View Full Version : FREE Screening of HD100 originated film March 29 at Hollywood HD Fest


Tim Dashwood
March 27th, 2008, 03:45 PM
I received an email reminder from director Jonathan Robbins about a screening this weekend in Hollywood of the first short film I shot with the HD100. He wanted me to pass on the info of the FREE screening (http://digitalvideofestival.bside.com/?_view=_filmdetails&filmId=51990383) to interested dvinfo members.

The film has also apparently been nominated as "Best in Genre" at the festival.
Our 23 minute short thriller called Your Ex-Lover is Dead will be screening at the Fairfax Theatre in Hollywood on Saturday, March 29, 2008 at 8pm.

The film is about a desperate girl who falls into a pickpocketing partnership only to find that it is a bigger operation than she knew and she's tired of being used.

Your Ex-Lover is Dead has screened in Toronto at the Thor East Film Fest, and the Wildsound Short Film Festival (http://www.WILDsound.ca), and will screen in June at the ReelHeART International Film Festival (http://www.reelheart.com).

It's U.S. premiere will be part of the International Digital Video (and High Definition) Festival (http://www.digitalvideofestival.com/). The screenings are held at the Fairfax Theatre (http://www.filmradar.com/calendar/venue.php?id=11) in West Hollywood (Beverly and Fairfax) and are FREE on a first-come, first-seated basis. Preceeding the film is the feature OTIS (http://imdb.com/title/tt0996967/), starring Kevin Pollack, Illeana Douglas and Daniel Stern which begins at 6:30. Following Your Ex-Lover is Dead will be 2 more short films and then a Q&A.

I hope to meet some of you at the festival! If you'd like to view a trailer of the film, you can do so at http://www.yourexloverisdead.com
Jonathan Robbins

Unfortunately I won't be able to make the screening, but I know there will be some technical questions regarding the film so I'll try to tell you a few details as I remember them.
We used a total of three HD100U cameras (non-A), shot 720p24 on ProHD tape and used a m2t-to-Quicktime AIC post workflow via FCP5. (Post occurred before FCP was able to capture 720p24.) I "think" I had the 13x3.5mm Fuji wide lens in the arsenal when I shot this film, but I could be wrong. I know that we definitely employed the stock 16x5.5mm lens on our B-Camera and sometimes the C camera.

Jonathan did the color-correction on his own with FCP's built-in 3-way. There are a couple of scenes that were intentionally shot day-for-night in-camera and some that were turned into day-for-night as an afterthought. I have some still shots in a thread somewhere with the technique described.

Some of you may remember the night-for-night tests I shot for this film with available street light. Some of those tests have made it into the final film.