going to see what is available to see. If you want them only to see what you intend them to see, then you have to direct their attention in the right places, and to properly “direct” their attention, you have to have everything in place where it belongs. Hence the never-ending spectre of pre-production.

-PolarisDib-

2 Comments
04 Oct11

ERGODIC CINEMA PROJECT INTERVIEW #6

Ergodic Cinema Project Interviews


Questions for J.P. Schmidt, Filmmaker, Act 4

The Ergodic Cinema Project

 



Interviewed by Jennifer Sharpe (odilonvert)


This is the sixth piece in a series of interviews with each member of The Ergodic Cinema Project. Each member has been asked the same questions for these interviews. These are the responses of J.P. Schmidt, filmmaker for Act 4, Afterlight:

JS: Tell me about your background in film.

JPS: In high school I had always wanted to be a novelist. Slowly that aspiration transformed when I discovered the screenplay medium, it was a landslide after that. I wanted to direct, shoot, edit, etc, and film became my new artistic home. I took my college funds, bought a bunch of film equipment and opted to teach myself via textbooks and DVD commentaries. I’ve been shooting since.

JS: What inspired you to get involved in The Ergodic Cinema Project?

JPS: An open slot for Act 4 and a load of talent already onboard.

JS: What is your segment’s relationship to other segments?

JPS: My segment connects to two other preceding segments (Dylan Ibrahim's and Justin Wagner's (Tremolo)) through atmosphere and the past. I connected to Dylan's segment via a storm which is a central element in his segment, and Justin's segment through the product produced - greeting cards.

JS: How has your experience with The Ergodic Cinema Project been so far? What do you find is good about collaborating over the internet, and what do you think is a challenge about it? Regarding challenges — any ideas about how to make it work better?

JPS: My experience thus far with Ergodic has been nothing but pleasant. The artists involved are an inspiration. By collaborating over the internet I have been able to meet artists I would have never had the pleasure to talk to otherwise, let alone collaborate with. No comment on challenges, art is challenging, anything good is.

JS: Anything else you’d like to add about your participation in The Ergodic Cinema Project?

JPS: This is a short story by Ernest Hemingway that inspired my segment: Hills Like White Elephants.



The hills across the valley of the Ebro were long and white. On this side there was no shade and no trees and the station was between two lines of rails in the sun. Close against the side of the station there was the warm shadow of the building and a curtain, made of strings of bamboo beads, hung across the open door into the bar, to keep out flies. The American and the girl with him sat at a table in the shade, outside the building. It was very hot and the express from Barcelona would come in forty minutes. It stopped at this junction for two minutes and went to Madrid.

‘What should we drink?’ the girl asked. She had taken off her hat and put it on the table.

‘It’s pretty hot,’ the man said.

‘Let’s drink beer.’

‘Dos cervezas,’ the man said into the curtain.

‘Big ones?’ a woman asked from the doorway.

‘Yes. Two big ones.’


The woman brought two glasses of beer and two felt pads. She put the felt pads and the beer glass on the table and looked at the man and the girl. The girl was looking off at the line of hills. They were white in the sun and the country was brown and dry.


‘They look like white elephants,’ she said.

‘I’ve never seen one,’ the man drank his beer.

‘No, you wouldn’t have.’

‘I might have,’ the man said. ‘Just because you say I wouldn’t have doesn’t prove anything.’

The girl looked at the bead curtain. ‘They’ve painted something on it,’ she said. ‘What does it

say?’

‘Anis del Toro. It’s a drink.’

‘Could we try it?’


The man called ‘Listen’ through the curtain. The woman came out from the bar.

‘Four reales.’ ‘We want two Anis del Toro.’

‘With water?’

‘Do you want it with water?’

‘I don’t know,’ the girl said. ‘Is it good with water?’

‘It’s all right.’

‘You want them with water?’ asked the woman.

‘Yes, with water.’

‘It tastes like liquorice,’ the girl said and put the glass down.

‘That’s the way with everything.’

‘Yes,’ said the girl. ‘Everything tastes of liquorice. Especially all the things you’ve waited so long

for, like absinthe.’

‘Oh, cut it out.’

‘You started it,’ the girl said. ‘I was being amused. I was having a fine time.’

‘Well, let’s try and have a fine time.’

‘All right. I was trying. I said the mountains looked like white elephants. Wasn’t that bright?’

‘That was bright.’

‘I wanted to try this new drink. That’s all we do, isn’t it – look at things and try new drinks?’ ‘I

guess so.’


The girl looked across at the hills.

‘They’re lovely hills,’ she said. ‘They don’t really look like white elephants. I just meant the

coloring of their skin through the trees.’

‘Should we have another drink?’

‘All right.’


The warm wind blew the bead curtain against the table.

‘The beer’s nice and cool,’ the man said.

‘It’s lovely,’ the girl said.

‘It’s really an awfully simple operation, Jig,’ the man said. ‘It’s not really an operation at all.’

The girl looked at the ground the table legs rested on.

‘I know you wouldn’t mind it, Jig. It’s really not anything. It’s just to let the air in.’


The girl did not say anything.

‘I’ll go with you and I’ll stay with you all the time. They just let the air in and then it’s all perfectly

natural.’

‘Then what will we do afterwards?’


‘We’ll be fine afterwards. Just like we were before.’

‘What makes you think so?’

‘That’s the only thing that bothers us. It’s the only thing that’s made us unhappy.’


The girl looked at the bead curtain, put her hand out and took hold of two of the strings of beads.

‘And you think then we’ll be all right and be happy.’

‘I know we will. Yon don’t have to be afraid. I’ve known lots of people that have done it.’

‘So have I,’ said the girl. ‘And afterwards they were all so happy.’

‘Well,’ the man said, ‘if you don’t want to you don’t have to. I wouldn’t have you do it if you didn’t

want to. But I know it’s perfectly simple.’

‘And you really want to?’

‘I think it’s the best thing to do. But I don’t want you to do it if you don’t really want to.’

‘And if I do it you’ll be happy and things will be like they were and you’ll love me?’

‘I love you now. You know I love you.’

‘I know. But if I do it, then it will be nice again if I say things are like white elephants, and you’ll

like it?’

‘I’ll love it. I love it now but I just can’t think about it. You know how I get when I worry.’

‘If I do it you won’t ever worry?’

‘I won’t worry about that because it’s perfectly simple.’

‘Then I’ll do it. Because I don’t care about me.’

‘What do you mean?’

‘I don’t care about me.’

‘Well, I care about you.’

‘Oh, yes. But I don’t care about me. And I’ll do it and then everything will be fine.’

‘I don’t want you to do it if you feel that way.’


The girl stood up and walked to the end of the station. Across, on the other side, were fields of grain and trees along the banks of the Ebro. Far away, beyond the river, were mountains. The shadow of a cloud moved across the field of grain and she saw the river through the trees.

 

‘And we could have all this,’ she said. ‘And we could have everything and every day we make it more impossible.’

‘What did you say?’

‘I said we could have everything.’

‘We can have everything.’

‘No, we can’t.’

‘We can have the whole world.’

‘No, we can’t.’

‘We can go everywhere.’

‘No, we can’t. It isn’t ours any more.’

‘It’s ours.’

‘No, it isn’t. And once they take it away, you never get it back.’

‘But they haven’t taken it away.’

‘We’ll wait and see.’

‘Come on back in the shade,’ he said. ‘You mustn’t feel that way.’

‘I don’t feel any way,’ the girl said. ‘I just know things.’

‘I don’t want you to do anything that you don’t want to do -’

‘Nor that isn’t good for me,’ she said. ‘I know. Could we have another beer?’

‘All right. But you’ve got to realize – ‘

‘I realize,’ the girl said. ‘Can’t we maybe stop talking?’


They sat down at the table and the girl looked across at the hills on the dry side of the valley and the man looked at her and at the table.

‘You’ve got to realize,’ he said, ‘ that I don’t want you to do it if you don’t want to. I’m perfectly willing to go through with it if it means anything to you.’

‘Doesn’t it mean anything to you? We could get along.’

‘Of course it does. But I don’t want anybody but you. I don’t want anyone else. And I know it’s perfectly simple.’


‘Yes, you know it’s perfectly simple.’

‘It’s all right for you to say that, but I do know it.’

‘Would you do something for me now?’

‘I’d do anything for you.’

‘Would you please please please please please please please stop talking?’


He did not say anything but looked at the bags against the wall of the station. There were labels on them from all the hotels where they had spent nights.

‘But I don’t want you to,’ he said, ‘I don’t care anything about it.’

‘I’ll scream,’ the girl said.


The woman came out through the curtains with two glasses of beer and put them down on the damp felt pads. ‘The train comes in five minutes,’ she said.

‘What did she say?’ asked the girl.

‘That the train is coming in five minutes.’


The girl smiled brightly at the woman, to thank her.

‘I’d better take the bags over to the other side of the station,’ the man said. She smiled at him.

‘All right. Then come back and we’ll finish the beer.’


He picked up the two heavy bags and carried them around the station to the other tracks. He looked up the tracks but could not see the train. Coming back, he walked through the bar-room, where people waiting for the train were drinking. He drank an Anis at the bar and looked at the people. They were all waiting reasonably for the train. He went out through the bead curtain. She was sitting at the table and smiled at him.

 

‘Do you feel better?’ he asked.

‘I feel fine,’ she said. ‘There’s nothing wrong with me. I feel fine.’"

0 Comments
26 Sep11

ERGODIC CINEMA PROJECT INTERVIEW #5

Ergodic Cinema Project Interviews
Questions for Justin Wagner (Tremolo), Filmmaker, Act 3

The Ergodic Cinema Project


Interviewed by Jennifer Sharpe (odilonvert)


This is the fifth piece in a series of interviews with each member of The Ergodic Cinema Project. Each member has been asked the same questions for these interviews. These are the responses of Justin Wagner, filmmaker for Act 3 (as yet untitled):

JS: Tell me about your background in film.

JW: I have never made an actual film, but I was on my school’s broadcast journalism team which required me to create a segment, shoot the segment and then edit the segment. I was the chief-editor in the class so I also had to edit the final production. 


JS: What inspired you to get involved in The Ergodic Cinema Project?

JW: My aspiration to make a film combined with the terrible feeling I get when I let people down ifI don't keep a promise. Now I HAVE to make a film!

JS: What is your segment’s relationship to other segments?

JW: The hardest part about this project has been relating all the radically different segments in away that is not overly obvious. There are written juxtapositions between the characters in mine and Ryan’s segment that should be interesting. A card from Jennifer’s segment will make anappearance in mine, but I’d like to do more than just that. Connecting it in a realistic way is very important to me. When it’s all done, I don’t want anyone questioning anything about the way mine connects with the others. That is my main goal. So far, coming up with a realistic connectionbetween my segment, Dandara’s, and Noel’s (Santropez), has proven hard, but I shall succeed! I have a few ideas kicking around, but none completely settled on. I’ve gone through a couple of ideas already, but scrapped them because they just didn’t work correctly. I need to go through some of the later entries on the submissions thread again to get a better idea of how mine should flow into those segments.


JS: How has your experience with The Ergodic Cinema Project been so far? What do you find is good about collaborating over the internet, and what do you think is a challenge about it?Regarding challenges — any ideas about how to make it work better?

JW: I am very happy to be part of this project. With all the hostility that shows up around the discussion forums sometimes, I am glad that everyone involved seems wonderful! Collaboratingover the internet, for me, has been exciting because this is the first time in my life that I havebeen involved with people who are really interested and committed to filmmaking.


JS: Anything else you’d like to add about your participation in The Ergodic Cinema Project?

JW: So far the experience has been great and I hope we inspire people on the discussion forums,and in general, to continue making collaborative film. Hopefully, when the project is finally finished, we all can meet up!

1 Comments
03 Sep11

ERGODIC CINEMA PROJECT INTERVIEW #4

Questions for Bobby Kenneth LePire, Filmmaker, Act 4

The Ergodic Cinema Project

 



This is from “The Orphanage”, a fantastic Spanish horror film. During the nightmare sequences, this is the sort of atmosphere I am aiming for. Sparse, creepy, simple lighting.

Interviewed by Jennifer Sharpe (odilonvert)


This is the fourth piece in a series of interviews with each member of The Ergodic Cinema Project. Each member has been asked the same questions for these interviews. These are the responses of Bobby Kenneth LePire, filmmaker for Act 4, Sparks Of A Whispered Dream:

JS: Tell me about your background in film.

BKLP: In high school, I made quite a few shorts, one of which I am currently expanding into a feature length script. I have a few small projects that my friends have worked on with me, but nothing as expansive or as professional as this.

JS: What inspired you to get involved in The Ergodic Cinema Project?

BKLP: Dane (aka PolarisDib), whom I had known for about a year or so beforehand, invited me to join the project. I respect Dane and his opinions, thus I was intrigued.

JS: What is your segment’s relationship to other segments?

BKLP: The name of MOTHER’s missing son, Alex. In Roboko’s segment (as of yet untitled), Alex is the main character, and winds up far from home. This just naturally fit into the story I wanted to tell, which is that of a mother’s desperate search for her child, in a slightly surrealist/creepy manner. These two elements fit nicely together. The two segments also share a setting, “Epping Forest”. I had always envisioned the school at the end being in a forest, and once again, things fell into place here. Near the end of Roboko’s script, Alex wanders into Epping Forest. There are actually has two links here: obviously, the first is that the forest is meant to represent the same one in Roboko’s segment. However, deeper than that, since this is a search for Alex, the endings of both segments have an odd sort of parallel. The end of their respective journeys leads them into a forest, and after the forest is when supernatural elements kick in for each of the segments.


“Lucky Number Slevin”. Aside from being a personal favorite, what sticks out is the impeccable art design. From crazy green flower wallpaper, to empty bus depots, it’s a very stylish film, and I am going to aim for a similar style in the art direction department.

The elements from Dylan’s segment (as of yet untitled)... the relationships here were a bit trickier to make, because my script had been written first. Unfortunately, TheGamgee had to back out, but luckily, Dylan stepped up to bat very well. He read my script, and was successful in helping me rewrite it without forcing me to make major changes to it. The most significant way in which I rewrote my script occurs at the beginning. MOTHER is on the phone with a friend of hers, when Alex calls. All of the sudden, the power goes out. The storm and power outage come from the beginning of Dylan’s segment, thus making the two connected by time and setting. I like this new beginning better, as it seems more plausible as to the hows and whys of the call being missed.

A second reference to Dylan's script is much more subtle, and occurs a few times. In Dylan’s segment, a huge plot point is the release of these political prisoners. At various intervals, whenever a newspaper is shown, or when MOTHER is doing a bit of research on the web, the news stories will be about the political prisoners.

This has no real bearing on how my story flows, but it was a nice, subtle way of encapsulating all of it into one shared universe.



From the noir classic “The Third Man”, and is how I hope to capture Mother’s character throughout. Feeling alone, in a land that feels foreign now.

JS: How has your experience with The Ergodic Cinema Project been so far? What do you find is good about collaborating over the internet, and what do you think is a challenge about it? Regarding challenges — any ideas about how to make it work better?

BKLP: My experience so far has been fun, enlightening, and pretty damn awesome. Meeting all these different filmmakers has been a good way to expand my ways of viewing movies, and what makes them art.

Collaborating over the internet is great because it allows everyone involved to (more or less) instantly see what the other has written. For example, we have been sharing our various scripts through Google Docs, or various other text-based links. It’s nice to able to have that instant communication, no matter where you or they are in the world.

The more challenging aspects of working over the net would entail finding the time to sit down and talk. Needing a majority of the people to be free on a certain day and time can be daunting, and when a meeting gets changed at the last minute, it can be hard to rework everyone's schedules around it.


“Rest Stop Dead Ahead”. The cracked look of the wall, the harsh lighting, the grittiness of it. That’s how I hope the school to look.

JS: Anything else you’d like to add about your participation in The Ergodic Cinema Project?

BKLP: The Ergodic Cinema Project is a unique project, and even if none of us collaborate on a project again, it’s been a pleasure to be able to work with, and be inspired by everyone involved.
0 Comments
27 Aug11

Ergodic Cinema Project Interview #3

Questions for Dylan Ibrahim, Filmmaker, Act 3

The Ergodic Cinema Project

 



Interviewed by Jennifer Sharpe (odilonvert)


This is the third piece in a series of interviews with each member of The Ergodic Cinema Project. Each member has been asked the same questions for these interviews. These are the responses of Dylan Ibrahim, filmmaker for Act 3 (as yet untitled):

JS: Tell me about your background in film.

DI: I am an aspiring filmmaker. I have been interested in film since I was really young, but how I perceived it has changed over time. I began experimenting with video editing in 2008-09. Working not with a camera, but with stock footage. Once I started to I use a camera, my options for expression increased. And here I am.



JS: What inspired you to get involved in The Ergodic Cinema Project?

DI: A vacancy for one spot in Act 3 unexpectedly opened up, I had been following the project and was encouraged to join.

JS: What is your segment’s relationship to other segments?

DI: First, the image of the woman dropping items in front of the protagonist's door. This is a reference to Letters (Jennifer Sharpe's segment). I don’t know why I had chosen this particular reference at first, but now in considering it, I think it’s because it is a way of crossing into another segment, and giving rise to new outcomes. Secondly, tarot cards are included, referencing Sparks Of A Whispered Dream (Bobby Kenneth LePire's segment): the main character flips through and looks at two different decks of cards, a deck of tarot cards being one of them. Lastly, there are paintings on the fronts of doors in my segment, also referencing Sparks Of A Whispered Dream, where tarot card images are shown on the fronts of doors. In my segment I decided to use my paintings on the doors instead.



JS: How has your experience with The Ergodic Cinema Project been so far? What do you find is good about collaborating over the internet, and what do you think is a challenge about it? Regarding challenges — any ideas about how to make it work better?

DI: While I was intrigued by the concept of the project from the beginning, it wasn’t until after I joined that I began to more clearly understand how it works structurally. What’s good about internet collaboration is the diversity of people, minds, and ideas that can be included in a project like this. Everything is so different, yet we can manage to connect and collaborate despite these differences.



JS: Anything else you’d like to add about your participation in The Ergodic Cinema Project?

DI: Only that I'm anxious to get started on the actual filming of my segment.
0 Comments
15 Aug11

Ergodic Cinema Project Interviews #2

Questions for Ryan Estabrooks, Filmmaker, Act 2

The Ergodic Cinema Project

 



Interviewed by Jennifer Sharpe (odilonvert)


This is the second of a series of interviews with each member of The Ergodic Cinema Project. Each of the members were asked the same questions. Here are the responses of Ryan Estabrooks, filmmaker for Act 2, For No One:

JS: Tell me about your background in film.

RE: My addiction with film began when I was around 11 or 12. My father would always take me out to the movies every single weekend, just us two. It was a great way for us to spend time together and allowed me to see hundreds of films in my youth. Around age 13, he bought a video camera for me which sparked my initial interest in filmmaking (although I didn’t know it at the time). I partnered up with my best friend and we began filming skits, making short comedy videos simply to show to our friends.



I have been a writer all my life, ever since I was in pre-school when I was making comic books by hand. It was only natural that at age 15, I dove into screenwriting for the first time. I moved to Nashville when I graduated high school, initially for audio engineering. It was during school when I realized that filmmaking was to be my truest, most natural passion. I saved up thousands of dollars and purchased my own film equipment and have not stopped since.

JS: What inspired you to get involved in The Ergodic Cinema Project?

RE: The concept of an omnibus film is what initially drew me to this project. In fact, a year or so ago, I had written my own omnibus film so it was only natural that I gravitated to this. The ability to take part in a project that will include numerous filmmakers from around the world is a very special thing and could be very important in the film world. It has massive potential to make a big impact.

JS: What is your segment’s relationship to other segments?

RE: My segment follows a Dandara’s segment which deals with Brazilian military dictatorship and namely, 138 prisoners of this dictatorship. The main character will be wrapped up completely in bandages, wearing a Brazilian military jacket. This is to signify that this could be one of the escaped prisoners, or perhaps someone related to a prisoner. This person flees the life she was leading in Brazil to this home, where she breaks into it and steals the life of a well-off, bored housewife who wishes to be dead.



JS: How has your experience with The Ergodic Cinema Project been so far? What do you find is good about collaborating over the internet, and what do you think is a challenge about it? Regarding challenges — any ideas about how to make it work better?

RE: I think communication has been handled very well throughout this Ergodic project. The great thing about collaborating over the internet is being able to tell stories with people that are thousands of miles away from you, which would simply not be possible otherwise. The challenge may be that some people do not have access to very good equipment or need more hands on deck to help film their project; being thousands of miles away, we cannot physically help out in this manner. I can’t think of too many ideas to make it better. I may have to get back to you on this one.


JS: Anything else you’d like to add about your participation in The Ergodic Cinema Project?

RE: I can’t wait to see this complete film and I can’t wait to meet all of you beautiful people!
0 Comments
13 Aug11

Ergodic Cinema Project Interviews

Questions for Dane Benko (PolarisDiB), Director

The Ergodic Cinema Project

 



Interviewed by Jennifer Sharpe (odilonvert)


This is the first of a series of interviews with each member of The Ergodic Cinema Project. Each of the members were asked the same questions. Here are the responses of Dane Benko, our Director:

JS: Tell me about your background in film.

DB: I will not get into the whole story for brevity’s sake, but for most of my life I wanted to be a writer and did not think any art form was as appealing as prose. However, in my mid-teens I stumbled upon several movies that were both unlike anything I had seen, as well as clearly something more than what I had come to expect from mainstream cinema. The movies were Fight Club, Requiem for a Dream, and Lost Highway, and I watched them all back-to-back in one sitting. Now that I have a greater grasp of film history, I know those movies are still a lot more “mainstream” than quite a lot out there made in the past and today, but nevertheless that was the bridge into the idea that movies were something more than American Pie and Star Wars.

I was lucky because it was at that exact time that Governor Richardson started pushing for the creation of a film industry in New Mexico. New Mexico was the first state to start attracting Hollywood via film incentives, so the landscape at the time was very tuned in to educating and training young people in the ways of film.

I have been involved in a variety of projects and of course for the most part I am still a newbie and working my way in. I made a variety of short films for myself while working as a PA, office assistant, gopher, extra, and just about any bottom-of-the-totem-pole position just to get near sets, until I was effectively able to start working with other groups editing their shorts, doing a bit of grip work, scanning submissions for festivals, and so on. Thus, currently I am a jack of all trades and master of none. I am still learning but have been working on a two year contract in the United Arab Emirates making training and promotional videos, using my free time to work on the Ergodic Cinema Project and other personal things. My professional focus is on editing.

JS: What inspired you to get involved in The Ergodic Cinema Project?

DB: I believe I made some comment on the Mubi forums about how I talk to people because I want to work with people, and Justin, the originator of this project, invited me to join his thread to discuss the possibilities of a collaborative project. I am wary of Internet collaborative projects because they get discussed a lot and happen rarely; I myself had already spent some time on others and for the most part they tended to fizzle out quickly. However, at the time I was making a sort of early New Year’s Resolution to myself to keep creating and make a daily habit of it, and with the time I had open over here I decided to go along with the collaborative project thread.

My immediate desire was to see if I could give the idea of Internet collaboration two major things it tends to lack, structure and focus. At the same time I randomly stumbled across the concept of “ergodic literature” online, and looking into Espen Aarseth’s theory of cybertext made me think there was a good key there for Internet collaboration. I pitched my idea and it stuck and now I am responsible for it.

Now that I look back at this anecdote, I realize that my original concept has been significantly changed—and far exceeded. One of the particularly helpful parts of being on the Ergodic Cinema Project is the fact that the collaborators really responded and kept engaged, and real things started happening real quick. I decided I would stick it through to see how far it goes, and now one segment is done and others are going into production, including my own. Who knew?



Meanwhile, the structure has necessarily had to change to adapt to the somewhat ephemeral nature of Internet collaboration, but what strikes me is that none of it has really fallen apart. I do not think I know what the final project will look like, but I know the result is going to be interesting and that everyone who sticks through with it will get something from the experience. Meanwhile, the segments are good enough and the concept is strong enough that we have gotten some real support from other parties, and occasionally I receive messages from people I do not even know asking when they will be getting a chance to see the final product.

The Ergodic Cinema Project is not the first and will not be the last Internet collaborative work. I think we are merely exploring the concept as a model and that model, whatever the result, will inform how subsequent artists go about trying to focus and structure future projects. That thought makes the Ergodic Cinema Project to me definitively experimental.

JS: What is your segment’s relationship to other segments?

DB: I am one of the currently two closing segments, an Act V segment. The number of segments per act has had to change according to the availability of segment directors, so when I wrote my segment, “His Conception”, about a murdered Indian man who has to choose between living in his own memories in death or leaving them entirely behind for another life, I had it more in mind to loop the project back into Brazilian filmmaker Ana Dandara’s Act I segment, “Missing”, about the search for lost victims of a political coup. The concept behind my segment I wanted to focus on was using the already surreal landscape of Dubai while responding to the lost stories of political victims in Dandara’s segment. Hussein, my main character, is supposed to be an assassinated activist leader.

Act IV segments were written after Act V, so they are supposed to tie into mine. Virginian filmmaker Bobby Kenneth LePire has a good transition into my segment via an open doorway that can lead visually into my segment and metaphorically into “Death”. The segment directed by JP Schmidt, however, is an almost complete inversion of my narrative, where a couple’s decision over whether to have an abortion decides the fate of their relationship. This fits the structure of the project as a whole: SEARCH – DEATH – REBIRTH, which in addition to formatting loosely all of the separate segments, is supposed to cover the entire project as well. Bobby’s and JP’s segments are focused on a breaking away and end, but mine has to be a coming back together and renewal; nevertheless, all three elements must be featured in our segments.



Now we have another Act V segment directed by Max Slobodin,, who is using his painting background to explore these themes through the use of color in other movies—breaking down the concept and structure as summary of the art of image making. My short promises to be muted and desaturated, and his will end in an explosion of color. The project leads to different paths.

JS: How has your experience with The Ergodic Cinema Project been so far? What do you find is good about collaborating over the internet, and what do you think is a challenge about it? Regarding challenges — any ideas about how to make it work better?

DB: Most of this question is answered in question 2, methinks. I have to see how people respond to the finished project before I will get a full understanding of what we could really do better (and how), but a lot of the work of this project has been to figure out how to make it work, so now that we have an infrastructure and some experience in it, we will better appreciate how to do it, or at least projects like it, better the next time around.

The biggest challenge is to be literally unable to just go to one of the collaborator’s house on a weekend and say, “Okay, let’s get something done today.” There have been times when I have seriously considered buying plane tickets to the ends of the Earth just so that I could flex my demanding producer muscles and make sure things are whipped into shape. The most excellent part of the project, however, is how whenever I get that feeling, I then get a response from one of the segment directors that they are far further along on their project than I imagined.

It is not a well-oiled machine because it is not manufactured yet. I will apply the oil once I know what creaks I have designed.

JS: Anything else you’d like to add about your participation in The Ergodic Cinema Project?

DB: I use the projects I do on my own time to recreate the wheel. I was told several times by many different people when I was first starting out in film not to waste my time recreating thewheel. It is common for someone to talk about going to film school, thinking they have learned a lot, and then going onto set and learning far more. I have done the former, am doing the latter, and want to add a third, and that is taking the stuff you have learned on set and reapplying it, re- appropriating it to your own thing to ensure you really understand it the way you think.



As director of the Ergodic Cinema Project I have had to reteach myself what I knew about fundraising and producing as well as learn what I did not know, and as one of the segment directors I have been using the most recent craft skills I have learned in my day job to try to make something better than I have ever done before. The way I see it, I am already ahead of where I was before. It makes me feel good to know I have gotten a lot of stuff done.
0 Comments
08 Aug11

Letters

Reflections On A Completed Segment

Of The Ergodic Cinema Project

 



Since making a pitch about my segment for The Ergodic Cinema Project seven months ago, entitled Letters, I recently finally completed it. Letters is the first film I have ever made based on a script, and that follows a narrative. My objective when I joined The Ergodic Cinema Project and decided to take the leap from the kind of films I usually make, which are abstract and poetic and never follow a storyline, was to see first, whether I could successfully tell a story through film. Secondly, whether I could mesh my particular style with such a story. That is to say, combine some images that rely less on logic and more on emotion, with a story which has a clear beginning, middle, and end.

Letters contains a sense of mystery within its story which leaves something to the viewer’s imagination. It certainly is not all spelled out. My task was to relate my story in some way to the preceding script Missing, the first story in The Ergodic Cinema Project, written by Dandara. Missing is about the search for a political prisoner during a turbulent time in Brazil’s history, the 1970’s. The main character in Missing seems to come to some sort of resolution about the fate of the missing person in her life through a dream- like sequence, but by the end we are not really sure if there was in fact, a resolution. At the end of the segment, the main character is seen exiting the cemetery, well-groomed, now white-haired, seemingly at peace. Has she forgotten? Did the dream we observed her experience really put her at peace, calm her anguish? The mystery of the missing person remains, and the mystery of how the woman looking for that missing person resolved her pain and loss remains.



When I read Dandara’s script, I tried to think of a contemporary situation where mystery is almost a kind of currency. What jumped into my mind were the relationships we have with people on the internet, with whom we have never met in real life, who appear and disappear on public forums, with whom we trade emails revealing personal things, when suddenly, for reasons unknown to us, all correspondence ceases. Suddenly, the person with whom we formed this strangely intimate and fragile bond with evaporates, is never heard from again. Letters explores the idea, although the correspondence does not take place in the environment of the internet, of that piece of personality revealed in these kinds of cyber-space friendships which may, or may not, have anything to do with truth.

In Letters, more than one character appears to assume an identity and is purposefully misleading, not unlike the kind of confusion that surrounds political intrigue and spying. There is the declaration of death by a third party (Chambord) for the character (Chartreuse) who goes in search of a woman ("Anisette") with whom he has been corresponding, relating to the search of the female lead in Missing for her loved one in a graveyard. As in Missing, it is unclear whether in fact Chartreuse, who is declared by Chambord to be dead is for sure, dead. The game that the woman "Anisette" initiated with Chartreuse when she stole a letter from a woman whom she did not know, and then proceeded to impersonate her through writing, comes back to haunt her in the form of a letter from a new man who seems to be impersonating her supposedly dead former correspondent -- the new "Chartreuse," who no longer writes his letters by hand. There is danger in playing games. There is danger in getting emotionally involved. And some mysteries may never get solved.

I made Letters piece by piece from the minimalist script I created for the purpose. When I put the pieces together, I was surprised and pleased that despite the fact that they had been created spaced apart by time, there were elements that tied all the pieces together. One of them is flowers, another is water. These elements were not at all planned, but as I was creating each "chapter" of my script, certainly they must have been in the back of my mind, as bridges from one filmed piece of script to the next.


The skirt I wore in the scene where the woman comes home and opens the door from the outside is covered in flowers. I had chosen a skirt that had been given to me as a gift but I had not worn yet for this scene, a skirt which was unmistakably feminine. But as I saw the movie for the first time from beginning to end, I noticed that from the very start with the camellia petals on the ground that the first woman (the "real" Anisette) is walking on, flowers appear here and there throughout the film. For example, the flower that the camera focuses on before it moves on to a crack in a glass window overlooking a highway, the flowers on some of the cards that Chartreuse writes to Anisette on, the flowers of Mexican sage attached to the necklace Anisette receives from Chartreuse, the flower pattern on the pillow Anisette opens the “new” Chartreuse’s letter on at the end of the film. This flower imagery to me represents an awareness of the sensual potential between Anisette and Chartreuse. But in each scene, this flower image varies according to mood. In the beginning, there are dead petals, scattered, no longer a whole flower. The flower near the highway is a little ominous and sad, its colors strange, orange and black, the camera moves around it and backs away from it, warily. The gift of Mexican sage, so fuzzy and fragrant, when put on the neck, appears to contain something toxic and dangerous in it. The flower pattern on the pillow is blue, black and white, two-dimensional, flat. Not alive. As are the flowers on the cards that Chartreuse writes on. Throughout the story, flowers that appear seem to follow the course of action in mood, but they always hint at what the reality is – illusion, a dangerous illusion, a deadly illusion.

Water is also used as a theme. In the beginning of the movie, before the piano music starts, the sounds of crickets and water accompanies the “eye” of the camera as it searches in the woods for something. Later, when Anisette reveals the phrase she keeps hearing repeated in her ears at night, there is the image of a fountain, water flowing downward over steps, rushing but “tamed” water. Finally, there is the water that is used to wash the ashes of the letters from Chartreuse and the letter from Chambord that she burned down the drain. The sound of the water hitting the tinfoil, the ashes, the gulping sound of the drain – the water sounds in the beginning of the movie were wild, free in nature, then this water was channeled into a fountain, lively but controlled, and finally water is the element used to bury evidence, definitively.



Aside from all the scenes shot directly from the script, I used random footage I had shot over time, sometimes months in advance of the conception of Letters, to flesh out the story between Anisette, Chartreuse, and Chambord. Taking randomly shot footage one day, and later using it to speak for some very personal thoughts and feelings is typical of my style of filmmaking. It was really atypical for me to combine a more structured story-telling device like a script with that style of working, but I really enjoyed it. Somehow, it seems I found a way to tell a story without losing my preferred manner of working, and that was a wonderful surprise.

0 Comments
26 Jul11

Ergodic Cinema / Segment: His Conception / Development

by PolarisDiB

Budgeting, Organizing, and Stretching One’s Experiences

 



When I first got into filmmaking and was asking several experienced people their advice about it, I often received the following advice:

You need to work with other productions so that you do not spend too much time recreating the wheel.”

Well, my experience so far has put me on sets both short film and feature length, in production offices, driving to buy last minute props at Wal-Mart and actually editing other people’s work together, and yet when it comes to my own work I feel strongly compelled to recreate the wheel.

I have made two personal shorts before being involved in the Ergodic Cinema Project, and shot another which I have been unable to complete because of sound design issues. Those shorts, along with other projects I’ve worked on that either were not meant to be considered a full project or I did for someone else, have all been a process of working through “How to Make a Movie” for myself at a dogged pace that should have me making feature lengths somewhere around the year 2283.


Seriously, however, every time I do a new project there is one specific aspect of that project I want to try to work out. In the case of “His Conception”, it is basic producing.

Like many involved with the Ergodic Cinema Project, I am used to no budget, guerilla tactics to get my project off the ground. This is useful because it helps you create despite the world and despite yourself (and yes, “spite” is probably a little too much of “despite”), but it also can cut you off from the ability to go beyond yourself and make your project something bigger than even you intended. There is a personal part of cinema and a collaborative part. As the Ergodic Cinema Project is a collaborative project, it offers several unique opportunities. One of them is the ability to make a movie where I am currently located, in Dubai. The issue is, in order to even make the movie in such a strange and foreign environment, I need more help than a guerilla style will offer. Thus I am stretching myself further than I have done before.

I would not have been able to offer my segment to the project in its current form if it were not for several unique opportunities. One is that I previously met a gentleman who works in a production company in Dubai who was eager for the opportunity to work with a Westerner on a project. Another is that on my day job out here as a video production worker I have had opportunities to observe visual effects work I had no access to beforehand. Finally, there is the landscape of Dubai itself, a surreal city literally built upon sand where one alley leads to a palace and another right beside it to a slum. Who wouldn’t want to use this concrete and glass mirage for a movie?

But in order to get it together I have to work outside my comfort zones by necessity. I am not at home, where I know I can get around shooting permits by naming a few professors and pretending I’m making a “student project” (or really not pretending, since that’s basically what I was doing). Not everyone out here speaks English, and my main character is from India. Also, for some of the basic effects work I am planning, the production requires a bit more control and care than a one-man crew can offer. Even in a low-to-no budget situation, this requires organization, equipment, and scheduling. A budget is as necessary for organizing as it is for cost. I am working on a budget as we speak.



In the meantime, the production company in Dubai can help me gain access to shooting permits and actors, while crew from my own production office are already working with me in terms of how to work out the technical aspects of the shoot. I now have a director of photography and there is a chance we may be able to work with a RED camera. I have worked with the RED before and it certainly is not the come-all-end-all of professional cameras, but it would be great to have in this sort of work because visual effects, even minor ones, require quite a bit of resolution. Previous planning for this project focused on the Sony EX3 for most of the shots with a Canon 5D for the effects shots. We may still try to use the EX3 or 5D for its versatility.Thus far we are looking at a two-day shooting spree, with a much greater amount of time spent afterward in post-production. I am organizing a meeting in Dubai this coming weekend to discuss more of these issues with the production company, and in the meantime am working on breaking down the script. Script breakdown, budgeting, and scheduling are all things that I know but not things that I have done. It is not given enough credit how even minor things like that make big differences to the type of production you are working on.


I am still at the stage where any of these details may have to change. As the Ergodic Cinema Project is wrapping up its first funding campaign and its collaborators are gearing forward for the production itself, things are looking to start feeling a bit more high octane. It has been amazing seeing this thing developing and now the first indications of what we can achieve is slipping through. I predict, if anything, this project will surprise even ourselves.
2 Comments
23 Jul11

Ergodic Cinema / A Garage Collaborative Experiment / Stage 5

STAGE 5: Status of Acts 1 through 5, Launch of IndieGoGo Campaign


Key points for Stage 5 assembled by Odilonvert

 



It is almost the end of July, and we are almost at the end of our IndieGoGo Campaign to fund our project. Much as we had expected, crowdfunding is challenging! We have made three promo videos in the space of two weeks,and are in the middle of trying to get the best out of the social media world to bring more attention to our project. Wish us luck as we enter the last week or so of our campaign that we will reach goal, we need it!

In other news, we recruited a wonderful designer who goes by the Mubi name of TheFlyOnTheWall. He designed our logo, and we can’t wait to ask him to help us with other items, such as the DVD covers, t-shirts and other items we will be offering donors.

We also recruited three new filmmakers! They are: D♯, who will be taking over Barbosa XIII’s spot in Act 4, and we have finally grabbed filmmakers for the other two spots in Act 5 which we originally meant to fill alongside PolarisDiB’s segment. These new filmmakers for Act 5 are Ricky Richtoffen, and Max Slobodin. All three new filmmakers are in the scriptwriting stages of their segments, to be submitted by Thursday, July 28th and voted on by the group on Friday, July 29th. After that, ALL of our segments will be considered in production, and PolarisDiB and I will start considering final submission deadlines for all films. We are moving forward!



Some impressions thus far, in my role as both producer and filmmaker on this project:

Wow, I think we have to congratulate ourselves on a team that has survived the generally non-committal quality of internet “relationships” for almost seven months now. We’ve manage to live through comings and goings (a producer and several filmmakers), voted and approved many pitches and scripts in the process, and managed to even video chat over various time zones. In particular I recall a tinychat session in which we managed to snag Act 1 filmmaker Dandara all the way in Brazil. We talked about the project, but we also all managed to laugh (tinychat has not quite perfected their sound yet) and enjoy each others’ company. Meetings such as these affirmed for us how cool this project is and how eager we are to have fun putting it all together. And how much we want to make it come together, through hell and high water, as the saying goes.

Our biggest challenge thus far has been the IndieGoGo campaign. When it came to explaining our concept to the world, we found we weren’t as confident as we thought. What audience are we appealing to? Will they understand what we are doing? How best to communicate it? Suddenly, it became apparent that the group was in different minds as to how to do this – after we had already launched the campaign. Underneath, in my opinion, was the concern that since this was an unusual project, it might be difficult to get support. A month long campaign to better let it sink into people’s heads? Can we ask for as much as we are asking, considering that it is unusual (and therefore could be possibly viewed with suspicion)? With little more than a week left, it will be interesting to see what develops… and what does not. And how that will impact our project, in particular for those filmmakers who cannot go forward and make their film without a particular dollar amount. To be tackled after July 31st right here in production notes for the Ergodic Cinema Project, stay tuned…
________________________________________________

List of collaborators to date:
Director & Financial Officer: PolarisDiB | Producer: Odilonvert | Assistant Producer: PolarisDiB | First Administrative Assistant: Kate | Designer: TheFlyOnTheWall |

Members:
Dandara (Act 1) | Ryan Estabrooks (Act 2) | Odilonvert (Act 2) | Santropez (Act 2) | Tremolo (Act 3) | Roboko (Act 3) | Dylan Ibrahim (Act 3) | Bobby Kenneth LePire | JP. Schmidt (Act 4) | D♯ (Act 4) | PolarisDiB (Act 5) | Ricky Richtoffen (Act 5) | Max Slobodin (Act 5) |


Status Table and links to our page on Mubi Garage (regularly updated on the profile of Odilonvert):


Our Ergodic Cinema Project on Mubi Garage


Hosting, Funding and Film Festival Participation Updates:




Hosting: The Ergodic Cinema Project will be hosted on Mubi Garage, though an external website to showcase the completed project is currently under development.


Funding: We are almost at the end of our IndieGoGo campaign (end date is July 31st, 2011). Although limited funding for segments may become available at some time in the future, contributors are strongly encouraged to work under the assumption that budgets will be restricted to their personal nances.

Please contact our Director PolarisDiB for details.

Film Festivals: We do plan on running the festival circuit, showing the body of our work in its entirety. Although the submission of individual segments to festivals is not restricted, it is highly encouraged that contributors credit Ergodic Cinema Project and its affiliation to Mubi Garage.
0 Comments
02 Jul11

SEARCH -- DEATH -- REBIRTH: The Ergodic Cinema Project | IndieGoGo Campaign

by PolarisDiB

 

Our Half of the Story


The Ergodic Cinema Project is a collaborative online video project featuring filmmakers from the United States, the United Kingdom, Canada, Mexico, Brazil, and the United Arab Emirates. Expanding on Espen Aarseth's theory of ergodic literature, the goal is to create a feature-length movie that allows the audience to choose their own path or relationship toward the narratives and themes being presented. The project consists of eleven segments all interconnected, through which various journeys can be seen. All of the segments, and in fact the project as a whole, is structured around the concept of SEARCH -- DEATH -- REBIRTH.

Your Part in the Story


As the tagline says, the Ergodic Cinema Project is an experiment in both collaborative cinema and audience interaction. With Internet video and global communications at the forefront of our minds, we seek to create a new form of cinema built into the architecture of modern life as it relates to our online presence and off-line experiences. The segments themselves are inspired by the landscapes, histories, and experiences of the filmmakers in their respective countries while the full feature length project itself is structured around how those different perspectives are bridged together in common references and understanding.  




HOWEVER, THAT ONLY CREATES HALF THE STORYThe Ergodic Cinema Project also seeks to bring in the audience as co-creators/co-writers of the movie by allowing them to search through and interlink differing segments as the movie unfolds.

The Story Begins Here


SEARCH -- DEATH -- REBIRTH consists of eleven 10-15 minute long short videos created by filmmakers around the world. We plan for it to be presented on a website as well as available for collectors on hard-copy interactive DVD. We are also looking into ways to possibly present the project to live theatrical audiences using randomized segment renders.

However, we want our audience to get involved NOW.  In addition to this crowdfunding campaign, we will be sharing the project's progress on MUBI's Garage. The Ergodic Cinema Project's page can be seen here. Your comments and viewership is very inspirational to us and will inform the way we move this project forward.



And if it is successful, the Ergodic Cinema Project may expand to produce more segments that fit into the SEARCH -- DEATH -- REBIRTH web, as well as potentially other thematic narratives. Your investment now may land you in a position to be one of our collaborating filmmakers in the future!

The funding we are requesting goes towards the infrastructure of the project as well as the individual segments' productions. $10,000 may seem like a lot but it is all being applied toward 11 short video productions, the hosting and development of a website, festival outreach, and marketing and promotion. Every dollar we receive is useful, every bit of help and interest we get is appreciated. The cost of a cup of coffee, a day's worth of gas, an extra twenty dollar bill found on the ground will all be used towards the production of a new form of filmmaking and interaction. With your help, SEARCH -- DEATH -- REBIRTH will be a memorable and unique experience unprecedented in the history of cinema.

We Come Bearing Gifts


We're also giving you something back for your support. From producer credit to memorabilia, extra features and live screenings, we want you to have something special as a token of our gratitude. Please take some time to look through the the list of bonuses we will provide you for your support, listed on this page.
 

We Want YOU to be One of Our Collaborators


Even in reading this page, you are being of immense support for us, and we like to think this project is as much yours as it is ours. In addition to a monetary pledge, you can become one of our backers by sharing this page with everyone you know and helping get the message out.  It takes almost no time to share this page with others, and then this project belongs to you in a big way!  

Below are share tags for various social network sites, or you can link directly to this page, or you can participate and bring others to participate here our discussion thread.  

We will also be posting updates, news, production notes, rough takes, interviews, and so on, and want to hear your responses to it. Production Note 4... overviews the plot of the various segments as well as updates their status. Production Note 5 is coming soon. Keep a look out on this page as well as on the Ergodic Cinema Project's project profile on the Garage for news as the SEARCH unfolds.

 

 

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14 Jun11

Ergodic Cinema / A Garage Collaborative Experiment / Stage 4

STAGE 4: Status of Acts 1 through 5



Key points for Stage 4 assembled by Kate

The Ergodic Cinema Project hosted by MUBI Garage is a unique experiment in cinematic form, exploring the potential of international collaboration in the age of the internet. Inspired by the implications of literary ergodicity and its relation to the cinema, the Ergodic Cinema Project seeks to invent a system which imparts upon the spectator an experience of contextualization and recontextualization of narrative information akin to the following of information on the internet from hyperlink to hyperlink. Individual film segments represent possible deviations and varying avenues of a collective narrative. Our "key" segment takes place in the late 1960’s Rio de Janeiro, focusing on the life of a woman and her search for a political activist who has recently gone missing. Subsequent films may be followed by the viewer in any number of combinations, the essential problematic of the "key" segment unfolding in different ways through different films.

The Ergodic Cinema Project collaborators live in different countries, speak different languages and have radically differing stylistic concerns. All have come together through the internet. We utilize avenues of cyber-communication to produce this project which has for ultimate aim the creation of a film in cyberspace, one which echoes the very experience of moving through that same cyberspace.
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List of collaborators to date:
Executive:

Director & Financial Officer: PolarisDiB | Producer: Odilonvert | Assistant Producer: PolarisDiB |

Members:

Dandara (Act 1) | Ryan Estabrooks (Act 2) | Odilonvert (Act 2) | Santropez  (Act 2) | Tremolo (Act 3) | Roboko (Act 3) I Dylan Ibrahim (Act 3) | Bobby Kenneth LePire | JP. Schmidt (Act 4) | Barbosa XIII (Act 4) | PolarisDiB (Act 5)

The following components are described in greater detail in Production Note 1:
Structure, Theme, Length of Segments, Equipment, Shooting Schedule and General Details (use of actors, language and subtitles, music).

Status of Act 1 (Dandara):
Awaiting funding for post-production.
Missing: Spanning three decades in Rio de Janeiro, “Missing” follows a woman’s search for the grave of a lover who disappeared amid political turmoil. The fluid story slips back and forth in time and blends fantasy with reality. In dream sequences, Maria, the protagonist, experiences the torture, terror and anguish of her lover’s disappearance. After a fruitless search, Maria finally makes her own grave for him, burying his jacket along with her own cherished necklace as an emblem of their love.

Status of Act 2 (Ryan):
Ryan’s production is on hold until he finishes work on several previous obligations. He plans to start shooting this month.
For No One: A parasitic, otherwordly stranger steals the identity of an unhappy housewife who is stuck in domestic hell. Like the best eerie fiction, “For No One” blends creepiness with an underlying mood of bleakness and despair. Ryan said he gleaned inspiration from many sources. “I was inspired by old noir films, Impressionistic art and even a dash of science fiction,” he said.He had intended to include dialogue, but as he worked on the story he realized that breaking the silence might disjoint the narrative’s dreamy flow. “It naturally came about as a silent film which really intrigued me, since it will require me to step out a bit of my comfort zone considering that most of my previous scripts were talky, dialogue-filled comedy screenplays,” he said.

Status of Act 2 (Odilonvert):
In the filmmaking spirit, Odilonvert has submitted her status update as a short video that can be viewed here.

Status of Act 2 (Santropez):

 

 

Santropez’s recent location shots give a taste of the rustic beauty that awaits viewers in his completed film: Santropez' script: A boy wakes up in another life. Unable to find a hobby that interests him, he receives an invitation to a soccer game where he overhears a conversation on Russian film and their "weight" compared to that of a cow, measured in Playstations. In an effort to understand the significance of this "weight," the boy attempts to gather 20 Playstations but is discovered by his father and punished. Later during the visit to a farm, he attempts to pick up a cow but instead blacks out and wakes up in yet another life.

Status of Act 3 (Roboko):
Roboko will be posting location shots soon. She is also in the midst of whipping up a website for the team, and she will be presenting a set of mockups for the site in a few days. After members have chosen a look, Roboko will start plugging on the code. The site includes a Wordpress section where team members can blog their progress.  
Roboko's script: This modern day reworking of Dante’s Inferno depicts two American high school students in the roles of Dante and Virgil.

Status of Act 3 (Tremolo):
Technical difficulties have delayed production on Tremolo’s film, but he expects to complete it by mid July.
Tremolo's script: Two aspiring greeting card writers battle for one open slot at a 1920s predecessor to Hallmark.

Status of Act 3 (Dylan Ibrahim)
TheGamgee has bowed out of the project, but we are pleased to announce that another member, Dylan Ibrahim, has volunteered to fill his slot. Dylan is currently working on a pitch, to be submitted for group vote on Monday, June 13th, 2011.

Status of Act 4 (Bobby Kenneth LePire)
On site photographs:

 

 

 

Bobby is refining a pitch, which will be voted on by the group on Monday, June 13th, 2011.
Bobby's pitch : A mother’s search for her missing son sends her into a nightmare world of satanic worship and human sacrifice.

Status of Act 4 (JP. Schmidt).
JP. Schmidt has submitted a pitch to be voted on by the group on Monday, June 13th, , 2011, and is currently working on a rough draft of his script.
JP.ʼs pitch In his own words: “An abortion leads a young couple to face a personal wake up call. Jeff, the male in the relationship, waits in a hotel room while his girlfriend, Jess, drives herself to the clinic. They decide to get a room that night in order to avoid facing their families after the procedure. While alone in the room Jeff finds himself into a forced hunt within himself, seeing if he is really capable of the responsibility this relationship is calling forth. The catalyst to these thoughts was the fact that Jess didn't want him with her and this isolation sends him into his own thoughts. Before Morning Jeff knows he needs to make a decision.”

Status of Act 4 (Barbosa XIII)
Barbosa XIII has just joined the team, filling out the Act 4 shorts.  He will be posting a pitch to be voted on by the group on Monday, June 13th, 2011.

Status of Act 5 (PolarisDiB)
Polaris is working on the second draft of his script, which he plans on showing to a Dubai production company in a couple of weeks.
Polaris’ script: The story begins after the death of the protagonist, a Pakistani man named Hussein. Having just witnessed the massacre of his family at the hands of extremists, Hussein is hurled into a limbo state where he must choose whether to be reborn on earth and risk experiencing more tragedy.

General Announcements:


Hosting: The Ergodic Cinema Project will be hosted on Mubi Garage, though an external website to showcase the completed project is currently under development.

Funding: We are currently looking into methods of funding for this project. Both Kickstarter and Indiego-go are being considered at this time as are other options.  Crowdfunding initiatives and funder incentives will be discussed via an open Skype session on Saturday, June 11, 2001, at 10:00 am Pacific Standard Time. Although limited funding for segments may become available at some time in the future, contributors are strongly encouraged to work under the assumption that budgets will be restricted to their personal finances.

Please contact our Financial Officer (PolarisDiB) for details.

Film Festivals: We do plan on running the festival circuit, showing the body of our work in its entirety. Although the submission of individual segments to festivals is not restricted, it is highly encouraged that contributors credit the Ergodic Cinema Project and its affiliation with Mubi Garage.
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