Categories
Editorial Photographic Pictorial

OMNI – a new feature from Tristan Versluis

I’ve known and worked with Tristan Versluis for a few years now since I did stills for his FX-heavy short, Pixel, in around 2007. He’s mostly known for his prosthetics work (recent credits include World War Z and Harry Potter & The Deathly Hallows Part I) and has been moving into directing first via self-written shorts and now features.

His first big feature came a couple of years ago, called Not Alone and starring Lucy Benjamin amongst others. Frustratingly, that project seems to have left his control in the edit, taking a somewhat different direction to that originally envisaged. Since then there have been more shorts and now a brand new self-written feature that he’s in full control of, called OMNI.

An alien abduction story, OMNI started shooting in Germany a couple of months ago with Tristan’s core group of previous collaborators, led by Stuart White on cinematography duties, and this month returned to the UK with two night shoots on a rooftop in Hackney Wick. They’re shooting on a couple of different cameras but for this particular shoot the team got access to a Red EPIC and a mini jib arm which injected some real dynamism into the scene, one of the key moments in the film. Speaking of which, I actually know virtually zero about the plot of the film other than that some of the characters witness an extra-terrestrial visitation and one of them gets spirited away. Is Tristan keeping a wickedly tight grip on the secrets in the script, or did he just forget to send me a copy of it? I have a feeling it’s both, which is cool because I like a bit of mystery…

The scenes we were shooting featured Charlotte Hunter and Ray Bullock Jnr, and despite the freezing temperatures (but thankfully little wind or rain!) both put in very moving performances. At some points in the scene Charlotte was lying on the baltic concrete wearing really not very much (no more than the average lady wears to a nightclub, put it that way) and before the camera rolled was visibly shaking with cold; these actors willingly suffered for Tristan’s art – the effect of the staunch loyalty Doctor Versluis instills in those that work with him (he has such a calming, zen-like bedside manner when applying time-consuming prosthetics to actors that the name ‘Doctor Versluis’ was coined and stuck).

So here’s a bunch of my stills from the evening, mostly behind-the-scenes because I think that stuff is always a lot more interesting, and all approved by Tristan for their lack of spoilery content; if you’d like to comment on anything I’m @myglasseye on Twitter. Enjoy, and thanks for visiting.

(just click on images to see them larger without leaving this page)

Categories
Photographic Pictorial

Jacob Proctor’s new short, ‘A Sunny Morning’

While working my way up the ladder of ‘stills photographer’ on movies, I did a lot of short films. Several of the directors I worked with on those shorts have become friends who I’ll go out of my way to work with again, including Tristan Versluis, Ryan Haysom and Jacob Proctor. The first short I did for Jacob was Mother Time (on Vimeo here) a couple of years ago, and then Collectables (photo gallery on my blog here) a year or so later.

He recently wrote and directed a new short, A Sunny Morning, shooting over the course of a weekend in a house in Greenwich (the Art Director, Melanie Light, emptied a lounge and converted it into a bedroom). Like Collectables it features just two characters, played by Sophia Myles and Charlie Cox, and was shot by Director of Photography Trevor Speed.

When the film has completed editing, Jacob intends for it to be a calling card for his directorial skills and has been building an online following around the film and it’s cast using Twitter (follow them here) and a blog-based website (over here).

My involvement started with some concept photography for the website, followed by production stills on set. The film is about a woman called Grace who is on the brink of a life-changing decision following an argument with her husband and jealousy of her best friend’s career success. To create the mood, Jacob wanted to illustrate the website with specially-shot photographs of Grace’s ashtray, books, and a ring lit by soft, natural light and so one Saturday morning around a month before the actual shoot we set up in his own bedroom and shot the arrangement in as many ways as we could think of to give the website designer something to play with.

I wanted to post a few of my own favourites from that day, which you can see below. The film’s Twitter account will be releasing more stills from the set as they accumulate more followers and Facebook friends, so take a moment to add your support and they’ll get released that bit quicker 🙂

Here’s the social network links for the film one more time:

their blog
on Twitter
on Facebook









On-set still, featuring Charlie Cox and Sophia Myles

Thanks for reading – feel free to comment below.

Categories
Editorial Other Photographic

new website a-go-go!

I finally have my new website up and running. It’s pretty much the same as the old one but better, in my opinion, for having finally ditched that hateful chunk of buggy code they call Flash. This means I’ve also had to give up on SlideshowPro and while I’ll miss the very lovely SlideshowPro Director content management system, I will in absolutely no way whatsoever miss working with Flash.

So, goodbye headaches, hello mobile devices! Yes, the new site runs on pretty much any device you care to mention, at last!

It’s running on WordPress using a theme from GraphPaperPress called Sidewinder. This allows me to display my photos in a side-scrolling stream that users have complete control over. No more waiting for the picture you wanted to see to come round again on the slideshow.

It also allows me to use hassle-free menus to display links to individual collections of images, incorporate new features easily with plugins, and all the other lovely stuff that comes with WordPress. Ah, but doesn’t everyone complain that it’s not very stable under pressure? Don’t worry – in the extremely unlikely event that Mr John ‘Daring Fireball’ Gruber links to my site or something, I’ve got W3 Total Cache activated.

So have a look around and let me know if you manage to break it or if anything doesn’t work how it should. I am currently working on a Photoshelter page as well, for easier distribution of images to clients and in case anyone would like to buy prints or license images. Nobody ever does, but what the hell, building the site keeps me quiet of a weekend!

Categories
Editorial Photographic Pictorial

T4 Behind The Scenes Photos

I’m very lucky to have two main jobs, both of which I enjoy – stills photography and television camera operation. I work on T4 as a camera operator a lot, and they just got a new set with lots of colourful neon lights so I was asked if I could bring in my camera and get some behind the scenes and action shots for the studio website. I also had a go at doing some for myself in black and white. I like to use the Nikon D700’s B&W mode. It’s a lot more flexible than most digital camera B&W modes, with extra controls for contrast, brightness, and colour filter to change tones of grey to suit the scene (I usually leave it on orange). The result is a nice punchy B&W with more character than if you just removed all the colour data like most B&W modes do.

(I’d still like to run them through PS for individual tweaks to contrast and brightness but these are all untouched, straight out of the camera.)

Categories
Editorial iOS & Mac reviews Photographic Reviews

Hipstamatic: a comparison of the latest films and lenses

There’s been quite a few Hipstamatic lens/film packs released since I last posted my ‘every lens and film combination’ image last year. Actually, it turns out that a few of them were limited edition and they aren’t available any more. I stopped using Hipstamatic for quite a while and I missed a couple of these, including Melodie and Salvador 84. Personally I think it’s a shame they decided to make limited editions – I’d happily fork over the 59p each for sets that included these lenses so that I could have a complete set.

So, I currently have 9 lenses and 12 films installed in my copy of the app and so I made up a revised table of combinations. I did do a set of shots using one particular combo and then each of the flashes but to be honest I think the flash effects aren’t that great so I made an editorial decision not to bother with them for this, which took long enough as it is! 😉

(click to view large, or see the original over at Flickr)