Austral: Southern

  • February 1, 2010 12:45 am

“Marta says the interesting thing about fly-fishing is that it’s two lives connected by a thin strand. Come on, Marta. Grow up.” –Jack Handy

–HERE’s THE PART THAT MAY INTEREST YOU–

Amazing documentary: Rocaterrania made by a documentarian I just discovered, Brett Ingram. Such, great, great stuff. Go exploring and run with it.

Here’s an article from the NYTimes on the subject of the documentary with great stills.

–HERE’s THE INCESSANT RAMBLING PART–

My afternoon sketch-- but I don't know the flower this is.

The above is a term Austral is found in botany– and lately there’s these intersections happening all over the place. That electric charge; the tingle of being awake and starting to feel purposeful. You may argue spring closing in, but its February First (and I will spell it out for you) in Chicago– an epoch. Now, certainly I’m a winter child and it pleases me to no end to engage in winter sports, drive my car for soup lunches in the snow and shovel the walks.

Despite my outward persona as being “social”– I crave time alone, and winter serves that purpose nicely as the sidewalks empty of pedestrian traffic and the citizens of my Northern city retreat into their down turtle shells.

But there is a snap and a current, and I feel that I am supposed to know people and things and have my hands in a million projects. Lately, I’ve been starting awake with ideas and visions. Sometimes I sit in my cold drafting room folded into a -20 sleeping bag pursuing the thing in my head. Other times, I rattle of e-mails.

Everything is flowing out of the South– my heritage is starting to make this self-defining dent. It started with an e-mail trade of a cousin I had lost touch with. Then the curriculum catalog landing on my desk with the 2010 offerings at the Botanical Gardens, and I think about my nonexistent green thumb, yet the almost crippling urgency to start pushing seeds into dirt with my thumbs. Some things are just wired into your code– I come from a long line of farmers. Appalachian farmers. Then I feel this pull to be very invested in a co-worker’s stage play, and it hits on that theme.

When my brain starts overloading, I find myself needing very much to work with my hands, typically I retreat to illustration or yard work. But when I sit down the charge is too much and its hard to concentrate, and the lawn resembles Russian tundra. No snow to shovel, no leaves to pick– brown, dead grass with sun hitting at the lowest latitudes.

This entry probably looks insane and feels aimless, but I thought if I would sit here and try to think of what ignited all of this– it would become obvious. Maybe its mania or caffeine. Or Spring. I’m going to ride it.

This and That

  • December 29, 2009 12:23 am

Final pushes for The Experiment-- Monica and Clayton (Directors)-- Stefani (Director of Photography) Utah.

Hello from real life. With the holidays and the first round of grant cycles for 2010 approaching I have been rather MIA. The Experiment for 137 Films keeps trucking along and is starting that glorious push into post. I have the good fortune of working under a fantastic directing team composed of Monica Long Ross and Clayton Brown. Clayton has started this new blog for science films if you’d like to follow his thoughts on particle accelerators and Volkswagens.

I have launched a new collective called RealLab you can check out our forthcoming film projects on the site… and yes, I actually get to say film in two of these cases. Oollala! In fact we found a couple of Kodak canisters hiding in the 137 office two weeks ago if they’re stable, Clayton plans on making them into a short.

(I was born in 1981. Film is mythical to me.)

Meanwhile, Sean my glorious DP for Soul Winners plans on having some adventures with Super 8 footage for the film.

A busy month all around, lots of doing lunch and meeting deadlines. Coping mechanism for stress:  I’ve discovered 21 Jump Street via Hulu. Fair warning– do not watch so many in a row because the continuity issues are numerous. On the flip, a young Jason Priestly keeps showing up.Anyway, lately I’ve been thinking about the whole evolution of Fox and what it must have been like to be working in programming during the mid 1980s. However, at this moment I am thinking of a snack, so I shall hang it up.

Hi, Hello.

Happy 2010. I’ll come up for air in Spring time when we load up Mister Yeti (that is the name of my dear Honda Element) and return to shooting. In the meantime its a winter of funding strategy and post production from the Carole Cave.

Top 25 Documentaries of the Decade

  • November 15, 2009 10:57 pm

Via Paste Magazine:

25. Food, Inc. (2009)
24. Dig! (2004)
23. Gleaners and I (2000)
22. The Devil and Daniel Johnston (2006)
21. No End In Sight (2007)
20. No Direction Home (2005)
19. Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room (2005)
18. Anvil: The Story of Anvil (2008)
17. The White Diamond (2004)
16. God Grew Tired of Us (2007)
15. Super Size Me (2004)
14. An Inconvenient Truth (2006)
13. Jesus Camp (2006)
12. Capturing the Friedmans (2003)
11. Born into Brothels (2004)
10. Waltz with Bashir (2008)
9. Murderball (2005)
8. Spellbound (2002)
7. When the Levees Broke: A Requiem in Four Acts (2006)
6. King of Kong: A Fistful of Quarters (2007)
5. Bowling For Columbine (2002)
4. The Fog of War (2003)
3. Grizzly Man (2005)
2. Iraq in Fragments (2007)
1. Man On Wire (2008)