Thursday, March 29, 2012

Behind the Scenes 2: Desert Wasteland

Here is a behind the scenes look at day 4 of Desert Wasteland:

 

Jade Diaz and Kasey Seats were all smiles for the dating montage
Our third day of shooting was for a dating montage between MJ and Steve (played by Jade Diaz and Kasey Seats) 



 Our challenge today was to effectively show the passage of time in one day of shooting.


One of our keys components of portraying this time passage was having movement in each shot. We began with a night scene on a sliding rack focus shot.
 
A morning breakfast scene
Stepney, also on sound today, finds a comfortable hidden spot for the shot


Rubio and Brindis set up a passage of time shot




We quickly moved throughout the day with actors changing wardrobe after each shot. Our most difficult shot included a pan showing the passage of time with the actors in different spots. While the actors changed wardrobe, natural shadows and lighting were quickly changing at an alarming rate. We moved as quickly as possible and were able to get our shot. 





MJ and Steve once shared love

The owners of a nearby horse ranch were kind enough to allow us to shoot a few shots there. Unfortunately, our AD Ronnie Stepney is allergic to horses, and had to sit this one out. 







Script Supervisor Melissa Aragon goes over daily notes
All in all, we had a successful day of production- which Camera Hogs crew celebrated with steaks afterwards... : )
Aragon prepares a take close to the ranch horses

 

Tuesday, March 27, 2012

Behind the Scenes: Desert Wasteland

Here's a peek behind the scenes of Desert Wasteland Day 3:

Joseph Inveire captures sound as the Camera Hogs crew surrounds the car


Our third day began on a bright and early morning on a ranch in the desert.


In this scene, our main character Melania Jovino (aka M.J played by Jade Diaz) is castigated by two men of the cartel, El Jefe and El Ocho(Basil Pena & Richard Beserra).
Levi Hart bounces light onto Jefe as Marilyn Brindis captures a POV shot

Two cameras (Rubio and Brindis) were used to film this scene from different angles inside and outside of the car. The scene begain with Rubio on a crane from atop a sandy hill and Brindis covering shots from inside the car.


Natural light and bounce boards were used to light our actors.


Script supervisor Melissa Aragon attentively watches the scene
The scene flowed smoothly the entire morning, ending with Rubio on a steadycam and Brindis getting static close-ups.





 

 

 




After a nice 5 hour break, the crew was back to work for our second desert scene...This time at night.

 

 

Positioning cars for the shot

Our desert night scene was our toughest scene yet. 


Our first obstacle was figuring a way to effectively light the scene, as we were unable to obtain a quiet and reliable generator that could power sufficient light.


We instead improvised using headlights of cars, a large fire, and very low lens aperatures.
   

Actors rehearse around the fire while cars get into position
By positioning the cars in a half circle around the fire, we were able to capture desirable high contrast lighting to fit this intense scene.

After a long and careful application of makeup, (courtesy of Gary Vau Jr.) actor Kasey Seats is ready to be mangled... "Playing the lead role of Steve is completely different than my other roles," Seats remarked. In this scene Steve gets wiped out by MJ and her cronies. "I like being the bad guy for once."
Actor Kasey Seats gets the beating of a lifetime
Our scene seemed to be flowing nicely until we ran into another obstacle... The cars could not sustain the light for as long as we needed- batteries began dying. We began a system of running cars between takes and jumping the ones that needed it.

What a great crew and cast! We were able to shoot this intensly lit scene thanks to everyone's much appreciated effort and work!

 Camera Hogs gives a huge thanks to everyone that came out and helped work on this set!

Saturday, March 24, 2012

Updates!

It has been a few weeks since our last post- as Camera Hogs have been diligently working on our very own production, Desert Wasteland. Here's a sneak peek behind the scenes under production:



Carlos Rubio setting up the steady-cam


 

 

Our first two nights consisted of two party scenes, both exterior night shoots.


A Camera Hogs Moon

To light these night scenes, Rubio devised and
constructed a synthetic moon with a 1K off
an 8X8 bounce board .



 
 
Our AD Ronnie Stepney knows how to get the party started


























  




To further light the scene, we built a small camfire  (this also kept our actors and extras warm and happy).