Author Archive | Brandon Walter

Compressing your Film for DVD

Building the movie on DVD is simple these days, but getting the best looking film is such a pain! Unfortunately, it’s still safer to send a DVD rather than a Blu-Ray even though it looks subpar. So our film is 89 minutes and you can pick a setting in Compressor 4.1 for DVDs and it will build a disc, but I found the quality to be subpar. After messing around with the settings and letting it build 6 different verisons of the movie (which took all day BTW!), you can get your film to look pretty darn good.

The custom setting I ended up going with for our 89min feature was this one:
CBR (BEST) 6.5

The disc ended up being 4.37GB + the audio of 129MB for a total of around 4.38GB which is really good. DVDs have a ceiling of 4.4GB. The first disc I built using Compressor’s default settings was only 3.3GB. That’s 1GB less data of on the TV and it really showed.

You might say, “why not use VBR (Variable Bit Rate)? Isn’t it supposed to be better?”  I did try a few of these out… 1 pass and 2 pass versions and found the CBR was better. I think if our film had more chopity chop action it would have made more of a difference and I would’ve used VBR.

You might also say “why not using a higher encode like 7.5Mbps?” This can be tricky. It will play back fine on a computer, but some DVD players will choke. I gleaned most of the compressing info from Larry Jordan who’s a king at this stuff.

He says the following:

So, to make sure that your DVDs will burn properly:

1) Set your average bit rate between 4.0 Mbps and 6.5 Mbps. (The lower the number, the more video you can squeeze onto your DVD. 4.0 Mbps should allow a little more than 2 hours of video.)

2) Make sure your peak bit-rate doesn’t exceed 7.5 Mbps. 7.0 Mbps is better. (I use 7.2.) This makes sure you have enough head-room to compress active scenes without creating so much data that computers or older DVD players can’t keep up.

burn-dvd

0

Day 4 – Do’s and Don’ts of Writing, Acting, and Directing

Writing, acting, and directing your own film is something I would only advise a masochist to take on. The only reason I attempted to do this was my co-director Kasi Brown (pronounced “Casey”) and I knew that we had each other to pick up the slack. We’d shot a bunch of sketches and had both worked on films for many years. We knew a feature length film would be vastly different, but we felt brave enough to try. We’ve always shared a creative shorthand with one another, where one of us thinks something, we lock eyes and the other says “that’s perfect! Let’s do it!”  So we set forth with making Gone Doggy Gone, and we weren’t going to let anyone tell us we couldn’t do it. Here are a few examples to help future writer/actor/directors avoid mistakes we made.

Behind the Monitor

Kasi Brown, Brandon Walter and our DP Garret O’Brien


USING THE CREW WHEN YOU CAN’T BE BEHIND THE MONITOR

If you think the camera crew or DP can be your eyes as a director think again. They’re doing their job. How are they supposed to do your job as well? Were this a short film or sketch, then maybe it could happen, but not on a feature so it’s best to just let this idea go.

When we weren’t in scenes, we were behind the monitors making sure the shot was ever so right. First we’d check the frame, then run over and act. So many times something would come up with lighting, or a lens change would happen at the last minute and the shot would be slightly re-framed. Since we had our acting hats on, we neglected to run back and check frame. Stupid us. The shot, which had a joke in the frame, didn’t register anymore.  It was our fault because we didn’t switch hats and double check. This kind of thing happens all the time when you’re overextending yourself on set.

THE HARMONS

Kasi as Abby Harmon, Laila the Yorkie in the middle, and Brandon as Eliott Harmon

THE ACTING ROLES YOU PLAY

Kasi and I played husband and wife and were in nearly every scene together. Stupid us, again. If we’d played different roles then one of us could have been directing while the other acted. This would have made things much smoother. But if you have to do this and can’t be told otherwise, make sure your directing partner is an awesome actor. I was very fortunate to work with Kasi who is “all balls”. She doesn’t know the meaning of half-measures. Her acting brought everyone else’s up a notch. Thank God for her years of acting experience and helping me out when the proverbial celluloid sh*t hit the fan. She was the calm in the center of the hurricane.

THREE TAKE SCENES IF WE WERE LUCKY

Many times we’d set up a shot and only have 3 takes from one angle if we were lucky. When we’d look back at the footage and see there was only 1 take of something, we were horrified. “Are you kidding me? That’s all we got? Oh, yeah… we had an 8 page day with 50 setups, stunts and dogs!” Don’t do this to yourself! You’ve really got to break down the shots of every scene before hand so much that you’ve either got them storyboarded or written out extensively so they can easily be communicated. Although, we did this we could have done it in even greater detail. Plan your shots out like its D-Day. Eisenhower took a full year to prepare that invasion. He took his time, and planned, and planned, and planned some more, and made plans for failed plans, and planned for different plans. That’s the kind of attention to detail you need when you make a movie for $100 or a million dollars.

I hope I’ve conveyed to you why you shouldn’t write/direct/act in your own film or at least some pitfalls to avoid. We were a bit foolish in some aspects, but I’m glad to be a fool and have a finished feature film, than having a script I’m trying to get made.

0

Day 3 – Chase Scene

Today was one of the hardest working days of our lives. We were all tired from the previous days efforts shooting a bar out. Kasi had to perform a lot of stunts, chasing one of the characters through a house, and outside, then up and over and embankment, then run down all the steps and chase a car. It was totally grueling for everyone. Luckily, our crew held together and the following day everyone showed up to set! Thank you crew!

20130426-084908.jpg

Kasi Brown and Brandon Walter go over the shot list between set ups.

0

Walter has been Kidnapped

A day after we finished shooting our film we discovered that a real life yorkie named “Walter” was kidnapped. The similarities to the situation of our film are eery. Walter is 11, deaf and is somewhere in the Hollywood. Walter’s mom was instructed to post missing dog flyers, then the kidnapper would return the dog and accept the “reward”. If you see this little guy with someone other than its owner please contact helpfindwalter@gmail.com.

An email from the owner:

We don’t know much about the guy who took him, except that he has an Armenian accent, and is very familiar with an area near our house that’s referred to as “Little Armenia” (between Wilton & Normandie, and Franklin & Sunset. My guess is he lives somewhere in that vicinity.
Walter is tagged, but they may have removed his collar. He is also microchipped. He’s deaf so won’t hear you if you call, but if he sees you he’ll come to you.

 

Here’s the KTLA news segment.

20130518-111549.jpg

UPDATE 5/19/13 :
Walter has been returned to his owner! The kidnapper dumped him off on Los Feliz boulevard and a good samaritan returned him.

0

Production Begins Today!

Today is our first day of shooting our feature film. It’s been a long journey and we are very excited to begin. We’ve assembled a great crew and awesome cast. We’re going to be shooting some office scenes today with Mark Teich We decided to start the week with days that we are not acting in so we can just be directors and get used to it.

Pictured below are Kasi and Charles (1st AD).

20130421-064751.jpg

0

Powered by WordPress. Designed by Woo Themes

UA-45382219-1