Interesting blog post by Keith Balmer about the cornucopia of amazing television shows in recent years.
He echoes what I have been feeling - anyone who says there's nothing good on tv has been living with their head in the sand for the past ten years.
This is as good as it gets folks - set your DVRs, rent 'em from Netflix, catch 'em on Hulu - do yourself a favor and bask in the sunlight of this golden era of tv: Breaking Bad, Treme, The Pacific, Justified, Modern Family, Lost, Parenthood, and soon the new season of Mad Men.
This is by no means a definitive list, there are many other great shows out there.
And then go back and catch up on The Sopranos, Six Feet Under, Rescue Me, Deadwood, Dexter, Battlestar Gallactica, Rome, Brotherhood, Curb Your Enthusiasm, Generation Kill, Weeds, True Blood, and of course, The Wire.
You'll be glad you did...
Tuesday, April 27, 2010
Tuesday, April 20, 2010
Film is dead
First of all, I love film.In elementary school I was one of those AV monitor dorks who wheeled the projection equipment into your room and threaded the film whenever your teacher needed a break and forced you to watch that boring volcano documentary again. I started shooting with Super-8 cameras as a 12-year old and spent many a long night gluing edits together in my dark, noxious-fume-laced-room. I later finally got my hands on real 16mm equipment as a film major at S.F State. We Cinema students scoffed at the broadcast arts department kids and their aesthetically inferior crappy-assed video cameras that they were forced to use. Eventually as a professional video editor, I spent many long hours trying to make video look more like film (Cinelook anybody), but it never really got there.
With its slightly stuttering 24 frames per second, motion picture film suggested another reality altogether different from our own - a place to pour our ideas, our emotions. It was the medium of visual poetry, of dreams. Video on the other hand, presented the harsh, glossy reality of the now. The faster frame rate of 30 frames per second made it appear to our eyes to be a glance not of art, but of our own mediocre everyday reality. Video was the realm of soap operas, of news, of live events.
I wanted to live in the filmic world of metaphor - of campfire tales and big-screen dreams. I fought the film battle long and hard, but you know, what?
It's over - film is dead! Long live digital!
Labels:
Canon 7D,
digital technology,
hollywood,
indie film
Wednesday, April 14, 2010
Spook Hunt Scene 4 Preview
Here's a scene 4 sneak peek preview (you'll just have to wait until the whole movie is finished to see the entire scene!)
Keep in mind that the audio has not been mixed yet and some shots are still kinda dark as there has been no color grading yet.
Best to watch at night with the lights out!
Spook Hunt Scene 4 Preview from Todd Miro on Vimeo.
Keep in mind that the audio has not been mixed yet and some shots are still kinda dark as there has been no color grading yet.
Best to watch at night with the lights out!
Spook Hunt Scene 4 Preview from Todd Miro on Vimeo.
Labels:
Canon 7D,
color grading,
horror movies,
indie film,
spook hunt
Monday, April 12, 2010
Spook Hunt Scene 4 notes - the perils of microbudget filmmaking
It was 1:30 am Saturday morning. We had just finished almost five hours of shooting. Everyone else had gone home and I was transferring and backing up all the media to hard drives. I pulled up a couple shots to see how they looked and my heart sank to the pit of my stomach. There was practically nothing there - no usable image at all. There just was not enough light.
Writer/Director Todd Miro was really pissed off that Producer/Prop Master Todd Miro had slacked on his duties.
This last shoot for Spook Hunt really hammered home to me how much I've been juggling on this project. I've been wearing the multiple hats of:
Writer
Producer
Director
Post Production Coordinator
Editor
Digital Media Wrangler
Sound Recordist
Production Manager
Craft Services
Set Design
Location Manager
Script Supervisor
Prop Master
Stunt Coordinator
Not to mention, running and maintaining my post-production business, Miro Digital Arts (finishing editing and sound mixing for the latest Goldman Prize videos), and oh yeah, being a father and husband too.
Something had to give - and it finally did Friday night.
(Yep - that's my master shot - enough to make a grown man cry)
(...and there's Charles' close-up Charles? Charles? anybody there?)
Writer/Director Todd Miro was really pissed off that Producer/Prop Master Todd Miro had slacked on his duties.
This last shoot for Spook Hunt really hammered home to me how much I've been juggling on this project. I've been wearing the multiple hats of:
Writer
Producer
Director
Post Production Coordinator
Editor
Digital Media Wrangler
Sound Recordist
Production Manager
Craft Services
Set Design
Location Manager
Script Supervisor
Prop Master
Stunt Coordinator
Not to mention, running and maintaining my post-production business, Miro Digital Arts (finishing editing and sound mixing for the latest Goldman Prize videos), and oh yeah, being a father and husband too.
Something had to give - and it finally did Friday night.
Labels:
budgets,
Canon 7D,
horror movies,
indie film,
spook hunt
Wednesday, April 7, 2010
HP presents new iPad killer - Apple please take note
From Yahoo news:
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ytech_gadg/20100406/tc_ytech_gadg/ytech_gadg_tc1480
Here's the link if the embed doesn't play full screen:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AeDalRBjyJo
As an avid Apple user, I'm underwhelmed by the iPad as it exists today. Hopefully this warning shot by HP over Apple's bow will get them to realize how important things like a camera, a USB port and SD card reader are. I don't really care if the HP device is vapor-ware or not if it gets Apple to iPad v2 sooner.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ytech_gadg/20100406/tc_ytech_gadg/ytech_gadg_tc1480
Looking at the (purported) spec sheet, the Slate appears to have a series of enticing features that are missing on the iPad. There's the camera, of course, and we're not just talking one but two: a 3MP lens in back and a front-facing VGA camera for video conferencing. We've also got a single USB 2.0 port, an SD card reader, a "conventional" SIM tray for 3G networking, and HDMI-out video capabilities (not to mention 1080p playback) via the Slate's dock connector. (Each of these key points are highlighted on the leaked marketing sheet as an "HP advantage," by the way.)
Here's the link if the embed doesn't play full screen:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AeDalRBjyJo
As an avid Apple user, I'm underwhelmed by the iPad as it exists today. Hopefully this warning shot by HP over Apple's bow will get them to realize how important things like a camera, a USB port and SD card reader are. I don't really care if the HP device is vapor-ware or not if it gets Apple to iPad v2 sooner.
Tuesday, April 6, 2010
Comedy Movies - time to take off the kid gloves!
I just recently saw Hot Tub Time Machine...
...yeah, that Hot Tub Time Machine, and trying my best to ignore the wash of teal and orange, I settled in for what I hoped would be a hilarious combination of Bill and Ted's Excellent Adventure
meets The Hangover
. I mean, the flick's got a great setup and John Cusack going for it - this should kick some funnybone ass.
Well, the movie is... ok.
And that's the problem.
So many of these comedies start with a good premise, some gifted actors and then they kinda go soft. They hit you with a good line here, a promising development there, and then right when you're ready for the big laugh... they let up on the gas.
Let me be frank for a moment here. Comedy shares a lot with Horror and Porn. It's all about timing, tension and release.
It's really not rocket science. Please, just give me some wacky characters, an engaging plot, but most of all...
MAKE IT FUNNY - AND DON'T LET UP!!!
...yeah, that Hot Tub Time Machine, and trying my best to ignore the wash of teal and orange, I settled in for what I hoped would be a hilarious combination of Bill and Ted's Excellent Adventure
Well, the movie is... ok.
And that's the problem.
So many of these comedies start with a good premise, some gifted actors and then they kinda go soft. They hit you with a good line here, a promising development there, and then right when you're ready for the big laugh... they let up on the gas.
Let me be frank for a moment here. Comedy shares a lot with Horror and Porn. It's all about timing, tension and release.
It's really not rocket science. Please, just give me some wacky characters, an engaging plot, but most of all...
MAKE IT FUNNY - AND DON'T LET UP!!!
Sunday, March 28, 2010
Hollywood - no, it's not all that bad
I realize that some of my posts on this blog have tended to have an anti-Hollywood bias. So in an effort to not seem like a complete dour sour-puss I thought I'd share with you some of the movies that I actually did enjoy in 2009:
(insert sounds of crickets chirping)
No, seriously, here we go (in stream-of-consciousness order):
- Inglourious Basterds
- District 9
- The Hurt Locker
- A Serious Man
- Up in The Air
- Up
- Watchmen
- Adventureland
- The Blind Side
- The Cove
- Food, Inc.
- Let the Right One In
- Drag Me to Hell
- Paranormal Activity
- Tell No One
- Knowing
- The Hangover
- Anvil!
- Star Trek
- Avatar
You see, most of those are Hollywood-produced films, with a sprinkling of indies, docs and foreign films as well.
Ah... there, now I feel all warm and cozy knowing that great movies can be made despite the risk-averse Hollywood mainstream that continues to churn out ripoffs, retreads and sequels.
(oops, sorry - just can't help myself sometimes.)
Labels:
hollywood,
horror movies,
movies
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