Sleeping Dogs Film Review

sleepingdogsfilmreview

London. Eve spends her days caring for her almost vegetative fiance Tommy while struggling to make ends meet. Tommy’s only hope of recovery is a radical new treatment, but it’s expensive. Running out of time, Eve turns to Tommy’s old friends for help. Little does she know that journeying into Tommy’s murky past will unravel a chain of deception that will prove the ultimate test of her devotion.

This film was shot as a collaborative project by a crew of two and a core cast of five for a production budget of £100. It went on to be nominated for a BiFA.

Floris Ramaekers co-wrote, directed, was DOP, camera operator and editor. Pretty impressive stuff. Now for the film…

Dark and heavy, the film is beautifully shot and looks far more expensive than it is. I cannot tell this is a low budget, scaled back production. The acting is great. While some of the characters are not exactly likeable, each is well-written and the actors do an excellent job. Special mention to veteran British actor Jon Campling who has been in so many great films he has probably lost count himself. He is a star who is destined for great things. Liberty Mills is also amazing in the title role.

Sleeping Dogs is an entertaining, gritty British film in the way only Brits can do. It is no surprise it has received nominations. I loved it and was incredibly impressed at what was achieved. I hope this team of cast and crew make another film as this one really is excellent.

Go and see it.

Interview with Simon Horrocks Third Contact Director | Film

What inspired you to make the film?

I had been a screenwriter for many years but, although I had sold screenplays, none had made it to production. I decided if one of my scripts was to be made into a film, I would have to do it. We had no money, but we set about shooting the film with what we had to hand. I felt I was at a ‘now or never’ moment in my life, so I put everything else aside and dedicated myself to one thing – making a feature film.

In fact, many well-known filmmakers have done this. Aronofsky’s first film, Pi, was crowdfunded 10 years before kickstarter become popular. Christopher Nolan shot his first film in London, and the whole production was scaled so that crew, cast and equipment could fit into a London cab. Other filmmakers such as Brits Peter Strickland and Ben Wheatley recently self-funded their first features. In the past, Shane Caruth, Robert Rodriguez and Kevin Smith have launched their careers this way.

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Where did the initial idea come from?

It was inspired from what one critic described as a ‘goldmine of ideas’. I had already worked on a script back in 2006-7 using the idea of ‘quantum suicide’. The script had a rave review from the UK Film Council, comparing it to films such as Blade Runner and Memento, but they passed. So I approached the subject again, but in a different way, scaling the story down so I would be able to improvise my way through the production.

Why do you think the Kickstarter campaign was such a success?

For a few different reasons. I spent a lot of time planning and designing the campaign. I also spent hour after our talking to people online, making allies. As I didn’t have a team, I knew I need some friends who believed in what I was doing, and I was lucky enough to find some. Slowly the buzz started to grow, and as the deadline approached, this growing crowd got behind the campaign in a big way and drove it over the line.

Tell us about the film

The film is a surreal psychological sci-fi thriller about a psychotherapist who investigates the mysterious deaths of two patients. It seems to be a film which different people experience it in different ways. If you like films which are intelligent, puzzling, haunting and thought-provoking, you might like Third Contact.

How hard was it to make?

It took 3 years from writing the script, to production, followed by a year of editing, sound design and scoring the music. I had no professional crew and I was operating camera for the first time, as well. The guys I had recording sound were doing that for the first time too. Bit by bit, we worked through the script, shooting as locations became available.

The challenges were many, but I took the ‘one step at a time’ philosophy, meeting each as we needed to. Otherwise the scale of the project would be too overwhelming for me, as writer/director/producer/camera etc, to attempt to solve every problem in one go.

Often, I didn’t know where we would shoot a certain scene, or who would act in it, even while we were halfway through the rest of the project. The strategy was to get all the scenes in one location in the bag, then move onto the next and work out how and where and with who we would do it.

What is the hardest, and easiest thing about directing?

I think, as a director, your task is to have the overall vision of the film, while the team are focusing on the small details. The overall vision will inform the decisions you need to make, down to the smallest detail. But I think every director is different, so each will have a hardest and easiest element. Some directors come from an acting background, so dealing with actors is easiest for them. While others are more technical and are happier playing with the camera and thinking up shots.

For me, I’m not that interested in the technical side of filmmaking, so I reduced that to a minimum and focused on the story I wanted to tell.

What did you shoot it on?

A HDV camcorder (Canon HV30) which is a consumer camera. It is a high quality one, and had a bit of a cult following, which is the reason I decided to use it. At the time, DSLRs, which are popular now, were just out of reach for me, financially. My philosophy was that a camera doesn’t make a great movie. I’d rather watch a great, imaginative story shot on an iPhone, than something more technically proficient but boring to watch.

I didn’t see using a camcorder as an excuse for making a low budget looking. I saw it as an opportunity to explore using a camcorder to shoot a film. I always intended to create my own aesthetic. People are obsessed with this idea of something looking ‘professional’, which to me is a meaningless quality. Picasso used ordinary house paint to create his masterpieces, which I’m sure many painters at the time would have considered ‘unprofessional’.

You only spent £4000. Where did most of the budget go?

The camera cost £600 and the microphone £700. We also spent over £600 on make up fx, as we had to age the main character 30 years, which involved doing a full head cast and creating a prosthetic mask.

How did you keep the budget so low?

By writing a screenplay with minimal number of characters, and locations which were accessible to us. Many of the scenes were shot in my house, or friends’ houses. We had a very small crew and cast who donated their time to making the film. Also, by improvising certain scenes around what we had available to us. We couldn’t afford to be 100% fussy, otherwise the film would have never got made. Again, I didn’t see this as a set back, but more as part of the creative process. Sometimes, things worked better than they would have, because we were forced by budget restrictions into being more imaginative.

Its like the old story of the mechanical shark used during the filming of JAWS. The thing never worked, so they ended up using underwater shark ‘point of view’ shots, looking up at swimmers’ legs dangling into the water – which, of course, is far more terrifying than seeing a rubber shark swimming around.

What’s next?

We will be getting Third Contact into as many cinemas as possible. After that, looking at the next project. I will need to take stock of everything I have learned in the last 5 years of making and marketing this film solo, without any industry backing, and see how I feel about the next step.

Independent film Third Contact Tours after making cinema history at BFI IMAX

Third Contact is the debut feature film from Director Simon Horrocks and his company, BodyDouble Films. After a successful premiere at the renowned BFI IMAX, the independent film will make its way around the UK, Europe, America and Canada over the next four months. Screenings are being funded by Indiegogo and Tugg using a unique ‘cinema on demand’ approach.

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The story follows Dr David Wright, a depressed psychotherapist, who embarks on an obsessive investigation after a second patient takes their life in mysterious circumstances.

Shot using only a handheld camcorder, a microphone and a light, the overall budget for the film came to an astonishingly low £4000. The film has been praised for its exceptional camera work in addition to its seamless use of colours, themes and sounds throughout. The actors have been credited on numerous occasions for their performances whilst the script has been commended on its intelligence.

The writer and director, Simon Horrocks, who also took care of filming, casting, production and editing, had raised the money to put the film together by working in a cinema. Later down the line, Horrocks would be making cinema history for having a film short costing virtually nothing, screening in a theatre alongside films made for £200 million.

This milestone moment in Horrocks career came together by a Kickstarter campaign, which funded the premiere held at the BFI IMAX in London. The likes of MacUser Magazine and Raindance Film Festival got behind the project and made donations towards the campaign.

Once the premiere had taken place the film received rave reviews from the likes of Faust, Critics Associated, Frankenpost, Movie Sleuth and The London Film Review. Third Contact also made it to the prestigious HoF International Film Festival in Germany.

Third Contact will be screening in various locations in the UK, Europe, Canada and America over the forthcoming few months.

We will have an interview with the director, Simon, soon.

Entity Film Review

entity film reviewA group of documentary filmmakers travel into the heart of rural Siberia and come across all manners of unpleasantness in this low-budget, stripped down horror thriller written and directed by Steve Stone. It utilizes a low budget (approximately £100,000) to go over what is admittedly familiar material in the horror genre, but is executed in a stark and efficient manner that grabbed it the Best Horror Film at the London Independent Film Festival earlier this year.

 

A British documentary crew led by Kate Hansen (Charlotte Riley) for ‘Darkest Secrets’  travels to a remote Siberian woodland to report on a grisly find decades earlier; dozens of unidentified bodies shot dead and buried in shallow graves. Joining the established film crew are renowned psychic Ruth Peacock (Dervla Kirwan)  and local guide Yuri (Branko Tomovic), who escorts them to the location and narrates the backstory to their cameras. Hopes are that Ruth can give a unique insight into the the identity of the victims and why they were killed.  However they soon stumble across a vast, dilapidated research facility that harbours far more sinister secrets…

 

At first glance Entity would appear to heading down the well worn path of the found footage horror film that broke through into the mainstream with The Last Broadcast and The Blair Witch Project, and has been diluted down over the years with titles such as the Paranormal Activity quartet. The opening scenes play out via skipping and distorted CCTV footage and the cameras point of view is brought up and referenced several times throughout the film. Thankfully Stone resists succumbing to a ‘flavour of the month’ approach and settles for a more traditional narrative style and supernatural feel. The tone here favours atmosphere and chills over graphic carnage and the film touches on themes of regret, loss and memory that thankfully suggest the filmmakers agenda was above just splattering claret across the walls. The abandoned military facility is a horror subplot that has been done to death with recent incarnations such as The Bunker and Outpost. It’s credit to Stone and his collaborators that they manage with limited resources to craft such omnipresent dread from such a familiar setting. A large part of that is down to the impressive location scouted for the film; an abandoned, almost monolithic industrial estate that seems to smother the  characters and the very screen with its presence. The cinematography serves well in in transforming it into an embodiment of menace and transfers from graceful tracking shots to a frantic, hand held pursuit in night vision as the narrative develops. Proceedings are made more memorable by a strong cast doing good work with what do seem initially liked cliched roles. Particularly worthy of note is Kirwan who embodies her role with an ethereal calm in the face of fear, that always seems not too far from some form of breakdown as the story unfolds.  Branko Tomovic also does solid work in a role that is admittedly not very difficult to guess its trajectory but he invests it with a surprising mix of menace and care.

 

I had the fortune of seeing Entity at a director’s Q&A at the London Independent Film Festival. Just from Stone’s passion and enthusiastic response to questions it was easy to see the time and energy he had put into the project and how much it meant to him on a personal level . Entity is not without its rough edges but it gets the job done with effective determination.

 

Do Elephants Pray? | Film Review

Do Elephants Pray? is a film that anyone on the 9-5 rat race will be able to relate to, and to their credit, the filmmakers capture the dull greyness of adulthood, jobs and responsibility perfectly.

Advertising executive Callum Cutter’s (Jonnie Hurn) life completely changes after he meets a French free spirit (hippie) Malika (Julie Dray) and their worlds of commerce and nature collide. Malika promises to change Callum’s life forever, as long as he keeps her identity secret.

Callum is the head of his own failing advertising company and is trying to find meaning in his own soulless life, he is played with subtlety by Hurn who is very good in his role and is also the screenwriter and producer of the film. Callum faces the dilemma of selling the unsellable product.

Marc Warren (of Hustle fame) is also in this film, playing a cad after Callum’s job to perfection. This film was five years in the making and is based on real events on the life of writer/actor Jonnie Hurn, which gives the movie substance. Filmed in London and in the magical forest of Broceliande in Brittany, the film stays true to itself. Do Elephants Pray? is an enjoyable film about self awareness and the meaning of life. With talented and passionate people behind the story it is definitely one to watch. Director and producer Paul Hills has directed well, capturing the essence of the film.

Length: 105 minutes.

Film Characters To Put Into Your Low Budget Film.

The key to low-budget film-making is to have as few locations as possible. Locations and travel cost money.


Anna Paquin who is in the vampire TV show True Blood

Now, onto characters. You can’t afford to have a baseball player in your film if you want to see him in action. The key is having characters who can look authentic without renting expensive stadiums.

CIA agents are always popular in films. All you need is an actor in a suit, and, possibly, a fake gun. (If you are filming outside with a fake gun you must alert the authorities and tell them you will be filming in the area. Least you get shot by armed police thinking you are some kind of homicidal killer).

FBI agents: Ditto.

Waitress. Make a gritty, real life drama. It is relatively easy to talk a cafe owner into filming in their establishment for free. They will probably say yes for some publicity and a thank you in the credits.

People in love; everyone loves a good love story, and a happy ending. The purpose of film is to tell a story visually. Is there possibly an easier story to tell than a story about love and relationships. Something we all understand and go through?

Gangsters. a suit, a fake cockney accent and a fake gun. Brevity is the soul of low-budget film-making. Be careful when doing a gangster film though. They are heard to do well as Martin Scorsese has put the bar so high. You could make a good short if you have a good, original take on it.

Zombies; It’s easy to find a trainee make up artist who wants to add to their portfolio so your zombies will be authentic. It’s another popular genre.

Vampires; They are huge right now thanks to Twilight and True Blood. How hard is it to find some black clothes and fake blood? Bloody easy in fact.

More important than the genre and characters for a film is the script. An original film, well acted, and with a good script can beat any big budget blockbuster. Money is no longer a problem for independent filmmakers. You can make a film on a shoestring budget.

Photo credit: DarkChacal