Monday, May 9, 2016


Pegasus Film Festival

Position:

Chief Executive on Fundraising Board


Details:

Communication with potential donors and sponsors, coordinating donor responses, creating template and platform for requests, tracking monetary donations, initiating equipment and workshop inquiries

Senior Film Pitch

Camp Kanukatut (Comedy)...

Treatment:

Man, worn down by life and all its hardships, shown sitting, drinking coffee, reading paper
Phone rings, he answers as if dispatching, brother is calling
Brother is an overly-dramatic actor, polar opposite from man, in need of money
Suffering from some nonsensical ailment, brother pleads
Man concedes to helping pay for his treatment, starts flipping through paper
Finds a job he qualifies for, meets all requirements, then sees position "Camp Kanukatut Counselor"
Calls brother back and says no, to which he gets an equally dramatic response, sighs, applies
The stern man goes to the campsite and meets with the Director, a super friendly Canadian woman
He immediately gets the job, and a ridiculous outfit, feeling overqualified but again, concedes
Man, given his past, barks order at the children, resulting in tears
Counselors are all happy-go-lucky people, and one camper refutes man's orders
Comedic actions ensue as child rebels, man sees him being picked up by arguing parents
The next week of camp, man begins to empathize with kids and we see his "heart"
After receiving a session's worth of payment, man goes to brother, who needs more money
Ends with man walking back on campsite in counselor outfit


Logline:

A worn-down, retired prison guard must help his ridiculous, hypochondriac of a brother, pay for his acclaimed "ailments" by getting a job as a Boy & Girl Scout Camp Counselor, and is forced to step out of his comfort zone with children and not inmates.

Monday, February 22, 2016

Doc. Talk

I am currently teeter-tottering between two documentaries: introducing one of the adolescent Syrian refugees OR the pollution status of White Rock Lake. The direction is not set in stone due to a lack of opportunity, rather than decisiveness. If I am contacted back by the International Rescue Committee within the week, I'll run with the first idea. Otherwise, I'll pursue the second.

Awareness is the first step toward acceptance. Given the fact these refugees only arrived a couple months ago, they are battling with the predispositions of prejudice people, who see them and think "war." It's this exact reason I find the film idea both compelling and necessary. The hero will undoubtedly be the young Syrian refugee, presented as an observational documentary. Visual aspects with feature the "day-to-day" life of said subject. 

The question regarding White Rock Lake's current cleanliness increases by the year, as well as the surrounding pollution. If I were to run with this idea, the hero would be one person dedicated to cleaning the lake. A devout member of "For the Love of the Lake" could easily serve as that. It would be expository in make-up, leaving the viewer with a solidified opinion based off the evidence presented in the film. White Rock is a naturally visually compelling location, and I would most likely include a time-lapsed shot of sunrise or sunset. 

For now- the waiting game.

Over the past weekend, I watched the film "Stories We Tell." Throughout it, whenever they were talking about Sarah Polley, the mom, old film archives would play. Not only was it visually compelling, but the hero being the mother provided for an authentic connection between audience and film. This observational documentary was rated poorly, however, I personally found it inherently beautiful in its simplicity.