Icarus the Owl – The Extortionist

Icarus The Owl
The Extortionist
The Spotless Mind
Dir. Rose Ayers

This music video was produced by the Jabberwocky collective in Portland, Oregon.
jabberwockyproductions.com

Crew:
Cinematographer: Sam Naiman
B Camera/Steadicam Operator: Mike Ferry
C Camera Operator: Cassie Cohn

Executive Producer: Tanner Russel

Special thanks to:
Jon Beanlands
Gearhead Grip & Electric
The Northwest Film Center
Davis Street Tavern
The Portland City Grill

Cast:
Businessman: Michael Gaddi
Extortionist 1: Aydika James
Extortionist 2: Robby French
Waitress: Amy Knight

DEVOTION Trailer

I shot this short film for first time director Martha Early in late summer, 2009.  It stars Alicia Rose and Rosalie Lowe. TAGLINE: After a nasty breakup, a young woman must choose between companionship and sanity when her new confidant exhibits sinister tendencies.

Sinister indeed. In conceptualizing the look of the short, Martha and I wanted to progressively reflect the relationship’s descent into darkness through camera work and lighting- a process I will cover more deeply in subsequent posts.  At this time, I’d like to share a few insights I have about the trailer itself.  Fair warning: its about to get both technical and philosophical up in here.

“The negative is the equivalent of the composer’s score, and the print the performance.”
-Ansel Adams

I color corrected this trailer in Apple Color, after Martha edited in ProRes 422 HQ 1080p24.  Using ProRes ensured the footage stayed a little bit pliable, which for me was more important for the trailer than the actual film.  When shooting a scene for a film, I maintain consistent light levels from shot-to-shot so that all coverage can be consistent.  Color correction is usually about small tweaks in skin tone values in different shots- a natural extension of the photography that allows a scene to cohere, assuring a viewer’s attention to the performance.  When the photography works, color correction can make a great contribution on a subconscious level.

A trailer ends up an amalgamation of shots broken away from scenes, edited together more for representative value than any other trait.  Just like an individual scene, there is a thread to each trailer that must hold together.  The stakes aren’t just that the performance might not get across, but that the viewer will pass up the film entirely.  With this in mind, it was important to color correct the trailer as if it were a scene itself.  The challenge being shots pulled from scenes that are entrenched in different lighting moods with very different skin tones and color temperatures.  This is where ProRes came in handy in this situation, allowing me to give some of the footage a tug and a nudge without sacrificing quality.  The photography in this film was largely about the actress’ facial expressions telling the story, and for that to be preserved through the trailer so naturally made me very happy.

Lime Green Day Dream

This is a promo I made for hip-hop artist e.Major for the release of his first album “Lime Green Day Dream”. The idea started out with him wanting to speak on his influences and thought process through the album’s recording. Once we drew a bead on this through some interview footage, we thought it might be nice to accent with some studio footage. Since LGDD was already recorded, I shot some sessions of e.Major and the artist Flight, working on their collaboration project. It worked out nice that he could have a promo for the album he was about to release, and pique some interest in a subsequent project.

My own production was pretty bare bones here due to budget. Just me, a sony EX1, and a wireless lav for the interview. I threw a 35mm adaptor on and got a little more depth control through Nikon primes for the studio footage. Grading was done in apple color.

This project reminds me that the simplest route can often be very rewarding.