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Editorial Photographic

some TV exposure for Not Alone

You may recall I worked on a feature for my mate Tristan Versluis a while back, a horror called Not Alone starring Lucy Benjamin. I wrote a wee bit about it here.

Lucy was just on I’m a Celebrity… Get Me Out of Here! in the UK and is doing the publicity circuit now. Tomorrow (Thursday 10th December) she’ll be on The Wright Stuff on five from 9:15am, which I happen to be operating camera on.

Had a quick chat with the producer and it turns out knew about the film and hadn’t got any stills yet, so I was able to hand over a disc of lovely high res pics directly.

The movie isn’t by any means the only thing Lucy will be talking about but it’ll be nice to see Tristan’s baby start to get out into the public. Check it out if you’ve got a moment, 9:15am tomorrow on five.

Cheers for reading!

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Photographic

a pretty cool milestone

1DA_0501.JPGA few weeks back I mentioned that the website for 1 Day had gone live, a movie I did some stills for in 2008. It opens next week and today I arrived at work to discover a bunch of my photos from it on page 3 of The Independent. It turns out the film, which is set in Birmingham and centres on street gang warfare punctuated by rap musical numbers, is being turned down by certain chain cinemas in the city after a West Midlands police officer informally suggested to the manager of the Birmingham Odeon that he shouldn’t show it. The manager then spoke to other cinemas who also agreed not to show it, although there are several others that will.

Anyway, despite the negative connotations of the story itself, it was pretty cool to see several of my shots in print in such a high profile article. On the way home I picked up the latest Empire and found they’d reviewed the film and in so doing had given me my first ever publicity still in print within their covers, which I’m pretty stoked about. I’ve had shots in plenty of listings pages and some industry magazines, which is very satisfying, but Empire is something else so I’m just riding on that little cloud at the moment!

Cheers!

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Categories
Editorial Photographic Pictorial

on the set: last days

ZOM_0010.JPGIt’s that time of year again, when the horror fans gleefully attempt to out-gore each other with impunity and all the theme bars stock up on fake cobwebs and witches hats, and homes across the world welcome back the smell of slowly-rotting, slightly scorched ghoulishly carved pumpkins : it’s (nearly) Hallowe’en!

My mate Ryan Haysom (left, painting a severed hand with home-made blood) loves his gore, and last week signed up for a competition to produce a 3 minute zombie film in 48 hours over the weekend. Unfortunately rain stopped play on Saturday so he bumped everything to Sunday. Given that an edited film had to be in by Monday morning it was going to be impossible to shoot and edit and submit in less than 24 hours but hey, when you’ve got over a dozen zombies turning up and a couple of really nice locations already sorted (and ONE MILLION POUNDS in insurance cover arranged at the insistence of one location owner), you don’t just give up, so off I went on Sunday to document a very fast, dirty and fun shoot in Highgate.

The film is currently called Last Days and follows 3 survivors of a zombie outbreak as they struggle to stay alive – Mark Vincent (who was introduced to me as the title role of Ryan’s first short, the disturbing and impressive LV16), Scarlett Marshall and Sean Turner (who also appeared in Ryan’s second and third shorts, Feral and Fragments, both of which I shot stills for). As the film starts they’ve been chased to a tunnel on a footpath through the woods near Highgate station, and are pursued to an abandoned school where the film reaches its conclusion.

Categories
Editorial Photographic Pictorial

on the set: not alone

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Not Alone writer & director, Tristan Versluis
I first met Tristan Versluis (pictured left) about 2 years ago when I answered a crew-call ad placed in Shooting People for a focus puller. Obviously I’m no focus puller, but I’d been bitten by the unit stills bug doing a few freebies on shorts for friends of friends and was looking for something new to shoot. The ad in question had been placed by Stuart White, the director of photography on Tristan’s short Pixel (2007), and I replied to ask if they needed any production stills on the same expenses-only basis that most short film crews agree to. They did, I signed up, and I ended up shooting not only the production shots but also all the effect and texture reference shots for the CG artists.

Since then Tristan has completed two other shorts, I Love You (2008) and Questions (2009), the former of which I was able to work on as well. If there’s one thing in common with all of these, it’s Tristan’s preferred flavour of gruesome prosthetics effects, unsurprising considering his career as a prosthetics designer on the likes of Hot Fuzz (2007), Sweeney Todd (2007) and Prince Caspian (2008). He’s earned himself the affectionate nickname “Doctor Versluis” amongst friends and actors because of his gentle, methodical ‘bedside manner’ working with actors during the long and tiring process of applying the prosthetics, and he brings the same calming focus to the directorial chair, making it a pleasure to work with him.

For his first feature (self-written, like his shorts) he’s teamed up with Andy Thompson from Dead On Arrival Digital in the producing chair, the writer and director behind The Scar Crow. He’s also made sure to bring along practically all the key crew from his shorts, including Stuart White as Director of Photography, Melanie Light as Production Designer, Tiernan Hanby as 1st AD and Trevor Speed pulling focus, so it felt more like a reunion than a weekend of work.

The movie is called Not Alone and while you can get the full sell on their official website, the story basically follows a troubled young woman (Lucy Benjamin) in 1958 America seeking an escape from haunting memories of a gruesome massacre, and finding completely the opposite at an old cabin out by the coast. Needless to say, it doesn’t go at all well and there’s a lot of blood.

Reading the script I had to wonder if Tristan was deliberately making his life difficult shooting in the UK to recreate 1950’s West Coast USA but on arriving at the location (left) I was extremely impressed with the set. They’ve managed to find and secure an absolutely perfect existing cabin on the Norfolk coast, eerily isolated among windswept fields just yards from a ragged coastline, as well as a pair of beautiful genuine 1950s American vehicles, a Dodge and a Chevrolet, which absolutely sell the setting. Mel Light told me that in just the first few days it was already one of the best-looking productions she’d worked on and peeking at the monitor during takes I’m very excited about seeing the finished film.

Categories
Editorial Photographic

ten great photography blogs

logo.gifI’ve tried to cut down on the amount of stat-checking since my crisis of confidence a couple of months ago, but I do still sneak a look more often than I should, and I keep seeing links from a site called Blogtrepreneur. I’ve always assumed it was just one of those photoblog aggregate sites like VFXY or photoblogs.org.

Anyway I actually clicked the link today and it turns out that in February the guys at Blogtrepreneur listed me in an article entitled Ten Great Photography Blogs, along with some of my own favourites. Here’s what they had to say about my glass eye:

A unique portfolio with portraits, stills and editorial shots that express the unique viewpoint of the artist; one that captures real world images in stark honesty.

… which is nice! Thanks, guys.