Archive for the ‘General’ Category

The stereotypical Nazi officers

Sunday, March 8th, 2009

A reader of the Iron Sky blog pointed me a Smith & Jones -video that describes quite well the stereotypical Nazi characters, and it goes well with this weekend’s topic – so here you go!

The Anatomy of a Nazi Film

Saturday, March 7th, 2009

There are certain regulations you need to take in consideration when thinking about making a Nazi film. Just heed these instructions, and you’ll be holding an Oscar in your hands in no time!

swastikaSwastika Flag
Swastika (the tilted one) is definitively the most effective symbol of the 20th century, and sells DVDs almost like helicopters and explosions in the front cover. You just can’t do a Nazi film without it. How about a closeup shot of a red canvas fluttering slowly in the wind, then slowly tilting up to reveal the white circle, and eventually the swastika in the middle? At least two films last year opened with the exactly same shot (Valkyrie and The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas). A filmmaker should be aware of the fact that this is the ultimate Nazi film cliché you won’t be able to avoid, and most likely any new use of it you think you can come up with has already been seen a thousand times. So don’t worry too much about it, just get it out there – the people will love it anyway. Just remember not to overuse it, there’s still hundreds of Nazi films coming up, so we can’t ruin the effect from them, now can we?

Black Leather Boots
What is a Nazi without the boots? You know, the shiny, tall boots that bang rhythmically on the wooden floor when the main evil officer is introduced for the first time? Not to mention the endless rows of marching boots, or the tip of the boot that crushes the filter-less cigarette into the asphalt of the airfield. The boots are just as important as the cowboy boots in a western, or the high heels in a good fetish porno film, and everybody knows what they look like, so you can’t get away with something that’s quite close. The boots of a Nazi officer are a sexual symbol of power, strength and manly ego, just like a male erection to a porno film, so pay a lot of attention to the shoes you pick.

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Uniforms
A common misconception of the Nazi uniforms is that they were designed by Hugo Boss – they were not. Hugo Boss factory did produce, with the kind help of the forced labor, the black SS uniforms & some other models, but the original designs were done by SS-Oberführer Prof. Dr. Karl Diebitsch and graphic designer Walter Heck. Another common misconception of the original Nazi uniforms is that they actually look cool and sexy -they don’t. One of the biggest reasons are the colours – we are used to the gray or black uniforms on the soldiers, but a big let-down for me was the fact that the uniforms were actually mostly darkish green – a colour I hate anyway (always when I try to buy something in gray or black, I only find it in this color, dunno why) – or some other stupid shit like brown, yellow or even had a pink collar in some cases. So be careful when picking your Nazi troops – SS is the best and most certain pick, since they had the all-black uniforms that go well with the black boots and the red Swastika armband. They even had a frigging dagger and a skull on their hat, which reminds me of this little comedy piece I found from the Internets:

The Colours
To continue on the topic of colors – A good Nazi film is known from it’s palette: washed-out brown, green and gray. There needs to be some kind of a plug-in for After Effects called Nazificator that just desaturates everything by 35% (except red, which it boosts 50%), and it’s one of the basic tools introduced to the young film students in the film schools. I haven’t been into any, so I wouldn’t know.

Tom Cruise, the funny little chap with an eye patch, presenting here the color palette of a good Nazi film.

Fatzi – The Mandatory Fat Nazi
Remember Hermann Göring, the fat fuck who killed himself in the jail just before he would’ve been hanged. He was the manifestation of all the Nazi decadency – a debauchee who loved orgies, wore an all-white uniform, and was terribly intelligent in the worst possible manner. Fatzi is one of the mandatory characters that just need to be in any self-respecting Nazi film, maybe introduced in a dinner scene with a lot of close-ups of his greasy lips, laughing and sweating like a pig. He’s a wonderful character, one you can dump all of the darkest clichés on, and get away with.

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The Language
Now here’s a tricky issue. You know, the Nazis used to speak German, which was also played quite an important role during their regime. But as we know, the Americans hate to read, so you can’t just put the Nazis speaking their original language in a film (you’d have to – god forbid! – use subtitles) and expect it to sell in the English-speaking world. So you either need to come up with a “clever” solution or accept the sales losses – and we know which option the producer or the studio usually picks. This means that we, the Europeans, need to suffer either the American-English, or even worse, the fake German accents that portrays their language. But if you go with the German language, you’ll find another surprising problem quite soon: German is actually a very delicate, beautiful and soft language – quite unlike the stereotypical “jawohl Horst ich komme” -porn-German that’s stuck somewhere in the back of our heads when we think about the Nazi lingo. So whatever you pick, you’re doomed anyway.

Controversial Theme
Nazis are bad, we know that, thanks to the hundreds and hundreds of films and books that have been banging this into our heads for half a century now – and there’s nobody disagreeing with it. But today, the trick about doing a Nazi film is to have a story with an angle to it. Maybe it’s about a good nazi, or about kids in the Nazi era, or claiming that Hitler was actually a human being . When creating a story for your Nazi film that’ll meet the needs of the oh-so-jaded and critical modern audience, the best way is to pick a theme from any family/general audience film, like kids, or love, or friendship, and just change the characters – or one character – into Nazis – and boom, you have an Oscar nominee in the making.

The Jew brat and the Nazi brat in The Boy in the Striped Pyjama

Hitler
Hitler is a major don’t in any good Nazi flick – although exception proves the rule. We’ve had Robert Carlyle, Ian McKellen and Liam Neeson playing Hitler, among hundreds of others, but when Bruno Ganz came out with his portrayal in Der Untergang in 2004, it was just like all the work by these hundreds of other great actors was made obsolete, and everything after that will be compared to Ganz’s role. So unless you know exactly what you are doing – which you don’t – forget Hitler. He’s the most interesting, the most well-known figure of our times, and you just can’t put some second-hand actor portraying him and put him going apeshit somewhere in the background.

Zombie Room will continue to explore the Nazi topic with one more entry, coming up tomorrow – the Top 10 Nazi Films! So stay tuned!

- Timo.

Lex Nokia

Thursday, March 5th, 2009

This is actually not a film-related article, but something I’ve been quite concerned about lately, so I’ll write about it here.

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Finland has been known for quite a long time as one of the most uncorrupted countries in the world. Yesterday, this was changed. A law dubbed as “Lex Nokia” was lobbied and steamrolled through in the Parliament of Finland. The law has received a lot of criticism from the law professors, general public and Internet actives because of it’s vague wording which, in the end, may give certain parties in Finland more power to watch over the Internet than for example police has nowadays. In addition to that, it has come clear that a lot of a bit strange lobbying and even threats have been attached to the preparation process of the law. It is said that Nokia has threatened to leave Finland and take the 16000 jobs with it, if the law doesn’t go through.

The law itself gives the right for the employers to monitor the emails of the employees, but the law extends also to other communities, like housing cooperatives, which makes it even more ambiguous and vague.

One of the saddest things was that some parties that I would’ve expected to vote against the law either staid out of the conversation, or changed their view in the end. The biggest disappointment was the Green Party (Vihreät), from where only Energia’s main favourite MP Jyrki Kasvi was doing the right thing and voting against it. Strangely enough, both Perussuomalaiset (far-right) and SDP & Vasemmisto (left-wing) both were collectively against the law, but all together almost 1/4 of the Parliament were not present at the voting, and it was smashed through with a clear majority voting for the law.

Here are the results of the vote.

Makes you think, makes you wonder, doesn’t it?

- Timo

Remember when…

Wednesday, February 25th, 2009

remember

Zombies tweeting the Oscars live!

Sunday, February 22nd, 2009

The Oscars are only a few hours away. Me and Timo will be up all night commenting on the gala. You can follow us on Twitter (@ZombieRoom) or even better, our LIVE Twitter feed from  http://blog.starwreck.com/ where you can also follow commentary by our good friends Jarmo and Laku from Energia (@Energia).

Essi & Timo

Berlin Diary #7: Wrapping up Berlinale

Thursday, February 12th, 2009
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Essi Suomela & Timo Vuorensola

This was the fifth time for me in Berlin, and second Berlinale, and for Essi, the first of both – and we fell in love with the city immediately after stepping out of the cab. Before this I was always dead busy, but with Essi I was able to share the experience throughoutly, and we both got a hefty doze of awesomeness out of Berlinale 09. Oh lord, it’s already 2009… My my, the time does fly…

We didn’t get to see even one film. We didn’t get to bed sober any night. We didn’t go to any museum, didn’t see any tourist sites, or didn’t practically even leave Potzdamer Platz during the one week. We didn’t have even one nice romantic dinner just with the two of us – always just running around franticly, meeting tens of people and then dragging our asses to totally stuffed parties after the long day. Then bed, then zzz… And the same thing repeats all over again. Always hangover in the morning, the terrible breakfast and even worse morning coffee, then off to the city again. Not quite romantic or glamorous, but we both enjoyed the whole time like never before. It felt bad this morning to pack the stuff, get out of the hotel room with world’s worse and most expensive Internet and a construction yard just outside of our window.

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Timo Vuorensola & Tero Kaukomaa

It was easy to see that this year Berlinale was quite a lot easier than the last year. There was no specific film that had a lot of hype around it – The International was quite important because it’s new Tykwer with an int’l cast. There was almost no special marketing stunts, apart from our paperboy, that I would’ve catched at least (like Wild Bunch’s Che Tent last year), and people were much more just minding their business.

Yesterday I was also speaking at Talent Campus in Berlin with Liz Rosenthaland M dot Strange. We had a couple of hours of a seminar with some questions, a discussion, then Meet the Experts –session, where people could ask me questions and I tried to answer them something intelligent. After that, we met with Essi the male lead actor of Iron Sky, whose name we yet haven’t revealed to the public, and headed for a dinner with Liz, her husband Nikolai (an animator working on a short series Marsipan).

The dinner was a perfect ending for a nice trip in Berlin. We headed for the most German restaurant, the oldest one in Berlin (anno 1600-something), and drank a lot of schwartz- and weissbier, jägermeister, and ate around one kg of pork each, schweinhaxe, with sauerkraut. We won five Berlins.

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Tero Kaukomaa, Essi Suomela, Pauli Kopu and Pekka Ollula

Wonderful Berlinale, and eventually got stories to both Variety and Screen about Iron Sky cast!

Danke schön und bitte!

Timo.

Berlin Diary # 6 – There are nazis on the moon

Wednesday, February 11th, 2009

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Hello everyone. The festival is coming to an end and me and Timo are flying home tomorrow. But there is still time to talk about the different kinds of promotion we did here in Berlin. It is very hard to stand out in a festival like this, where there are hundreds of movies who all want the same attention. It is especially hard when you don´t have a big marketing budget to spend. That is why you need to get creative. So we had to come up with something that is not only cost effective, but also draws the right amount of attention to us. This year the main focus was on Iron Sky and I have to tell you that the team behind Iron Sky definitely had an ace up their sleeves this year. They had a marketing stunt, where they gave out a fake news paper claiming that there are nazis on the moon. They hired an actor to play a paperboy who had to shout out the news about moon-nazis. The coolest thing about this was, that it was made together with the community using Wreck A Movie as the tool to gather up fake news stories from the year 2018. It was awesome and here is a clip of what went on outside Martin-Gropius-Bau.

 

Watch the video here

Addition to this we had a couple of more things here in Berlin that we did to promote our project. Iron Sky is a co-production between four companies, but the main producer is Blind Spot Pictures. This company has also made films like Jadewarrior, Mans Job and Everlasting Moments. It was decided to make a brochure that would represent the company; in this brochure they had a filmography of past and upcoming films, of witch some are still in development. It looked great and it was received very well among the movie folk.

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Then of course we had the more traditional way of promotion; the good old press release. During the festival, it was revealed to the public that the main character of Iron Sky will be played by a German actress called Julia Dietze. I think she is perfect for the role. Also the rest of the casting is forming quite nicely, unfortunately I can´t give you more information about the subject just yet, but we will be keeping you updated on this as soon as something more is confirmed. 

ironsky_juliadietze

And finally there were the  numerous amounts of meetings, get-togethers and parties, which are always the most effective  way to make your self known. Timo was also a speeker at the Talent Campus along side with M Dot Strange. 

Essi 

Berlin Diary # 5 – Best from the north

Tuesday, February 10th, 2009

mammuth_screen_variety

Todays topic is about upcoming Scandinavian films. It seems that all the best movies are coming from the north this year. There has been a few movies that really got my interest in Berlin. One of the most intresting ones is Mammoth, directed by Lukas Moodysson. It is the first movie by the Swedish director to have done in english language. It is starring Gael García Bernal and Michelle Williams. I´m really intrigued by this film all thought Moodyson has made a couple of really disturbing films in the past.

The long wait is almost over and  director Lars von Trier finally has a new film to show, it is called Antichrist, a psychological thriller – that evolves into a horror film. Willem Dafoe and British actress Charlotte Gainsbourg are playing a couple who retreat to an isolated cabin in the woods following the death of their child. There, they soon start to encounter strange, terrifying occurrences. The film is now complited, but still there is not that much info on the film anywhere. I did have a change to meet someone in Berlin who had seen the film and she told me that the movie is absolutely amazing. I can´t waite to see this one!

anti_christ

Metropia is a Swedish sci-fi animation and it is directed by Tarik Saleh. The trailer is awesome and the look of the film is totally unique. It has a cool cast of probably the best indie actors in the world; Vincent Gallo, Juliette Lewis and Udo Kier. Set in Europe when the world is running out of oil and the net of undergrounds has been connected. Supposedly the movie follows a man who tries to stay away from the underground. He keeps hearing a strange voice in his head, and he soon finds out that his life is controlled in every detail. 

Then we have Norwegian Nazi-zombie-movie Død snø (Dead Snow) directed by Tommy Wirkola. I was lucky enough to be invited to see Død snø , in a private screening during Os International Film Festivalen in Norway some months ago. The movie really is as good as it sounds and on top of that it is actually unique. I really like Tommy Wirkolas ability to combine homage with something new and interesting; not a very easy thing to do folks! Død snø is basically a teenager-slasher-horror-comedy with Nazi-zombies. The storyline is pretty basic; it’s about these teenagers that go up to a cabin in the mountains in the middle of winter and get ambushed by a bunch of zombies. Yeah, you know the drill… But this one really delivers, and all the clichés are used to benefit the film. You can see a lot of influences from past genre movies and it is filled with homage towards them. Everyone who likes these kinds of films will have a blast at the movie theater; I laughed my ass off!

Ein! Zwei! Die! 

Then of course we have the science fiction comedy called Iron Sky, witch is Timo´s film and a horror movie called Sauna from Finland. Iron Sky won´t be completed this year, but it is definitely something to look forward to. There is also a cool ninja movie coming from Norway, but I can´t say much more about it yet. I have met the producer and maybe I could get an interview from him to add to our blog. I will definitely be following that project very closely and I will be posting more info about it soon. Also a zombie movie (not Stone’s War) from Finland is looking quite possible. More about that later…

Essi

Berlin Diary # 3 – Ninjas, sushi and one huge monster

Sunday, February 8th, 2009

We have now been in Berlin for three days and I´m totally falling in love with this city. Yesterday was pretty interesting and I also took allot of photos so you´ll get a better image of what went on.

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The European Film Market (EFM)

Yesterday we finally had a change to really check out The European Film Market (EFM) at Martin-Gropius-Bau. The building is fully packed with sales companies, production companies, producers, sales agents and all kinds of film makers from all over the world. EFM is one of the most important events of the international film industry and we  are here to promote Iron Sky and also make new contacts etc. What we did yesterday with Timo, was that we tried to get the attention of various sales agents to possibly sell Iron Sky in the future. So we went from booth to booth representing our film and hopefully it will pay of some day. Let´s keep our fingers crossed.

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Timo with a big ass monster

There are hundreds of films showing at the market, but one film really stood out for us and I want to tell you just shortly about it. The film is called La Horde (The Horde) and it is an end of the world battle between gangsters, cops and zombies. The trailer we saw looked awesome!!! Unfortunately you can´t find that particular trailer from the internet yet, but hopefully soon. I also took a picture of the great looking poster they had, but I promised not to publish it, so you will just have to take my word for it. It was really something. There´s not that much info of it in the internet, but you can follow up the project via Twitch Film and here is a direct link.

http://twitchfilm.net/site/view/the-latest-on-la-horde/

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Essi & Timo

Later me and Timo headed out to eat in Pan Asia with a Norwegian producer Eric Vogel. With us were also a Norwegian actress Ingrid Bolsø Berdal, directors AJ Annila and Aku Louhimies, producers Tero Kaukomaa and Jesse Fryckman, and last but definitely not least our marketing wizard Ukko Kaarto. Since last years Berlin Film Festival, AJ and Jesse have been ranting about this restaurant and how it has the best sushi in the world. Obviously I was skeptical about it, but I have to say that it really was the BEST sushi I have ever eaten.

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Best sushi in the world

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AJ Annila & Eric Vogel

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Jesse Fryckman & Ukko Kaarto

After one of the best dinners I have ever had, we headed out to the Norwegian party. Which was by the way much better that the Danish party. The Party was extremely hard to get into, even all the Norwegian producers didn´t got in. We were lucky enough to be invited and the party really was a success. The venue was very nice and they had a band as well. 

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On our way to the Norwegian party

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Timo is digging the band

Today were are going to Krautrock, the annual karaoke celebration organized by Fantastic Fest. So tune in tomorrow for another edition of the Berlin diaries and from the scene report of the party. 

Essi

And so the story begins…

Friday, February 6th, 2009

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It is now the 6th of February and we are in Berlin, Germany and as promised here is the first official blog entry from the team behind Zombie Room. Welcome aboard and hope you enjoy the ride!

Before I start, I want to introduce our contributers here at Zombie Room. We have two writers, Essi Suomela and Timo Vuorensola. I´m currently working as a production coordinator for a movie production company called Bronson Club. I´m also an aspiring producer and a film fanatic. I resently worked on a movie called Sauna, directed by AJ Annila, who also made the first Finnish kung fu movie, Jadewarrior. Timo is a director and is working for a Tampere based movie production company called Energia Productions.  Timo directed a movie called Star Wreck, that was released in 2005 for free in the internet and it has been downloaded 8 million times so far. He is currently working on his new movie Iron Sky, a science fiction comedy about nazis in the moon. We are aslo ingaged to be married in 2010.

Ok but now it is time for the first of the Berlin diarys. We will be blogging from Berlin daily, so stay tuned!

 

timo_essi_tero

Berlin Film Festival: Diary day #1

This is my first time at the Berlin Film Festival and I got to say that I´m very impressed. The town has a buzz in the air from all the movie industry folk and the spring seems to be more on the way than in Finland. Yesterday was the first day so it was quite easy and breezy for us. We had one meeting, we met up with some friends and got to know the area. I went to the market that is in a beautiful building and later on we met Todd Brown from Twitch Film and I had the most expensive drink of my life; a bubbling cosmo for 17,50 euros at the Ritz Carlton Hotel

I know this all sounds pretty sweet, but I think I should tell you that we are suffering from a bad case of a festival curse. Everything started with Tero Kaukomaa´s tooth. Tero is a producer and owns a company called Blind Spot Pictures. He is also the producer for Iron Sky and Sauna, and he is traveling with us here in Berlin. But anyway, he went to the dentist a day before we were leaving for Berlin and the dentist said everything was ok. But two hours later Tero bit on a piece of hard candy and broke his tooth… So he had to go to the dentist again. Then Timo broke his laptop. It just broke down basically for no reason, so we had to replace it with another one.

Then in the morning when we arrived to the airport we noticed that I had forgotten my laptop at the office. So then it had to be rushed in cab to the airport. On top of this we almost missed our flight. When we got to the hotel, all our reservations were totally messed up. When we got to the rooms, me and Tero both broke our luggage. My zipper got busted in the plain and Teros handle just broke off. Later that same night Timo got locked in at mens room at the Ritz Carlton Hotel, because someone had stolen the (I guess a pretty expensive) door handle from inside the door. This was a nice addition to his migraine he had developed earlier that day.  And just a few minutes ago I was also locked out when I was having a smoke in the hotels backyard . 

Today the plan is to have meetings with potential co-producers and do promoting for Iron Sky. I will report about this more later. Let´s hope the curse is fading away…

Cheers, Essi

 

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