LA LA Land

September 30th, 2009 by Glendyn

Back home after a week of ‘meetings’ in LA. I now have a U.S agent and a head full of possibilities (not dreams). I have never had much interest in working in the U.S and in particular LA, but now, particularly after having made my first film, the idea of working in and/or via the U.S is a really exciting and much more defined opportunity.

Made some new friends as well as a chance to meet up with some old ones, including my good friend Mike (above) who was passing through at the same time I was there so we spent the weekend cruising around. Random shots below…

Strangely beautiful and a very particular quality of light in LA. Perhaps its all that pollution that hangs thick in the air that gives the hard sunlight a permanent diffusion. Although the shots above were mainly shot near Venice and down in Orange County where the sea mist was real thick. Very cool.

I’ve heard some pretty bad things about L.A, ad although I found it pretty hard to access at first but I think it’s a city that slowly reveals reveals itself the more time you spend digging, I barely even scratched the surface. It has definatly wet my appetite for more.

Fireworks in L.A!

September 29th, 2009 by Glendyn

New York State Of Mind (pt 2)

September 24th, 2009 by Glendyn

Top of the Rock!

MOMA guards.
Tribeca woman.
Oldschool

Kid on the Statten Island Ferry.

Another Kid (Rosebud) on the Ferry.
I want to shoot a whole film right here.
Natalie on a late night walk ‘home’ near Wall Street.
Like I’ve died and gone to heaven…
I ? NY!

New York State Of Mind (pt 1)

September 24th, 2009 by Glendyn

(As I write this I’m mid-flight between New York and LA. They have Wi-Fi on the plane! Giddy Up!)
This was my first trip to New York. I cant believe it’s taken me so long to get there. What an amazing city. I’ve been to some great ‘cities’, Berlin, Rome, Tokyo, London, Paris and I live in what I think is one of the great cities, Melbourne, but New York seriously takes the cake. In some ways it was so familiar because you see so much of it in film, TV and popular culture as a whole, but on the other hand it was so much more intense and awesome than I ever thought it might have been.
My wife Natalie and daughter Rosebud flew over from Australia to join me for the week and it was such a great time. We walked and walked taking it all in. . Met up with friends, old and new. So many images and experiences to sift through.
Whenever I travel to a knew place, it’s like from that moment on I see my own POV in everyday life with a slightly wider lens, New York has done that to a tremendous degree, it’s almost like a fisheye! I have only just left and I can’t wait to go back.
Also whenever I’m in knew places I like to totally geek out and hunt down locations that have been used in films that I love. It was Degrassi Street last week in Toronto, but in New York you could spend months just finding film locations. They are everywhere! So I decided to head out to Brooklyn to find a place that my brother went to last year.
My bro and I where obsessed with the film Saturday Night Fever when we where kids. So I went to find not only the street(s) from the opening credit sequence and in particular the Pizza place that John Travolta gets two slices from. “Gimme Two.”
(UPDATE ‘NO LONGER AVAILABLE, DUE TO COPYRIGHT CLAIM’…? What a load of baloney.
Lenny’s Pizza still exists and is still serving Pizza. I don’t think it’s changed much in 30 years. I had the Vodka Tomato Sauce (yep Vodka!) and Cheese and a slice of margarita. It was really great Pizza!
It’s a really cool area, with the overhead train line so iconic in so many films. Really broad accent out here too. “Yoo whann-a Cwup o’ Cwoffee?”
They have this framed photo hung at the counter of John visiting the shop, but who is that other guy next to him? You can see the owners have taken pictures from a TV screen to show the scenes where Lenny’s is used.
As novel and geeky as it might be, I really love going and finding film locations. I guess I see them as sacred in some way. Alot of thought and consideration goes into choosing a location, and most of the time when you see a great location in reality, you can see why a director has chosen it, it might has great depth, how the lens they used has changed or distorted the reality, or a distinguishing feature that gives it a sense of place (like the overhead Railway in Saturday Night Fever, it’s a great piece of production design just sitting there waiting to add value. It’s one part of the production process I enjoy the most.
If your as tragic as me, there is a great website here that lists a heap of great films, their locations and how to find them.
(A special hello to my friend Keri D Light, who I met by surprise in a bar last night, which is always where I seem to run into her…! She has just moved to NY and has head full of dreams and inspiration. All the best Keri! I’m so jealous!)

Toronto

September 22nd, 2009 by Glendyn

Just had a great week in Toronto. It’s a cool city to visit and the festival itself is amazing, well organised, friendly and very passionate about cinema.
Last Ride screened three times to packed theaters (with the first screening Sold Out). For me it was great to screen the film to an audience that had no preconceptions of it as an ‘Aussie film’, and could just view it as ‘A FILM’. The response was fantastic, and I had great feedback and conversations from punters directly after each screening.
I haven’t discussed ‘reviews’ on this blog and I have generally avoided reading them, but it’s been interesting reading some of the very positive international critiques coming off the Toronto screenings. Here are three that have been sent to me Movie Line, Twitch and Row Three.
Also some video clips of the Sunday Q & A. It’s dark but the audio is clear…
The whole experience was great as I continued to learn more about this crazy yet amazing industry. I’m sure I have said this before, but I have learnt more about film making since I actually finished making the film…
On a totally geeky front with the help from my new friend Elisa and old friends Jane and Nick we tracked down a very important Toronto street from my childhood!

My Directors Commentary on the Directors Commentary.

September 8th, 2009 by Glendyn

I had a great time last night recording the commentary for the DVD with two close and very dear friends. Greig Fraser (DOP) and Jack Hutchings (Editor). It was great Greig could be there as he is now based in LA. Just by chance he flew in yesterday and was able to make it. One of those great spontaneous meetings. If we had planned it for months, it wouldn’t have happened this way. Very cool.
I hope we gave good commentary. It was more like a conversation than a shot by shot commentary. We watched the film with the sound down and I realized towards the end that we probably only had 15 minutes of film left and we hadn’t really discussed the things I thought we would. But it was a good experience, and I hope the people who take the time to listen when its released will get something out of it. I did lay awake last night going over all the things I could have, should have, would like to have said if we did it again…
In prep for the session, my buddy Jolyon put me onto this great podcast about the ‘Art of Commentaries’ at Hollywood Salloon. It’s nearly 3 hours long! But these guys go into great detail and play sections of really interesting and great DVD commentaries, as well as some really terrible ones (Arnold Schwarzenegger “… and here I am… erm, riding a horse…”) . The Podcast is really comprehensive, entertaining and well worth the time.

The Extras

September 4th, 2009 by Glendyn

I have had my head down finishing a batch of commercials and working on all the bits and pieces for the release of the Last Ride DVD (released November). Strange that it is still in cinemas around the place but we are working on the DVD. I always thought this kind of thing happend much later, but the lead time is very long for production and distribution.

It’s going to be a really sweet ‘Filmmakers Edition’ package. 2 discs, featuring amongst many things, a great 50 minute behind the scenes docco made by my friends Jono and Tim, deleted scenes, my short films Cracker Bag and The Desert, oh yeah and the film!
Also in the pack will be a 50 page book which I’m almost finished designing (see front cover above) with photographs, a great conversation between screenwriter Mac Gudgeon and novelist Denise Young and some ramblings by me.
I’m off to the Toronto Film Festival next week, where Last Ride will have it’s international premiere! Very excited to say the least.