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Sunday, February 05, 2012 09:32

Archive for the ‘The Hollow Girl’ Category

General Update – Premieres & Festivals

Sunday, September 19th, 2010

Our feature film Shackled had its premiere in the Tain Theatre in Dundalk on Thursday and was attended by around 300 people, which was absolutely fantastic. The film was very well received and a very good night was had by all. Thanks to everyone who came to show their support and for all the lovely messages and emails we received afterwards.

The Hollow Girl was nominated for three awards at this years Underground Cinema Awards in Killiney last night. It was up for Best Editing, Score and Cinematography. While we didn’t win any of our categories, it was an honour to be nominated and we’ve been told the film was well received by audiences. It is to be featured in the Underground Cinema Roadshow which starts in Naas next week. Thanks to Dave Byrne and his crew for a good night.

The Hollow Girl also had its North American Premiere last night at the Maelstrom International Fantastic Film Festival in Seattle last night. We’re looking forward to hearing audience reactions from the screening. We’ll keep you all updated in that regard!

Hollow Girl Award Nominations!

Tuesday, August 24th, 2010

We are delighted to announce that our short film The Hollow Girl has been nominated for three awards at the Underground Cinema Awards. The film has been nominated for Best Cinematography, Best Score and Best Editing. The awards themselves will take place on Saturday the 18th of September 2010 and more info can be found here: http://www.underground-cinema.com/the2010nominees.htm

Awards Update

Monday, March 8th, 2010

We are happy to announce that Squid Media was one of the three finalists for ‘Best Creative Company’ at the Louth County Enterprise Awards on Friday the 5th of March. Congratulations to the winner of our category, Cathy Prendergast, and to all the other winners on the day. (Details: http://www.lceb.ie/)

Our short film The Hollow Girl was shown at the Dublin Film Fringe Festival on Saturday the 6th of March. Unfortunately we did not pick up any awards, but it was very interesting to see the range of films at the festival, both funded and unfunded (Hollow Girl being in the latter category). Congratulations to all the award winners. Full details here: http://www.filmmakersnetwork.ie/dff/

Hollow Girl Festival News

Thursday, February 25th, 2010

We are delighted to announce that our short film The Hollow Girl has been selected to be screened at the Dublin Film Fringe Festival on March the 6th 2010. Full details are available on the festival website:

http://www.filmmakersnetwork.ie/dff/

‘The Hollow Girl’ is on IMDB

Thursday, December 10th, 2009

We’re very happy to announce that The Hollow Girl has been awarded an IMDB page (Click here to go there now!)
(more…)

The Hollow Girl Premiere

Friday, October 2nd, 2009

Thank you very much to everyone who attended the premiere of The Hollow Girl last night. There was a great turnout and we got a lot of great feedback. Plenty of compliments to keep our hearts glowing and a few constructive critiques to keep us learning! All in all it was a great night and everyone had a great time.

Thank you to everyone who made this film possible. We couldn’t have done it without you! :)

ADR tips

Monday, September 7th, 2009

Hey guys, I’ve been cleaning up some of the dialogue in Hollow Girl, and I thought I’d share some tips for ADRing1. ADR is usually employed to clean up dialogue, but we were able to use it to rework the story, by modifiying Max’s lines. Whatever reason you are ADRing, here are some tips I’d recommend for the best end result:

  1. It is going to be one of the last things you do with the film and certainly if you do end up doing ADR make certain your edit is 100% locked. In our case we had a lipless character2, so we could change anything he said after the edit was locked. If you are in similar situation, then make sure their dialogue is locked too!
  2. Maybe ADR can be done cheaply, but cheap sounding dialogue is likely why you are ADRing in the first place. Dig into your pockets and go somewhere that has a proper sound booth to get clean audio. We used The Bright Room up at DKIT. It is a dry hire suite, so you’ll need to find an engineer who can work pro tools. They can usually provide a few leads.
  3. At the very least you’ll want a to take a copy of your film so the actor can hear the lines they are re-recording, as well as hear how they delivered them. It can help for them to see their performance too. An up to date script will be welcome too.
  4. During the re-record, break down your dialogue into managable section, and anytime there is a pause of anything more than, say, a second, try to record them seperatly. At this stage you want to get it sounding as similar as possible to the original delivery – same tone, inflection, etc. The closer you can get it to original in terms of tempo, the better too. But you may find that no matter how hard you try they won’t sync perfectly – fret not!
  5. For that is where the kind folks at Synchro Arts come in. They have created a program called VocAlign which will magically align up your ADR track to your guide track (the original dialogue). The below example isn’t so much for ADR, but for syncing the voice of the Hollow Girl to Max.
    Check it out before being sync’d:

    Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

    Dialogue is clean, but out of sync. Well some VocAlign tweaking3 and:

    Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

    Pretty saucy eh?

  6. Drop your newly aligned ADR track into your audio editing software and get it into place. If you are using one of the plugin versions of VocAlign you won’t have to do this, but I was using the stand-alone version, so I did.
  7. Listen and watch back over it all to make sure it’s all in the right place!
  8. Crack open a beer and praise yourself for a job well done – you should now have wounderful sounding and perfectly in sync dialogue!

_______________________________________________________________________________
1 Automated Dialogue Replacement
2 Max. Obviously :P
3 It is easy to use software, so I’m not going into it, but let me just say that you want to make sure any sizable gaps are removed from your audio. You won’t be able to sync up dialogue properly if you have any dead space before, during or after the recording on either your guide track or dubbing track.

Hollow Girl Posters

Thursday, August 6th, 2009

OK, so I said I would update weekly – then we had another bout of technical issues1, and I figured you were all getting sick of my contast updates of “It’s almost ready”, so decided to hold off until I had something worthwhile to share, add or whatnot.

And here we are – with the posters for the Hollow Girl underway I thought I would post them here for some feedback. Click on the image for a better look:

The Hollow Girl - landscape Poster The Hollow Girl - portrait Poster

These went through a few designs, with images of the tree and the charm on them, but after Ambrose and I looked at other horror movie posters we found that they are better if have some image of the creeper2 on them.
Steve3 and I are looking into some tag lines4 and if we create one we like I’ll insert it somewhere on these posters.

So any thoughts? Would you go see this film based on these posters? Fancy throwing you own ideas for a tag line into the melting pot?
_______________________________________________________________________________
1 Not to worry – it all seems to be back on track!
2 I’ve decided randomly to use this as a generic term for the villain of horror movies
3 Writer/Producer Steve
4 That one liner thing you see on posters

Visual Effects and Grading

Friday, July 10th, 2009

I want to share with you some of the things that are happening in post production with HG. I have included four different scenes from the film in their various stages.
The images are compressed for the web and are incomplete, so please excuse the quality.

1-clean
figure 1a – clean plate of a shot from the opening atmosphere montage

1-fx
figure 1b – Vfx – colours have been changed to make it more gloomy & early morning

1-grade
figure 1c – grade – the whites and blacks have been crushed to give better contrast. The colours have been pushed into a murky blue green to add an eerie atmosphere

2-clean
figure 2a – another clean plate of a shot from the opening atmosphere montage

2-grade
figure 2b – grade – Again, the whites and blacks have been crushed to give better contrast and the colours have been pushed into a murky blue green to add an eerie atmosphere

3-clean
figure 3a – clean plate of the kids coming out to play in the field. Our focus shoul dbe Kate (the girl at the back in green), but the pink top at the front draws the eye to it

3-fx
figure 3b – Vfx – we have pulled out the colours of the girl’s top, muting it. Now she fits the colour palette of the other extras and hopefully the eye will be drawn back to Kate

3-grade
figure 3c – grade – a less extreme version of the earlier green grades – still holds a somewhat gloomy atmosphere but also, when combined with how the camera moves, emphasises Kate as her green natural colour palette is made that little bit more vivid (hard to see in a still image, you’re gonna have to trust me on this ;) )

4-clean
figure 4a – clean plate of the green screen sequence when the camera moves into the car while they are driving

4-bgplate
figure 4b – background plate shot from a moving car

4-fx1
figure 4c – Vfx – basic compositing of the background plate behind the main image. Not the most convincing of fx, but it would probably go unnoticed as is

4-fx2
figure 4d – Vfx – selling the shot. We have added more blur to the background to fit the depth of field used in the rest of the film. Also some ligft wrap has been added around the window frame. Then the colours of the main plate have been shifted to match the background plate – afterall light reflects off it’s environment. Finally a series of moving images, such as branches have been added over the main image to simulate light blockages as in a real car. You can just about make one out above – a nice technique for selling the shot as long as it isn’t overused

4-grade
figure 4e – grade – finally the foreground and background plates have been graded to make it late evening, which it is in the script

Anyways, once the full film is graded, grain and a slight vignette will be added to complete that ‘film’ look.

So, what do you think?