Marcus Mann

2015 Minneapolis 48 Hour Film Project Schedule

Hello readers!  Marcus here…

Can you feel it?  Tomorrow is the start of the Minneapolis 48 Hour Film Project 2015!  I just landed in Minneapolis from Columbus, and I’m ready to get down to it.  

Scheduling a 48 hour shoot is vitally important, because, although the shoot never goes exactly according to plan, if there is a solid foundation the production can always bounce back.  Knowing what needs to be done and when is crucial to a successful film challenge effort.

The three of us Jackets have worked on our process over the years and have come up with a basic weekend plan that has delivered a film on schedule every time.  Below you’ll see a breakdown of our itinerary for each day of the competition.  There are a lot of great ways that other teams break down their weekends, but this approach has worked best for us in the past.

Remember, for this production, Andrew and I will be co-directing from a script I will write, and Eric will be our director of photography.  We will all be on set to monitor the production, keep things on track, and hopefully catch any major disasters before they get too big.

Friday

The competition starts at 6:00 P.M. with a kick-off party at the Crooked Pint Ale House in Minneapolis.  At 7:00 P.M., Andrew, Eric, and I will receive our required elements then rush back to our secret meeting location.  We will then spend until 9:00 P.M. or so brainstorming the story we want to tell.  We let the required elements drive our story discussion, so it’s hard to account for exactly how long this will take.  It’s our goal to make a film that wouldn’t work if the elements were removed.  We learned that lesson back when we made All’s Chair in Love and War.

With a firm concept in hand, we will break off with me writing the script, and Andrew and Eric will launch into producer mode.  They’ll be contacting our cast about any wardrobe requirements we have come up with, and coordinating with our production assistants and post-production crew.  While sleep is important in the weekend, we find it’s best to gather resources as much as possible on the first night.  Andrew and Eric will go to sleep when everything is on track for the next day.

The first draft of the script should be finished around midnight.  I will then prod Andrew with whatever instruments are nearby until he wakes up.Andrew and I will review the script, I’ll make any glaring changes, and then we’ll both tap out for the night.

Saturday

Andrew and Eric will start breaking down the visual elements of the film around 5 or 6 in the morning.  I’ll join them around 7, and together we’ll determine exactly how we’re going to shoot our story.  With that information in mind, we’ll be able to break down the schedule for the production.

Our cast will arrive at 9:00 A.M. and we’ll spend the next hour in rehearsal.  This will be time for us to get the script on its feet and for us to make any changes based on suggestions from our fantastic performers.  We have some talented storytellers and improvisers on our set, and I want to get their feedback at the onset of the production.  Inevitably there will be some better ideas for lines or even whole sequences with a fresh group in the light of day, than I came up with in the dark of night.  Our emphasis on rehearsal will allow us to fix problems before we commit them to film.

We’ll start shooting at 11:00 A.M.  This is where co-directing with Andrew will become a big strength.  Andrew will be focusing on the visual style of the film and the production coordination, while I focus on the actors.  It allows us to be two places at once.  I can hone in on the performances, while Andrew ensures that the visuals are effectively communicating the story we want to tell.  Even better, we aren’t limited strictly to these roles.  That gives us another set of eyes on both visuals and performances.  Together, we will catch a lot of things we wouldn’t individually, and the film will be better for that collaboration.

We’re scheduled to keep shooting until midnight.  The exact details of the shoot are up in the air until we know what we’re shooting, but during this time we’ll frequently run footage over to our editor, Ben Pimlott, so he can cut while we’re recording.

Once we’re done shooting, we’ll review the footage Ben has cut together and decide if there are any additional shots or dialogue we need.  If we’re in the clear, we’ll move fully into post.  If not, we’ll schedule the pick-ups.

With shooting done, I’ll tag out for some rest and Andrew, who will get more rest on Friday night will push through with Ben on editing.

Sunday

Sunday morning, Eric and I will join Andrew and Ben around 7:00 A.M. to review the state of the cut.  Our goal is to make changes and have the picture locked by 10:00 A.M.  This will allow us to then split out the audio of the project for Eric Pagel, who will be doing our sound mix, and Reed Reimer, who will be composing the score.  Eric Carlson will, at this time, work on color correction while Ben gets some rest.

With the post-production split into three groups, sound, color, and score, we’ll start reassembling the elements as they are completed.  Our target is to have everything brought back into a single project ready for export at 3:30 P.M.   This will give us a backup copy that we’re able to take to the turn-in, while still allowing us three hours to make any final tweaks.

If all goes according to plan, we will turn in the final edit at the Crooked Pint before the 7:30 P.M. deadline, watch Game of Thrones, then call it a night!

Monday

Sometime after we are awake again, we’ll share our final cut with our cast and crew.  We’ll wait until after the public screening to show the film online, but rest assured you’ll hear stories from the production weekend before then!

Thanks for reading up on our game plan.  If everything goes as smoothly as it is written here, this will be the easiest film challenge of all time!  Unfortunately, things never go exactly according to plan… though, that can be part of the fun, too.  We’ll be posting pictures to our instagram feed, and making brief updates here throughout the weekend.  So stay tuned for more on our fourth Minneapolis 48 Hour Film Challenge!

Until then,

Marcus

 

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Film Challenge Prep 2015

Greetings!  Marcus here…

All throughout May we’ve looked back on our previous efforts in film challenges, but now it’s time to start talking about the future.  Today is Friday, May 29, 2015, which means that we are one week away from the next Minneapolis 48 Hour Film Project!

In this post I’ll give you a rundown of the prep we’ve done so far, and introduce you to our excellent collaborators!

The 48 Hour Film Project helpfully identifies the only four types of work that can be done for the film prior to the weekend, which I will shamelessly use as my headings…

Organizing Crew

The first step for all Two Jackets productions is to determine what each of us Jackets will be doing on the production.  We’ve decided that Andrew and I will be co-directing-- with Andrew additionally producing, and me writing the script-- and Eric will be our director of photography and camera operator.  This gets us all involved directly in the creative process, and will allow us to quickly solve problems together as they arise over the weekend.

With that settled, we started making calls and managed to put together one of the most exciting groups we’ve ever had the pleasure to work with!    

Allow me to introduce our team for the 2015 48 Hour Film Project:

  • Composer – Reed Reimer:  We’ve worked with Reed on projects for the past five years, ever since he wrote the fantastic score for our feature debut, Limpwings.  Reed’s musical chops are second to none, and we’re thrilled to be collaborating with him again!

  • Editor – Ben Pimlott:  Ben is a fellow Minnesota State University Moorhead alum, and we’re extremely excited to be working with him for the first time on an official Two Jackets shoot.  I was always awed by Ben’s work in school, and I personally can’t wait to make something new with him!

  • Sound – Eric Pagel:  After working with Eric on I Stole a Lot of Money! we knew we had found a great collaborator.  Eric is a professional sound recordist, and will be mixing our final audio as well.  We are super stoked to have Eric back with us for this project!

  • Assistant Camera – Nicholas Korokidas:  Another MSUM alum whom we’re really happy to be working with again.  Nick has a great visual eye and will be a wonderful counterpart to Mr. Carlson in our photography department!

  • Makeup Artist – Anna Giuliano:  Anna did the electric make-up in our film, Meanwhile, at the Citadel of Superheroes… and is graciously joining us for another round.  Anna is a professional make-up designer, and she’ll make us look good!

Additionally, we have the awesome Dustin Riccio and Chelsey Green joining us as production assistants, Sam Johnson (photographer on Keeping Up with the Cloneses) filming behind-the-scenes footage, and Sally Winther contributing delicious craft services (food)!

Those are the people who are going to make this film possible, and I couldn’t be happier with the group we’ve brought together.  It’s going to be a blast!

Organizing Cast

Occasionally, when making a film it is important to have actors as well as crewpeople, and this is one of those times.  We’ve brought together two of our favorite past collaborators, and an actor we’ve been dying to work with for years.  Without further ado, let me introduce the cast of… well, whatever it is we’re making…

Bill in A Lutefisk Western.

Bill in A Lutefisk Western.

We’re bringing in Battling Bill Dablow for his first 48 Hour Project with Two Jackets since 2012’s Put a Ring on It!  Bill is a fantastic actor, and just a great guy to have around.  We’re excited to have him talk this year!

Lucas in my senior film, Ecci's Story.

Lucas in my senior film, Ecci's Story.

Joining Bill is Battling Lucas Vonasek!  I had the pleasure of being in an improv troupe with Luke back in college and having him star in my senior thesis film.   However, this will mark the first official Two Jackets production Luke has taken part in.  Luke can currently be seen performing live each week with Bearded Men Improv at the Huge Theater in Minneapolis!

MJ, stolen from the Bearded Men website.

MJ, stolen from the Bearded Men website.

Rounding out our cast is newcomer, Battling M. J. Marsh!  Andrew, Eric, and I have never worked with M. J. before, but, like so many of our favorite collaborators, he is a hilarious member of the Bearded Men!  We’re very excited to get him on camera for the first time!

Securing Equipment

Equipment is slightly less exciting than the awesome cast and crew we’ve pulled together.  It is however still very important if one wants to, you know, record anything.

Eric Pagel is generously bringing in his own sound mixer and microphones. He will then be using Pro Tools for sound mixing in post.

We will be shooting the movie on a Canon C100.  We chose this camera so that we could shoot with natural lighting as much as possible.  This keeps our production nimble, and will help us keep on schedule when filming begins.  Nicholas, our assistant camera operator, has generously lent us his camera for the shoot.

The film will be edited using the Adobe Creative Cloud suite, which our editor Ben is, again, generously bringing to the table.  I can’t overstate how thankful we are to have these contributions from our collaborators!

Scouting/Securing Locations

Our primary objective when looking for locations is to find a place that can serve as a backdrop for multiple scenes without getting visually dull.  In Put a Ring on It, our first Minneapolis 48, we spent too much of the production traveling from location to location, and since then we’ve learned our lesson. All’s Chair in Love and War, and Keeping Up with the Cloneses were both shot in a single location.  That helps keep the film moving, and allows us to focus on telling a contained story.

We’re still locking down our final locations for this year, but rest assured, most of the filming will take place in one spot!

Wait, what about scheduling?

In this post I’ve discussed the resources we’ve assembled for our film, but a successful production requires more than just good people and equipment.  Next week, I’ll give a rundown of how we’ve scheduled out the weekend to maximize our productive human-hours during the 48 hour period.  Until then, I’ll be busy getting as much sleep as humanly possible so that I can remember what that’s like when the weekend gets started.

Marcus

 

 

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Top Five Reasons Why We Love Film Challenges

Hey gang! Andrew here…

Welcome back to Film Challenge Month at TwoJackets.com! Last week, we wrapped up our nine-part Film Challenge Retrospective series. If you haven’t had a chance to read through all of those articles, I highly recommend it. Together they form a detailed account of our most influential film challenge experiences so far, including all the mistakes made, lessons learned, and victories victor-ed! So go ahead, check ‘em out! I’ll wait while you get caught up.

All finished? Good! Now, you’re probably wondering - with all of the stress and frustration, the lack of sleep, the constant pressure of the clock, and the probability of failure - why do we continue to participate in these film challenges? What compels us to throw ourselves into this gauntlet time after time after time? 

Well get ready to have those questions answered! I’ve compiled the top five reasons why we love film challenges!

#1 - Embracing the Unknown

Going into a film challenge weekend, we don’t have a clue what kind of a movie we’re going to be making. We’ll assemble a team and pool together our available resources beforehand, but for what? We don’t know! And we find this very exciting! Going in with a blank slate means we’re truly making a film from idea to completion in just two days. That doesn’t allow any time for second guessing. We’re also likely to make something unlike anything else we’ve ever done before. I don’t think Two Jackets would have made films like Put a Ring on It or All Dressed in White in any other context, but I’m so grateful for those experiences. They allowed our creativity to manifest in exciting, unforeseen ways!

Actor Bill Dablow as former football star Reggie Thomas in Put a Ring on It, our entry in the 2012 Minneapolis 48 Hour Film Project. Drawing "silent film" as our genre that year required us to communicate a story entirely through visuals, which was …

Actor Bill Dablow as former football star Reggie Thomas in Put a Ring on It, our entry in the 2012 Minneapolis 48 Hour Film Project. Drawing "silent film" as our genre that year required us to communicate a story entirely through visuals, which was an unexpected, but enriching experience.

#2 - Instant Gratification 

We get to make a film in just two days! A finished one! With a beginning, a middle, and an end! We don’t have a clue what it’ll be about, but we can tell you now, without hesitation, that we’re going to have a new short film ready for your viewing pleasure on Sunday, June 7, at the end of the 2015 Minneapolis 48 Hour Film Project. Film challenges are minimum time commitment for maximum creative return.

We went into the 2013 Minneapolis 48 Hour Film Project with an empty office and some chairs, and we came out the other side with All's Chair in Love and War - one of the oddest films in our oeuvre. I wouldn't have it any other way!

We went into the 2013 Minneapolis 48 Hour Film Project with an empty office and some chairs, and we came out the other side with All's Chair in Love and War - one of the oddest films in our oeuvre. I wouldn't have it any other way!

#3 - Team Building

Film challenges bring people together! Back in our early college years, the Jackets participated in the National Film Challenge. Going into those first few events, we hardly knew the other members of our teams. However, we quickly learned that when you’re together with a bunch of people pushing their artistic abilities to both a mental and physical limit, friendships bloom! To this day, we continue to work with people we met back in those formative times and encourage each other as artists. In addition to these stalwarts, we try to bring in new collaborators on the cast and crew each year in order to add fresh voices to the mix. For this year’s event, we’re welcoming three new collaborators into the fold! We hope it’s the beginning of a beautiful friendship!

Eric was very happy to team up with some of our favorite collaborators for the recording of "The Money Song" from our film I Stole a Lot of Money!, which we made for the 2014 Four Points Film Project. From left to right: Eric, the foot of …

Eric was very happy to team up with some of our favorite collaborators for the recording of "The Money Song" from our film I Stole a Lot of Money!, which we made for the 2014 Four Points Film Project. From left to right: Eric, the foot of Emily King, Tyler Michaels, Reed Reimer.

#4 - A Public Screening

The fun isn’t over after the filmmaking weekend. The film that you and your team created with your collective might, that you sprinted to complete, is going to be put up on the big screen in front of a living, breathing audience! This is a rare gift. Filmmakers aren’t used to seeing how their work affects people. We can put it online for an anonymous crowd, but that doesn’t provide the instant feedback of being there in person. Another unique aspect is the composition of that live audience. Almost everyone in the room with you, watching your film, has a film of their own to screen, made as part of the same grueling experience. And even with that great equalizer, those films are going to be so different from one another, even if their makers received the same assignment as you. This is a special experience that doesn’t happen at any other type of screening.

Team Two Jackets after the Best of Fest screening for the 2014 Minneapolis 48 Hour Film Project. From left: Debra Berger, Eric Carlson, Andrew Neill (ME!), Katie Vannelli, Craig Larson

Team Two Jackets after the Best of Fest screening for the 2014 Minneapolis 48 Hour Film Project. From left: Debra Berger, Eric Carlson, Andrew Neill (ME!), Katie Vannelli, Craig Larson

#5 - Community Involvement

Film challenges bring the members of a team closer together, but they also bring the teams of a community closer together. In Minneapolis, the city producers work hard to organize mixers and workshops ahead of the event weekend with the goal of forming new friendships and collaborations. At public screenings, filmmakers get together in the lobby before and after the show to commiserate and share their experiences. We’ve been participating in the Minneapolis 48 Hour Film Project since 2012, and each year we make new friends and colleagues. Events like these make me realize that film isn’t only what goes into a production or what ends up on screen. The community forming around the art completes it, and we’re so glad to be part of it.

I snapped this shot of City Producer Austin Anderson at a recent mixer for the 2015 Minneapolis 48 Hour Film Project.

I snapped this shot of City Producer Austin Anderson at a recent mixer for the 2015 Minneapolis 48 Hour Film Project.

As I wrap this up, I’m going to cheat and add a sixth, overarching reason for why we love film challenges: They’re fun! We get to hang out with some of our favorite people, meet some new people, tell a story from scratch, try something new, and see our work on the big screen! For those who participate in film challenges, it’s easy to see only the blood, sweat, and tears going into them. However, when you take a moment to step outside the pressure and exhaustion bottled up in these weekends, and you see the creativity and community behind it all, then it makes sense. There’s so much heart and drive in it. This is why we love doing it. 

Andrew

Film Challenge Retrospective: All Dressed in White

Hey ghouls and goblins! Andrew here…

Things are about to get a touch spooky and a tad scary here on TwoJackets.com! For this penultimate entry in our Film Challenge Month Retrospective series, I’m going to reminisce back to October 2014, when Two Jackets participated in the first-ever Minneapolis 48 Hour Film Horror Project and brought our film, All Dressed in White, to life!

Horror movies require moody BTS photos. From left to right: Joe Filipas, Rachel Palashewski, Erin Granger.

Horror movies require moody BTS photos. From left to right: Joe Filipas, Rachel Palashewski, Erin Granger.

The 48 Hour Film Horror Project was Two Jackets’ third film challenge of 2014 (and it wouldn’t be our last)! For our roles on this project, I directed, Marcus wrote and assistant directed, and Eric was mysteriously absent - perhaps off chasing a man-beast with an insatiable hunger for the most bizarre of cuisine. In order to fill the Eric-sized hole in our hearts, we assembled the largest team we’d ever assembled for a film challenge. I’d list every one of our team members’ beautiful names here, but I’m feeling rigor mortis set in. You’d best just watch the film (available online now for the first time!) and stay through the credits...

As long as we’ve been participating in these film challenges, I’ve longed to draw horror as our assigned genre. When the announcement went out that Minneapolis was to host its first-ever all-horror 48 hour film challenge, I was thrilled! This meant that every genre we could draw would be a subgenre of horror. My dream of horror (very different from a nightmare) was about to come true!

I devoured short horror films before the event weekend. I wanted to learn all the in’s and out’s of what made a short horror film successful. I took extensive notes, listing what techniques worked and what didn’t. I had extensive conversations with Marcus and our frequent collaborator and friend, Craig Larson, about the elements that worked best for each of us. By the time the event weekend arrived, I felt comfortably prepared for the challenge ahead. At kickoff we were assigned the following elements:

Character: Eileen or Ethan Diness, Caterer (this threw us for a loop)
Prop: A broom
Line of dialogue: “Never again”
Genre: Asylum/Insanity

The production of All Dressed in White is an example of how one can go into a 48 with plenty of preparation, experience, and a cracker-jack team in tow and still make a ton of mistakes.

In the retrospective articles for Mostly Attractive Monsters and Put a Ring on It, we’ve well covered an important lesson: play to your strengths. Going into the Horror Project, I had discussed with Marcus and Craig that I wanted to make something truly scary. However, although I had done plenty of research, the execution of effective horror techniques was still uncharted territory. Two Jackets had never made a straight-up horror film before. We were willingly venturing into the unknown, accepting failure as a possibility.

A 48 hour film challenge is not the most forgiving environment for experimentation. Making Put a Ring on It, a silent film, in 2012 was definitely an experiment, but we were drawing on many other strengths to supplement the sacrifice of sound. For that project, we were wise to hold fast to the storytelling voice we’d previously established, losing the dialogue but keeping familiar elements as well as our unique perspective through which we’d filter the story.

With All Dressed in White, I struggled to reconcile the established Two Jackets voice with the darker material we had developed. The result feels inconsistent. My intention was to make something tense and discomforting, but the film’s perspective isn’t subjective enough to really place the viewer in the situation. As a result, the characters’ goals seem unclear, the tense beats are missed, and the moments of relief feel too frequent. The Two Jackets sense of humor, most apparent in the film’s finale, then arrives abruptly without any proper setup. Transitioning between tones in a 6-minute short film is tricky and, when you only have 48 hours to make that film, ill-advised.

The experience of working with a large team to make this film also taught me a great deal about communication on a film set, which is always essential, but even essential-er during the rush of the 48. I made a grave communication misstep early in this production that put us behind for the rest of the weekend.

Since we had more hands on deck than usual, I made the decision to dress the set more than we’d ever previously done. When we arrived on location Saturday morning, we made a list of set and costume items, and I sent a team out to procure them. My mistake was in not establishing a clear deadline or budget for this run. While the budget didn’t end up being a concern, the deadline most certainly was. The production design team didn’t return until close to 1pm, and with the subsequent dressing of the basement location, we weren’t shooting until nearly 3pm.

Due to the increased stress of the late start, I felt off-balance for most of the shoot. Directing requires a great amount of focus, and the stress of the day’s mistakes was clouding my focus and ability to tell the story as best as I could. I was already facing the increased difficulty of an unfamiliar genre and new techniques, and I now had far less time to work through those challenges. I was so pleased with the drive of the team once the camera began rolling, but in hindsight I can now see that we were pursuing an inconsistent and incomplete vision.

If I had taken just a few minutes with the production design team to create a schedule, I’d have shaved hours off our shoot and have prevented the chain reaction that continued to drive us behind. We wrapped shooting around midnight, which isn’t much later than normal, but the delay in shooting meant our editor, Mitch Miller, was behind in the cut. Also, in the rush to complete the shoot, I had hardly given any direction to Mitch. With this slow start, the edit came down to the wire, and we were left without adequate time to finesse sound and color. We made it to the drop-off in time, but the film we handed in (the same version you watched above) still felt rough.

Taking on the dual role of director and producer is tricky. The needs of the story and the production are complementary but different, and if you’re responsible for both, you have to strike a balance. However, that balance requires a great deal of compartmentalization and an incredible amount of focus. If you can split the responsibility, I highly recommend it. For the 2015 48HFP in a few weeks, Marcus and I are sharing the directing role as we did for All’s Chair in Love and War. This way, he can devote the necessary attention to the cast while I focus on the crew.

While All Dressed in White may not have been completely successful, I strongly believe that this experience was well worth having. For one, despite the delays, the team came to play; their commitment to the production kept me afloat. The team also came out to support the film at the screenings, where it ended up in the Best of Fest! At that event, we won the award for Best Costumes, which was a nice consolation given all the extra time we took to procure them.

This production is a hard one for me to think back on, but I won’t misconstrue it as a wasted effort. We knew tackling horror meant leaving our comfort zone. The takeaway here isn’t that we should avoid horror in the future; we just need to accept our mistakes and consciously correct them the next time around.

After All Dressed in White, I was anxious for another chance to make a film and put into practice what I’d learned. Lo and behold, three weeks later, we were kicking off another film challenge. More on that next time…

Andrew