CREWING FOR MOVIES 2 – AN EXPERIENCE

The Poltergeist Movie: Part One (script development)

Somewhere in the middle of 2010, I put an advert on the New Zealand Art and Creative Website called The Big Idea – my advert described an opportunity to make a short movie without a budget – my ad explicitly stated that I had a mini digital video camera (not professional standard, but not shoddy – Canon MVX100i) and that I valued keenness over experience – and that due to there being no budget, no one was getting paid. There were ten or so responses to the advert. When I held a meeting to discuss the project, about nine people showed up.

I had never run a meeting before, so I was making it up as I went along. I stated as much and when asked whether there was a script and what the script would be about, my response was that no, I specifically had decided not to write a script for the project. All of my big ideas for movies were committed to major projects – novels and such. I was interested in overseeing the script process, but I wanted to get ideas for what to shoot from the team. This was to be a somewhat democratic process.

Four people showed up to the second meeting – this was my crew.

At first, most people hung back from the conversation, unsure if any contribution might be bullied down and ignored. But eventually, after a few beers, people began to open up. I was pushing the attitude that the subject and premise of the movie really didn’t matter. It would all come down to the script and the implementation. It never matters what the movie is about, or what your story’s starting point is. This seemed to take the pressure off coming up with ideas and people started contributing.

The biggest push was for some kind of suspense movie with – for example an alien invasion. Keeping in mind that we had no budget, we had a few goes at trying to figure out how we might shoot something like that, without it looking lame. We agreed the best way to do any movie of that kind would be by showing as little of the “creature” as possible as in Ridley Scott’s Alien.

Eventually it was decided that there was no way to make a realistic alien on a zero budget, so I had the idea of making the creature a poltergeist, instead of an alien. And we began to turn over ideas about how we could shoot a poltergeist and what might happen in the film. After the meeting I secluded myself for a few weeks, writing an eight-page script – a classmate of mine who was at the meeting, and myself were taking it in turns to write the script for the shorts we were going to make. It was my turn, and every couple of days, I emailed a copy of the script in progress to everybody who was involved in this project.

I took notes and suggestions on board and the girl who was keen to direct the movie found us some actors, while one of the guys did some SFX research so we could have some cool things happen in the story. – As it wasn’t going to be a dialogue movie and short films have to engage the audience in some way, in a short time. Usually there isn’t much opportunity for a complex plot.

Published by pflynt

My sense of humour is absurdist, inwardly bleak, caustic and morose, self-referential, rebellious and defiant, even in some cases sadistic, but overall sincere and even in the tragedies, hopeful.

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