4.11.2009

Interview with Alex Lamb.

Hello Friend(s).

I was recently involved with the production of the music video for Argyle Smile's "Every Song." I got the opportunity to interview director Alex Lamb about the video. Check it out!



JC: Why did you choose to shoot this video. Did you choose it or did the band choose it?



Alex Lamb: I chose to shoot a video to this song because the song inspired the idea. In fact, [band member] Jared Parsons and producer, Jon Guillen, both thought that it was an odd choice for a music video at first considering the other songs that were on Argyle Smile’s demo.


JC: How did you come up with the concept.


AL:
I was listening to the song and it just hit me. I don’t’ really know why dominoes came up in my mind, but they did. The only thing that I really knew right away was that I wanted the dominoes to feel like a character that followed Jared around rather than something that he set up the previous day. I also knew that I wanted to show Jared and Dana’s dominoes dancing together.

Then after about an hour of toying with the idea in my head, I had a rough story that fits pretty much what you see in the finished video. A lot of details were filled out weeks or even months after the idea though. The art gallery was originally going to be a record store that Jared’s character worked at and Dana’s character was going to be a regular costumer that always came in and flirted with him, but we heard that we could get an art gallery for free, so we changed it. I guess it worked for the story though. In fact, the free art gallery fell through and we had to dress an empty loft up with all of our friends’ art pieces. So, even though it was an idea that came out of happenstance, it became something that we considered necessary for the story, at least in our eyes.

Also, Jared resetting his dominoes at the end was something that we came up much later in pre-production. That’s what really tells the story I think. The fact that we see that this guy goes through the same thing every day, and that even though he gets disappointed, he’s going to try again tomorrow. I think that it makes it so much more powerful to see him set up the dominoes again at the end of the video. That was never in the original pitch.

JC: How many dominoes did you buy?

AL: I think we bought six hundred and some odd dominoes. A little over 300 black and 300 white. We used pretty much all the dominoes at once in the spiral shot. I think that was the biggest domino shot, and we didn’t get it the first time, so we had to reset that whole thing. I KNOW we used all of the dominoes when we did foley. We set up another spiral and four microphones at different positions so that we could get a long track of constantly falling dominoes.

JC: What were some of the highs and lows of the shoot?

AL: I’m going to start with the low points because that’s how the video started. The first day of the shoot was one of the most nerve racking and disappointing days of my life. It started with false hope. We got the shot of Jared’s feet walking down the hall from his bedroom to the bathroom and the dominoes following him. It took about three or four takes I think, and we were really happy with what we got when we finished. We looked at each other and thought, “hey, this is going to be easy.” The rest of the day was crap. We shot for about seventeen hours. Our crew left after twelve hours and we called all of our friends who were getting off work to come and fill in as our backup crew and we shot for five more. I think we got about three or four shots in that day that we ended up using in the final video. We knew that it was going to be hard to shoot dominoes, but I don’t think we understood how much time it was going to take to reset them. Usually, after you shoot a take and it doesn’t work, you just do it again because all the lights and camera are set up already. However, when you have to reset a couple hundred dominoes, that adds forty minutes to every take.

I felt horrible at the end of that day. I wanted to cry, but I didn’t want to lose my leadership skills, so I held it in and just hugged [Cinematographer] Max. The hug said everything. We’re sort of gay that way. Fortunately, each day after that went a little smoother than the day before. So by the end of the video, we were all domino toppling experts.

I think that the highlight of the shoot for me was the third day of shooting. It was the day that we shot in the bedroom. Every day up until then was really grueling, and I was so stressed and anxious, I wasn’t sure if the video was going to work out. That day though, we ended up getting so many shots that just made me smile. I loved the dolly shots of Jared asleep in the bed and crawling in to bed, the first and last shots of the video. They both took a LOT of takes, but when we finally got them, I knew that whatever else we shot was going to be bookended with these two shots and I wanted them to be perfect. I’m really proud of those shots and REALLY proud of Max Well for pulling them off.

I also remember getting really excited about the shot of Jared’s feet stepping into the slippers. All we really planned was to show the dominoes go by and have his feet come down, but on set I decided that I wanted to see the train pass as well. This took a lot of practice. We had one guy (a certain JC) running the train, one guy toppling the dominos, Jared stepping down at the perfect time, and an AC pulling focus for all of these things. When we finally got that shot, I think I started giggling. Is that weird?

The other shot we got that day that blew my mind was the shot of Jared leaving his house. I don’t say that in a conceited way at all; I had nothing to do with why that shot was awesome. The credit can only go to Jared and Max. Max set that shot up and was able to get the crew to operate the dolly in an incredibly cramped space, and Jared amazed us all with his uncanny ability to walk at the same speed as toppling dominoes. That was something we were really worried about in pre-production, was that they would go way to fast for Jared to be able to walk naturally and keep up with the dominoes. I think he might have practiced at home. Every time we had to do another take, it had something to do with camera or lighting, it was never because Jared couldn’t keep up with the dominoes. He makes it look so effortless, jerk.


JC: Anything you would change about the video?

AL: The opening shot of the art gallery. There is so much I would change about that shot. I wish that the frame started tighter on Jared and pulled out to where it is at the end of the shot. I also wish that we had an extra or two cross the screen so that the shot didn’t seem so flat. I just don’t buy that shot. Also, I think that the dominoes could be revealed a little later. We were so rushed that whole day. Most anything that I’ve ever wanted to change in the video is from the art gallery shots. Fortunately that’s really the only shot that still bugs me though. I hate that it’s right in the middle of the video too, because youtube and facebook use it for the thumbnail. It’s just a frozen frame from the one shot I don’t like.

JC: Does it have anything to do with Mike Burrows or me in the background? Honest.

AL: Ha Ha. No. Well, actually, sort of yeah. I don't like the way that I directed you, Erin, and my mom to move. But it's not your fault, it's mine. Mike did great. Mike didn't even know he was in the video until I pointed it out to him because Jared's performance is so enthralling.

JC: Fair enough. Jared is sort of dreamy... like the glitterboy from Twilight. So, if you could shoot a video about me, what would it be?

AL: I would dress you up like the Easter Bunny and you would walk around with a basket full of Faberge eggs. You would deliver the eggs to all of the girls that like you, but instead of handing the egg to them, you’d throw it to the ground, smashing it. Somehow that would magically destroy the girls’ lives in different ways. I’ve got some ideas, but I want to talk to you about them first. I wouldn’t pitch this idea to just anyone, you’re the most bitter person I know. I think it fits you.

JC: I'm all sunshine and smiles. What are some of your music and film influences?

AL: I’m not really a musician, but I love Ozma. I guess that Argyle Smile influenced this particular video. Film on the other hand I could list so many influences. I think for this video particularly though, I would have to say Tim Burton, Wes Anderson, and Michel Gondry. Tim Burton, because we watched the opening to "PeeWee’s Big Adventure" a bunch to get ideas of how to visually show a chain reaction/Rube Goldberg kind of device. Wes Anderson, because I think a lot of the shots remind me of Wes Anderson. I don’t think we did that consciously, but people have pointed it out to me, and I agree with them, so there was probably some subliminal influence. I don’t know if any aesthetic aspects of the video were influenced directly by Michel Gondry, but I know that I was watching a lot of his music videos the week that I came up with the concept, so I have to imagine that he sparked the idea somehow in my brain.

JC: Do you like black licorice?

AL: I like Good N Plenty

JC: What is in store for you, Argyle smile, and the video? Any new projects?

AL: Argyle Smile’s EP is due out at the end of May and the video is going to be available on the CD. As for the video alone, we’re sending it to lots of festivals. It’s already generated a lot of interest from bands that want to hire us independently, but we hope to start working with some record companies soon so that we can get bigger budgets.

We’re talking to a couple bands right now that have seen the “Every Song” video and want to hire us, but nothing is official yet. Surf Monkey Pictures has two pretty big projects lined up though; both are web series. One is starring Joey Derryberry as the Long Beach independent talent agent, Mel Greenwood. The other is the original animated series developed by Nolan Wang called Stick Figures. They should both be premiering this summer if we get off our asses.

JC: If you could shoot any band's music video, who would it be?

AL: Van Halen

JC: What is Jared's email address?

AL: Just message him at www.myspace.com/smileargyle. If he doesn’t get the email, Dana will, but she’s hot so it’s sort of a win win.

JC: Thanks, Alex.

AL: It was alot of fun! (Alex Lamb insists that I clarify that I wrote that last part for him. He claims that he had no fun and was tired when he did this.)

Alex Lamb is from Long Beach, CA but now lives in Beverly Hills. He graduated from Chapman University in 2006 with a BFA in Film Production. He is now an editor and director.

http://www.alexlambeditor.com/

Facebook fan page: http://www.facebook.com/pages/Alex-Lamb/55879215871


Check Argyle Smile out on the internet:

Myspace: http://www.myspace.com/smileargyle

Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=506868577&ref=mf#/profile.php?id=1312540500&ref=ts


-jc del barco ii

interviewer/extra/fan



3.25.2009

Where the Wild Things Are

Full steam ahead, ladies and gentlemen. 

After being in production for a couple of years, Spike Jonze finally gave us a trailer.


I ran into Spike Jonze at a bar a little over a year back. Asked him how the film was coming along. He responded with a chuckle and an "I couldn't tell ya." Earlier that month, they had some test screenings of what he had made so far, but apparently it sent children screaming and crying out of the theatre. Universal told him he couldn't deliver the film. Originally the Jim Henson company had made 9 foot animatronic suits for actors to  play the wild things, but they didn't look real enough. They decided to go with CG. I was first bummed when I heard this, but am excited after seeing how great they look in the press photos and the trailer. I wonder what happened to those suits though...

I hope the remodeled film still holds Spike's vision and delivers a new classic.

The trailer filled my with an urge to yell like a child... I wonder what the rest of the film will do.
If you need me, I'll be camping outside the Arclight waiting for the premiere on Oct. 16th, 2009. Mark your calendars, friends. This film has gotten much preproduction hype and hurdles that set expectations high. This can remake or break Spike. I think he will come through. 

-jc del barco ii

wild/child/fan

2.28.2009

Avey Tare & Kría Brekkan


Avey Tare from Animal Collective and Kría Brekkan (Kristín Anna Valtýsdóttir, former lead singer to Icelandic band múm) have apparently been married since 2007 and live in NYC together.

How did I miss hearing about this? I've been an avid múm fan for years now and I was sad when she left the band. Her ghostly child-like voice has sung me through the rainy days for a while now.

I just saw Animal Collective @ the Fonda on Thursday... total mind blow. Avey Tare is most of the voice behind AC. His ethereal-yet-organic guitar catches and phenomenal vocal range have launched the group to the head of a new generation of expirmental music. Merriweather Post Pavillion is the talk of the town (and rightly so) and never grows old in my head.

They recorded an album together on Paw Tracks titled "Pullhair Rubeye". All the tracks are reversed and was rumored to have been released as a way of messing with album leakers. That is a whole different can of worms.

A kind Ms. Burbach pointed me towards this video:



This video is one of the sweetest most tender things I have ever seen. The song is light and sweet. The stolen glances between the married couple just fills my heart with a hope that marriage may not be dead. As much as it leaves a thick taste in my mouth, this video makes me want to fall in love.

Ya. I said it.

Enjoy.

-jc del barco ii

warm/fan/inspired

2.15.2009

Kittens Inspired by Kittens.

I don't have much to say about this. The video left me speechless. Every ounce of bitterness, betrayal, aggression, spite, jealousy... everything evil was wiped clean with this. This video is a revelation. It is rebirth. This video is the voice of God.





-jc del barco ii
 
i/love/cats

2.10.2009

I think Chris Brown and Rihanna broke up


http://www.eonline.com/uberblog/b99434_rihanna_cops_chris_brown_threatened.html?sid=rss_topstories&utm_source=eonline&utm_medium=rssfeeds&utm_campaign=rss_topstories


Not cool, Brown, Not cool.

Just two weeks ago my good friend Laura and I were discussing how the two of them are super cute and the next Jay-Z and Beyonce. Her cute hair and stunning voice paired up with his teen-heartthrob vocals and better-than-Timberlake dance moves were a great face for Hip-hop romances.

Then he choked her and popped her in the eye. What a dynamite thing to do, man. That girl is a catch. She opened for Kanye when she was only 19! Chris brown is only 19. That's a lot of life to live with the reputation for beating the shit out of your girlfriends. Wait, he threatened to kill her too.

What's going to happen to their careers now? Jail? Anger Management? Talk groups?

Sad day for relationship role models.

Don't beat your lovers people. Have a happy Valentine's Day.

-jc del barco ii

not violent/willing to be Rihanna's rebound skank/dissappointed

2.03.2009

Prop 8 films dot org


Hello all. Here is the reason I haven't been blogging lately. Please support and check the website out and fbook, and twitter, and myspace, etc. A discussion forum will be launched this week to lead discussions. Please join in. I need your voice.

Here is my introductory post at http://prop8films.org/Blog/



Welcome to the Prop 8 Films blog. This blog will act as a good platform for discussion on the passing of Proposition 8 in California. Along with the film makers, I believe it is important to have an open discussion that is neutral and respectful. I feel that a lot of the good points in either side of the spectrum were lost to emotion and bumper stickers.

Let's take a step back and really look at specific points of views. Whether it is race, religion, financial status, political stance, or personal bias... let's take another look at why people stand where they stand.

The documentary that is in production through Bucks Boys will serve as a neutral inspection of the matter. Learn more at prop8films.org.

Follow us on twitter too! Facebook, Myspace, etc, all to come soon. This blog and forum will be as organic and interactive as possible. If there is something you want to talk about or see, we will deliver it.

Nice meeting you,

-jc del barco ii

12.16.2008

Nude: Big Ideas (don't get any)

This post is only going to be fun for Radiohead fans.

Here is something my friend Sebastian sent me a few months go.

This project was James Hudson's thesis for the Glasgow School of Arts graphic design course.
He did it for Radiohead's Nude remix contest earlier this year, but didn't finish by the deadline. It is still awesome. Watch. It starts up about a minute in.


Sinclair ZX Spectrum - Guitars (rhythm & lead)
Epson LX-81 Dot Matrix Printer - Drums
HP Scanjet 3c - Bass Guitar
Hard Drive array - Act as a collection of bad speakers - Vocals & FX

Check his Vimeo page on it for his word on the project here

I thought "Nude" was already an incredibly layered and intricately structured composition as it is. Seeing a few old machine parts perform the song blew my little geeky mind. I doubt it was recorded in sync with the footage, but it's still awesome.

If this got you in the Radiohead mood, check out this LA based a capella group, Sonos. They have a cool cover of "Everything in it's Right Place" on their myspace. They are playing live Dec. 20th at the Hotel Cafe in Hollywood. 21+ if you are interested. I'm not. 

Hope this was fun.

-jc del barco ii

radiohead fan/geek/doesn't trust machines


12.10.2008

Kids Getting High Off of AIDS Medicine.



I was trying to think of a clever title for this one, but the story in the purest form says it all.

Teens in South Africa are stealing and selling anti-retrovirus drugs and smoking them to get high.


Teens grind up the pills, cut them with painkillers or marijuana and then smoke them in order to induce halucinating and tranquilizing effects. 

...


...

I don't think I'm alone when I say this, but there's something shitty going on here. AIDS is expensive. Magic Johnson beat it because he has a bajillion dollars (and his name is Magic). International governments and NGO's spent around $10 Billion dollars fighting AIDS in 2007 alone. I'm a little chaffed that there is alot of international effort that focuses on fighting AIDS in
 Africa, then the kids drop the ball and roll spliffs out of donated money. Some of these bad apples are stealing needed medicine, some corrupt pharmacists are selling it in secret. The medication requires diligent pill taking schedules. Missing any of these or abusing the drugs can render the treatment null. 

Money doesn't finish the job. The world cares, but the infrastructure of these poorer countries sort of return the favor with a "fuck you" by not establishing social workers to teach people about such risks, people to track the distribution of medication, and honest workers that get paid enough to not want to make a selfish cut.

"Higher-level bodies – those at the top of funding chains – need to take a greater responsibility for the actual implementation of money on the ground. There is a great emphasis amongst the international community on raising money for AIDS, but once that money has been allocated, not enough attention seems to be paid to where it goes." (advert.org, regaurding funding allocation in South Africa with information gathered from an article by N. Ndlovu, article here.) 

And aside from this, wouldn't this sort of just eat away at your guilt? Do people really want to get high at the expense of someone else's safety or health? It's like buying blood diamonds or cocaine. Seriously think about where your possessions are coming from people. Legal or illegal, everything has some sort of cost.

Maybe it's the rush of doing something totally selfish. Who knows.

It's serious business, I'm sure you know. I'm just bummed that such a great treatment is falling into the hands of delinquint prick kids that don't understand the weight of what gets them off. 

Also, watch "Philidelphia". They showed it to us in high school health class to learn about AIDS and why you shouldn't have sex without a condom even if you're Tom Hanks. It's a good movie.


Learn more about AIDS and how you can help here:




Read this on the AIDS situation in South Africa: 

Have a good day!

-jc del barco ii

high on life/human/likes when people don't die


Ads