Archive for the ‘Pupsock’ Category

Introduction, the 16th Annual Brouhaha Film and Video Showcase, and Beyond

Thursday, December 13th, 2007

I’m Tom Mumme, the producer of PUPSOCK AND WENDELL IN THE GALLERY OF DOOM, and I have finally had a chance to contribute to this blog. It has been a long road up to this point (especially for Patrick), and our screening at the Brouhaha Sunday makes it all worthwhile.

Patrick, Kevin McGuire (voice of Pupsock), James Compher (animator of Giacomo), and myself were on hand for the screening at the Enzian Theater in Orlando, FL (home of the Florida Film Festival). For those not familiar with the Enzian, it’s an art house cinema with tables and comfortable rolling armchairs, a fantastic environment for Independent Films (www.enzian.org).

There were about 150 people in attendance for our 11am screening, and after ordering a pizza and a pitcher of coke, we settled in to watch some films. PUPSOCK was the 8th of 11 films to screen so the audience was primed and ready when the POEM pictures and Blue Juice Films logos came on. Our film looked great on the big screen and the audience response was exceptional. It was great for me to finally see it with a non-biased audience and to see what worked and what didn’t. For a film that we consider being about 85-90% complete, they laughed in all the right places, were wowed by all the animation, and generally responded to it as a finished piece. In other words, we could release it right now, and audiences would love it as is.

However, being the stubborn perfectionists that we are, we see places that could use a little nip/tuck, or a little polish here and there, and will spend the next few months getting it just the way we like it (by we, I mean Patrick, I just sit back and bark orders).

The best films at the Brouhaha are eligible for the Florida Film Festival (thought of as the #8 Film Festival in the World by Festival Guru Chris Gore, www.floridafilmfestival.com) and we still have a submission out to the South By Southwest Film Festival (www.sxsw.com) so we’re hoping for the best there. We want to have a finished film before those festivals, and Patrick has been tireless in his efforts to make it the best it can be.

Well wish us luck, and I’ll try and blog again soon.

Additional Shooting

Wednesday, August 29th, 2007

I’d mentioned in my Derailed post that we had to shoot another scene, and I wanted to talk about it a little bit. The shoot happened on August 16th, with a small crew, outside the Brevard Museum of History & Natural Science — which is the same museum we shot Dudley in.

In the original script, the film opens with an establishing shot outside “Ye Olde Museum of Modern Art,” and then quickly moves inside to a dark and somewhat creepy scene where Pupsock and Wendell corner Princess Stacie’s kidnapper, Dirk.  If you know the characters, this is a funny scene.  However, since this is the first movie I’ve done with them, you don’t know the characters.  So, while you’re trying to figure out what kind of movie you’re dealing with, the movie is pretending to be something it’s not.

In order to combat this problem, I went ahead and expanded the first scene from a simple establishing shot into a quick little scene with Pupsock arriving at the museum and coordinating the plan of attack with Wendell over walkie-talkies.  It kinda ruined the nice reveal we have of Pupsock in the creepy scene, but it sets the tone for the rest of the movie so well, that it was a worthy sacrifice.

Once we had the scene written, there was still some question as to when we’d actually shoot the thing.  I’d been working on the special effects in my spare time, not sticking to any schedule, other than I was eager to be finished.  When I talked to Jamie Donmoyer, the brilliant puppeteer who served as Pupsock’s main performer (the also-brilliant Amy Strickland filling in for one day) about her schedule, she informed me that she’d be in New York for a while, puppeteering on Disney’s Johnny and the Sprites.  She’d be back and forth between Orlando and NYC, but pretty much the only day she could do it would be August 16th.  Luckily, this was between gigs for producer Tom, so he was able to bring out the Blue Juice Films light kit, and serve as DP.  So, we were on.

This left not a lot of time to plan, not to mention building the “Ye Olde Museum of Modern Art” sign.  So, I sprung into action.  Most of the crew weren’t available on such short notice, so I ended up building the sign myself, and was pretty pleased with the result.  Used a big piece of plywood, with a peg-board-like material covering it.  Jigsawed a curve to the top, and connected it to two fancy fence posts.  I put two-foot squares of plywood on the posts, so they could stand free while supporting the sign, and made the sign detachable for easy transport.  Well, as easily as one can transport a large sign and fence posts.  Which is not very easily.  Lastly, I bought a bunch of letters from various craft stores, spray painted them, and glued them to the sign.

The only crew I had were Tom as DP, Chris Santora - who served as Practical Effects Lead and Assistant Director on the main shoot, and Kevin McGuire - the voice of Pupsock, who both served as “General Shemps,” a.k.a Production Assistants.  I didn’t originally want to bother Kevin about the shoot, because he’d just bought a house and had been busy getting it ready to move into, but no one else could make it, so I decided to give him a call.  It turned out he wanted a break from working on his house, so he came out and was invaluable.  Tom was able to put both Chris and Kevin to work, and only needed me occasionally after I had blocked out the scene with him.  This left me free to work with Jamie, so we could be on the same foot before shooting began.

We were shooting outside at night, and it took longer than expected to get enough light on the museum to be able to see it.  However, once we got rolling, everything was awesome.  A couple of bumps at the start, but we had just enough crew that I was able to sit right next to Jamie, and it didn’t take too much coaching for her to just nail the scene.  It’s so much fun working with her, because she puts so much life into Pupsock, it’s a joy just sitting there and watching it happen.  After the first couple of takes, Tom and I just kept looking at each other with big grins on our faces.  Whatever doubts we had about whether or not this was the right way to open the movie just vanished.  The new opening is gonna be awesome!

Weekly Progress, August 24, 2007

Friday, August 24th, 2007

This has been a busy week — at home, anyway.  My daughter, Anastasia, turned 2 on Tuesday the 21st.  Coincidentally, my editor’s son, Christian Miller, was born on Tuesday.  So now they have the same birthday, though Anastasia has laid claim to it for far longer.  So, I spent a lot of time with her, and not so much on the movie.  Because of this, I’m moving my personal Wendell deadline to Labor Day.  I’ll have a 3-day weekend from the day job then, and no toddler parties planned, so I should have plenty of time to crack down.

What I did have time for, however, was this:

Mushroom Painting

I created a 3D environment in After Effects, based on a painting that local artist Danny Schmidt did special for the movie.   I cut out pieces of his beautiful painting, recreated it in After Effects, and composited Pupsock & Wendell into it.  This was my first finalized shot working with green screen and virtual sets, so I was very excited about it and took the time to get things right.  I like this picture, but it doesn’t really compare to how awesome it is seeing the shot in motion.

Jim finished off another Giacomo shot, which will find its way into a new trailer I hope to have ready in September.  Then, I put him to work on the hardest Giacomo shot in the film, which I hope he will blog about soon.  Hint, hint.

Finally, I’ve gotten roughly half of the recomps done.  I hope to be finished with that annoyance by Wednesday.

Weekly Progress, August 17, 2007

Friday, August 17th, 2007

As mentioned, all of my effort for the previous week has been put towards getting a better composite on Wendell and the new shoot. I’ve been calling it a reshoot, but it isn’t replacing anything we already shot, just adding on.

Luckily, there’s good news on both fronts. The shoot got rolling a little later than expected, but we pulled it off without any real problems. Jamie Donmoyer was able to take a break from working on Disney’s “Johnny and the Sprites” to come back home and help us out. Her performance as Pupsock was amazing, as always. Producer Tom Mumme DP’d the shoot, and we pretty much just looked at each other with big grins after each take. Also, my sign came out pretty good. Which is nice.

The crew was rounded out by AD Chris Santora, who was called into service as a Dolly Grip, and Kevin McGuire, who came on-board at the last minute and really saved our butts. He helped out Tom a great deal, and played Wendell so Jamie would have something to work off of and I could focus on directing her.

I played around with several different effects in After Effects to get Wendell to look more organic and not just pasted onto the scene. There were two shots I worked on, to get a look I liked and see if I could reproduce it. Tom and Chris both gave their stamp of approval, so I’ll be able to move on — hopefully getting most of the shots re-comped this weekend.

Welcome to the Blog

Thursday, August 2nd, 2007

Welcome to this Behind-the-Scenes look at the post-production of “Pupsock & Wendell in THE GALLERY OF DOOM!” I’ve set up this blog to keep people posted on the progress of the film, and to help raise awareness of it. I’ll post on my progress and my process, and invite some of the other people making the movie it to talk about their work.

First, the basics:

  • The script was written in May of 2006.
  • Principle photography took place in Orlando, FL in January 2007.
  • The film was shot over the course of 8 days, on a Panasonic AG-HVX200, in 720p.
  • I wrote and directed the film. Thomas Mumme produced it, Jeremy Schneider DP’d it, Ryan C. Wolfgang was the Production Designer, and Chris Santora was the 1st AD and Practical Effects Supervisor.
  • The film stars Pupsock Jackson, who was built and puppeteered by Jamie Donmoyer, and voiced by Kevin McGuire. The humans are played by Joey Monasterios and Jeff Gougen.
  • We’re currently deep in post-production, currently working on the two animated characters.
  • Wendell is a 3D animated character, and is being brought to life via the OpenSource 3D animation package Blender. He was designed by myself, modeled and rigged by Philip Yon, and is being animated by me.
  • Giacomo is a 2D animated character, being animated in Flash by Jim Compher and Sharon Jimenez.
  • I’ve currently got 17 shots of Wendell completed, out of about 47.
  • I did the initial design work for Giacomo, and it was further refined by Sharon. Jim took Sharon’s detailed drawings, and has begun making a simpler version inside Flash.
  • The Giacomo team has 0 of 27 shots complete.
  • The film is being cut by Adam Miller using Final Cut Pro. I’m doing the compositing in After Effects, on a PC.

I plan on expanding on most of those bullets in future posts, so check back often.