“Spirits” Triumphant at Blackout! World Bows Before DVG!
September 21, 2009 at 9:34 pm | Posted in Keith Boynton | Leave a commentTags: cinematography, Emmys, Grammys, Oscars, Razzies, victory
Last Saturday’s Blackout Film Festival went off without a hitch (as far as I could tell, anyway), thanks to the tireless efforts of Tom Keefe and his merry band of film fanatics. “Spirits” had the honor of closing out each screening block, and the audiences at the two screenings I attended seemed to enjoy it, if scattered laughter and general attentiveness are any indication.
On a more concrete note: the festival jury singled out our film for the Best Cinematography prize! We here at 12in12 extend our heartiest congratulations to Derek Van Gorder, DP extraordinaire, who shot four of our thirteen films (and hopefully many more in the future). “Spirits” was the first film Derek did for 12in12, and his involvement in it goes back to the very first e-mail he wrote us, in response to our Craigslist ad, which included this fateful sentence:
The “Spirits” script mentioned on your blog in particular stands out for me, since I am highly interested in telling stories purely through visuals, and have pursued several films in this vein before.
Amidst a mass of form e-mails, the fact that Derek had actually checked out our blog and had something to say about it caught Mike’s and my eye immediately. Ever since that e-mail, Derek’s been on our good side, and our appreciation for him has grown with every film we’ve done together. Sometimes, in spite of everything, Craigslist does right by us.
Thanks to Tom and the gang for a very enjoyable festival! Tom is currently exploring the possibility of taking the Blackout Film Fest on the road, spreading the good word to a few more American cities. We’ll keep you posted as that story develops. Meanwhile, we need to get to work setting up a screening of the 12 …
Posted by Keith
“Spirits” on CNN!
September 18, 2009 at 7:08 pm | Posted in Keith Boynton | 3 CommentsTags: breaking news, headline news, Huey Lewis, news, news flash, news of the day
Last Saturday, Tom Keefe of the Blackout Film Festival filmed a short interview with me at a bar in his neighborhood. Two days ago, the promo video he cut together was featured on CNN’s Headline News. Don’t believe me? Check it out!
I’m not sure why my name appears in capital letters at the start of the segment, but I’m not complaining. The Blackout Film Festival is tomorrow, Saturday September 19th. Get the info, get your tickets, and go!
Posted by Keith
“Spirits” at the Blackout Film Festival!
September 11, 2009 at 1:06 am | Posted in Keith Boynton | Leave a commentTags: bailout, blackout, charity, film festival, NYC Food Bank, recession
As I mentioned way back when we were laying out the schedule for Semester Two, “Spirits” was our official entry in the 2009 Blackout Film Festival — and, as it happens, they took it! The Blackout Film Festival is the brainchild of Tom Keefe, whom I’ve known since our days together at the hoity-toity Hotchkiss School in Lakeville, CT. Its first incarnation, back in 2004, dealt with the previous year’s city-wide blackout (hence the festival’s name). This year, the theme is the economic recession, and “Spirits,” with its themes of deprivation, desolation, and redemption, fits right in.
The festival runs for one day only — Saturday, Sept. 19th. The full 90-minute program of shorts will screen at 3 PM, 5 PM, and 7 PM, at the School of Visual Arts Theater (333 West 23rd St., between 8th & 9th Aves.). Tickets are going fast, so if you’d like to attend, click here to buy tickets now! A percentage of the proceeds will go to the New York City Food Bank.
This is the first time I’ve ever had a film in a festival, and I’m tremendously excited about it. It’s also the first film Mike’s produced to be so recognized, and I hope that he’s pleased as well. Mike will be out of town for the festival itself, but I’ll be attending the 7 PM screening, and participating in a Q&A afterward. I’d love to see you all there!
My thanks to Tom, Whit, and the whole gang at the Blackout Film Fest. I can’t wait to see what you guys have cooked up.
Posted by Keith
Inside the 12in12 Confessional
September 8, 2009 at 10:34 pm | Posted in Mike Lavoie | Leave a commentTags: fire pants, honesty, liar liar, virtue
It’s not easy to say “I’m sorry,” especially to someone you love. 12in12 blog followers, you know that I love you and would never do anything to hurt you, but my Catholic guilt is forcing me to confess: I have lied to you. As has someone else, who was raised with no discernible Christian guilt and will remain nameless – other than giving you this ancient Grecian riddle:
Who is it whose name starts with the “K” and ends with the “eith Boynton.” Therein lies your liar.
We said we’d make 12 films in 12 weeks, but we lied to you from the VERY FIRST FRAME. Yes, during the editing of “Old Love,” we realized we hadn’t gotten an establishing shot of the neighborhood. After keeping DP Robb Stey to film way overtime on the shoot day, we did not feel like asking him to come back to Brooklyn to shoot just three seconds worth of footage.
And then I remembered: I DID have three seconds of footage of the neighborhood. Matt Suter, the director of Carroll Gardens, in his infinite wisdom shot a bunch of B-Roll footage with our DP, Matt Ramirez. So I plugged in my ancient 320GB Lacie hard drive and listened to its tiny fan cough up two years of built up dust. Sure enough, once I opened up the Final Cut Pro file, there was a beautiful intersection of Carroll Gardens, Brooklyn – circa Sept 2007. After that it was just a quick export to my desktop – the perfect crime!
So to the Matts – the uncredited cameo director and cinematographer of “Old Love” – 12in12 thanks you!
And to all of those we betrayed, this one’s for you:
Peter Cetera likes Peter Cetera even more than Mike Lavoie likes Mike Lavoie!
Posted with enduring and bottomless remorse by Mike Lavoie
“Be Like a Duck” Is Up, and the Project is Over — Again!
September 7, 2009 at 3:25 am | Posted in Sandra Boynton | 5 CommentsTags: ducks, edward r. murrow, family, surrealism, train stations, waterfowl
I prefer not to think of it as Film 13. It’s simply the final entry in the 12Films&OneMisguidedMusicVideoIn12OrSoWeeks.com canon.
I am supposed to post this new music video, “Be Like a Duck,” tonight, under the arbitrary and profoundly unfair rules of this irritating-overexuberance-of-youth 12in12 enterprise. HEY! I just discovered that if you type 12in12 with the caps key accidentally depressed, it reads !@IN!@. Which is certainly apt. How can these guys expect any reasonable person to shoot and edit a film in just five !@IN!@ days?
Okay, I really did think that’s how I’d be feeling at this point. But it’s 6:10 PM on Sunday and the film is, astonishingly, DONE! How? Here are my insider tips so that you, too, can make a movie in no time at all:
- Find a perfect Director of Photography. If the images look great, the audience will forget all about mere logic.
- Have perfect children. I recommend four. Then, whenever possible, cast them in whatever show or film you do. (Your children won’t be nearly as perfect as mine, but that’s okay.)
- Enlist the perfect sound and image editor.
- Locate one great dancer, and give him or her a solo.
- Get great support people.
- Include frequent if obscure duck references, and invoke — without explanation or apology — Edward R. Murrow.
- Give Mike Lavoie his own show.
In the case of this project, the perfect photographer is Derek Van Gorder, of “Spirits”/“Moving Pictures”/”Magic Marker” renown. My perfect children are Caitlin McEwan, Keith Boynton, Devin McEwan, and Darcy Boynton, who together comprise 2/3 of this great cast. I truly adore and thoroughly admire them, though I do wish they’d clean their rooms. The perfect editing partner is my great long-time collaborator in all things music-based, Michael Ford. That one terrific dancer is the incredible Nick Brentley. The superb and tireless support people are intrepid camera assistant Al Gonzales, trusty production assistant Evan Downey, elegant behind-the-scenes videographer Beth Andrien, and my perfect husband Jamie McEwan. And it was indeed thrilling to imagine bringing Mike Lavoie’s show to grateful viewers all across America.
I want to enthusiastically thank all these fine fine fine people. What a great pleasure this was. And thanks of course to those 12 Films 12 Weeks visionaries who were so gloriously naïve last June.
One last note: In 1979, I directed a young actor/dancer, Mark Frawley—then 19 years old—in Noel Coward’s “Tonight at 8:30” for Dartmouth Summer Theater. I was 25. Mark soon went on to Broadway glory. In 2005 — I was still 25 — I tracked Mark down to choreograph a number of my songs, among them “Be like a Duck”, for a performance at the Kennedy Center’s Millennium Stage. It’s that subtle and elegant Frawley choreography that forms the basis of this video. And it’s creative collaboration and friendship that make all things worthwhile. And coffee.
Posted by Sandra
Inside 12in12: The Numbers
September 6, 2009 at 10:00 am | Posted in Mike Lavoie | 4 CommentsTags: keith fail, marathon, mike win, running times
When Keith and I set out to make 12 films in 12 weeks, we decided each film would be between three and five minutes long. By that standard, only one film succeeded – “A Summer’s Day.” Which I directed. And since the point of the whole project was to keep the films short – I win.
Sorry Keith. Better luck next summer.
Here are some numbers that sort of put the project in perspective. Played end to end, the films would take almost and hour and forty-five minutes. Not too bad for a summer.
Posted by Mike, The Champion
Bonus! Deleted Scene from “The Jogger”!
September 5, 2009 at 2:58 pm | Posted in Keith Boynton | 4 CommentsTags: aliens, clones, deleted scenes, outtakes, special edition DVD, United Nations
Every once in a while, there’s a scene so good — so nuanced, so nimble, so deftly brilliant — that you just can’t put it in the movie. That’s what deleted scenes are for!
Note to fellow filmmakers: this is what happens when you let Mike and Dylan loose on a film set. (Well, okay, I actually encouraged them.)
Enjoy.
Posted by Keith
Bonus! Black-and-White version of Film #11, “Hero by Proxy”
September 3, 2009 at 12:42 pm | Posted in Keith Boynton | 1 CommentTags: black and white, Bogart, film noir, German expressionism, noir, The Big Sleep
Back when Michael Redfield and I were hard at work editing “Hero by Proxy,” there was a lively debate about whether we should embrace the film’s noirish aesthetic to the fullest extent and actually post it in black and white. At one point, I went so far as to propose a hybrid solution: put Hank’s storyline in black and white, and leave the Private Eye’s adventure in color.
In the end, Michael decided that the film played best in its color version. But we didn’t want to deny you guys the chance to see it in all its 1940′s glory. And so, in the spirit of bonus features on a DVD, here’s “Hero by Proxy” — The Full-Noir Edition! Enjoy.
Posted by Keith
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