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Naked from the Neck Up
Monday, 22 October 2007
Short flight, Long Day
Topic: Just Cause...

Sometimes I'm just a glutton for punishment.

Lats night we were up rather late drinking after the screening of our film. Youd think I'd try to make it a short day.

So, it's up and at 'em. Scott delays going into work until after dropping me at the airport, so I pack up, we grab breakie at a nearby cafe, then I say bye to his kitty, Gloria, and we're off to the airport.

On the way I call my friend Diana, whom I knew was flying TO Portland this morning. She's just landed as we leave Scott's. Ships that pass on the freeway...or something.

Goodbyes said, I check in at Portland's airport. No sooner have I cleared security than I see a familiar face. I walk over. He looks up. "Good Time Charlie" I say, pointing at him.  Yep, it's the actor who played the title roll in one of the films ours was screened with. He's heading home to L.A. I give him my card, we chat, then he's off to the plane.

The flight home is uneventful, and I finish the book I've been reading: If Chins Could Kill: Confessions of a B Movie Actor, by Bruce Campbell. It's a fun book, and oddly inspirational for someone who wants to make movies.

I'm in the office by 3. Now the fun begins. Right off, I see our visitor from Japan and wave, and he waves back rather tentatively. It's clear he doesn't recognize me. This theory is supported by the numerous double takes I receive from co-workers, some of whom don't realize who I am at first. I guess the shaved-head and lip makes me look a lot different. I suspect the latter especially.

Scott calls from Portland to say our short didn't win the audiece favorite last night. The winner? Good Time Charlie. I suspected as much... Scott's upset. I'm not surprised by the result.

I'm pretty beat, but I do get some work accomplished. I find my car where I left it on Saturday in the company garage. Now I have to drive to Cupertino for a Yakiniku dinner with our visitor and some select co-workers.  The food's fantastic (as usual), but I deflect the drinks as much as possible. I'm tired and still have to drive an hour to get home. Finally, we part and 10 p.m. and I hit the road. I text message one of my friends as I leave. He texts me back as I arrive in S.F. He is getting off work at 11 p.m.

Now, I should just go home and sleep. This is where I get really stupid. I go have a drink with him in the Castro. It's great to see him, but I'm fading fast.

1 a.m. and I get home and zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz....


Posted by molyneaux at 12:01 AM PDT
Updated: Tuesday, 19 May 2009 10:49 PM PDT
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Sunday, 21 October 2007
It's SHOWTIME
Topic: Makin' Movies

I awake with a slight headache. Not sure it it's last night's drinks or not, but it puts a rather unpleasant edge on the morning.

Espresso helps kick start me to on painting in the Solar-Man drawing I did yesterday. I'm a little rusty with Photoshop, so it's a litle slow going at first, but it comes back to me and my work speeds up. Before long, Solar-Man is all done and I leave Scott to compose the final comic book cover type image.

A nice hot shower is in order, then it's on to the business of shaving...a much more involved task than it was previously, since for the past year I've worn a full beard and only had to shave my neck. Now I have to shave my head, my upper lip, and around the sculpted beard I'm wearing. It takes 5x as long as 5x as much shaving cream. Is it worth it?

Scott and I go out to Kinkos to get the comic handouts printed.

Solar-Man...dressing left

That done, we hit a pub and get lunch. Next task is getting Scott an outfit for tonight's screening. He doesn't know what look he wants...and shopping is a little slow until a salesman he knowns starts steering him around. He tries on a very cool black jacket with a paisley pattern that you don't see until the light hits it right, but the jacket costs more than he wants to spend on the whole outfit... so I find a short version in my size and I buy it.

Shopping accomplished, a short break is taken to have coffee with my former downstrairs neighbor, recently moved to Portland. That done, Scott and I make a run to get metallic markers for writing on the fliers, then back to his place to suit up.

And Now Our Feature Presentation

We arrive at Cinema 21 an hour before the show, so we decide to get a drink before the line starts. Neither of our two principle actors will be attending, but Kyle has seen my comic image of his alter-ego on Scott's website and on a phone call to Scott thanks me for the "generous package".

Drink done, we meet Ms. Kelly, our location manager on the film (and on-screen DJ), Dean, and Jenny (who played Shiela).

Now, here I get a tad uncomfortable, because Scott wants us to hand out the fliers—which are supposed to point people to his website if they want a DVD copy of the film—which is fine, but he wants us to shill for the film and try to get people to vote for it. This feels disingenuous to me. I realize it's an audience favorite award they're giving tonight, but this feels too premeditated. "Vote for our film" instead of "remember our film when you vote" is a farily fine distinction.

And then it starts.

Okay, right off, the house is fairly empty. It's the last show of a small city fesitval and it's on a Sunday (school) night. Second, the program didn't get enough entries (it's for local filmmakers) to fill out the two programs that had been planned, so they put it all into this one program...and even then there are only six.

The program started by having the filmmakers or their designated proxies say a few words about the films. Right away I can hear that some films have groups of supporters present while others do not, which means the latter have absolutely no chance of winning.
 
Let's face it, true audience favorites work only when there is a large enough audience for nepotism not to be an issue, otherwise it's like a high school student body election where only the popular girls get into office.
 
So, the films are a really mixed bag. Some are weird in that art school project sort of way, others are conceptually cute but the production values are non-existent. The projectionist isn't entirely on the ball with this video projection system... there's big lags between films, and at least one a film starts in the middle and then gets jumped back to the start.

Our film comes up 4th (I think), and right off there's problems. The sound level is really low through most of the big action scene, which totally undermines it. Then, when it ends, the screen goes BLACK before the credits. Then you hear the sound of the credits over a black screen, and then the picture comes back.  Frustrating!

That said, it's fun seeing it on the big screen. Even with the "stacked" audience, the best lines get laughs. Every time I see the film, however, I wish we had gotten in a joke right at the top to make the audience realize they have "permission" to laugh, since the opening scene's more action than comedy. Oh well, next film!

Afterwards, we and some compatriots of Scott's retire back to the pub where we started and have drinks and chat. It's great seeing Jenny and Kelly again. Kelley shows me her new custom made ring...which is subtly in the shape of the Green Lantern's power ring. She's such a loveable geek!

Myself, Kelly, Jenny, and Scott (Dean has left the building)

We end up discussing the various films. Several there are convinced that the only real competitor to ours is a rather gay knockoff of the fight dance in Michael Jackson's BAD video, but my gut instinct is that the film Good Time Charlie is the one we have to worry about. It got a lot of cheers.

We'll find out the results tomorrow.

 


Posted by molyneaux at 12:01 AM PDT
Updated: Tuesday, 19 May 2009 10:50 PM PDT
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Saturday, 20 October 2007
It's a Long Way FROM Tipperary
Topic: Makin' Movies

On the road

On my way to Portland, OR to see "Secret Identity Crisis" screened in a program at the Portland Gay & Lesbian Film Festival tomorrow night.

I'm flying out of San Jose so I can be in the area for a company dinner with a Japanese colleague when I return on Monday.

I'm running a little later than I want.  Since I want to leave the car at the office garage, I have to leave time to catch the free shuttle that goes to the airport from near the office. As I park, I'm debating abandoning this plan and parking at the airport proper. Just then I see someone from our Marketing department enter the garage. I instantly volunteer him to drive me to the airport. Fortunately, he agrees—after all, the airport is literally walking distance from our office.

In the air 

It's a small plane. For a moment I'm worried that I'll get stuck next to the man who clearly will overflow the meager seat width, but I luck out. I really luck out. I end up next to a very friendly fellow from Monterey and we chat the whole way. From the way he doesn't move his leg away when it touches mine, and the fact that I don't move mine, it's pretty obvious we're both batting for the same team. When I misspeak my age as 42, before I can correct it to 43 he chimes about the "ultimate answer" (if you don't get it, keep moving). I think I'm in love!  Ok, back to earth (heh heh). We swap phone numbers and email addresses. Maybe I'll get a date out of this.

A pleasant walk

In Portland, after a filling lunch at an Italian restaurant and a visit to Powell's Books, we end up back at Scott's place and he shows me the Solar-Man image that NEO f/x created for a handout he plans to print. I hate the image, as I think Photoshopped photos processed to make them look drawn are uniformly hideous. So, instead of hanging out and visiting, here I am at Scott's kitchen table drawing a comic book version of the same pose as the Photo...but, somehow, Solar-Man ends up a lot buffer than his cinematic counterpart. Hmmm... oh, of course. The camera adds 20 lbs. That must be it!  Sure!  (Click here to see the image.)

Anyway, it's a gay audience, and it is a guy in tights, so he gets lots of muscles, killer abs, and, er, a generous package. I resist the obvious temptation to pull a Joel Schumacher by adding solar-nipples to the suit. This leaves just one outstanding question... does Solar-Man dress left or right?

Left, I decide.

Now, as to if he's Jewish...

As I finish inking, Scott says we should have our villain on the cover somewhere, and suggests his face in the "company imprint" box in the upper left. I don't really want to spend a lot of time drawing another caricature, so I grab a printout of a screen grab and trace over it with Sharpies. I flip the result over, where only the black lines bleed through the paper, and clean that up. It's a cheat, but it's fast.

The images are scanned and coloring in Photoshop begins, but we stop to actually go do something other than work.

Cinema and Cocktails 

We meet Scott's friend Dean, who also acted as our A.D. on "SIC", and attend one of the features of the festival. This is the theater where our film will be screened. The showing we attend is pretty full, but it's a Saturday night. The film is Shelter.  It's one of those films where boy meets perfect boy with no (apparent) flaws and everything works out so perfectly in the end. Sweet but bordering on unbelievable. The pace is too languid in the first act, and I feel the older sister character is written as a plot device more than as a believeable human being, but it's not a bad film, even if I saw the ending coming by the third reel.

Dean leaves us after the show, and we attend the Closing Night Gala at a martini bar called CRUSH. Yes, the festival ends tomorrow, but they decided to celebrate the conclusion rather prematurely. Anyway, here I get a nice compliment on my beard and my new look, and I flirt with a guy, but mostly Scott and I talk about projects we'd like to do.

And now... sleep!


Posted by molyneaux at 12:01 AM PDT
Updated: Tuesday, 19 May 2009 10:50 PM PDT
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Friday, 19 October 2007

Topic: Just Cause...

Shaved my head again today to see how the dermatological surgery was healing and it looks really good. A little pink, but the nasty looking but harmless ol' sebhorric keratoses is gone for the time being.

I'd been wanting to change my look for a while now, and the razor in my hot little hand more than excuse enough.  Since my noggin was freshly shaven I decided I'd bare my upper lip to the sunshine as well.

The fun thing about shaving facial hair is that you can do it in stages and see what it looks like when you excise this bit or that.  First I started by excising the middle of the moustache out to the ends of my mouth, but left the bits on the side.  I'm not sure if it makes me look more like a Fu Manchu caricature or a Klingon. If my eyebrows were bushier, I'd say the latter.

  Duj HvoqtaH!*

(Note that you can see just a tinge of pink on the horizon of my head to the left of my eye...that's where the scalpel did its work.) 

After scowling in the mirror for a few minutes, cursing Tribbles, and calling the Enterprise a garbage scow in my best Michael Pataki imitation, my instincts tell me this isn't the best look for me.  The side tufts go, and no one will be offering me blood wine.

* "Trust your instincts" in Klingonese. 


Posted by molyneaux at 12:01 AM PDT
Updated: Tuesday, 19 May 2009 10:51 PM PDT
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Sunday, 14 October 2007
In the Can & Out the Door
Mood:  celebratory
Topic: Makin' Movies

Well, after working Friday and Saturday like mad, the "Fabulous Edition" of our short film "Secret Identity Crisis" is in the can. Director Scott Cummins was making tweaks to the edit and the sound in preparation for turning in a copy to the Portland Gay & Lebian Film Festival, where it will be screened on Suday the 21st.

My—self inflicted—job was to draw create new graphics for the opening and closing of the film. The original cut of the film made for the 48 Hour Film Project had a pseudo comic-book style image under the titles that then dissolved into the actual scene. That image, created by NEO f/x, was a crude digital processing job that looked enough like the newsprint image to sell the idea. However, when a similar image was tried for the last shot in the film for the final edition, the weakness of this approach became apparent.  That, and the film was ending on a image of an empty room.

I was adamant that the images needed to be replaced because they didn't match each other stylistically, the looked like Photoshop work instead of a comic book, and the last shot should be the hand clasp, not the empty room when the characters leave.

So, starting Friday I processed frames of the film to punch up the contrast, printed them large, slapped them on a lightbox, traced the important contours, then threw the frame grabs aside, and went to town with pencil and pen and drew the images from scratch. Once that was done, I scanned them back into the computer, cleaned them up, then painted them in.

The building was a lot more work than the hands, just because there was a lot more inking, and I had to spend a lot more time figuring out how much detail was needed and what was too much.

Fortunately, Scott loved them, and they're in the final cut of the film. And now we have the right ending shot.

Whew!

A week from now I'll see it in a theater with an audience!


Posted by molyneaux at 12:01 AM PDT
Updated: Tuesday, 19 May 2009 10:51 PM PDT
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Wednesday, 3 October 2007
I should have my head examined...
Topic: Day to Day

...and I did today, at the UCSF dermatology department, where I had a minor procedure to remove two (benign) spots of seborrheic keratoses from my scalp.

As they were removing it, one of the doctors commented, "It's very superficial", and I quipped, "Just like its owner."

Always after the laugh, that's me.

I got one.


Posted by molyneaux at 12:01 AM PDT
Updated: Tuesday, 19 May 2009 10:52 PM PDT
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Sunday, 30 September 2007
Starship P0rn
Topic: Cinema

The Castro Theater is currently holding a tribute to composer Jerry Goldsmith and running many films that he scored. Today was a double feature of Twilight Zone: The Movie, and Star Trek: The Motion Picture.  I only went to the latter.

Right off, something was wrong, I walked into the auditorium and heard Star Trek music playing...which would've been all fine and good had it been from any of the FIVE Trek films Jerry Goldsmith scored, but, instead, it was a clip of the horrid James Horner's theme from Star Trek II.  C'mon, it's a JERRY GOLDSMITH tribute and you're playing frakking James And The Generic Score Horner?!

That ignominity out of the way, I pop out my cell phone, call Andy Probert and promise to cheer his name when the end credits roll. He jokingly reminds me to pay close attention to the mention of "Commodore Probert" in the opening scenes. I assure him I will pay rapt attention.

The film gets rolling and right away I'm worried. The opening overture is missing.  The credits roll and I can tell it's not a good print. Plus, the projector setting isn't bright enough and the sound is kind murky.  Oh well, I suffer the technical flaws.

Here comes the Enterprise. Now, I've heard this film described as starship porn, what with its lengthy loving shots of all the space hardware, and seeing it on a big screen again, I can see that. The ship is beautiful, and the camera lingers on it, loves it, caresses it.

I find myself wondering if the warp drive effect might be considered the money shot.  I can't decide if this makes me some kind of high tech voyeur.

Anyway, 15 minutes into the film my heart sinks...there's a scene there that wasn't in the original theatrical release.  The volume fluctuates and the picture quality drops even more.  A few minutes later, another one of these.  Oh God, it looks like the bastardized "Longer" version made for TV.

I consider walking out and asking for my money back...this isn't what I expected. But I decide to stick it out...there are production details in this film that can't be made out on TV that I want to see, and who knows if I'll ever get a chance again.

To add insult to injury, about 70 minutes in, the film jams and the current frame melts.  While they're splicing it, I take the opportunity to point out to the guys in the lobby what print they appear to have. They say it was nearly impossible to find ANY print of this picture.  I shake my head.  This stupid movie made over $100 million in 1979 dollars...you'd think Paramount would have kept a few decent prints of it!

The movie's on again, and just as I'm bracing myself for the worst of the re-inserted cut scenes that I know is coming...suddenly, the film is not the Longer version.  The spacewalk sequence is the original form.  I scratch my head for a moment, then realize what must have happened...this print must be some compilation of reels from the Longer version and the Theatrical Version...a celluloid Frankenstein.

Then, as it's nearing the climax, I notice something...the audience is deadly silent during all the added stuff, but they laugh at the funny bits that were in the original cut. As I always suspected, nobody really cares about the extra crap that was wisely left on the cutting room floor in 1979.

Oh yeah, and 28 years later, McCoy still steals every scene he's in. He gets all the big laughs.

Then, it ends as the Enterprise goes to warp drive with a bang.  The money shot of starship porn, indeed! I feel like I should be smoking a cigarette in the afterglow.

Instead, I cheer the name of Andy Probert, as promised.


Posted by molyneaux at 12:01 AM PDT
Updated: Wednesday, 20 May 2009 1:09 AM PDT
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Make A Little Birdhouse in Your Soul
Topic: Music

They Might Be Giants are touring again.  After washing up after the "starship p0rn" earlier today, I meet Matt and Diana for dinner and drinks at Tommy's, then Diana drops us at the Fillmore.

Unlike last time I saw them, tonight they played some of their best known songs, hitting Anna Ng as the second number, later playing Birdhouse In Your Soul, and ending their second encore with their cover (better known than the original) of Istanbul (Not Constantinople).

I love this band. They're geeky as all get out, but they're clever songwriters. And the great thing about their songs, they're all short, so even if you're hearing one that you don't love, it's over in 2 or 3 minutes and you're on to the next thing.


Posted by molyneaux at 12:01 AM PDT
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Friday, 7 September 2007
It's a Museum... OF THE FUTURE!
Mood:  celebratory
Topic: Vacation

In Seattle with family.

Finally going to the Science Fiction Museum and Hall of Fame.

No photography.  Rats!  I wanted a pic of me with the 6-foot Next Generation Enterprise that my buddy Andy Probert designed.  Alas.

Cool stuff abounds. Models and costumes and robots, oh my.  I particularly like Luke Skywalker's lightsaber suspended a few inches from his severed hand.

My hands-down favorite thing has to be the full size Blade Runner "Spinner" flying car.  I wanna ride!

Afterwards, it's a lunch for my brother in the Space Needle restaurant next door.  I'm reminded of the joke as to why the restaurant in the Space Needle is the best one in Seattle: because it's the only restaurant in Seattle from which you can't see the Space Needle!

 

 


Posted by molyneaux at 12:01 AM PDT
Updated: Wednesday, 26 September 2007 8:22 PM PDT
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Thursday, 6 September 2007
Super...sonic
Mood:  energetic
Topic: Vacation

On my drive to Portland, OR last month the upper portions of Mt. Shasta were lost in the clouds.  On the way back I did get a look at the mountain, but not as good a one as I'd have liked, as the view from I-5 is only okay.  Today I got the most unusual perspective on Shasta...from the air. My flight to Seattle passed just west of the mountain, and I was practically looking straight down at it from 30,000 feet.  You'd think it would look punier from so far above, but you'd be wrong.  The immensity of it and its origins as a volcano are all too apparent from above. Sure, it's dormant, but I couldn't help a fleeting thought of what its erupting would do to the little Alaska Air jet that bore me.

The remainder of the flight was almost as scenic. We flew just west of Crater Lake, and then near Mt. St. Helens.  Did I have my camera ready?  Nooooo...

Arrive in Seattle to meet my brother and family. After shoveling fast food into my face and checking into our hotel we make a beeline for the Museum of Flight.  It's a great museum, with a section devoted to old WWI era aircraft that I loved. The whole place is very comprehensive, with many fine examples; everything from an Italian Monoplane to a Lunar Module!

We walked through the Air Force One that served U.S. Presidents from Ike to Tricky Dick. I resisted the urge to spit where Nixon had parked his flabby arse...but just barely.

I love airplanes. I got into them in Jr. High School, partly through discovering building airplane model kits, and partly through a fascination I developed with the abandoned Boeing Supersonic Transport.  Sadly, since the Concordes've all been grounded, my liklihood of exceeding the speed of sound have been reduced to near nil!

I may never get to ride an SST, but at least I got to walk though one today, as the museum has a Concorde on display.  It's cool to see how tiny the windows are and how narrow the fuselage is, but my one disappointment is that they have plexiglassed off ALL of the seats.  I understand they don't want people sitting all over the place and ruining it, but it would've been nice had they left ONE row available so you could sit down and see if you though it was cramped. 

Then again, how concerned are you with elbow room when crossing the Atlantic in 2.5 hours?

 


Posted by molyneaux at 12:01 AM PDT
Updated: Tuesday, 19 May 2009 10:52 PM PDT
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