Shorttakes Festival to feature student filmmakers

The newest crop of student filmmakers are not necessarily
students of film. As the tools of movie making are becoming more
available, film is increasingly just another thing to do to express
yourself.

“I think in the late ’80s and early ’90s, a
lot of young artists wanted to be in indie rock bands. Now the same
people that would have been in indie rock bands want to be
directors,” said third-year graduate directing student Chris
Eska.

Two of Eska’s films along with other student films will be
shown in Ackerman Grand Ballroom tonight as part of the annual
Shorttakes Film Festival. Another finalist in the event,
fourth-year theater student Billy-Vu Lam, actually is in an indie
rock band.

Lam is guitarist in the band Thomas’ Apartment, a group
that played last year’s Spring Sing. The famed apartment is
home to guitars, drum sets, a mixing board, speakers and a
big-screen TV. It’s this smorgasbord of technology that has
allowed student artists to make indie rock bands and now films.

Lam’s six-minute film, “All in a Day’s
Work,” was made for $600. He borrowed a camera from the Film
and Television Department, purchased all the 16 mm film he used,
and shot his friends doing martial arts sequences in a study lounge
in his apartment complex. Though it was his first film, he has a
good martial arts movie vocabulary gleaned from watching Jackie
Chan and Jet Li films and studying Tae Kwon Do and Capoeira.

“It really helps to know how to work the angles,”
Lam said.

But Lam only got into filmmaking last quarter, when he took the
cinematography class where he made the film. He’s studying
acting, and also currently helping to stage the recent Vietnamese
Culture Night. Likewise, third-year digital/media arts student
Gabriel Dunne views filmmaking as one of many things he’s
involved in. He’s considering studying architecture in
graduate school or specializing in various forms of graphic
design.

“The one thing I love and hate about my major is
there’s no solidity and direction,” Dunne said.
“You learn everything: video, multimedia, programming, web
designing, flash designing, 3D animation, interactive media. My
problem is that I love all of it.”

Dunne’s film, “The Mirror,” was shot in three
days for $300, at the Molecular Science building among other local
spots. Rather than telling a story, the film explores the idea of
alternate realities. To achieve that, Dunne used a cocktail of
computer tools, including After Effects, Avid, Maya, Combustion and
Light Wave. One shot features traveling through a wall to a reverse
reality in a red wash done digitally.

“It used to be restricted to the big filmmakers with huge
budgets. Now if you have a crazy idea, you can pull off an effect
like that,” Dunne said.

Like Lam, Dunne has musical capabilities. He composed the score
to his film as he does for most of his other animated works.

“For me, the music should be the first thing I do because
I can write visuals around it,” Dunne said.

But not everyone is a multimedia artist. Chris Eska entered the
graduate film school having only taken an undergrad course in film.
He didn’t know much about films and originally wanted to be a
sociology professor. Consequently, his films are tinged with his
first love and traveling. He took a year off of school to go to
Asia: Myanmar and India were his favorite places.

Just as William Carlos Williams wrote his poetry on prescription
note pads, today’s young filmmakers explore their passions
through low-budget technology, allowing fuller lives for these
celluloid-loving creatures.

“I don’t want an interesting career to get in the
way of an interesting life,” Eska said.

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