Tuesday, 30 April 2019

You know a good thing when you see it -

The support we're getting through  https://www.crowdfunder.co.uk/heartsfelled is wonderful.
Of course Zak Wylde productions have proven their talent and skills already in the opening sequence for Heartsfelled, The Identity Stealer - so it's not hard to understand why people want to pre-order the dvd or get their T shirt or even get the chance to visit us on site during this summer's filming.  
Clearly you all know a good thing when you see it.
Truly, I am thrilled. 


 


Thursday, 25 April 2019

Stunning Action Amy, a very special member of our cast

I don't know about you but I have a feeling Amy is going to be very popular with our followers and viewers. 

She's a talented artist in her own right as you can see if you visit her facebook page here: https://www.facebook.com/AmyHobbsArtist/

From her art, you will also see that she is a big fan of J. K Rowling's Harry Potter, Tolkien's Lord of the Rings, and G R R Martin's Game of Thrones. She's a bit of Whovian too and loves it when she gets the opportunity to play the role of Amy Pond at BBC public events . . . she has the legs, trust me.



As if being a talented artist, looking gorgeous in her costume and being an excellent high energy actress isn't enough, Amy is also a serious student of English Backswording and other Martial Arts.

And, on top of all that . . . she is at the beginning of her academic sciences career to train as a medical doctor.  She tells me that her greatest achievement so far is earning offers of places in three different universities. 

Oh, and if you're wondering about her skills with that sword or thinking she looks a bit fierce, Amy also tells me that she hates ignorance and olives!

Filming with Amy this summer is going to be high energy fun I'm very sure.





Monday, 15 April 2019

A Secret Location ... somewhere in deepest Bedfordshire

Yesterday I had a wonderful meeting with Pete and Zak - Director and Director of Photography on the Heartsfelled Project.
Script amendments agreed and everybody smiling, soon I shall be working through these with Heartsfelled the Storyteller himself.
Also, my sincere thanks to Mr. Tom Cree for our great news about the possibility of a much more convenient location for the next few rounds of shooting.  Let's hope this one works out, there's more to this secret location than shown here, but  I am very excited by what I know about it so far. Here's a sneak preview of what it looks like when film-makers go location scouting:

Just imagine our hero-warrior slaying the beautiful, tricksy, ghostly demon here . . .
. . . or, here . . .














And think what sneaky battle moves our pack of wolves will try to execute in here . . .

. . . or maybe here . . . 



Yikes!  Is that a wicked wolf-demon disguised as a beautiful woman?  Warriors beware.

























Hey . . . wild boar demon battles have been known to happen in places like this -




















 . . . Oh no! What terrible thing is our Director running away from here?  Look, he's calling for help . . .














So, don't forget to "follow" this blog for updates, and visit our youtube channel and click "like on our intro sequence : https://youtu.be/YirA1M6O9MU

Monday, 8 April 2019

Johnny Who?

I am so proud of the crew working with me on the Heartsfelled project.
Of course, they get up to all sorts of professionally, high standard stuff in the big-wide movie industry.  But, for many weekends in the year, they give their time and HUGE amounts of energy to making not-for-profit films for Johnny Who Entertainment.  The skills involved in filming, editing (don't worry, Zak will sort it out in 'Post Edit'), and the dedication and energy that go into these productions are second to none.  The Johnny Who Entertainments films are popular because they are fantastically good fun.

Here on the Heartsfelled project, I am waiting for masks to go with costumes, a meeting to prepare for the summer's shoots and beyond.  Oh, and inspiration for a bit of writing that is not at all related but needs to get done(!)   So whilst there is nothing much new to show from here why don't you have a look at our introduction trailer and also admire the Johnny Who Entertainments / Zak Wylde Productions' work linked below.

Oh, and before you go look, PLEASE, pretty please, click "like" in YouTube - it helps everybody a lot and lets us know that someone paid us a visit. :)

Look and 'like', how gorgeous our introduction, I just can't wait to see how the main body of this film looks:

https://youtu.be/YirA1M6O9MU


Heeeeeeere's Johnny Who?

https://youtu.be/QEDyJrGUIvM




Saturday, 16 March 2019

Watch the first sequence of our movie!

Hey - why not click to watch this on YouTube and give us a boost by clicking "like" while you're there?!
Whether you watch it there or here - please do admire the fabulous work or our actors, director and director-of-photography.  It's a wonderful editing job too.  I think we can guarantee that the main body of this work will be real quality.
ENJOY



Sunday, 10 March 2019

Exclusive merchandise now available!

Working on this project is such a privilege and it is exciting.
We want to share our love for Heartsfelled, so we've designed a bunch of goodies with our exclusive Heartsfelled logo that you can buy.
ENJOY

 Exclusive Goodies


Friday, 8 March 2019

Mystical, Magical Monsters!

Well, well, well.
It's been a fun week for me gathering costume measurements, designing half-masks for our demons - these are going to be made for us by a master leather worker.
The gorgeous tooled leather masks will really define our three demons.  When I can, of course, I'll show you some images.
It fascinates me to think of times when people couldn't really understand or explain drought, crop failures, eclipses or extremes of weather.   In order to make the difficulties of their lives make sense, I suppose, it was natural for people to put their faith in many deities.   Earth gods and demons could easily be thanked or blamed!
And so, in my original poem and now in our film, it is demons who travel in the guise of wild animals who come, seemingly in friendship, to the village where our hero Fyrdhwaet resides.  The village Chieftan does not recognise the signs of danger and disaster follows, drought, eclipse and crop failure threaten the people's very lives.  Brave Fyrdhwaet slays each wicked demon all on his own.
As Hearsfelled tells us this tale we will get to see the action and adventures played out.  Designing for these mystical, magical events is such fun.
If you want to follow our progress then please like and follow this Blog.
If you haven't already seen our establishing sequence that introduces Heartfelled's existence and The Ghosts of Times Past that have populated his stories for centuries then have a look now.  This is a real showcase of the skills of our film crew and costumier as well as the lovely ghosts themselves.  If you do visit out YouTube clip click 'like' before you leave 😊
Thank you.
https://youtu.be/YirA1M6O9MU

Sunday, 3 March 2019

Ladies and Gentlemen, may I proudly present -

I'm so excited, I just got back from spending a lovely afternoon with our storyteller, Hearsfelled, otherwise known as Nigel Gant.  I was mesmerised when he read through the script in rehearsal with me.  The project is going from strength to strength.
And then -
Look what was waiting for me when I got home!
This is the introductory sequence for our film.
It is designed to establish the nature and timelessness of our Storyteller and to draw you into the setting within which he exists.
The piece is called "The Ghosts of Times Past".   You see the ghosts spanning eleven centuries of occupation of that location, they are the stories of times past ...
I am so proud of the skilful filming and editing executed to perfection by Team Holland at Zak Wylde Productions.
I am equally proud to have been entrusted with Julia Gant's gorgeous wardrobe of costumes, most of which she hand stitched herself and all of which are period perfect.  Just - wow!
Keep following this blog to find out what does happen when you step through the right door . . . in the meantime, enjoy:

Saturday, 23 February 2019

Great progress

It's hard to write a post that says I've great stuff to share but cannot release it to you quite yet!
Watch this space, we are making great progress and pretty soon I will be able to show you what I mean.
In the meantime "follow" this blog so that you don't miss out!

Friday, 8 February 2019

Good designs are a-coming

So
It's Friday, it's raining but I am warm and cozy and there are so many good things gathering around me!
A long-delayed, but worthwhile waiting for, the ghost-demon costume is now on its way to us.  When it gets here we'll get to work producing illustrations and looking at ways to share this through merchandising as well as deciding how to make the most of it during filming!

Other costume elements are now in the design workshop and I am very happy to be pushing the progress of these.   We have wild wolves and wild-boar demons in the making. Scary stuff . . . "grrr"!  And seeing our hero, Fyrdwhaet, do battle with these will be such a big treat.

Elsewhere in the world our gorgeous storyteller, Heartsfelled, is getting geared up with practicing the storytelling so that he can do a proper-good job of laying down a voice track in the studio, in March.  That will be fun and we will no-doubt share some of the fun right here when it's time.

As for me?  Well, I'm busy being a writer, artist, poet and all those good things that made this project happen in the first place!

Follow this blog ... don't miss the exciting news I'm waiting for!



Sunday, 27 January 2019

Let me tell you about the importance of editing . . .

As some of you might know, one of my jobs is teaching film studies to 16-18 year olds. 
There are lots of reasons for me to value this job, and I do. 
You see, one of the most effective ways to engage a 16-18 year old with new and important knowledge is to make it really accessible to them. 
Consider what they can learn in terms of social variety, social behaviours, world politics, economics, right and wrong!  In film studies language we talk about these concepts as "messages and values".  My students watch a variety of film from a variety of places and a variety of eras.  We learn about the Weimar Republic and the German history of the 1920s and 30s in studying Expressionist films such as  Metropolis, for example.  Other early movie productions from other countries such as Strike, Battleship Potemkin, or French Impressionist movies or Japanese works from the likes of Yasujiro Ozu.  Oh, and what about Nosferatu - there is so much more to the context, messages and values of this movie than it simply being a un-sanctioned copy of the Stoker family's Dracula story.   From later eras, we delve into the worlds created by great directors such as Kubick, Spielberg, Lucas, Ford . . . the list is long.   We analyze people's behavior in movies like Fincher's Fight Club, or Alex Garland's Ex-Machina. We worry over societies failings through films such as the Meirelles's City of God, or Chazelle's Whiplash.   We marvel at how Miller and his crew made us think, and think hard about the world through Mad Max (which, astonishingly, was made on a budget of less than $400,000aus.) 
Then there's the whole documentary film discussion!  One of the most significant things we must learn, both when we learn about film and when we learn through film, is the importance of editing!
Up until the last decade or so editing was done by physically cutting a piece of 35mm film at the point where a sequence should start, again at the end of that sequence and then "splice" or basically tape it to the beginning of the next sequence and so-on.  For the greater majority of films this required the skills to create "Continuity".  You need a seamless transition from one view to the next.   Sometimes the edit would take us from one room to another or one place to another, and at others it simply allows us to turn our heads from one character to another (Shot-reverse-shot).  The cameraman and Director and all their accompanying crew go about filming the events (or plot points) that make up the story they want to tell, the editor cuts and joins the sequences in such a way that any spectator can watch comfortably and, most importantly, understand the messages and values that are being delivered.
Now let's add a layer of complication for the editor ... there is much more than visual imagery, pace of action, purpose of action or emotional drive to consider!  The editor has to keep in mind music and dialogue.  Sometimes music is scored and added after the film has been edited, occasionally, as with Spielberg's ET, the edits are shifted, manipulated to match the music.  Those are the directors' choices by and large.  With dialogue it gets a bit more tricky, you can't just cut off part of the dialogue because that gives you a better transition from one image to another ... or can you?! 
There's a lot to think about here and I can only hope to wet your appetite, encourage you to think about the myriad people behind the fine finishes of a good movie and, if you feel so inclined, learn a little more about the complexities of the work they do so well.  If you're young there could even be a whole new, undiscovered world of careers out there for you to explore!  One of the points I have set out to make here, is that what you see on film, the moods film evokes, the thoughts a film inspires can only, in truth, be fully effective for you the spectator, if that film has been well edited.  How truthful a documentary will be, how exciting a chase scene or a fantasy event or any act of romance - it all rests on all the skills of all the crew AND then their editors.
Having said all of that, I want to comment on the work of our cinematographer for the Heartsfelled project, Zak Holland, who is also our Editor.  I've just viewed his first piece of editing for our opening sequence.  This is a sequence where Zak had to work through complex visuals (the ghosts of times past) set in different sites around our primary film location; he had to contend with the fact that we filmed all in one, long, hot and very sunny day (great you might think but that means that the sun moved, the light changed and the shadows changed, for example, all through the day! In editing you have to find a way to match not only action but light values and colours too).  On top of this he had to run the timings of each edit to match both voice-over narration and a particular piece of music.  I want to go on record here as saying that, in my humble opinion, Zak's work is exemplary.  This young man is a genius film-maker in the making.  From this, and other examples I've seen of what Zak can make happen, I do believe people will be talking about him and his work in the not too distant future and for a long time to come.  
Thanks Zak and - wow!