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Courtney Hoskins

Writer/Director

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Comic-Con: Friday Fun Stuff

I feel like a dork for posting these things so late. I missed so much work being sick and whatnot that it's been kind of crazy for me to try to catch up. Anyway, I got to meet Lloyd Kaufmann (president of Troma films) at Cannes this year. My friend Pericles (director of "Loop," for which I made some 3D helicopters and various other fun things) directed a film for them several years ago- "Redneck Zombies" and introduced us. He sent me an e-mail informing me that Lloyd would be there at the Troma booth. I stopped by about a dozen times throughout the conference, but no luck. Llyod was never there. However, I did find a copy of Pericles's film!

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(Peri's film is on the lower right. Right above it is the film the South Park guys made while they went to my school. Special guest star: Stan Brakhage! Did you also know that he is the guy for whom Stan of South Park is named? The more you know...)

I also wandered around the exhibition space (oh yeah, I was once again too late to test for the Dharma Initiative recruitment program). I found an interesting little... seemed like a scavenger hunt of some kind. There was a card with a staticy pattern printed on it. You had to take a plastic sheet and place it over the card in order to decode it.

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(My phone has been acting up lately. It's very slow at doing everything, including taking pictures, which means the shutter stays open too long and blurs everything. Blah.)

I can only focus on one or two ARGs at a time and right now, I'm giving my love to Lost (though it's kind of trying our patience at the moment, I'm betting it will be fun once it gets going) and Fringe (more on that one later). I was interested in this one, though, because of the "seek the six" message. The Oceanic Six (a Lost reference)? Was it a Fringe reference (there's a six fingered hand print in some of the advertisements)? Later, I saw some cool sky writing:

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Okay, cool. I was intrigued enough to start the game. Turns out it's a reference to "The Prisoner," which they are going to be remaking. I'll watch it, but I'm not interested enough in the game to continue.

Friday night ended with the best solo dinner I've ever had: Nobu "The Sake" Jyunmai Daijingo and edamame followed by the black cod with miso at Nobu. It was SO good that I didn't even care that I was dining alone. The cod was the consistency of butter and just fell off in perfect bite-sized pieces. The miso sauce was just sweet and crispy enough... heaven.

tags: arg, args, comic-con, lloyd kaufmann, loop, pericles lewnes, redneck zombies, seek the six, south park, stan brakhage, the prisoner
categories: stories, ufos
Sunday 08.10.08
Posted by Courtney Hoskins
 

The Cutting Room Floor?

Yes, it’s a film thing. Read on…

If you regularly read my blog, you might be wondering what the bloody h is going on. If you’ve never read my blog and are puzzled by how many posts there are for a blog that has only existed for a day, let me explain:

I am in the process of transferring my old blog to a new one. I have decided to go with Word Press over Blogger because I feel it gives me a bit more organizational and layout control and I am a CSS nerd and like to have things just so. It might not seem that way right now because I’m using one of their standard templates, but I’m getting to it.

So, what’s with the title? Well, I was friends with filmmaker Stan Brakhage before he passed away. One day, I wrote a description of one of his films. He was very excited by what I wrote and wanted to use it. Apparently, the Library of Congress said they needed better descriptions of his films because they couldn’t tell the difference between his works and scraps from the cutting room floor…

This was meant to be insulting. A brief explanation: Once Upon a Time, filmmakers used to edit actual physical film prints on big turntable machines, rather than digital media on laptops. They would physically cut the film and piece it back together. The stuff that ended up on the cutting room floor was the stuff that would not make it into the final film (also known as trash, scraps, crap, refuse, etc.) Despite the proliferation of non-linear editing systems and the popularity of DVD outtake clips and directors’ cuts, the term is still used in “the biz” to describe ideas, people, or shots that just don’t make it into the final “cut.”

Some film facts for you: Even today, at the end of the editing process, negatives do still get cut and most of what you see in movie theatres is still shown on film (yes, this surprises many of my non-film-savvy friends, as does the fact that as of this moment, film prints are usually still better quality than digital projections). Also, did you know that when you are watching a film projected in a movie theater, half the time you are staring at a black screen and the rest of the time you are staring at still images? The illusion of movement and constant illumination created from this flicker is due to a phenomenon called “persistence of vision,” whereby your brain “fills in” the missing pieces. Neat, huh?

Anyway, back to the title of this blog… My old blog was called “An Astronomer in Hollywood.” At the time, I was in school for astrophysics, having temporarily turned my back on my dreams of becoming a filmmaker (get it? It’s a play on the concept of “star.”) I felt torn between my two passions, knowing that one would end up a hobby and the other a career. Well, since film has clearly won that battle for now, I feel that my musings on astronomy, as well as dreams and meandering thoughts, are essentially “scraps from the cutting room floor.”

Now any Stan Brakhage fan would know: that’s usually where you find the good stuff!

tags: editing, film, movies, persistence of vision, splice, stan brakhage
categories: ufos
Tuesday 02.19.08
Posted by Courtney Hoskins
Comments: 5
 

Stan Brakhage's "Scenes From Under Childhood"

I just had the privilege of seeing the first two films in this four-part series by filmmaker Stan Brakhage, an amazing filmmaker and much-missed friend. I'd seen them before, though I'd never seen the first film with sound. The last time I saw it, I'm sure Stan projected it silent (or my aural memory has failed me). It is always difficult to "describe" a film like this. For those people reading this blog who might not have a clue who this "Stan" guy is (he is, in fact, the namesake of the South Park character, for those who watch the show) or what his films are about, I refer you to the above link and offer you this quote from his book "Metaphors on Vision:"

"Imagine an eye unruled by man-made laws of perspective, an eye unprejudiced by compositional logic, an eye which does not respond to the name of everything but which must know each object encountered in life through an adventure of perception. How many colors are there in a field of grass to the crawling baby unaware of 'Green'? How many rainbows can light create for the untutored eye? How aware of variations in heat waves can that eye be? Imagine a world alive with incomprehensible objects and shimmering with an endless variety of movement and innumerable gradations of color. Imagine a world before the 'beginning was the word.'"

Much of this series is a chronicle of such an "adventure of perception." Though, Stan himself cautions that "One can never go back, even in imagination," so this is an interpretation through an adult's eyes. I guess the best way to describe these films to someone who has never seen a film quite like this would be to call it a non-narrative documentary of sorts. It pushes the limits of this boundary- this just gives you an idea of what these films are "like."

Film #1

Filming through objects and materials that distort the image, under/over-exposing the image, interweaving sections of shifting colors, and filming much footage at child's-eye level, Stan Brakhage does convey the sense of "feeling" things with the eyes for the very first time. It is often difficult for the viewer to think "that's a chair, that's a hand..." etc. Many shapes had no recognizable "name" to me. Eventually, I found that my mind kind of shut down in the verbal sense, much in the same way it would during meditation. Unlike meditation, however, my mind was still otherwise quite stimulated and active. A rare "nameable" scene in which a young girl is feeding a baby with a spoon sums up my general feelings for the film: someone is offering me this new visual treat and I am reaching out with all I have to taste it! It's very difficult to put words to the experience. Often, I was reminded of just "being" as a child- waking up in the morning with my pajamas on, crawling under the furniture and staring at the patterns in the woodwork, touching things, watching things, etc.

Much of this film was somewhat dark and had a reddish hue to it, which I found to be very comforting, much in the same way a child might find a dish of macaroni and cheese to be comforting. The film is far from bland in the "dull" sense (and so is a good dish of mac and cheese), my point is that it's a gentle, soothing color. It's one we often see with eyes shut (I say "one," falling in to the name trap mentioned in the "baby unaware 'Green'" passage above- we see many shades of red (the dominant color, but there are other colors) as the light penetrates our closed eyelids, it passes through the various blood vessels, capillaries, etc. and casts a general reddish hue onto our mind's eye). I would (tentatively) imagine that this might be true for a baby, as well, but who knows? I certainly don't remember!

Film #2

This film was much more "nameable," much more "describable." It seemed to be a continuation of the perception adventure. The images were fairly bright and clear containing a fairly broad spectrum of colors. Rather than crawling and moving about in constant wonder, most of the children seemed to have a direction to their play. They begin playing with dolls (dressing and moving the little humans and gaining an understanding for how people are supposed to move, look, etc.) and toys. Organized games begin to materialize. The children play on playground equipment, and one really nice sequence showed one of the children making "mountains of snow" out of sheets on a bed and then tramping around on the bed with snow boots- what a great early step (literally) into Art!

There was a scene in this film that really started me thinking: One of the children is falling asleep in the back of the car. He keeps falling over, catching himself and distorting himself into uncomfortable positions. His sisters keep trying to move him into a more comfortable position, but the sleepy child insists on staying uncomfortable.

I've noticed that adults don't tend to do this very often. Usually (unless we've had too much to drink), we can nod off, wake up, and recognize that we are not in a position conducive to sleep. We then adjust our position and go back to sleep. I can think of a few exceptions that I have experienced recently. One involved the buzzing alarm clock. I always press the snooze button. One morning, I was dreaming. The alarm went off and I pushed the snooze button. I fell back into a dream. The alarm went off ten minutes later. In my dream, I recall wondering when the snooze period would end and I would wake up and stop this incessant noise! I thought that the alarm was IN my dream. I woke up very disoriented and confused. It took me a moment to "snap out of it."

Now I wonder (for that child who is violently nodding off and pushing away the sisters who are trying to help) if we have difficulty distinguishing between the dream world and the "real" world as children. I also wonder if babies need to sleep as much as they do because they are tired or because their bodies are so "new" or if they are simply making the transition from a purely dream-like reality (in the womb or beyond...who knows) to this one, the "real world." Just a thought...

tags: cinema, experimental film, movies, scene from under childhood, stan brakhage
categories: ufos
Wednesday 11.23.05
Posted by Courtney Hoskins
 

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