Category Archives: News

News from my personal and professional life.

"The Hive" documentary to chronicle the story of Seattle's legendary 619 Building

A Seattle director I’ve had the privilege of collaborating with several times, Brian Nunes, is embarking on a new documentary called The Hive. It will tell the story of a Seattle landmark that looms large in the mind of many local artists: the 619 Western Building. I lived in the building myself for a time, and I think half the artists in Seattle have done the same or know someone who has.

People from all walks of life found inspiration in 619 – from local business leaders to quirky artists… even famous actors could be seen wandering its corridors.

After years of neglect though, a 2001 earthquake and finally Seattle’s deep bore tunnel project… 619 Western was forced to close its doors and the artists were forced to find new places to live and create.

Our film intends to celebrate the space for what it was and highlight the importance of working artists in communities. It will serve as a mirror for capitalism and the creative spirit – how the two interact and often conflict.

The film is already “in the can,” as they say, meaning in this case that over 100 hours of footage have been shot. The money is needed to cover hiring an editor to put the pieces together into a story worth watching.

Brian has put together some outstanding rewards, by teaming up with artists including Ingrid Pape-Sheldon, a Seattle portrait photographer who is offering individual or family portraits. Billy King, who once lived and worked in the 619, will paint the portrait for the first person to donate $1,200.

Remember the 619! Learn more.

Tell Me Something True

Imagine getting straight advice from 50 of the most notable documentary filmmakers alive today. That’s what Jessica Edwards has imagined, and she’s well on her way to making it happen, in the form of a book, funded by an artfully crafted Kickstarter campaign.

Beyond Naked trailer released today

I’m happy to announce that today we’re releasing the trailer for Beyond Naked. Lisa Cooper and I have been working on the film for the past two years. The trailer we’ve been working on for much less time! But we’re really proud of both.

In cutting this trailer Lisa and I have aimed to give you a taste of the story, and a glimpse at the four primary characters that we followed. We hope you enjoy it. We can’t wait to screen the film publicly in Seattle, where we know a lot of people are eager to see it.

The film has already been submitted to festivals, and we’re awaiting news of where it will screen. To stay informed about screening times and later, online options for watching it, join the film mailing list or like the film’s page on Facebook.

New work with Jason Silva

I had an opportunity to meet Jason Silva after he delivered the keynote at this year’s Seattle Interactive Conference. His enthusiasm for his ideas is absolutely contagious. Jason told me he liked the sound design of our SIC 2012 teaser video so much, that he wanted me to cut his next “cinematic espresso shot.” What’s not to love about someone in love with bold ideas?

The results of our collaboration are now complete, and judging by the number of views (more than 5,000 plays in the first three days) it could well become the most popular video I’ve had a hand in making yet.

This was pretty much an editor’s dream gig: an open-ended opportunity to freely interpret huge ideas with awesome stock footage (most of it from shutterstock.com) and sound effects (most from Sound Ideas – a great company from my old stomping grounds in Richmond Hill, Canada). I even managed to sneak in one of my own shots. Can you guess which one?

Corrupt digital files – what's the culprit? *Updated with answer

I spent the morning shooting a bunch of old gear that I’m preparing to sell. Imagine my dismay when I opened the CF card and saw every single file looking like this (see above). At first I thought the camera was defective, but some troubleshooting revealed that I could display the images fine on my camera’s playback. So that appears to rule out both the camera and the card being defective. That pretty much left the card reader as the prime suspect.

However, further testing reveals that files pulled directly off the camera via usb cable also are corrupt. So now I’m back to thinking the problem might lie with a defective cf card after all. Anyone ever seen anything like this before? I’m using Canon 5dmkiii with Lexar Professional UDMA7 (1000x) 32GB CF card.

Unfortunately I have only one CF card (typically I use SD cards, which are working fine) so I can’t test with another CF card immediately.

*** Update 11/26: I purchased a UDMA7 compliant card reader, the Lexar Professional USB 3 reader, and it reads the card fine. Images open normally. So apparently the culprit is the card reader, not the camera, or the cable, or the card. I had understood that USB 2 cf card readers could be used with UDMA 7 cards, but apparently that’s not the case. For me, at least, the 1000x cards require an updated card reader to function properly.

Seattle celebrates new term for Obama

Lisa and I headed to Capitol Hill last night to watch election returns. It was just like old times four years ago: As the networks called it, hundreds of happy residents poured into the streets to celebrate not only Obama’s win, but Washington’s choice to extend full marriage rights to same-sex couples, and to legalize marijuana. Good times.

Nordstrom's windows

Our most recent commercial piece is up today on Nordstrom’s Facebook Page. Lisa and I shot this piece primarily with three GoPros, all running concurrently in timelapse mode, one frame every two seconds. We repositioned the cameras a couple times to get more angles covered. But I think what makes it especially fun is the very brief moments of dslr footage intercut with it.

Some frame grabs:

Visual Contact welcomes intern Alex James

Today was our first shoot with Alex James, who is interning with us at Visual Contact. Alex passed the “how the hell can you fit all this filmmaking equipment into the back of this Nissan Leaf” test today, and we’re thrilled to have him on the team this summer. Alex is a senior at Ballard High School, where he recently got his hands on the Oscar won by Undefeated director TJ Martin, who spoke to his class. “It was very, very heavy,” he said. Welcome Alex!

DocForest is September 14-16

Seattle documentary filmmakers will gather again this year for SeaDocs annual meetup in the Kitsap Peninsula. It’ll happen Friday, Sept. 14 through Sunday the 16th. There will be lots of opportunities to screen your work in progress and get feedback from a supportive audience. And the location is magical: the Kitsap Mountaineers’ Forest Theater. Camping will be available, as well as summer-camp style cabins.

Lisa Cooper and I have been invited to teach a 90-minute workshop about DSLR filmmaking, which we’re looking forward to. We’ll cover all the basics: the DSLR’s strengths and weaknesses, how to resolve the challenges of dual-sound recording, how to get a big-film look on a lunch-money budget, and much more.

I’m told more details will be posted on the SeaDocs Facebook page as they become available.