Archive for April, 2009

Fan Fiction vs. Ripoff

Monday, April 27th, 2009

Last year in Cannes Film Festival me and Essi went over to the Palais des Festivals, the main building where the Film Market was set up to. The Market, in short, is a place where production or sales companies present their film productions, and buyers (for example, distributors) make deals and acquire distribution rights. It was the first time for me and Essi in such a huge market, and the sheer amount of films in production, in distribution and in development was just overwhelming.

The most fascinating thing we bounced into were the films we instantly identified as being complete, total ripoffs of great films with a strong franchise, trying just to ride at their marketing and fool people to think they are the the right ones. Last year, the biggest thing in Cannes was, of course, the new Indiana Jones film, and we were shocked to find how unscrupulous attempts there were made to copy and ride the great Spielberg franchise. Jack Hunter, “Indiana Jones without Ford, Spielberg or budget”, was the name that got us all excited about, and as we dug deeper into the subject, we got to know a production house called The Asylum, solely focused on doing films like this. Ripoffs – or, mockbusters, as they are often dubbed.

This led me wonder what’s the main, big difference between my first feature, Star Wreck, and films like The Terminators, Transmorphers, Allan Quatermain and the Temple of Skulls, or AVH: Alien Vs. Hunter. Looking at the bigger picture, we started to wonder what’s the main difference between Fan Fiction and Ripoff?

Similarities are definitively striking:

THE SIMILARITIES

1ridingthefranchise

We both, fan fiction filmmakers and ripoff-filmmakers ride on an existing franchise that has been created by great filmmakers, nursed by writers, producers and directors to make it’s way to the heart of millions of people around the world. By tapping into this vein, instead of trying to build something completely original, we skip this tedious and most uncertain process of filmmaking, and jump right into the middle of a blooming concept with already-built fanbase tuned to consume whatever the franchise has to offer.

2makingmoney

What’s even worse, we both aim to make money with our productions – films based on other people’s hard work. The difference, though, is quite big: wherein most of the fan fiction is distributed over the Internet for more or less free, the mockbusters are directly slammed into DVD and rolled over to markets into the discount shelves right next to the original productions, or into video rental stores to fool the hasty customers to pick them instead of originals. But nevertheless, we make money with them, whether it’s by selling merchandise, DVDs, or just plain pay-to-support, we’re getting money based on work made by others.

3copyingthecontent

To make the circle perfect, both fan films and the ripoffs copy most of their content from the existing brand, both visually and storywise. The characters have close resemblance to the originals and the main visual elements like space ships or monsters are much like in the original ones. Fan Fiction usually goes even further with this, by taking the exact original elements – like names, 3D-models and even music – and use them quite nonchalantly. The ripoffs are usually a bit more discreet on this – not because they believe it’s wrong, but because they want to avoid the lawsuits. And they are quite good at it, crawling at the grey area.

Uhh, that makes me feel bad. But what makes us different, then? Is my work more respectable than someone else’s, or am I just another ripoff artist?

THE DIFFERENCES

1inspirationmotivation

The reason we, the fan fiction filmmakers, do these films is because we love the originals so hard that we want to expand the story, world and characters laid out by others before us. Parody and fan fiction are the biggest complements that can be given to a filmmaker – works that prove that whatever they’ve done has inspired others so hard that they want to give their shot at it. We’re not in it to exploit, but to expand.

2forquality

One of the most important points the fan fiction filmmakers aim at is the quality of their replicant. Fan films are, when done right, usually of the highest possible quality, made with a lot of love, a lot of background research and a lot of effort to reach at least close to the level of the original. The ripoff filmmakers just want to make a cool poster and enough decent-quality shots to make a trailer that might fool somebody, but usually rest of the film is just utter crap, disrespecting the original in the most terrible ways.

3thehonesty

One thing which I believe when working on a fan film is definitively honesty. I want to state out loud that this is not the original, but a work inspired by the original and made by fans, for the fans, not to exploit the franchise but to pump more life into it. We’re not claiming we’ve done something original, but we’re saying that what we’ve done is a work of love towards the original, and should not be mistaken for anything else.

The reason I started writing this entry was because today I bumped into one of the most interesting, intriguing and highest-quality fan fiction films ever made: The Hunt for Gollum. It’s fan fiction in two levels: first, it explores a story left untold by J.R.R. Tolkien, and it’s directed, acted, edited and scored with a close resemblance to Peter Jackson‘s awesome Lord of the Rings film trilogy. The trailer is quite stunning, and the 40-minute film will be released on May 3rd at Scifi London film festival.

I’m definitively looking for this one, just check out the trailer:


Trailer 2 – The Hunt For Gollum at SCI-FI-LONDON
by HuntForGollum

Benchmark

Thursday, April 23rd, 2009

Ok, here’s something quite amazing. Take a look at it, and make it a benchmark for whatever you’re trying to accomplish.

(Via BoingBoing).

Zombie Monday!

Monday, April 20th, 2009

Good morning, everyone! Zombie Room starts the sunny but chilly Monday with some Zombie Pirates!

 

Also, don’t forget the Helsinki Zombie Walk!

Top 10 Directorial Debuts of All Time

Saturday, April 18th, 2009

top10directorialdebutsofalltime

I was watching this film the other day called Lars and the Real Girl, a story about a man who falls in love with a doll. It´s directed by Craig Gillespie and it was his directorial debut feature film. I thought it was a great movie, especially for a first time director. Also I´m eagerly anticipating Duncan Jones´s debut feature film Moon (although I´m guessing it won´t be coming to cinemas near you any time soon…). A few days ago I started thinking about other great debut feature films and this list is what I came up with.

donniedarkoDONNIE DARKO directed by Richard Kelly

Donnie Darko reached cult status almost instantly when it came out. And why not, it is a brilliant film. But I have sometimes wondered if Richard Kelly just got really lucky with Donnie Darko… If you compare Donnie Darko to his second feature, Southland Tales, the difference could be measured in light years. Never the less Richard Kelly is definitely one of the most interesting film makers today and hopefully he will get his shit together in his next movie. Donnie Darko also made Jake Gyllenhaal the star he is today.

kidsKIDS directed by Larry Clark

For me Kids is still one of the best movies ever made about teenagers. Oh man, those kids still give me the creeps. Director Larry Clark has made a career telling stories about young people and their problems. Usually quite disturbingly. He has never been afraid to handle touchy subjects and no tabu is too tabu for him. Still I believe Kids is his best work to date.

amoresperrosAMORES PERROS directed by Alejandro González Iñárritu

Amores Perros is the perfect debut film for a non english speaking film maker. It is not easy to break to the international market, I can tell you that. But in order to do that, you need an exceptional movie that is so good it doesn´t matter what language is spoken. For the record I don´t have a problem with subtitles or anything like that, I´m just saying this in general. Amores Perros has a complex story and huge ensemble cast, but it stays in control trough out the film. Not bad a for first movie. After Amores Perros director Iñárritu went on to doing english language films like 21 Grams and Babel.

eraserhead2ERASERHEAD directed by David Lynch

David Lynch really fought to get this film made and a good thing he did. In addition to his grand he got from school, Lynch used money from friends and family and he even took a paper route to finish it. As you know the end result looks amazing and it feels like watching a beautiful, but surreal nightmare. You can really see his ambition and hard work in the movie and it most definitely paid out.  He has had an amazing career always staying true to his roots and his own vision. There is no questing about it, that Lynch is one of the only true visionaries of our time.

piPI directed by Darren Aronofsky

Darren Aronofsky won a bunch of awards with his debut film Pi. He then went on doing a movie called Requiem for a Dream which was also very pressing much like Pi. After these two movies people thought they knew Aronofsky as this fast cut editing visual genius, but as it turns out he had a much bigger range of impressing himself trough his lens. The Fountain wasn´t very well received, but I think it was amazing. The Wrestler was also a very different film compared to the others (in my opinion it was Aronofsky best work to date). So I can´t wait to see how a remake of the classic RoboCop molds in his hands.

beingjohnmalkovichBEING JOHN MALKOVICH directed by Spike Jonze

Being John Malkovich is actually one of my favorite movies ever. It is a flawless combination of the perfect script (written by Charlie Kaufman) and a visionary director. Jonze and Kaufman have also collaborated on Adaptation. Like you may have noticed we here at Zombie Room are also super psyched about  his newest work Where the Wild Things Are. Check out our posts on the subject here and here.

reservoirdogsRESERVOIR DOGS directed by Quentin Tarantino

When Reservoir Dogs came out it was clear that it wouldn´t be the last we hear from director Tarantino. The movie portrays what happens before and after a jewel heist gone seriously bad, but not the heist itself. At that time I thought no one could top a movie like that, but then only two years later along came Pulp Fiction and Tarantino became a household name. Not easy for a director by the way. Now I´m eagerly anticipating his new nazi epic Inglourious Basterds.

americanbeautyAMERICAN BEAUTY directed by Sam Mendes

Sam Mendes instantly became one of the top directors in the world with his debut feature American Beauty. This was actually also the writing debut for screenwriter Alan Ball. Hopefully they will collaborate again some day. Mendes has directed four feature films now and all of them are very good. American Beauty is still his best work, although Revolutionary Road came pretty damn close.

lesquatrecentscoupsLES QUATRE CENTS COUPS directed by François Truffaut

Les quatre cents coups (The 400 Blows) is one of the defining films of the French New Wave and it displays many of the characteristics of the movement. It is a semi-autobiographical film, reflecting events of Truffaut’s and his friend’s lives. The English title is a straight translation of the French one, but it misses its meaning, as the French title refers to the expression “faire les quatre cents coups”, which means “to raise hell”.

citizen-kaneCITIZEN KANE directed by Orson Welles

It was crystal clear for me who would get 1st place on this list. Citizen Kane is voted best movie of all time I don´t know how many times and it still is one of the greatest stories ever told. It was nominated for an Academy Award in nine categories, but won only for Best Original Screenplay (by Herman Mankiewicz and Welles). Although Orson Welles went on having a great career, this film is the one he will always be remembered from.

WHO DIDN´T MAKE THE CUT…

I also want to give credit to a few more great debut films that didn´t quite fit into the list, but are true movie gems.

CONTROL directed by Anton Corbijn

CLERKS. directed by Kevin Smith

SYNEGDONE, NEW YORK directed by Charlie Kaufman

IN BRUGES directed by Martin McDonagh

LARS AND THE REAL GIRL directed by Craig Gillespie

THE STRANGERS directed by Bryan Bertino

There are of course many many more great debuts out there, but I had to choose 10, so I´m sticking with them. If you think I have left something important out, I would love to hear your opinions.

- Essi

New Poster And Images For Where the Wild Things Are

Friday, April 17th, 2009

We here at Zombie Room are totally in love with Spike Jonzes new film Where the Wild Things Are. We are keeping a close eye on this one and we will be posting news etc. as they appear. Here is the amazing looking new poster and some images.

where_the_wild_things_are_1

where_the_wild_things_are_2where_the_wild_things_are_4where_the_wild_things_are_5where_the_wild_things_are_6where_the_wild_things_are_7where_the_wild_things_are_8where_the_wild_things_are_9where_the_wild_things_are_10where_the_wild_things_are_11Mr. and Mrs. Zombie wishes everyone a great weekend!

- Essi

Worst Case Scenario is dead, all hail Army of Frankenstein!

Wednesday, April 15th, 2009

I’ve been following the downfall of Worst Case Scenario, a Nazi zombie film, for quite a long time, and when Twitch told few weeks ago that the film is dead, I felt bad. They had released two of the most promising teasers for the film, and things had been rolling quite well – the project is widely known around the world, and a lot of freaks have been waiting for it. But now it’s dead, and not to be re-animated anytime soon.

The good news, though, is that the director has dragged some of the ideas from the film, re-wrote the story and is now working on a new film with a great title: Army of Frankenstein.

Here’s what the director Richard Raaphors says about the production:

“The market for zombie movies is saturated and no distributor is buying them anymore: chances for financing WCS became very small. Also there are two other nazi-zombie flicks out there and as a result of that ours would look like a rip-off… When it became clear last year that WCS was as good as dead I came up with the idea of a WSC-prequel with a really low-budget of half a million Euro. That project almost came to fruition, but I can’t use the name Worst Case Scenario due to some rights-issues. The only way to get it on track was a different story and new title: Army of Frankenstein. This is still a working title but I think it covers the story nicely. The visual style will be the same as I will direct AoF! WCS can stay what is is, two kick-ass trailers and a great and promising story that never saw the light of day. Mabye someday we’ll dig it up, but than the Army of Frank[en]stein will be roaming the Earth! This time we don’t want to rush things, we’re talking with a producer and are still writing the script with Miguel Tejada Flores.”

I certainly hope he’s wrong about the impossibility to fund another Zombie film – reading Times article “Zombies Are the New Vampires” makes me think otherwise – but other than that, Army of Frankenstein sounds just absolutely awesome! Let’s hope they get it rolling this time, working on an internationally interesting film as a first-time feature film director is a hard job, I should know that…

Zombie Room adds this as nr. 1 in the list of most interesting Zombie films in production, and shall keep following the production as closely as possible.

Here’s the first concept art of the film (click to view it bigger):

aod1

Oh, and don’t forget to check out the two teasers of the now-abandoned Worst Case Scenario production, out of where Army of Frankenstein has been spawned from.

 

 

(Via Twitch/Bloody Disgusting)

Kids vs. Zombies

Monday, April 13th, 2009

1239612327939

Have a great week!

Top 5 David Lynch films

Sunday, April 12th, 2009

David Lynch hasn’t done one bad film. I want to mention this, because it’s easy to think of Dune as a failboat of a scifi film, which it was at some level, but still kicks ass compared to most of the science fiction films out there anyway, so fuck you if you don’t like Dune, it’s a great film. But not one of the best by Lynch. But neither is  Blue Velvet, no matter how much some people rave about it. Here’s my personal top-5 by Lynch, while waiting to hear more from his next films.

twinpeaksLaura Palmer was definitively one of my teenage fantasies…

The prequel-feature to the ever-famous Twin Peaks -TV-series is by far Lynch’s most underrated and hated film, but the one I’m quite easily placing as Lynch’s best work. Why? Well, it smashes together faces like David Bowie, Jack Bauer, Chris Isaak and Harry Dean Stanton – not to mention the original Twin Peaks cast led by wonderful Ray Wise – adds in a wonderful soundtrack by Angelo Badalamenti, and lets it slowly boil under Lynch’s unique directoral vision. When served, it’s an unforgettable, multi-layered beautiful film with the aura of mystery around it only Lynch can create.

But what makes the film really to stand out is the naive, a bit “amateurish” filmmaking on many of the scenes, which I personally believe to be the thing that nailed Lynch from being just another strange filmmaker into a real nerd-filmmaker god. Times film critic Vincent Canby said it quite well when writing about the film: “It’s not the worst movie ever made; it just seems to be”. Quite right, Vincent! Every now and then it seems like it’s been made by some fucked-up film school kid working on his “great masterpiece of a degree work”, but unlike these kids, every scene Lynch embarks on, regardless on how naive and purposefully strange it might smell like, he’s able to nail it. And this – I believe – travels across to the minds of aspiring filmmakers in the form of “I love this and I could do this”, and results in inspiring thousands of young filmmakers, but the flipside being the endless Lynch ripoffs that never rise anywhere close to what Lynch has been able to capture.

mulhollandHot chicks kissing. Win.

Mulholland Drive
has been considered quite widely as Lynch’s best work, and I’m no man denying it on a more general and filmatic level. I think Mulholland Drive “professionalizes” much of the stylistic things Lynch has tried out before, for example in Lost Highway, and polishes his storytelling to the maximum. I’m not sure if we’ll ever see a feature film so “straightforward” from Lynch again, or if this was it for him, but if it was, it was a perfect one for that.

Also included very hot lesbian action and the best scene in the history of cinema, the Winkie’s Dream scene.


The burnt-face hobo rastafari scares me shitless every time… But really, it’s the Oscar-worthy development of the whole scene that really does it.

inland

One of the scariest moments of the film was this frame.

Three most important things in Lynch’s by far strangest film for me are the crap-quality digital cam look of the whole film, the rabbits (of course), and the grim Polish gateways and stairwells. I’ve been able to finish this film just once, and after the experience I was completely blown away. I tried the second time, but dropped out somewhere in the middle. Because of this, I wasn’t sure if the film should be actually the best of Lynch so far, or on this list at all – so I decided to drop it somewhere in between.

INLAND is a combination of awesome, haunting and very Lynchian scenes, that don’t quite connect – but they don’t actually need to. I was going through the plot on Wikipedia, and looking at it in this format made a bit more sense than when whatching the film, because what Lynch has always mastered very well is the atmosphere that really grabs you by the balls, and you forget to worry about the overall plot. But there definitively seems to be one in there, and it has a lot to do with east European girls, a woman in trouble and rabbits.

INLAND is an unforgettable experience, as a film, but also as the post-filmtheater discussion item. Go see it, get blasted and try to interpret it – I think the truth might be somewhere there.

eraserhead

The baby is sick. Very, very sick.

David Lynch started his career as a filmmaker with Eraserhead as his first feature-length film, and what a wonderful film it was. It’s a story of a man on the moon, and a couple who get a baby that’s quite like a fetus of a giant baby parrot.

Although I know I’ll get lynched for saying this, but I think Eraserhead
is Lynch’s very own Star Wreck. He filmed it for over 6 years, and spent about 10k to his own and his friend’s money on it, nobody believed in it, but after it’s release, it became a huge cult hit in the horror genre. Mel Brooks hired Lynch right away after seeing Eraserhead to direct his next feature film -The Elephant Man – which eventually was nominated for 8 Oscars and blasted Lynch into superstardom among directors. Not a bad start for a director, but that’s what it takes many times – you really need to pull the first masterwork out of your ass with completely no money and nobody believing into it, instead of rotting in film schools and crying that nobody wants to fund your film.

Eraserhead has always been for me the film I’d loved to have directed, and I’m still looking forward into doing something similar maybe one day.

elephant

Lovely smile there, mr. Merrick.

So, fresh out of working with the strange and scary DIY-film Eraserhead, Mel Brooks, a comedy filmmaker and producer, hired young and promising David Lynch to direct Elephant Man. The film turned out to be a fantastic, a straightforward but still completely unique drama of a very badly deformed man, Joseph Merrick, also known as Elephant Man. It got 8 Oscar nominations, and won numerous awards, and it’s not a big surprise that a lot of pressure was put on Lynch after the film, and he was suggested to direct Star Wars’ second episode, but instead did Dune, which flopped madly. Nowadays, Hollywood has let go of the hopes on Lynch, and he can roam his own path as much as he wants to, if he gets his stuff financed.

Jennifer Lynch’s “Hisss” reveals the Snake Woman

Friday, April 10th, 2009

On a related topic to this weekend’s Lynchfeast, I wanted to write few words on Lynch’s daughetr Jennifer’s creature-feature in production, called Hisss (Or Nagin) – an USA-India co-production that’s about to hit the theater this year. I was inspired to do this after Fangoria just released the steaming hot pictures of the Snakewoman, portrayed by Mallika Sherawat, a super-hot Bollywood star.

Hisss is Jennifer Lynch’s third feature, and not the most conventional one: it’s said to be a musical/drama, will be shot in India, and it tells the story based on the myth of nāginī, a snake woman. Fangoria’s synopsis of the story is:

HISSS is a modern day retelling of the ancient tale of the ichhadahari nagin (snake woman) and follows a ruthless American, fascinated by the ancient folklore of the mythical creature, who travels to the jungles of India to discover the truth. He finds and captures the nagin’s mate for the magical powers of its nagmani, a mythical gem embedded in its hood. The nagin then transforms into a gorgeous femme fatale and follows him back into the modern world to track down her lover and wreak revenge on his captors and all who stand in the way of their reunion.

I haven’t seen Surveillance yet,  so I don’t know what to expect, but that goes without saying, given the family’s name.

What’s going on with David Lynch?

Friday, April 10th, 2009


It’s hard to talk about David Lynch without sounding like a complete fresh-out-of-filmschool-douchebag about to end up in development hell with your completely ununderstandable 3-hour feature nobody wants to see – not to mention, to fund, but then again, that’s me deep down.

What I love about Lynch’s films is the one thing that annoys and drives away most of the audience: the focus on the atmosphere instead of the story. His work tells me that film can be so much more than just a series of pictures that tell a story of a character or two. It can be a painting where you have to guess parts of the story, maybe stop for a while to just admire some brushstrokes and beautiful details and suddenly find yourself decoding the entirety all over again.

Let’s take a quick look at what Lynch is doing right now. I’m referring to Wikipedia and IMDB mostly (since most of the Lynch websites are quite as informative as his films are easy to follow..), so please excuse me in advance if some of the information is either outdated or wrong.

Lynch’s latest feature film was INLAND EMPIRE (2006), and after that he has completed a deleted scenes/extended storyline of INLAND into a 73-minute film More Things Happened (2007). He has also contributed a segment into a French film called Chacun son cinéma ou Ce petit coup au coeur quand la lumière s’éteing te que le film commence, a “collection of 33 shorts directed by different dierctors about their feeling about cinema”, and did a short film called Boat, about – well, David Lynch on a boat.

Lately, mr. Lynch has also contributed a lot of effort into production of films not by himself. Surveillance (2008) is a film by his daughter Jennifer Lynch, a thriller of sorts, and right now he’s working with Werner Herzog‘s horror drama My Son, My Son, What Have Ye Done (with Willem Dafoe, Udo Kier & Grace Zabriskie in the cast). The film is going to be released next year, and tells a story of a man who starts to experience mysterious things, and ends up killing his mother. Another production on IMDB’s list related to Lynch is called King Shot, a film by Alexandre Jodorowsky with Nick Nolte, Udo Kier and Marilyn Manson (!) on the cast. Lynch has just recently also filmed three commercials for Gucci, and is said to be working on a road documentary too.

Lately Lynch’s main interest has been – at least that’s where he’s been most active about in the public – is a form of meditative thinking called the transcendental meditation, of which he seems to be quite deep in with. He’s been travelling around the world having seminars about the meditation, which he believes can bring the peace to the world. He actually visited here in Finland as well, but frankly, I’m not interested in meditation so I felt that no matter how big a fan I am, I wouldn’t want to take the place of somebody really interested on his current topic and stayed home, watching INLAND EMPIRE instead.

So, the man is still going strong. We just don’t know what exactly is his next, real, feature film going to be. And most certainly, there’s no way trying to guess it – just remember Straight Story. It can be anything.

Tomorrow, a follow-up article Top 5 Lynch Films here on ZR. Stay 2ned.

The Zombies would like to wish you all a great Easter. The Lynch Rabbits are having one, too.

 

- Timo.

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