Thursday, November 29, 2012

Cutting Back on Crushing Blacks

Is crushing blacks something that will be a long forgotten trait of the early 2000's technology in digital filmmaking technology. I say yes.

I think what will start happening, as we have seen Canon and other manufacturers do since they started moving into the digital camera space...companies will start to put items like 'crushing black / Black Gamma' into the hands of the user 'on top of the camera'. So instead of having these items in the menu of the cameras, they will be a dial - rated to have certain numbers (like the ND wheel on professional cameras). I think the sensors are going to be so sensitive, that these tweaks will essentially be so easy to manipulate, within range, that the individual users will have to just click the dial and 'see' the difference on the screen and make their decision from that.

Who knows what will happen, but I think the days of waiting to see what the image looks like after the post process are coming to an end...at least for easy adjustments that revolve around camera sensors etc.

- MR

Saturday, October 27, 2012

Tuscan Time Lapses

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Cantina de Toia .... stuff of Tuscan fantasies are made of

CDT is a restaurant housed in a 13th century farmhouse that was once home to Leonardo Di Vinci’s Grandmother.

It's vast interiors fill every morning with ochre toned sunlight and every evening with succulent food and the melodious sounds of Italian dinner conversation.  You enter by the bar, a warm space with high ceilings flanked by antiquated wine vats and dine on the back patio perched above the olive groves. 

In other words: this place is paradise for liberal arts students and dreamers.

P2 considering itself the latter was fortunate to spend the month of July at CDT located in the small town of Bacheretto.



Wanting to capture it’s movements and moods: the quiet creep of morning light, against the freneticdinner rush we did a series of time lapses over the course of our stay in the apartment above the restaurant. 


To our friends who made this stay possible - Thank you. 


For the rest of you - Come on in and Take a look. 

- MS

Wednesday, October 17, 2012

Underwater Woes...

I have been underwater in the past two weeks more than I have been topside shooting - and it has been fun, albeit challenging. Starting with some faulty equipment (nothing flooded) and ending with a cautionary tale and a missed shot (well, kind of, the animals weren't playing nice anyway, so didn't miss much).

Here's the tale:
I started filming in a tide pool at Marine Life Park, the largest man made snorkelling pool in the world (thank you Singapore and her addiction to superlatives), all went well, some great shots and we were off to our next destination.

Which was the Ray Bay, where people can feed the Rays by hand, well kind of. Maybe in a few months when the Rays are ready to do this. So, the idea was to get an Underwater shot of my two characters feeding the rays from under the hand (as the mouths of Rays are on the bottom of their body). Pretty simple set up, nice midday light allowing me to get a good exposure from under water looking up at the two characters - however, I didn't anticipate the following; huge condensation/fogging on the inside of my UW port...Ahhhh!!!!

Here's what happened - I had set the camera to not use the auto power off, since there is no on/off ability when the camera is in the housing and all locked up. (this was my first mistake). Then I put the camera during my 5 minute break before going into the Ray Bay on the ground and didn't realize that it was pointing directly into the sun, and then i got into the Ray Bay and realized only at that moment that the water temperature was about 15 degrees colder than the first water I was shooting in -- all of these factors joined to cause the difference in temperature inside the housing to condense and create a wonderful fogging on the inside of the dome port.

So, beware divers, if changing bodies of water, test the temperatures first to avoid these problems.

- MR

Sunday, October 14, 2012

In the Dark on the Cape




Ticket for Admittance Cape Ann Community Cinema


A cinematic highlight of my recent trip to Massachusetts was the time spent I spent in the idiosyncratic and charming movie theatres on Cape Anne. These venues stole my heart and occupied my weekends with their programming, deepening my conviction that local theaters and movie houses maintain a place of critical importance in our experience of film. Curated for and by individual tastes these 2 cinemas showcase soulful collections of 'movies for grown ups'. 

 The Cape Anne Community Cinema in Gloucester and The Little Art Cinema in Rockport showcase a wide of films not typical in the Hollywood turnstile: foreign, documentary, live opera and weird one-offs. Joy. 

Little Art Cinema
Rockport, MA



Cape Anne Community Cinema is housed above a used record store on Main St in Gloucester.  Bringing together collective viewing and comfort like none other their seating is composed of overstuffed couches and recliners, and the concession stand serves beer, wine and local organic soda. The man at the helm Robert Newton, programs a wide spectrum of stuff:  mainstream movies, thematic viewing like this month's 'Doctober',  and artist talks like the upcoming one with character actor Stephen Tobolosky.  Their daily programming and creative curation is a testament to their commitment to bringing good film to the people. 

A few miles away and a short walk from our Rockport Studio is The Little Art Cinema. It is housed on the second floor of a Scandanavian meeting hall, tickets are sold at the humble concessions counter on the first floor complete with 
hand drawn butter for the popcorn.  The theatre itself harkens back to another era and is complete with wooden seats, velvet curtains, and foreign films. 

At a time when Hollywood blockbusters dominate the line ups of so many movies theaters, these smaller cinemas showcase thoughtfulness and genuine personality, and because of this I make it point to spend as much time in the dark on Cape Ann as I can. 

- Meghan 

Sunday, September 9, 2012

Lens Whacking Peccha Kucha


Last week Persistent Productions was given the opportunity to speak at Pecha Kucha 20x20 night in Singapore. The organizers approached us and asked us what we would want to talk about in the space of media and story telling - and being the continual experimenter that I am - I chose Lens Whacking.


For those of you who have never heard of this, it's a technique used in video that adds certain lighting elements to your videos. Below is the example that I created for the event.






But not only did I talk about Lens Whacking in general, I also unveiled the very first, full HD Lens Whacking system


It was a very fun event, full of laughs, hooting and hollering due to the rather inuendoe'd speech that I gave in front of 200 plus strangers, as I talked about 'how I liked to whack it'. In the end, I hope most people saw the humor in what I was trying to put out there in addition to a technique that I believe, when used correctly, can really add interesting elements to a scene.

Thursday, August 2, 2012

Cinema - What!

There are some things that are meant to move, and others that aren't.

Take a look at our newest Cinemagraph. Shot entirely at Luke's Oyster Bar on Gemmill Lane in Singapore - the 4 hour shoot has turned into this 4 second loop. Thank you to Travis Masiero for allowing us to close down the shop with you.

Enjoy!

Cinemagraph by Mike Rogers, Ugly D and Cosmic Coalition


Links:
http://uglyd.com/blog/keep-it-clean
http://www.lukes.com.sg
http://www.cosmiccoalition.com/

Wednesday, August 1, 2012

Shooting Wrapped...

Today marks the end of my five day shoot with Land Rover magazine - One Life - shooting with Helene Dancer, Editor at OneLife, Rod McKenzie, Freelance Writer, and Scott A Woodward (www.scottawoodward.com), photographer and frequent collaborator.

The shoot was a challenging one. As my last post mentioned, we were commissioned to make a film and snap some photos of Rod's journey through Singapore meeting and exploring the entreprenuerial landscape here. We didn't travel very far - distance wise - but we certainly spent a lot of time in the Land Rover Sport doing U-turn after U-turn, communicating via walkie talkie, telling Rod to stop, slow down, go faster, get in the left lane, right lane over and over again. I think his patience ran out half way through day three (I think that, because he told me on day 5). He was a good sport though - never getting frustrated even as Scott and myself chased the sun around the city trying to capture the elusive reflection on the glass panels or the sun spots shining through the windshield as Rod drove through Chinatown.

A great experience that taught me to always have graduated filters if shooting any expansive vistas or landscapes and have a requirement of any foreground elements - in this case, a car. It's a tough city to film under these circumstances, the scale is just so big.

It all ended well - we'll share the video once completed on the site here.
- Mike Rogers

Friday, July 27, 2012

Eastbound and MBS...

Started a 5 day shoot with Land Rover magazine, OneLife, with Scott A. Woodward (www.scottawoodward.com) here in Singapore. We are shooting a short film about the experience that Rod McKenzie has during his 5-day journey around Singapore meeting entrepreneurs.

After day one, the shoot is proving difficult. The biggest problem is that the urban city gridlock makes it very inefficient to scout a location, get an angle, position the car long enough for a shot (or for any action to be called with car and driver) and eventually decide that it's the right place for the shot.

I think we learned a lot yesterday though - Don't do it during the weekday. So, this weekend is our time to get the big buildings, empty streets and car driving through them.

If this happens, the next challenge is the scale issue. The problem is that over the last decade Singapore has decided that building for superlatives are more important than keeping some sort of architectural integrity in tact for their new buildings. So, this has created engourged looking buildings of inhuman scale that make it very difficult to shoot a normal sized car in front of it without distorting the image too much. Additionally - the downtown city center is built so compact that getting any distance is very difficult so you are always very close up on the vehicle trying to get both in the shot.

Anyway - here's a quick shot of the day from the incredible iphonography gallery of Scott A. Woodward.



- MR

Friday, June 29, 2012

Persistent Productions on Spinner

Today, June 28th, Persistent Productions' latest collaboration with Wishes and Thieves for their Forest Fire song (and similarly title EP) has been featured on the website Spinner as the Video of the day.

It was great fun working with Wishes. Long hours, shooting into the night at our Rockport, MA studio blaring the song until 2am as the band needed to 'feel' the vibe of the song during the recording session. We shot it a number of times, and ended the night with three full, non stop, performances of the song - after already shooting for 7 hours. It was an aggressive way to end the shoot, but it was a great reminder of how much energy a live performance gives a music video.

We hope you enjoy the video and look for more music videos from us in the near future.

Check it out here: Spinner Link here

http://www.spinner.com/2012/06/28/wishes-and-thieves-forest-fire-video-of-the-day/

Friday, June 8, 2012

P2 Dailies, Once a week






Please take a look at some interesting footage from our Series; P2 Dailies, Once a week. This one comes from our shoot with TCRP while we were in East Timor producing a film for their company. It's a quick video, but fun to see what nature does sometimes if you take the time, set up a nice looking shot and let the action unfold.

Thanks for watching.



P2 Dailies, Once a week - "The Look" from Mike Rogers on Vimeo.

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

Sala Bai




For the past several months we've had the pleasure of working with the Cambodian non-profit Sala Bai

This organization provides life changing education to young & poor Cambodians who otherwise would have a very small chance of being gainfully employed and a very high chance of being at risk for sex and labor trafficking.  For a little economic perspective: the students they accept into their program are coming from families (families!) that survive on less than $30USD per month. 

How the program works: Sala Bai is a free hospitality school based in Siem Reap. Over the course of one year they train students in one of four different specializations within hospitality. After graduation 100% of the students find employment. This employment places the students squarely in Cambodia's emerging middle class. It's an incredible track record and the people in charge of running the organization are wonderful as the place itself.

Where we come in: 
To showcase the transformative elements of the Sala Bai school Mike, Scott and I documented one of their student's, Khatna, from her rural floating village, through the school's program and onto employment at the (lovely) Heritage Suites Hotel. 
We documented this story in film and video with the aim of helping to share and expand the work that Sala Bai does.

The Debut: 
We debuted the film earlier this month to a very receptive audience at the Hilton Hotel Singapore in honor of International Women's Day.
Khatna, our main character was in town for the screening as well as Sala Bai's director Emmanuelle DeThomas, and the films' trusted translator Sokly Sour. This tireless threesome went on and screened the film with UNIFEM numerous times during their short trip to Singapore. 

Launching:
All of these efforts launched a new fundraising initiative for Sala Bai. To find out more about this initiative visit: touchsalabai.com

TBC...
Our  documentation of Sala Bai and the Touch Sala Bai initiative are the work of the very committed Sam McGoun. More on Sam in the coming weeks....