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Thoughts on the 48 Hour Film Project

After successful completion of the 2011 48 hour Film Project in New York City, the members of Killer Goose took time to reflect on the experience. You can view the trailer for our entry, “Redistribution,” HERE.
Filmmaker Focus: Writing “Feed A” and Exclusive Set Construction Video
Every filmmaker is influenced by other filmmakers, regardless of whether they know it or not. Little inklings of cinematography, dialogue, color palettes, and action styles constantly find their way into your film even if you don’t realize you are doing it. After working through multiple Killer Goose Productions, it was my turn to grab the reigns. I had such a great time working on “White Lighter”, which was a collaborative effort, “The Call”, Daniel O. Linke’s debut, and Dale DeVino’s “Dead for Life”, that I knew I was ready to take a stab at sitting in the director’s chair.
The State of Cinema: Summer Blockbusters and How I Moved On
Since the dawn of cinema way back when, in a time where people would challenge each other to duels, cats had more rights than women, and people didn’t have cell phones (GASP!), films were made with passion and heart, stories were more character driven, art films flourished, and directors had no use of digital effects so they used their actors to their full potential. This was all fine and dandy until 1975 came. I’ll give you a few clues to what changed cinema: 1. Amity Island 2. Brody 3. A giant great white shark. Ok you got it; we’re talking about “Jaws” here and I’m not going to lie: it’s a great movie, it won a bunch of awards and helped instill fear of the ocean for many people (myself included). But as scary as “Jaws” was, what was scarier was how it almost singlehandedly changed people’s perspective of going to the movie theatre. Steven Spielberg’s “Jaws” cost $8,000,000 to make and had a worldwide box office total of over $470,000,000. With these figures in hand, you can see why film producers realized they stumbled on something huge; it was called the “summer popcorn movie” and it changed cinema as a result.

















