Showing posts with label Short Film. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Short Film. Show all posts

Sunday, February 5, 2012

Campus MovieFest 2012 - I.F.

Another Campus MovieFest has come and go! It's amazing to think it's only been a year since I took up my own reigns and made my first Campus MovieFest film as a director. Now I'd like to present my latest short film, I.F.



In comparison to last year I wanted a complete film, rather than a silent film interlaced with a song. Last year, people were either fascinated or taken aback by my decision to use a puppet as the lead protagonist in the film. Whether or not someone enjoyed it, they all admitted that one irregularity in the film made them keep watching. 

This year, I wanted a stronger story, actors, and aesthetic look, but I wanted to keep one idea from Bottom  of a Glass; I wanted to retain the one irregularity in an otherwise tried and true story. Bottom of a Glass represented the despair and final ascension from pain for a grieving father. The fact the father was played by a puppet gave it a dynamic many were not expecting. 

In the same way, I.F., entails the story of a young child losing her parents and being forced to live a relative. Its unique dynamic stemmed from the inclusion of I.F. (Imaginary Friend) who is sent to help Jordan cope with the loss of her parents.

I hope you like the latest short film. Unfortunately, we were not able to bring home Best Picture of Best Drama this year, but I'm happy with the film I've made.

Let me know your thoughts in the comments!

P.S. We are in the running for CMF's Wild Card Entry. If we get the most views by March 3rd my team and I will still be able to travel out to Hollywood to see our film compete. Please take out the time share the film with anyone you know!

Here is the LINK


Monday, November 28, 2011

And Goodbye

This is it everyone. I'm done with one of the biggest goals I've held since the beginning of this blog. I've finished applying to all of the institutions I'd like to go for a graduate degree in Directing or Cinematography.

If you haven't been with me since the beginning take out the time to read one of my firsts posts, The Graduate School Quest. This was the first time I legitimately looked into pursuing film academia after my time at The University of Alabama. I wrote that on July 14, 2010. It's been over a year since that period in my life.

Honestly, it's amazing to be able to look back and have a record of my thoughts concerning a future I'm now consolidating. During the time I had my eyes set on USC, UCLA, and The American Film Conservatory. Now, the list has expanded to include NYU Tisch School of Arts and Columbia University. It's pretty ambitious and I'm nervous. I didn't apply to a safe school so it is all or nothing.

I should've done so, but for the past four years I've complied with being at a University I was not happy with. Now, as I progress forward I want to be somewhere of my own choosing. I've worked hard and I'm ready for the payoff.

Now that everything is done I'd also like to showcase my latest short film, And Goodbye. 


I directed, DP'd, and edited the short film specifically to showcase to my prospective graduate schools. I also sent my short film Portrait of the Storm as my second visual submission. I consider these two the best work I've done so far. Hopefully, they'll see merit in each of them.

I'd also like to say thank you to a few people who helped put this together. My homeboy Kevyn Bryant (of K.Bryant Photography) helped me find the talent in the film. My producer, Matthew Cocozza, put everything together smoothly. I believe this is the first time I knew I didn't have to worry about the logistics.

 My 1st and 2nd camera operators Greg Kubik and Tyler Plemons did a great job as well George Miller (who acted as our main sound operator and helped me shoot the time lapses earlier this year). The music was scored by Michael Maffei and Sundeep Kapur.

Overally, I'm happy with the final product. I'm already looking forward the next project, but I recently got in touch with Mike Gordon, one of the first people who let me touch a camera. It was amazing to hear him say the growth he's seen in my work has been exponential.

That's all I truly want. To keep getting better.

Be sure to follow Que The Lights on TWITTER and like us on FACEBOOK


Tuesday, August 30, 2011

Risk

Now that I'm back in school a good amount of the non-photography/film work is back. One of the most important being my Residential Advisor job. I'm the go-to person for about 30-40 students when something goes wrong or if they need some friendly guidance.

It's an amazing job. I honestly believe if I didn't enjoy multimedia so much I'd work in counseling or a relations orientated profession.

Every year before school begins we're required to participate in RA training. It's a two week training process focusing on team building and student management. We have an abundance of communities which brings a competitive feel to training. Enter Roll Call.

Every community produces a video for our annual Roll Call competition. There is no prize just bragging rights for a year. We won last year and my boss wanted a repeat so I was asked/force to produce the video.




Sadly, we didn't win. The short didn't follow the non-violent guidelines of the competition to which I say...you gave us the game of RISK! You know the one about conquer and domination. Once I overcame the bitter taste of indifference and defeat I was happy to heard the judges loved it.

I'll just remember to read the rules a little more carefully in the future.

On another note. I'm now on tumblr! I decided to name the new entity The Photographer's Domain. This is not a transition from Que The Lights. I've found a lot of inspiration for my work on tumblr and decided to enter the sphere of creativity I see there on a regular basis.


Thursday, June 23, 2011

Campus Moviefest: International Grand Finale


It's an interesting phenomena when you find yourself in a situation which embodies itself as the culmination of an entire year's worth of work. It feels as if I've been gradually building up to the moment I made it back to California..

June 17 passed a few days ago. This marked the one year anniversary of Que The Lights. From the beginning I set a simple, yet honest goal, establish myself as a legitimate filmmaker. What do I mean by legitimate?

Honestly striving to create a powerful body of work uniquely my own. I wanted to produce my own web of artistic design which displays a quality of work capable of standing on its own.

I believe I've done this to a degree. I still have a bevvy of work left to finish, start, and create, but this year has been a significant kick-start. Where I am gives validation to the words I set forth over a year ago.

Two of my films are in competition at CMF's International Grand Finale. The first is "Bottom of a Glass" and the second is "Portrait of the Storm: Tuscaloosa, AL."

"Bottom of a Glass" will be competing in the Best Drama section while "Portrait of the Storm" will be competing in the 3D competition.

Along with my own, others films from Alabama such as "Sugarbaby", "Blue Barry", and "A Certain Woman" will be in competition and screened. You can find more info here.

CMF is also providing student's with another great opportunity, the ability to meet with Hollywood executives, agents, and directors. This does not guarantee any individual a ticket into the inner-workings of the industry, but it does carry the potential of garnering valuable experience when we're thrown into the real world.

This is why they asked us to not only bring our resumes, but be ready to show our demo reel if asked. A demo reel is essentially a compilation of your best work edited into a single piece. It's your calling card to the industry and signifies the strength of your work as a filmmaker.

Check out mine and let me know what you think,


Director/DP Reel 2011 from Xavier Burgin on Vimeo.

This is why this moment truly signifies a round-up of this year. All of my best work tightly wrapped in about two minutes. It seems so small, yet every drop of sweat, long night story-boarding, headache induced irritation via shot listing, and carpal tunnel-esque bout while revising a script is somewhere simmering within this reel forming my hopes for a successful future.

Wish me luck this weekend. Hopefully my work won't need it.


Sunday, March 13, 2011

I Am The NU Black











One of my older films, Me and Mrs. Jones, has been featured on the currently watching section of website I Am: The Nu BlackThe NuBlack is a site dedicated to highlighting youth of African descent (I believe the creator makes an understandable effort to highlight youth of African descent rather than African American, but I'll explain later) and their creative endeavors. Still, I should allow the creator to better explain.
October 2008, I decided to set myself a challenge for Black History Month in the UK. 30 days of posts featuring youth of African descent , the things that inspired them, positive images, videos, news articles, quotes etc.
I completed the challenge and decided to continue. My aim is to try and post things that are not necessarily ‘out there’, that are original, creative and that will hopefully inspire those after me (and hopefully those before me if they come across the site).
The name thenublack comes from the idea that my generation and those born to parents of the African diaspora have had  a path paved for them by their ascendants.
Although we may not have experienced first-hand the effects that many of those well known figures had on the world – I have hope we’re not only continuing to pave that path, but that we’re aspiring to be equally as great, as revolutionary and box-breaking as they were.

I had the privilege of speaking with the individual behind the site. It is one of the few times I've been able to get in contact with someone from a website easily and hold a good conversation. I'm always looking for avenues to expose my work and TheNuBlack definitely showed interest.

For that I am undeniably appreciative.

Looking back on my previous work is interesting. You tend not to look back frequently until someone gives you a reason. I believe one of the biggest things I noticed is the growth in technical skills since I made the film. Comparing Me and Mrs. Jones to Bottom of a Glass  definitely gives you an accurate idea. I consider the comparison a positive. As a filmmaker/photographer/artist/etc, the worst outcome I can find in my work is lack of progression. If growth isn't evident, then something is wrong

Also, let me finish explaining why I am glad TheNuBlack uses youth of African descent over African American. I believe a lot of people (especially in The United States) forget Black History Month is NOT African-American History Month. It is a month that encompasses all individuals who can trace their ancestry to African roots in some manner. I honestly believe this understanding is lost more-so in the states.

Let me clarify. It isn't due to a lack of appreciation. Black History Month has just become so narrow in its spectrum of highlighted individuals and groups many people forget there are Black people outside of the United States and Black history across the globe. Check out the site HERE

You can check out all of my short films, including Me and Mrs. Jones on QTL's short film page.





Sunday, February 13, 2011

A SugarBaby Playing Mind Games in the Bottom of a Glass





Congratulations are in order,

Que The Lights short film Bottom of a Glass won Best Drama for Campus MovieFest at The University of Alabama.


This year the prizes included an Ipod Nano, a full version of Final Cut Studio, and a trip to California for the International Campus MovieFest where the best of the best will be screened for audiences.

Bottom of a Glass was also one of the Rethink Possible Award Semifinalists. If it wins at the next level we are given a chance to pitch our short film to a studio to be made into a feature length.

Best Comedy went to Mind Games-



Overall Best Picture went to Sugarbaby



Here are some other very well done films from the contest

Hustle



Blue Barry


Two Guys Over a Wall



I really  recommend watching Sugarbaby and every other film on the list. To everyone that helped out (pre, production, post, views, and votes) thank you. You're help made it happen. Be looking out for more from Que The Lights and Campus MovieFest.


Tuesday, February 8, 2011

Bottom of a Glass - Campus Movie Fest





It's done! I've finished up my next short film and entered it into the Campus Movie Festival at The University of Alabama.

The Que The Lights Team would like to present Bottom of a Glass, a 2011 UA CMF Short Film created by  Joe Field, Rene Gromotka, and me. This film benefits me two fold. The movie festival is a very efficient way of receiving exposure for your work. The film I worked on last year, Multiverse, when I was an assistant rather than captain is regularly viewed on youtube now. I'm not at that level yet, but I do believe our film has a very good chance.



With entering the contest a bunch of other factors come into play as well. For the people who regularly check out the site my team and I could really use your help. Go to youtube and check out the film plus going to the campus movie fest site and checking it out. Just click HERE


Wednesday, November 24, 2010

2001: A Space Odyssey

It's been crunch time at the University. Final projects and papers galore. Nothing new though. Recently, I finished a short film, Can't Be Friends, a piece centered around the relationship of a couple who are torn apart by their child. The piece was made as my final for my Liberal Arts degree in the Blount Program. In this post, I didn't want to focus on the film so much as the essay accompanying it. I decided  to compare the merits between one of my favorite movies, 2001: A Space Odyssey, and the message I wanted to convey through my film.

 2001 A Space Odyssey By Clarke, Arthur C./ Kubrick, Stanley.


You can watch the entire movie in increments HERE. It's not a hard read, but I understand the attention span can waiver. I know it happens to me even when I'm checking something out I'm interested in. If you do take out the time to read send me your thoughts.


The Interpretation of Cinema as Art and its Ties to Human Development

 History has displayed the fact mankind has a distinctive attraction towards our gift of creativity. This is not to say other animals do not retain the capacity, but we must acknowledge no alternate reature capably reaches the bounds of artistic gab the human mind displays. Whether the ability to formulate artistic endeavors arose from the scribbling our prehistoric ancestors or the divine outpouring of an unknown benevolent being we must give reference to the understanding the creative arts is a byproduct of gene-culture coevolution. This is “the underlying process by which the brain evolved and the arts originated” (Wilson 218). Steadily, people have realized “that the arts are not solely shaped by errant genius out of historical circumstances and idiosyncratic personal experiences” (Wilson 218). Instead, “the roots of our inspiration date back in deep history to the genetic origins of the human brain” (Wilson 218). All forms of art find their ancestry in the biological roots of humanity’s history. Whether poetry, painting, theater, or cinema, mankind’s evolutionary growth has provided the fodder to nourish our intellectual spirit. Combining the subject of my independent project along with the analysis of art within the social and biological aspect, my paper pushes to associate the importance of man’s biological functions in the epiphany of the humanities. When taking into consideration the scope of my short film project Can’t Be Friends, this being the interpretation of cinema as art, we must also track cinema’s development into a medium of artistic representation through the examination of my piece along with films deemed works of art not only in the field of cinema, but art in general.

         In Steven Pinker’s book The Blank Slate we are given an in-depth exploration of human nature in connection with its biological roots. Pinker explains how many of the established forums of interpreting the human condition such as the blank slate, the noble savage, and the ghost in the machine do little justice to the complete spectrum mankind’s state. The idea human’s decisions, thoughts, and personalities solely stem from society and upbringing is outdated. It is also partially inconsistent with the true mechanisms behind our nature. Instead, we must view the average person as complete combination of genetics and evolution bore from the millennia of ancestry once scouring our world as well as the outcome of our societies’ culture (Pinker 5-58).

This is all said to set up the reasoning behind both Pinker and Wilson’s interpretation of the arts and culture.  Wilson points out that “works of art that prove enduring are intensely humanistic” (Wilson 219). Works of art are may be “born in the imagination of the individuals, nevertheless [they] touch upon what was universally endowed by human evolution” (Wilson 219). It is quite difficult to argue this point when so many universal themes are shared by cultures across the world. In fiction and mythology one can frequently find categories of topics shared in every sub-group’s explanation of their origins. Themes include the story of creation where gods or a god create mankind, the triumph against heavy odds, the odyssey of the hero returning to his land, the world ending in apocalypse, the source of great power such as a tree of life or philosopher’s stone, the nurturing women such as Mother Earth or Gaia, the wise or holy man who has special powers of the mind, the virgin who represents purity, the trickster such as the god’s jest or clown, and the monster that threatens humanity (Wilson 223-224).   
   
How do we account for the universal appeal of these over-reaching themes? Why can we find tales of heroes fighting monstrous odds and stories explaining the creation of man so abundantly? Pinker leads us to understand that culture “can be seen instead as a part of the human phenotype: the distinctive design that allows us to survive, prosper, and perpetuate our lineages” (Pinker 60). This distinctive design naturally makes culture “emerge from that lifestyle” (Pinker 60). Wilson points out the arts spawned from human’s desire to attain some sense of order within the world when we attained a level of intelligence that went beyond basic primal instinct. Other animals have adapted to life that specifically deals with the parts of their existence necessary to keep them alive. For example, does a gazelle need to ponder the existence of God or the beauty of the surrounding landscape when the focal point of its life is making sure a lion, cheetah, hyena, wild dog, or crocodile does not make him a delectable morsel. This formula does not excuse the emergence of art as some unique system of coping inherent to humans just because we are humans. When humans reached the potential of “Homo-level intelligence” the brain began to process in a more advance scenario giving us the ability to make sense of conditions well beyond the realm of instinctive survival. The “evolving brain, nevertheless, could not convert to general intelligence alone: it could not turn into an all purpose computer” (Wilson 225). This meant for many of the thoughts, situations, and events we could not ascertainably explain, the arts “filled the gap” (Wilson 225). Humans of earlier time periods explained the human condition through magic, inexplicable creatures of yore, rituals, and forces of nature that “could be ritualized and expressed in a new, simulated reality” (Wilson 225). The beginnings of the most sophisticated, prehistoric cultural transformation can be seen in the “wall paintings, engravings, and sculptures found caverns of the southern half of Ica Age Europe” (Wilson 226). This dates well beyond the scope of human history giving us a wider scope of the time and power evolution wielded over the course of the arts before we as humans became more-so the forefront leaders in our own capabilities.

Fast-forward to the current representation of culture and you have a miasma of varying sub-groups, fetishes, trends, mainstream and underground movements, genres, counter-culture categories, and customs oozing out of the orifices of the human condition. At some point the arts became more than just a mechanism to organize and understand the world. It evolved into the expression, celebration, and perversion of its natural propensity. I now direct my attention to a significant, yet minute piece of culture’s growing arm of creation, cinema.
As anything else associated with culture and the humanities, cinema can be considered a skill and form blanketed under the arts. Cinema is an art-form with its own aesthetic and varying appeal. Speaking on its ancestry, modern film was preceded by the theater which held many of the key elements seen today such as scripts, sets, costume, directors, production, music, actors and audiences. The key difference begins with the visual display of a film. While a play happens naturally before an audience where everything is in the moment, a film represents a previously recorded work forever inscribed in history once documented through the lens. The film aims to lull you into its aesthetic, slowly pulling the individual from his reality into its own.

While all films can be considered works of art, there are those in particular who transcend the boundary of cinema becoming immortalized as a symbol of aesthetic akin to great literary and artistic painting counterparts. An example of this is Stanley Kubrick’s work, 2001: A Space Odyssey.  2001 fleshes out the spectrum of man from his primitive beginnings to his exploration into the unknown fathoms of space. Summarized, the plot involves a team of astronauts on a mission to Jupiter who face harrowing circumstances when the artificial intelligence on their craft turns against them. Still, such a summary does not do justice to the grand scale the movie extends towards. Produced during the height of the space race between USA and the USSR, the movie sections itself into four parts: The Dawn of Man, The Lunar Journey in the Year 2000, Jupiter Mission, 18 Months Later, and Jupiter and Beyond the Infinite (Dirks). Each piece delves into a personal segment of mankind’s growth. The Dawn of Man interprets our creation and our transition from instinctive animal to a creature capable of formulation and thought. This is witnessed by the ape-man’s realization a bone can be used as a weapon. The Lunar Journey in the Year 2000 transitions the audience from the primitive epiphany of prehistoric man to millions of years in the future where space travel and exploration is a dream materialized. Jupiter Mission, 18 Months Later delves into the main plot examining the power and repercussion of technology capable of rational thought and decision. Finally, Jupiter and Beyond the Infinite enters the realm of human rebirth, the cosmos giving life to a being evolved from the denizen of man, yet functioning on a higher plane we cannot fathom at this moment. The “first spoken word is almost a half an hour into the film, and there’s less than 40 minutes of dialogue in the entire film” (Dirks). The film is delivered at a mind-crunching slow pace with either music or silence, but neither at the same time (Dirks). The film leaves much of its story to the imagination giving the audience a film equivalent to a Rorschach blot, yet its silent imagery and mysterious symbolizations of life and rebirth convey a message pleasing to the aesthetics of human nature.

2001: A Space Odyssey gives credibility to cinema as a powerful art-form. It displays the work of film to be another piece of Wilson and Pinker’s explanation of human nature in adaption to its environment. Art has evolved beyond the rudimentary need to explain and now creates that which the world did not naturally form. I believe this supports the idea of gene-culture coevolution as the film touched on American culture during its time, while delving into the man’s continued struggle to understand and define his world.

My film Can’t Be Friends pales in comparison to such a feat, but on a much more minute scale works under the same banner, cinema as art. By encompassing the relevance of cinematography while experimenting with the emotions invested within the parental abandonment experience, I created a small-scale film representing an issue many can associate with. In the same way, Kubrick took a large scale issue, the creation of man and the power of technology, and raised its understanding to a widespread audience. Kubrick used music, silence, and ambiguity to create a world of awareness inherent only to the audience, while I took the conventions of the dynamics of relationships and set the entire film silent giving the audience the ability to reflect on the reasoning and outcome.


Bringing this all-together, one must consider art an age old condition and phenotype, a society driven outcome of the human condition and an evolutionary piece of our growth as instinctual driven creatures. Literature, cinema, or art, consider them unique, yet generic, or should I say genetic. A segment of our identity as an animal, philosophically and biologically.
             
Bibliography

Dirks, Tim. 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968). May 1996. 24 November 2010 .
Pinker, Steven. "The Blank Slate." New York: Viking Penguin, 2002.
Wilson, E.O. "Consilience." Religion, Ethics and. New York: Brown Little, 1998.

                               


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