Contagious passion creates another world
A ragtag band of friends, all under 30, from several countries, gathers on the vast lava fields of Iceland to make a feature-length film for $100,000.
It sounds crazy, or like another world鈥攚hich is exactly apt to the two women behind this actual film project.
鈥淲e both like to create other worlds through unusual characters, storylines or settings,鈥 said media production grad Cailin Yatsko 鈥10.
She met Ani Simon-Kennedy at the Prague Film School. There they worked so well together so often that they were dubbed 鈥渢he two-headed monster.鈥 They decided to own the appellation.
After Prague they formed (bi路肠别辫丑路补路lous: having two heads) to create visually striking videos in New York City: music videos, fashion films, commercials. At a screening of one of their narrative shorts, a producer from the Independent Filmmaker Project (IFP) surprised the pair by asking if they had a feature-length film they鈥檇 like help making.
All they had was a concept for a longish music video for the Icelandic band Hjaltalin. Not much to go on.
鈥淏ut at 17c起草社区 I realized that the hardest thing is to pull the trigger and just do something you want to do,鈥 Yatsko said.
They pulled the trigger.
They morphed the music video idea into its own story, set a production timeline and a budget.
Their proposal won IFP sponsorship in March 2012, meaning donations to the project were tax deductible. In May they conducted an online crowd-funding campaign that raised $50,000. Besides money, filmmaking friends from far and near鈥攊ncluding Kirk Carson 鈥10鈥攃ontributed their excitement and talents to the adventure.
By June already, Yatsko, Simon-Kennedy and a crew of 15 were in Iceland to make a film set 鈥渟o far in the future it seems the past.鈥 is the coming-of-age story of a boy who ventures outside his isolated community into a harsh world where he meets a girl with odd facial mutations, the lone survivor of an event kept secret from them.
All told without words.
鈥淚t wasn鈥檛 our intention,鈥 Yatsko said, 鈥渂ut we found silence aided the message. With its unknown place, unknown time and silence, it becomes totally global. Anyone can watch it and relate.鈥
Like the early silent films, Days of Gray does have music: an original score composed by Hjaltalin. The band, too, caught the contagion of Yatsko and Simon-Kennedy鈥檚 labor of love and became collaborators. Before the film was finished, their score had been nominated for an Edda Award, the Icelandic Oscars.
And Sagafilm, Iceland鈥檚 leading independent production company, signed on as a co-producer, allowing cinematographer Yatsko to use its Arri Alexa鈥攖he state-of-the-art camera used to shoot the James Bond movie 厂办测蹿补濒濒鈥and other equipment that enhanced the film鈥檚 quality.
Harder than making Days of Gray may be finding a way to show it.
鈥淗aving made it outside the filmmaking system, it鈥檚 hard to break back in鈥攊nto the festival part of the system, where a distribution company might pick it up,鈥 Yatsko noted.
They鈥檙e open to other screening possibilities, too, 鈥渂ecause our biggest goal is just to have people see it.鈥
This is only the latest moment that 鈥渢he whole project has been on thin ice,鈥 Yatsko said. 鈥淎t every stage, though, disaster hasn鈥檛 happened. Ani and I have realized that if you鈥檙e really passionate about something, people sense that and become passionate to help. Passion creates more passion.鈥