Super 8 short wins BEST SHORT at Westchester Film Fest!
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Super 8 short wins BEST SHORT at Westchester Film Fest!
Hi there. My short film, "The Light of Eons" has won BEST SHORT at the
Westchester (NY) Film Festival! We have two festival screenings in April -- River Run in North Carolina, and World Fest in Houston. If you know anyone in those areas, please pass it on -- I'd love to meet some super-8-ers.
My film was shot with on Tri-x Super-8, and finished on HD24p. I shot
without permits or insurance all over New York City (only one bad cop gave me a ticket, which I appealed and got dismissed because it was (at the time) legal to film on the subways without tripods or lights!).
I shot MOS and did a full sound design with voice over and score to
finish. You can see the festival acceptances on my site at:
http://www.thelightofeons.com
Hope to hear back and if you're near Winston-Salem, NC or Houston, TX,
please come to the festivals in April!
http://worldfest.org/
http://riverrunfilm.com/home.asp
p.s., also watch "That Darn Bill" at IFilm!!!
Westchester (NY) Film Festival! We have two festival screenings in April -- River Run in North Carolina, and World Fest in Houston. If you know anyone in those areas, please pass it on -- I'd love to meet some super-8-ers.
My film was shot with on Tri-x Super-8, and finished on HD24p. I shot
without permits or insurance all over New York City (only one bad cop gave me a ticket, which I appealed and got dismissed because it was (at the time) legal to film on the subways without tripods or lights!).
I shot MOS and did a full sound design with voice over and score to
finish. You can see the festival acceptances on my site at:
http://www.thelightofeons.com
Hope to hear back and if you're near Winston-Salem, NC or Houston, TX,
please come to the festivals in April!
http://worldfest.org/
http://riverrunfilm.com/home.asp
p.s., also watch "That Darn Bill" at IFilm!!!
- Jean Poirier
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Thanks. Yes, I did a telecine directly to HD24p. I was very lucky to have met with someone who offered to help out, and the look is, if I may say, amazing! Ironically, once downconverted to standard video, there are some artifacts from the grain, but still it looks great.
You can see one still from my film, which is a frame of HD exported to a jpeg, on my site (I hope to have more up soon!).
http://www.thelightofeons.com
I bought all my film directly from Kodak in NYC -- I plan to give them a DVD and see if it can't be a part of the 40th anniversary celebration!
Thanks again! So glad to have found so many Super-8 film makers out there.
You can see one still from my film, which is a frame of HD exported to a jpeg, on my site (I hope to have more up soon!).
http://www.thelightofeons.com
I bought all my film directly from Kodak in NYC -- I plan to give them a DVD and see if it can't be a part of the 40th anniversary celebration!
Thanks again! So glad to have found so many Super-8 film makers out there.
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Let's see.... I used primarily a Nizo, though I can't remember the number -- it did time lapse and ran 54fps, both features I used. I also used a big ol' Eumig, which has a faster lens for lower light conditions, mainly the subway.
I was lucky to get my telecine done at Technicolor in NYC -- they have a super-8 gate on their Spirit Telecine.
I shot standard frame aspect, with the expectation that I'd do a telecine to video, either digi beta or beta sp. When we did the HD instead, we cropped the image to 16x9. Most of the time it worked out to simply crop what was shot, but there were some occasions where I had to make some adjustments.
The film is set in the future, about a guy who never sleeps because, we learn through his voice over (the only "dialog" in the film) that he takes a drug that keeps him awake all the time. A discovery in outer space (that he reads about in the paper) and a discovery at home, make him reconsider his sleepless life.
I used time lapse to create his sense of a disconnect from normal time frames after 17 years of sleeplessness.
I actually had a fairly involved process for post production where I videotaped my dailies to mini DV and then from that first edit on FCP, I pulled my selects on super-8 for my telecine so I wouldn't have to transfer so much -- I shot around 125 rolls all together!
A friend suggested I do seminars on how I did it. Think there's a market for that?
Thanks for the interest!
dave
I was lucky to get my telecine done at Technicolor in NYC -- they have a super-8 gate on their Spirit Telecine.
I shot standard frame aspect, with the expectation that I'd do a telecine to video, either digi beta or beta sp. When we did the HD instead, we cropped the image to 16x9. Most of the time it worked out to simply crop what was shot, but there were some occasions where I had to make some adjustments.
The film is set in the future, about a guy who never sleeps because, we learn through his voice over (the only "dialog" in the film) that he takes a drug that keeps him awake all the time. A discovery in outer space (that he reads about in the paper) and a discovery at home, make him reconsider his sleepless life.
I used time lapse to create his sense of a disconnect from normal time frames after 17 years of sleeplessness.
I actually had a fairly involved process for post production where I videotaped my dailies to mini DV and then from that first edit on FCP, I pulled my selects on super-8 for my telecine so I wouldn't have to transfer so much -- I shot around 125 rolls all together!
A friend suggested I do seminars on how I did it. Think there's a market for that?
Thanks for the interest!
dave
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I'll buy itSanto wrote:There would be a small market for you putting your film on DVD and including an extended and informative "how I did it" documentary. Likely you'd get a hundred sales from this site if it were cheap.

Read my science fiction novel The Forest of Life at https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B01D38AV4K
Wow, 125 rolls for a short.
I'd like to see it, and would also buy the DVD, if made available.
Congrats on the win!
Scott
I'd like to see it, and would also buy the DVD, if made available.
Congrats on the win!
Scott
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http://www.lytewave.com/
http://www.lytewave.com/
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i live only 3 hours away from Winston-Salem and wil most definitely be attending the festival, i dont see your film listed, will it be showing there. also we should try and meet up, maybe have a lunch or somthing, i know a little about the town cause i have family there, im a newbie and could use any tips that you could give. hehe drop me an e-mail if you like companyofquail(at)gmail.com
i warned you not to go out tonight...