4 posts tagged “2008 idc”
I've posted the Willamette Valley Film Collective's entry in the 2008 International Documentary Challenge to the web, both at blip.tv and YouTube. The YouTube version is inserted here, and links to the (better quality) blip.tv versions are below.
See all photos and videos.
See the documentary in Flash on lo-fi cinema.
Or in Quicktime.
The biggest drama in this year's IDC was at the beginning of the week as we lost one member of the crew after another, and then scrambled to nail down a subject to fit into our selected genre of "Music." Ironically enough given that director David Doellinger is a historian, we pretty well took our other choice, "Historical," off the table for lack of compelling ideas (it isn't actually all that ironic if you think through the proposition of asking a professional historian to compress what they normally do with, often, years of work into five days and four to seven minutes of video).
Fortunately for us, one of the remaining crew, Jenn Richards, put us onto a house near the WOU campus occupied by music majors and host to a monthly concert series that just happened to be running on the Friday of the IDC (March 7). David, Norris Lee, Jenn, and I went to work on Friday, and Josh Du Chene joined us on Saturday. Maren Anderson found some time away from the new kiddo to help preview raw footage.
One of the key lessons I've learned from these timed film competitions is the benefit of starting editing early. To that end, I devoted myself as much as possible to that job during the competition. I can't say for sure if this year's effort is "better" than last year's, but I do think that it's more immediately accessible and certainly less fueled by crazed, late, late (or early, early depending on your perspective) punchiness.
For the record, this year's Willamette Valley Film Collective was: myself (editor and producer), David Doellinger (director and miscellaneous tasks), Jenn Richards (co-producer, sound, original music), Josh Du Chene (sound and photography), and Norris Lee (behind-the-scenes photography). Maren and Anne-Marie assisted with editing. Thanks to the residents of "8veU" and Tom Bergeron and the Brazilian Combo, who played Friday night.
You can watch a preview at blip.tv. Go here for a Quicktime version.
I created a collection of photos of our small crew for the 2008 IDC. A substantive post to come later.
I have been quietly putting together another version of the Willamette Valley Film Collective to participate in the 2008 International Documentary Challenge. This will be the third time I've done this. With some urging from Anne-Marie, I was thinking about not organizing an entry this year, but then David Doellinger, a WVFC veteran, expressed his enthusiasm for giving it another go, and that's all it took to tip me in the other direction.
One difference between this year and the previous two is that I am limiting my own involvement to producer and editor, rather than taking on those roles plus that of director and co-photographer as well. Partly, this is out of curiosity. Almost from the beginning of my venture into filmmaking, I've wanted to experience the process from the perspective of a photographer or editor independent of also acting as director. Partly, this is due to feeling overworked and over stressed due to added responsibilities on campus this year. And partly it is because I want to give other participants the experience of taking on other roles. David will be directing this year. His wife, Erin Marr, will be one of, or the, primary photographers (her likely co-photographer is William Bragg, who was DP for the Monmouth Film Collective in last summer's 48 Hour Film Project).
My original vision for these experiences was for the "collective" part of the team name to be a driving force for what we did, but what I discovered in the first year is that people aren't actually comfortable with that. Not everyone wants to work the camera or make decisions, etc. Maybe this is due to feeling intimidated by the equipment or lack of confidence. I don't know, but I did learn a valuable lesson about the differences between collaborative and collectivist work. People don't have to be "equal" to be valued or satisfied by their participation in a project like this. And the truth is the second year when I took more of a traditional directorial role was a better experience, and led to a better film, than the previous year when I had a more, well, communist vision of the process, something which just created tension from unresolved expectations of everyone wanting to take a turn on the camera and so on.
Read about last year's event (the post about 2006 is no longer online).
