Friday, November 14, 2008

Soundstage Shopping

We shot the musical portion of the first two Liken movies on the soundstage of a television station near the Salt Lake Airport. An old friend of mine worked there and was able to make it feasible for us to shoot there. But he no longer works there, and even if he did, the stage there isn't quite big enough to set up more than one set at a time. So to shoot there, we would need to tear down a set right after it wrapped, then build the new set and paint it ready to go the next day. Obviously, that makes for a long night, not to mention a wet floor the next day when we're ready to shoot.

When we moved to Utah in 2004, we looked for an office with warehouse space where we could shoot our productions. We found our eventual "home" in the East Bay area of Provo, where we shot the next six Liken movies. The space wasn't ideal (too small, ceilings too low, inadequate power, inadequate AC, inadequate restroom facilities, etc.), but we made it work, because that's what you do in the indy movie project world.

With the long lay-off between Likens, however, it didn't make sense to keep renting the warehouse space. So we moved all the walls, props and costumes to off-site storage, which costs about a tenth as much as the warehouse space.

But it does mean that we need to find space to shoot "Jonah." So we went soundstage shopping. It doesn't appear that there is a huge number of options here in Utah. But we managed to find one up in Salt Lake City that we think is big enough to handle all of our sets at the same time. That makes the prospect of rehearsing and shooting (on dry floors!) an appealing possibility. We still need to check out a couple more options before we firm up those arrangements, but it looks like we will be heading north to film "Jonah."

Another plus to shooting in SLC is that it is a little more central for our friends in that area as well as the Ogden area. But it will add a couple of extra commuting hours a day to our Utah County contingent. Hey -- just like shooting in L.A...

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Cue: Jonah songwriting

Aaron has started writing songs for "Jonah and the Great Fish."

Typically, the way we work is I'll write a script, we'll massage it over time, get it fairly well nailed down. But it won't have any songs, just "song notes," which will be usually a quarter to a half page of suggestions on music mood, a description of what the song needs to accomplish, ideas for some fun business that could occur during the song, that kind of stuff. Then Aaron will do his magic, and then we'll massage the songs a bit, then I'll work the lyrics back into the script, which may need to be revised with more or less dialogue before or after the song, depending on how much the song covered or to accommodate any changes of direction it may have gone.

For "Jonah," the first one he worked on is the first song from the movie (it doesn't always happen like that -- Aaron says he takes them in the order that they come to him). This song is a bit of a departure from the full-cast, high-energy opening that most musicals (including Likens) typically open with. Of course, it's good to give the audience something big and fun to set the mood.

But structurally, this episode seemed to want to go a slightly different direction, because we want to open with Jonah (who's sorta the star of "Jonah"), but we couldn't open with him in Nineveh, because he doesn't go there until the end of the story. So to put Jonah in a big setting, we'd have to create a whole new town, like maybe his hometown. And, not that budgets should matter, but creating towns for Liken and populating them with villagers is sorta expensive. And in the Liken world, budgets do matter. We decided it would be better to save the money on creating a town setting for Jonah's opening song and instead use it to create a cool set for Nineveh.

But this left us with a slight problem for the opening: it was scripted to feature just one man -- Jonah, right after he receives a revelation to go to the dreaded city of Nineveh. So we thought we'd put him in the wilderness, maybe in a tent, like he's on a mission heading somewhere. A solo opening. Risky. But I felt like if we kept it brief, and kept it lively (there are opportunities for humor as an anxiety-ridden Jonah tries to decide if he's going to accept this mission), we could maybe make it work.

Aaron sent me a version of the song that had a fairly sedate opening verse, with Jonah pledging to do whatever God asked of him, and then he gets the revelation and it all falls apart. It was nice, but I was worried that we were already pressing the good graces of our younger audience in particular with our one-man opening, and then to give them a minute of this slow ballad before it turns fun -- extra risky. I hesitated to mention it to Aaron, because it was the first song he had submitted on this project. But then I realized that this would be the first song in the the first Liken after a lengthy absence, so we really want to get this right. So I mentioned my concerns to Aaron, and he was totally cool about it. We brainstormed some possible revisions to the song, like maybe just lopping off the ballad-like opening as well as some other ideas. Aaron went away to think about it.

A couple of hours later, he calls me and says he wants to go in an entirely different direction with the song, and asks if it would be OK if sometime during Jonah's song, three fish girl backup-singer types pop up out of a nearby stream and sing a little counterpoint melody that chides Jonah in a fun way. My first thought was water feature (ka-ching), three backup singer fish girls (ka-ching, each with costumes, ka-ching x 3). But my next thought was it would be a great way to make that risky solo-opening a lot fuller and more fun. Plus, as Aaron pointed out, it introduces the concept of fish as sentient beings in this show. All that has to be worth at least one or two ka-chings. When Ken (my brother/producer/budget man) and I sat down to lunch, I ran it by him, and he laughed at just the thought of the three fish popping up and said he thought it would be well worth it.

So the three fish-girl backup singer opening concept was in. Shortly thereafter, Aaron sent me an mp3 of the rough version of the song. He even did the girl fish voices -- that guy can truly hit the high notes (although he confessed that after he recorded
it, he had to sit down for 5 minutes because the high notes gave him a massive headache). And talk about a fun song! It's called "No Way!", and it is short -- about 2 minutes. But it is high energy, fun and will get this show off to a great start.

Wednesday, November 05, 2008

A Logo is Born


Started work on a logo for Jonah. We typically do two over the course of the production. The first we use during pre-production and production. Then sometime during post-production, when we know a little more what our movie looks -- and feels -- like, we do our final logo.

As we are now in pre- pre-production mode on Jonah, we asked Brian Higginson to develop something for us. Didn't want something too whal-ish, since the "great fish" angle is something we're exploring in this retelling. Brian gave us several looks, and we ended up choosing the one you see here. I like that it captures the feeling of both the ancient scriptural nature of the story, but with a touch of whimsy. Thanks, Brian.

So now we have a logo. All we need is a movie. More on that to come...

Saturday, November 01, 2008

Oh, The Lengths We'll Go...


I was looking for a file on one of our servers the other day, and I came across a folder that brought back some memories of an example of the lengths we sometimes go to in an effort to make a Liken.

It was about a year ago this time that Ken's wife, Coppelia, suggested that Ken and I submit an application to a television show called "Amazing Race" (season 13, the one that's on now, without us, so let me nip the suspense right there). I had never watched the show, but when I heard the prize is a cool million, I realized that would fund more than a few Likens, and even if we didn't win, if we could get on, it would offer some amazing exposure for the series, so I thought it was worth at least investigating.

I ordered a season from Netflix and saw that it seemed a little more feasible for a guy like me than a Survivor (I've never been a huge fan of roughing it) or Fear Factor (I've never been a huge fan of eating cockroaches). The challenges that they do on Amazing Race seemed like they'd be sorta fun. Ken would be awesome in it, so I figured if by some miracle we got on, I could give him the hard ones and I'd take the ones that involved closing your eyes and jumping off of something high (now that I can do).

There was a lengthy paper application and they also require a 3-minute video application. So on Thanksgiving morning 2007, Ken and I hit the road with a small video camera, and Ken's daughter Aria and my daughter Katie, and shot our video application. We decided to be up front with the reason we were doing it (funding Jonah), hoping that might help set us apart from the gazillion other applications they probably get. Guess it didn't work.

I've kept the video under wraps (it would have been cooler to share if we actually got on the show). But when I came across it this week, I realized that even though we didn't get on, it was a pretty good representation of the lengths you have to go through to get a project made. It didn't work, but hey, so what? You try something, it doesn't work, you try something else. Eventually, hopefully, something will work.

Anyway, so here it is, our Amazing Race video application.