My Life to Live

Thursday, February 25, 2010

For Money

For money you can have everything it is said. No, that is not true. You can buy food, but not appetite; medicine, but not health; soft beds, but not sleep; knowledge but not intelligence; glitter, but not comfort; fun, but not pleasure; acquaintances, but not friendship; servants, but not faithfulness; grey hair, but not honor; quiet days, but not peace. The shell of all things you can get for money. But not the kernel. That cannot be had for money. - Arne Garborg, writer (1851-1924)

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Final Cut Pro 7 tips & tricks

Part 1 & Part 2. Something for every Final Cut Pro editor is here.

Speed up your Mac & Final Cut Pro using Font Book. "In addition to projects, you can use the Collections feature to organize your fonts in all manner of ways from type of font to whatever suits your needs." Very cool.

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Tuesday, February 23, 2010

The Film Editing Room Handbook Review

On 'How to Tame the Chaos of the Editing Room', the Film Editing Room Handbook is probably the best resource book out there, with the most current info on technologies as well as social media on its 4th edition print. As a lone-wolf editor who worked mostly by himself until hired by a big media company in NYC, I wish that I had picked up this book when I started my career path in editing few years ago.

Yes, I read my share of editing books and manuals, but no one really told me that the very first step into the editing career is NOT editing! Fortunately, Digital Cinema Revolution began when I graduated my film school, and Digital Editing Revolution soon followed with Final Cut Pro which enabled me and countless others to edit independently. Although I did learn Avid at my film school, along with awesome Quantel systems, Final Cut Pro is where all the low-budget, independent film and video works were for a novice editor like myself. Final Cut Pro is very flexible system and working independently meant that I can edit and work in my own way, without having a proper work-flow to interact with others, except for few graphic designers or sound engineers to clean up audio.

Once I got enough credits under my belt and moved up to work on narrative films, I quickly learned that taming the whole post production process is completely different work from editing an actual movie/video. Sure Avid & Final Cut Pro made the process a lot simple, but you still have to organize hours of footage and growing number of sequences, not to mention other elements that go into completing a movie.

This book does NOT teach you how to edit, nor teach you secrets of Avid or Final Cut Pro. The book is strictly technical manual for assistant editors to work in an edit suite, or at a post house, working on the entire post production process to the final cut of a film. I knew 75% of the materials in the book because of years of my experience in the post production industry, nevertheless it provided me with invaluable insights and I can heartily endorse for any aspiring editor who wants to get the foot in the door. I found the "Getting the Job" section at the end helpful as well as the Glossary part, which should be memorized before a job interview.

The post production world is moving rapidly as more and more new digital technologies are introduced to the market. Traditional apprenticeships in edit rooms have more or less diminished due to specialized professions in the post process, and the assistant editors of these days & ages are no longer aspiring editors, but more of a profession on its own right. If you been looking to break into the post production industry or embarking on the editing process for your independent project, this book will be an invaluable guide to your endeavors.

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Thursday, February 18, 2010

Ed Catmull, Pixar: Keep Your Crises Small

Learning from the master.

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Why Netflix Won't Be the HBO of the 21st Century

"the name of the game is subscriber retention."

I love Netflix, but one way or another, Netflix will have to own or create original hit shows/films to compete with other content channels. Otherwise, it won't be more than a niche DVD rental channel that's increasingly squeezed out by cheaper rivals like Redbox.

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Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Script Learning from ScriptShadow

What We Can Learn From Five Box Office Surprises

"You know your idea’s good when people immediately get excited about it."

Yeah, I wrote few short scripts like that. That's one of main reasons I still dabble in screenwriting, to get people invested in my story, and my world.

Interview with Ben Ripley - writer of Source Code.

"the great thing about being a writer in Hollywood, the source of our power, is the ability to generate new material."

"Its very simplicity became its high concept. None of that was planned from the beginning – none of it was outlined. It all had to come during the process of discovery in the writing."

I still haven't followed my New Year resolution of reading a script per weekend. I hope to read his script after I'm finished with an unproduced Indy IV script.

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Mel Brooks on Video Games

"Videogames are not for us. They're here to entertain the television." - Mel Brooks
Touché.

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Friday, February 12, 2010

David Simon interview

Really great, great interview from Vice. "First, at the beginning of every season, we did a sort of retreat with the main writers, the guys who were going to be on staff the whole year. We’d discuss what we were trying to say, but we were really having a current-events/ideology/political argument. The writers didn’t all think the same. We weren’t in lockstep on the issues of the day, whether it was the drug war or public education or the media. So we had to discuss the issue as an issue first. Never mind the characters, never mind plot."

"What we were asking was, “What should we spend 12 hours of television saying?” And that’s a journalistic impulse. That was coming from the Wire writers who were journalists and, to an extent, the novelists who wrote for the show who write in a realistic framework, like researched fiction. People like Pelecanos, Price, and Lehane."

"One of the things we were saying was that reform was becoming more and more problematic as moneyed interests—capitalism, which is sort of the ultimate Olympian god—become more entrenched in the postmodern world. Reform becomes more and more problematic because the status quo is arranged in such a way as to maximize profit and to exalt profit—particularly short-term profit—over long-term societal benefit and/or human beings. "

"When capitalism triumphs unequivocally, labor is diminished. It’s a zero-sum game. People paid a much higher tax rate when Eisenhower was president, a much higher tax rate for the benefit of society, and all of us had more of a sense that we were included."

"We pretend to educate the bottom 10 to 15 percent of American society to join the ranks of the existing economy, but it’s all pretense. We’re not really giving them a good enough education to make that leap into the service economy. We’re really preparing them for the corner and ultimately for the prison complexes. And they may not be educated, but they’re damn sure not stupid. They get it. So if they get it, what do you fucking expect? They understand that they’re being built for the corners."

"Film is a synthesis, and television, since it’s ongoing, is a synthesis between what the actor brings and what the director brings and what the writer brings and what the crew makes you capable of in a given day. It’s very communal."

"A lot of what The Wire was about sounds cynical to people. I think it’s very cynical about institutions and their ability to reform. I don’t deny that, but I don’t think it’s at all cynical about people."

"It was pandering. It was prostitution of a kind. It was pornography, is what it was. The pornography of poverty. The stakes are too high for journalism to do that. I understand why politicians do it. I understand why police industries cook their stats. I understand why school administrators cook their test scores. I understand people in a bureaucracy doing that stuff because I expect so little of them at this point after years of being a reporter."

"But what’s common to all of them is that they’re looking for the fault lines in society. They’re using crime to do it because that’s where these things are readily apparent. It’s where money and vanity and fraud and intellect and cultural dissonance all manage to show themselves in very blunt and fundamental ways."

"New Orleans has created such unique cultural art in terms of music and dance, and it’s a very idiosyncratic culture, it shows the value of what the American melting pot is capable of. It does it in a way that is visual and musical and demonstrable, and it does it in the fucking street every day. Somehow this city is trying to find a way to endure while the political essence of the country doesn’t give a fuck. That, to me, is a fascinating dynamic."

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Monday, February 08, 2010

Stay Away From Bad Stuff, With Sarah St. Claire

This was an unusual project where I received a bunch of photoshop files and make a simple storybook animation following the narration of Sarah Silverman. I'm not proficient in motion graphics, but I'm glad that the final product came out better than everyone's expectations.

The Sarah Silverman Program
Stay Away From Bad Stuff
www.comedycentral.com
Joke of the Day Stand-Up Comedy Free Online Games

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Wednesday, February 03, 2010

Nice Sarah Silverman Program

The Sarah Silverman Program
Exclusive - Nice Sarah
www.comedycentral.com
Joke of the Day Stand-Up Comedy Free Online Games

It was a straight forward edit but I got compliments for it, hence the post. :)

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Monday, February 01, 2010

Video Review of Avatar

I liked it because it deconstructs its narrative pulls & pushes instead of shiny new 3D technology as its main box-office appeal.

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iPad for Filmmakers

There are already many great iPhone / iPot touch apps for filmmakers and this article aggregates them into one place with the wishlist for the new dawn of iPad apps.

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