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NO STRINGS ATTACHED

January 14, 2005 by Nigel Dick

Just called SAG (Screen Actors Guild) to get the ball rolling on making the deals with actors all legal and proper. They’ve sent me a form I have to fill in full of questions I have no asnwers to – but at the bottom is a question that’s scared the living daylights out of me: ‘Do you intend to include any of the following in your production? Minors, Animals, Singers, Puppets, Stunts, Nudity.’

Oh no – the first flaw in my otherwise perfect plan has been revealed. What was I thinking? It appears I’m about to make a film without any puppets in it.

THE MAKING OF

Filed Under: Callback

THE MAKING OF

January 14, 2005 by Nigel Dick

Forgot to mention that the still you saw yesterday doesn’t mean we’ve started principal photgrpahy yet. I was simply shooting some stills to a) get something we can put up on our web site and b) create the illusion that things are happening. Web address coming soon.

Had lunch with Peter Harding today – he’s the guy that shot the Jason Mraz in Japan footage from that Mraz Live DVD I worked on 18 months ago. I was buying him lunch so that he could ask me some career advice which I gladly gave him: “Accept all offers of work that don’t involve both nakedness and ritual humiliation.” If ritual humiliation is involved on its own that’s OK – in my experience that comes with the territory.

This being Hollywood there’s no such thing as a free lunch and by the time the coffee was being served I was blagging Peter to shoot ‘The Making Of Callback’ that I hope will one day be part of our DVD. My only fear is that I hope I haven’t just offered him the chance to make a second version of ‘Lost in La Mancha’ with slightly lower stakes. Peter says he’ll do it which will be great for you and will probably be really embarrassing for me – I’ve given him final cut over his film. As there is no Making Of of the Making Of the deal was done over Pepsis and BLTs at Bob’s Big Boy on Wilshire which is where all the deals for Callback are being signed in blood.

This is terrifying and liberating. Every day I’m finding a new cliff and throwing myself off it. And just to make the stakes higher I’m getting someone else to jump with me every time. As they say on my favourite TV show Mythbusters: “We do this for a living – don’t try this at home.”

THE MAKING OF

Filed Under: Callback

THE MAKING OF

January 14, 2005 by Nigel Dick

Forgot to mention that the still you saw yesterday doesn’t mean we’ve started principal photography yet. I was simply shooting some stills to a) get something we can put up on our website and b) create the illusion that things are happening. Web address coming soon.

Had lunch with Peter Harding today – he’s the guy that shot the Jason Mraz in Japan footage from that Mraz Live DVD I worked on 18 months ago. I was buying him lunch so that he could ask me some career advice which I gladly gave him: “Accept all offers of work that don’t involve both nakedness and ritual humiliation.” If ritual humiliation is involved on its own that’s OK – in my experience that comes with the territory.

This being Hollywood there’s no such thing as a free lunch and by the time the coffee was being served I was blagging Peter to shoot ‘The Making Of Callback’ that I hope will one day be part of our DVD. My only fear is that I hope I haven’t just offered him the chance to make a second version of ‘Lost in La Mancha’ with slightly lower stakes. Peter says he’ll do it which will be great for you and will probably be really embarrassing for me – I’ve given him final cut over his film. As there is no Making Of of the Making Of the deal was done over Pepsis and BLTs at Bob’s Big Boy on Wilshire which is where all the deals for Callback are being signed in blood.

This is terrifying and liberating. Every day I’m finding a new cliff and throwing myself off it. And just to make the stakes higher I’m getting someone else to jump with me every time. As they say on my favourite TV show Mythbusters: “We do this for a living – don’t try this at home.”

THE MAKING OF

Filed Under: Diary 2005

INTRODUCING

January 13, 2005 by Nigel Dick

INTRODUCING

OK world – a first glimpse of Moe Jones! That’s Moe up on Mullholland looking over the city he’s going to take by storm. This is a place he loves to hang out with Garry while they plan a way to infiltrate or just avoid the studio system and get up to speed on their inevitable road to success. Moe is trying out some initial moves as he practices for his audition as Martinez.

Back in the real world: Obviously I’ve got a hold of items 17 and 18 from my list. Just need to track down a red enamel star. Other needs. (feel free to offer any help you can): a big pram that Kevin can sit in; any old apple boxes; any old C-stands (I have two but think I’ll need four); some sand bags.

Filed Under: Diary 2005

INTRODUCING

January 13, 2005 by Nigel Dick

INTRODUCING

OK world – a first glimpse of Moe Jones! That’s Moe up on Mullholland looking over the city he’s going to take by storm. This is a place he loves to hang out with Garry while they plan a way to infiltrate or just avoid the studio system and get up to speed on their inevitable road to success. Moe is trying out some initial moves as he practices for his audition as Martinez.

Back in the real world: Obviously I’ve got a hold of items 17 and 18 from my list. Just need to track down a red enamel star. Other needs. (feel free to offer any help you can): a big pram that Kevin can sit in; any old apple boxes; any old C-stands (I have two but think I’ll need four); some sand bags.

Filed Under: Callback

05? O S**t!

January 3, 2005 by Nigel Dick

The Holidays provided a useful opportunity to do three things:
1) Complete new draft of script.
2) Play with the guitar I bought on eBay.
3) Live in complete denial about what I’m letting myself in for.

I mean – blagging to the press that you’re going to bomb Bagdad is one thing. Actually finding the camels, elephants, smart bombs, bullets and people who’re willing to die while wearing matching camo outfits is something else. So, I’m compiling a list of things I’ll need to buy / borrow / get / steal / do…
1) Need car – any convertible will do. Preferably something looking battered or cheap that an out of work actor could afford.
2) Need to buy video camera to shoot movie.
3) Need to learn how to use it.
4) Need a lot of extras.
5) Need to make some t-shirts to get a buzz going: “I invested in a Hollywood movie – all I got was this lousy t-shirt.”
6) Need better idea for t-shirt logo.
7) Need Fed-ex or UPS outfit.
8) Need a pineapple costume.
9) Need a purple dinosaur costume.
10) Need a cute girl who’ll wear underwear in a film.
11) Need a cheesy office location for a seedy Hollywood agent (and girl in underwear).
12) Need 1 pair red satin shorts, 1 gag, 1 pair handcuffs. (the kind that a girl in underwear might have).
13) Need a new Range Rover for a day.
14) Need a bunch of people in swim-wear for a day…kind of like the girl in her underwear.
15) Need some free press.
16) Need forty empty or used Starbucks cups.
17) Need a beret with a red star on it.
18) Need a loudhailer – doesn’t have to work.
19) Need to blag an outdoor restaurant patio for an afternoon.
20) Need some Roman helmets and togas.
21) Need a spear with some fake movie blood on it and a paramedic uniform.
22) Need a girl who’ll pretend she’s in a porno movie – doesn’t need to get naked.
23) Need a partially deflated balloon.
24) Need a man-dressed-as-a-Tampon outfit.
25) Need to get a favor from the guy who wrote “Act Naturally.” My guess is he’s dead so I’ll have to blag his publisher.

Don’t feel embarrassed about offering to help me with any of the above. I’ll let you know how the search is going.

Filed Under: Callback

05? O S**t!

January 3, 2005 by Nigel Dick

The Holidays provided a useful opportunity to do three things:
1) Complete new draft of script.
2) Play with the guitar I bought on eBay.
3) Live in complete denial about what I’m letting myself in for.

I mean – blagging to the press that you’re going to bomb Bagdad is one thing. Actually finding the camels, elephants, smart bombs, bullets and people who’re willing to die while wearing matching camo outfits is something else. So, I’m compiling a list of things I’ll need to buy / borrow / get / steal / do…
1) Need car – any convertible will do. Preferably something looking battered or cheap that an out of work actor could afford.
2) Need to buy video camera to shoot movie.
3) Need to learn how to use it.
4) Need a lot of extras.
5) Need to make some t-shirts to get a buzz going: “I invested in a Hollywood movie – all I got was this lousy t-shirt.”
6) Need better idea for t-shirt logo.
7) Need Fed-ex or UPS outfit.
8) Need a pineapple costume.
9) Need a purple dinosaur costume.
10) Need a cute girl who’ll wear underwear in a film.
11) Need a cheesy office location for a seedy Hollywood agent (and girl in underwear).
12) Need 1 pair red satin shorts, 1 gag, 1 pair handcuffs. (the kind that a girl in underwear might have).
13) Need a new Range Rover for a day.
14) Need a bunch of people in swim-wear for a day…kind of like the girl in her underwear.
15) Need some free press.
16) Need forty empty or used Starbucks cups.
17) Need a beret with a red star on it.
18) Need a loudhailer – doesn’t have to work.
19) Need to blag an outdoor restaurant patio for an afternoon.
20) Need some Roman helmets and togas.
21) Need a spear with some fake movie blood on it and a paramedic uniform.
22) Need a girl who’ll pretend she’s in a porno movie – doesn’t need to get naked.
23) Need a partially deflated balloon.
24) Need a man-dressed-as-a-Tampon outfit.
25) Need to get a favor from the guy who wrote “Act Naturally.” My guess is he’s dead so I’ll have to blag his publisher.

Don’t feel embarrassed about offering to help me with any of the above. I’ll let you know how the search is going.

Filed Under: Diary 2005

EBAY

December 16, 2004 by Nigel Dick

I couldn’t sleep.

It was the middle of the night so I got on the web. CNN.com was too depressing – full of stories of death and mutilation – so I started surfing, eventually winding up on eBay. Another flash of inspiration hit me. In the script there’s a scene where all of Moe’s acting pals are armed with video cameras. When we eventually shoot this scene I’m going to need maybe 20 or 30 video cameras of various ages – I’m going to be on a budget and I’ll need cheap ones – doesn’t matter if they don’t work. Within minutes I’d bid on 10 cameras – all costing less than 2 bucks a piece.

“I’m a frigging genius,” I thought, “Ten cameras for less than $15!”.

Now I’ll confess that this was the first time I’d ever actually bid for anything on eBay – call me old school but I’d always given the place a wide birth. Suddenly I felt I could dress the entire movie on the cheap through the web. This was going to be a cakewalk. That’s when I saw that small print about the shipping costs. These lo-cost cams all came with battery packs and chargers and those suckers are heavy. Most people were estimating around $20 for shipping. Help! My bargain basement approach to propping the movie had just leapt by over 1,000%.

First lesson of home-financed movies learned. Have patience. Read the small print. Humbled and dispirited I did what any grown man would do at four in the morning while dressed in his PJs and surfing on the web.

I bought a guitar.

POSTSCRIPT. It seems I was outbid on nearly all of the cameras. I did however get a winning bid in on one camera for less than $9 including postage. It should arrive any day now.

Filed Under: Diary 2004

EBAY

December 13, 2004 by Nigel Dick

I couldn’t sleep.

It was the middle of the night so I got on the web. CNN.com was too depressing – full of stories of death and mutilation – so I started surfing, eventually winding up on eBay. Another flash of inspiration hit me. In the script there’s a scene where all of Moe’s acting pals are armed with video cameras. When we eventually shoot this scene I’m going to need maybe 20 or 30 video cameras of various ages – I’m going to be on a budget and I’ll need cheap ones – doesn’t matter if they don’t work. Within minutes I’d bid on 10 cameras – all costing less than 2 bucks a piece.

“I’m a frigging genius,” I thought, “Ten cameras for less than $15!”.

Now I’ll confess that this was the first time I’d ever actually bid for anything on eBay – call me old school but I’d always given the place a wide birth. Suddenly I felt I could dress the entire movie on the cheap through the web. This was going to be a cakewalk. That’s when I saw that small print about the shipping costs. These lo-cost cams all came with battery packs and chargers and those suckers are heavy. Most people were estimating around $20 for shipping. Help! My bargain basement approach to propping the movie had just leapt by over 1,000%.

First lesson of home-financed movies learned. Have patience. Read the small print. Humbled and dispirited I did what any grown man would do at four in the morning while dressed in his PJs and surfing on the web.

I bought a guitar.

POSTSCRIPT. It seems I was outbid on nearly all of the cameras. I did however get a winning bid in on one camera for less than $9 including postage. It should arrive any day now.

Filed Under: Callback

WANKER

November 23, 2004 by Nigel Dick

It’s been 15 long months since I wrote that first missive and obviously things didn’t work out quite as I’d hoped.

But maybe it’s all part of a bigger plan that I am only just beginning to appreciate. Chasing Fate indeed.

After I’d posted that first optimistic blog we all threw ourselves into the process of getting a large production underway. First came the fun dinners as the producers and the writers and myself all became friends and we all tried to establish what made each other tick. They were enamored of my video career and seemed obsessed by Britney’s ‘Oops’ video – I loved them for their enthusiasm and their determination to get this movie made with me at the helm. We started taking meetings at the Film Company and soon we were meeting casting directors and establishing what kind of movie we were making. It seemed that our budget would be about 15 million bucks and, in my quietest moments, I was full of awe that at last I was going to be making a real movie. “Don’t screw this one up!” I thought.

With a casting director in place the casting process began and as the pale Los Angeles winter crept upon us we spent hours and hours meeting every attractive and interesting and vaguely available young actor and actress in town. It was a fascinating process. Some were enormously talented, some were amazingly beautiful, some were obviously desperate, others were just plain ordinary. But as the months passed by I became more confidant and truly felt that we were all getting somewhere.

Meanwhile the project’s announcement had hit the papers. Amazingly I found myself and a certain enormously successful entertainment person who was involved mentioned in the same headline in a Reuters report. “This is bloody marvelous!” I thought.

As we worked away I continued making videos. On one occasion, in order to remain available for casting in LA, I persuaded a six piece band from the UK (along with their managers and their label folk) against their wishes and at their expense to fly to LA so I could shoot them here rather leave town for a week and miss some meetings. I got permission to take a long-planned fortnight’s holiday in Australia and the casting sessions were adjusted to let me go. As I sat on the cusp of 2004 and cycled along a windy beach Down-Under I was very excited about what the New Year had in store for me. Even so, having been disappointed before, I told those around me that the back-slapping was very premature and they should keep their much-appreciated congratulatory messages on hold till the movie’s release party.

By the end of January we had our cast and my lawyer was spending hours hashing out my contract. A particularly tough point was the fact that he and my agent wanted me to get a Development Fee for all the hours I was spending working on the film. A compromise was reached and a sum agreed. I started turning work down to make myself available for the movie which was going to happen at any moment.

Then the Film Company bailed.

For a number of reasons, none of which were entirely clear but mostly I think to do with dollars, they announced didn’t want to make the film. The day after word came through that they had walked their lawyer rang me up demanding to know why I hadn’t signed my contract! I did the honest thing and suggested he should speak to his superiors. On reflection I should have kept my mouth shut and signed – I would have picked up that pesky Development Fee that had caused my lawyer so much grief.

My energetic producer was full of enthusiasm, “We’ll take it elsewhere,” he confidently predicted. But as the months drew on it seemed that no-one wanted to make a 15 million dollar movie and the cast we’d picked were too costly for a 5 million dollar version and didn’t justify the investment in a 30 million dollar one.

As the fallout became more noticeable on the Hollywood Geiger Counter the script well dried up. The amazing head of steam I’d felt I was being propelled along by at the end of 2003 had evaporated and the press clippings waiting to be filed announcing our casting choices and possible start dates taunted me like old lovers who’d moved on to newer pastures. The be-suited gentleman in whose hands I had trusted my career and who’d so happily wined and dined me as we felt we were on the brink of such a major breakthrough now confessed that I was such a nice and talented guy that he thought someone else should look after my career. Let’s just translate that piece of amazing double speak into other words shall we? “You’re so brilliant, I’m firing you!”

Plainly it was the last gasp of my involvement with Chasing Fate and all I had was some memories of some fine free meals and a bunch of unrecouped Beverly Hills style parking receipts for all those hours spent in casting. For all our months of work neither myself, my manager or my lawyer had received a penny.

Next.

One Friday afternoon I was putting together a reel for someone and I found myself watching a clip from 2gether – perhaps the best script and only decent film I’ve directed. I giggled as I watched the guys do their stuff and suddenly it dawned on me. Kevin Farley was born to play Moe Jones – the lead of a script called CALLBACK – a low budge comedy I’d written with my pal Jordan a few years back.

A new plan of world domination quickly hatched in my fertile brain cell and this time I’m going public with it. To hell with Hollywood! I’m going to make another movie even if they don’t want me to. Kevin has agreed to play the lead and I’ve agreed to break the first law of film-making and I’m going to spend my own money making the movie if I have to. Moe Jones, the part Kevin will play, is a lovable but desperate actor in Hollywood, a very talented and decent fellow, who can’t get a gig. He decides he’ll do whatever it takes to get the part of the bad guy in the next Die Hard movie. It took a week for me to realize that perhaps Moe’s story, one that I’d started writing years ago, is eerily familiar to me. Hmm.

As I recall many film productions are made under the banner of a new incorporated company so that the finances of the production can be more easily handled. If this is the case I will call the company that makes Callback ‘Nice and Talented Guy’ inc.

There I’ve said it. I’m going to make the damn movie. Better get to work and produce something now otherwise I’ll look like a real wanker!

Filed Under: Callback

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