Archive for March, 2009

Follow Hindsight on Twitter/Facebook

Tuesday, March 31st, 2009

I’m entering the world of social media marketing! The production of Hindsight can now, in addition to this blog, be followed on Twitter and through the official Facebook group. I’ll be tweeting while on location in Connecticut and the Facebook group will be another place to post teaser trailers and behind the scenes clips. Both accounts are public, so feel free to check them out. I’m already making some tweets here and there, and the Facebook group should get some more content once I have a teaser ready.

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Join the Facebook Group

Pre-Production Woes & Inspiration

Tuesday, March 24th, 2009

I was DPing a shoot all weekend, so I took today off work in order to get some pre-production done.  It felt good to sleep in for once, and then wake up to a hot cup of tea.  It’s surprisingly still cold in Boston for being the middle of March.

My goals today were as follows:

  1. Finish my fiscal sponsorship proposal to the Marlborough Arts Center and get some feedback
  2. Finish my working shot list and location/contact list
  3. Write a proposal letter to the family that lives in my old house
  4. Update this website

I did about 50% of those four, but the night is still young.  I got some good feedback on my fiscal sponsorship proposal, but I found that becoming sponsored is more complicated than I imagined.  I need to consider things like ownership, liability, and other IRS legal stuff.  It’s tough to think about the creative aspect of the project, while at the same time thinking about the non-creative stuff.  I feel like my mind can only focus on one thing at a time.  Both are very stressful, so when I try to multi-task (like I did today) I end up becoming frustrated with myself.

But I decided to take a break and watch a film that I had been wanting to see for a while, but just never had time.   It’s a German documentary called, “Our Daily Bread” and I actually found it very inspiring.  The film is essentially wordless.  There are a few scenes where we scene people in conversation, but there are no subtitles for us non-German speaking Americans.  Ultimately the conversations don’t matter because the point of the film is the images.  For 90 minutes, I was engulfed in the utter weirdness/beauty/horror of modern food production.  Because the film has no narration, and no interviews, the images let the audience develop their own reaction.

I’m glad I watched Our Daily Bread today because it provided needed inspiration for what I want to do with Hindsight.  My original idea was to make Hindsight a wordless film, but I was nervous about whether or not I could produce enough images to complete a story or render a theme.  I changed my original idea after seeing some films by Ross McElwee in which narration was paramount to the theme.  Working off that thought, I decided to try and include some interviews with my family.  I think Hindsight will end up being a mixture of two very different approaches to documentary filmmaking.  I can only hope I know how to find the right balance.

Pre-Production Update - Sean Hanley DBA

Monday, March 9th, 2009

Last monday, Emerson College had a snow day and I felt lucky to have some free time to work on pre-production for the film. Here I am at Cambridge City Hall filling out the form to get my DBA certificate.

Creating DBA at Cambridge City Hall

All production related work for Hindsight will now be done under my the new DBA, simply called Sean Hanley DBA.  Pretty original huh?  I then headed over to the bank to create a business account that will handle the production funds.  It felt really great to get these two steps of pre-production done, because they will now allow me to focus on other upcoming steps like raising money and promoting the project.

It also feels good to be self-sufficient and have a production account that will be very organized.  I’m on spring break this week, so I’ll be working at my internship for a few days and doing more pre-production.  I’ll keep this blog updated with each new step.