Thank you to everyone who voted for my entry in the Slow Mo Films contest. With your help I was able to get second place and win the runner up prize! Woo hoo! Thanks everyone!!! I seriously appreciate your help and support.
Author Archives: Ian Robertson
Mystery Box at the San Diego Film Festival
The screening times for Mystery Box at the San Diego Film Festival have been announced. It’s going to be screened twice during the festival: Thursday, September 25th at 5:00pm and Friday, September 26th at Noon. Both screenings are at the Gaslamp theater in downtown San Diego. (The address is 701 5th Avenue, San Diego, CA 92101). Right now you can just buy passes for the full festival or specific entire days. The tickets for individual screenings will be on sale September 15 for $10. All tickets and passes can be purchased here. I hope to see you down there!
Film #8: “No Rest For The Weary”
Here’s film #8 of the 12 Films in 12 Months. For the month of August, I made a western : “No Rest For The Weary”. Enjoy.
Film #8: The Shoot
For the month of August, I made a western. It was incredibly fun and the shoot went really well, but doing a film set in a specific time and place definitely added some new challenges that I hadn’t had to deal with while producing the other films. There’s a very specific aesthetic that westerns have and I wanted to try and match that in the film. I had to find things like location, costumes, and props that worked for the story as well as for the time period that the story takes place in.
A couple days before the shoot, my wife and I went driving out east of San Diego to try and find a good location far from telephone wires, houses, cars, noise, and any signs of modernity. Eventually, we found a spot that worked really well and wasn’t too far off of the beaten path (because I also didn’t want to make my actors hike way out into the middle of nowhere). That same day, between a couple of thrift stores, some items the actors already had, and a costume rental shop, I was able to get the costumes nailed down.
The morning of the shoot, I swung by a couple places to get the final props I needed to pull the film off: guns. A friend of mine has an old double-barrel shotgun that fit the look of the film perfect. He was kind enough to let me borrow it for the shoot. Then I swung by my friend Brent’s house and picked up some rubber hand-guns. He’s a prop master in Hollywood and was able to get me some good-looking rubber revolvers to use for the film. I also was able to use an old wooden chest that my parents had left over from a pirate-themed party we had thrown years ago. Apparently this chest really did come out west on a wagon many, many years ago. It worked great for the look of the film.
I got back to my house to meet the actors and prep for the shoot. My three actors this month include two that I’ve used in other films: Blake (who was in Mystery Box and The Pick-Up) and Fox (who played Sven in Paper Covers Rock); and a new actor: my friend Sam Saavedra. They got into costume, we went over the day, loaded into a couple of cars and headed east to the location. When we got there we found the spot where we were going to shoot, got set up and started shooting.
The shoot itself went very well. Once I got the guys out into the middle of the wilderness, in costume, the whole thing started to come together. The shots looked beautiful and the guys did a great job with their respective parts. Although it was a little rushed at the end, we were able to finish the shoot and be back at the house only 10 or 15 minutes past schedule.
One thing that I was really excited about and really added another level to the film is that I was able to get some production blanks for the shotgun, so we were able to fire it for a couple of shots. I wasn’t sure quite what to expect, but it looked really cool with all sort of smoke coming out of the barrel; but it sounded more like a large cap gun (which was fine as I have a good collection of sound effects and the visual was the more important part of it).
Overall, it went very well and the footage turned out great. I put some pictures up on Flickr here.
Film #8: Quick Update
Things are coming along well for this month’s film. I have a pretty tight rough cut of the film completed as well as the full soundtrack recorded (but not mixed). I have one pick-up shot I’m about to go shoot (a last minute shot that I decided to add after working on the edit). After that, I’ve got to finish mixing the soundtrack, adjust the color on some of the clips, and finalize the titles and credits. It’ll take me most of the rest of the day, but I’m hoping to have it up by tomorrow morning (or even later tonight). It’ll be coming soon!
More Great Western Finales
Here’s two more great duels that end a pair of classic westerns. These continue to inspire me as I’m working on editing my western this month.
First, from A Fistful of Dollars:
And second, from High Noon:
Last Week to Vote!!!
We’re down to one week left in the Slow Mo Films contest so if you get a chance, head on over to SlowMoFilms.com and vote for “FINALIST #6 – ONE DOZEN EGGS”. Remember, you can vote once per day per email, so head on over and rock the vote!!!
Muse – Knights of Cydonia
A few months back when I was working on the music video and featuring one-a-day on my Twitter feed, my friend Kerry sent me a video to check out. Well, I slacked on posting it, but now it seems fitting to post it as I’m working on a western. It’s the video for the song “Knights of Cydonia” by Muse and it’s a strange and awesome genre-mashing video featuring lazer-toting, kung-fu fighting cowboys…and that’s just the beginning. Check it out:
Exciting News!
I just found out that my first film of the 12 Films project, “Mystery Box“, has been accepted into the San Diego Film Festival! It’s going to be part of the San Diego Shorts series and will be screened twice alongside several other short films from local filmmakers. I’m seriously stoked! This is the first time I’ve ever had a film shown in a festival so I have no idea what to expect.
The festival runs from September 25 – 28 down at the Gaslamp theater in downtown San Diego. They’ll announce the film line-up and schedule at the beginning of September. Event and day passes are already available for purchase, but individual film tickets (for instance, if you just wanted to come to see “Mystery Box” and the other San Diego shorts) won’t be on sale until September 15; and when they do go on sale, they’ll be $10. For any info on the festival and to order tickets, check out their website here.
I’m planning on attending both screenings so if you come down, be sure to say hi. I hope you to see you down there!
The Wild West!
This last weekend I shot the footage for Film #8 of the year. In terms of genre, this month I’m making a western! Ever since I started this project, I’ve wanted to include a western at some point. It’s a rich genre that is filled with classic films and performances. The genre itself is laced with specific codes and conventions that are often used to explore themes like the taming of wilderness, honor, revenge, justice, and the definition of morality.
When AFI picked their top 10 westerns earlier this year, they chose some classic films like High Noon, Shane, and Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid. As I was writing this month’s film, I started by watching the showdown from High Noon to get inspired. I also watched the fantastic showdowns from two classic spaghetti westerns (so named because they were produced by Italian studios) from Sergio Leone’s “Dollars Trilogy”: A Fistful of Dollars and The Good, The Bad, And The Ugly. It definitely got me into a good frame of mind for writing a showdown.
For your own enjoyment, here’s the finale from The Good, The Bad, And The Ugly:


