hello. my name is mike ambs.

  • Random
  • Archive
  • RSS
  • ask me things

via ftom film:

I should apologize - this site has been far too quite the last few weeks! It’s not that there’s been nothing new to report - we actually have been a bit overwhelmed, to explain: Erica and I are heading back to NYC in September for a week’s-worth of industry meetings at IFP Labs; pitching… or really just talking in general is not my strong-suite, so, I’m a little terrified of what’s coming up fast. The point being, there’s been a lot of writing lately to meet the film profile deadlines.

The film’s logline, synopsis (60 words) *and* even the summary (500 words) all had to be re-written, mostly from scratch. Here’s the updated synopsis, which I’ll need to update soon on the main site:

For Thousands of Miles is a story of coming home after months of travel and constant-motion; a story of who you are before a 42-hundred mile bicycle ride, and who you are when that road finally ends; it is a story of a person now split between two lives.

Also, I needed to write another 500 words for the artistic statement, which took me a while to get right. The last remaining things needed are bios - Erica wrote mine today, which means, for the first time ever, I have an actual, adult-like bio… I was excited! 

Outside of writing, I’ve been trouble-shooting some smoothcam issues in FCP7, we were recently assigned a mentor for the film, through IFP, and I was supposed to get that person an updated cut of For Thousands of Miles weeks ago - but considering 80% of the shots in the film were affected by this sudden tech bug (resulting in a strange jack-hammer-like vibrating effect on footage); I spent two weeks pulling my hair out over test trying to fix it, but!, I’ve finally found a work-around. 

Aside from that, I’ve been keeping myself up late at night trying to find a way to finance the last $60k needed for the film, which doesn’t include marketing of any kind, yet. I’m trying to stay open about the IFP film week I mentioned above, but, I know FToM is a difficult film to get money for… IFP even mentioned that I might have a harder time than normal getting industry-anyone interested. But, regardless!, I’m still trying to move forward… but, these days, I feel like I’m dragging a small house behind me… uphill… in the snow… both ways.

Source: mikeambs

    • #FToM
    • #Writing
    • #Erica Hampton
    • #IFP
    • #Labs
    • #Film Week
    • #Synopsis
    • #Mentor
    • #Zoo
  • 10 months ago > mikeambs
  • 10
  • Comments
  • Permalink
Share

Short URL

TwitterFacebookPinterestGoogle+

Charles Mudede is a Marxist from Zimbabwe who makes poetry out of impenetrable philosophy, dogs’ assholes, and uncanny masses of energy shrouded in deep space. Robinson Devor is an American aesthete who bridges the gap—the gap where so many great ideas go to die—between full-bodied artistic commitment and the ability to get shit done. The two make movies together.
After watching 14 minutes of footage from Devor and Mudede’s next experimental documentary—about Sara Jane Moore, the first woman to fire a loaded gun at a U.S. president—the Genius Awards committee came to an awkward realization: Much as we tried (and for years we have), we just couldn’t keep ignoring Devor and Mudede’s films. Together, the pair (Devor as director and Mudede as screenwriter, along with New York–based cinematographer Sean Kirby) have completed two feature films, Police Beat and Zoo, both of which premiered at Sundance. Zoo also screened at Cannes. Their third feature, currently going by the title Untitled Sara Jane Moore Documentary, is a Sundance 2011 hopeful.
Self-conscious avoidance of these world-class local filmmakers was getting ridiculous—becoming the, um, rearing stallion in the room, if you will. So after months of deliberations and watching many, many other films, too, we simply couldn’t justify not giving them the award, even though Mudede also obviously has a day job here at The Stranger. (Mudede recused himself from all deliberations as soon as his name came into consideration, and he is donating his half of the $5,000 Genius prize to Northwest Film Forum.) This is major, genius-level filmmaking coming out of Seattle and bringing international attention back home with it. These movies matter.
New York Times critic Manohla Dargis called Police Beat one of the highlights of Sundance in 2006, describing it as “a delicately funny tale about everyday surrealism.” And of Zoo, she wrote: “Characters don’t just walk in this film; they float across the frame, pouring like liquid toward their inexorable destinies.”Untitled Sara Jane Moore Documentary will chronicle the very weird existence of Moore, the seemingly innocuous wife/mother/accountant who tried to assassinate President Ford in 1975 and was released from prison in 2007 at age 77. It shares the previous two films’ uncanny atmospherics, nearly imperceptible blending of reality and fiction, and mesmerizing, hyperchoreographed visuals.
Mudede and Devor met in 2002, when Devor was looking for a script consultant: “I was writing a script about an African child soldier, and I thought Mr. Mudede, given his African background—little did I know how middle-class it was—that he’d know about African child soldiers. He agreed to take a look at it.” On hearing this, Mudede let out a mad cackle: “I turned over the script to my mother—I really did! I said, ‘Look at this and tell me what is African and what is not African,’ because I had no idea.”
Devor had moved to Seattle after a decade in Los Angeles trying to make movies in the mainstream industry. While down there, he directed a documentary about Angelyne, the eccentric L.A. “model” and self-made celebrity whose pink Corvette and cryptic billboards (featuring nothing but her name and a painting of herself in a sexy pose) became a beloved staple of local counterculture kitsch. Angelyne’s career of delusion resonates perfectly with Devor’s later projects: documenting the humanity of outsiders and freaks, misguided revolutionaries and unrepentant horsefuckers.
Devor’s first feature, The Woman Chaser (starring Patrick Warburton, about a used-car salesman who becomes obsessed with making a movie), achieved moderate success, but Hollywood, it turns out, was a disappointing dead end. “The Woman Chaser turned out really nicely, I thought, and after that I had this mistaken notion that I could kind of do arty films and do my own thing,” Devor says. “But instead, I just was doing a lot of meetings in Hollywood and they weren’t going anywhere. So that period of disillusionment was good timing—it freed me up to go up here.”
Devor and Mudede teamed up to work on Police Beat—Mudede’s script partially inspired by his long-running Stranger column of the same name—a slow amble through a series of human transgressions, small and large, which caress and capture Seattle’s dark green, dark blue, dismal beauty. The film is almost pathologically restrained.
Devor describes the pair’s shared aesthetic: “It’s so important just to have a sense of atmosphere—a sense of place, but really atmosphere—and atmosphere is composed of light and sound and emotion. It could be a low-wattage emotion, a simple thing. Maybe because I don’t have a car and I’m happy to just sit in the woods and film something.”
“Charles is the most poetic prose writer in Seattle,” says Carey Christie, a local filmmaker and youth educator, “and Sean Kirby is the most poetic cinematographer. And Rob doesn’t want to tell stories, he wants to make poetry, and that’s why their collaboration keeps happening, and why it keeps getting better.” Like Police Beat, Zoo is a movie about transgression (man has sex with horse, man dies), and poetry, and the dusky, bucolic silhouettes of the Enumclaw plateau. It’s difficult to think of a less gorgeous way to die than a perforated colon, and a less glamorous instrument with which to perforate one’s colon than a stallion penis. But Zoo is a gorgeous, dignified, intellectually curious piece of art nonetheless. “Rob makes movies about people that don’t fit,” Christie continues. “He shows us how we are like them. It’s the reason I keep supporting him, because in person he can be a real asshole.” She laughs. “He holds local filmmakers to a higher standard, and in that way he presents our community with an opportunity for growth—I wish more filmmakers would do that.”
Why do Mudede and Devor keep choosing to work with the other?
“I enjoy the care he takes in filmmaking,” Mudede says. “Absolutely. I hate to say it, but when it comes to the artistic process, a lot of people are lazy. Or they give up before all the possibilities are investigated. And there’s a certain thoroughness to Rob’s work, not only in the writing process but in the way he crafts his films. And that sometimes goes against the producers. Producers are concerned with getting the most we can out of the least we can. Rob has a commitment to what’s going to cause the most grief. That’s really the creative process.”
And Devor: “I say this with great sincerity: If somebody offered me anybody, the most famous novelist, the most tenured professor, the most laureled screenwriter, American or European, I really would stick with Charles. I think it’s his commitment to originality that is the absolute key thing. He has no desire at all to do what has been done. It also is a slightly maddening thing, but it’s mostly very positive: He doesn’t need it as much as I do. By that I mean that only something that’s really exciting is going to stimulate him. If you’re in a company town like Hollywood, and you’re grinding things out, you’re going to sell out.”
Mudede and Devor are Seattle filmmakers—both agree that they couldn’t do what they do if it weren’t for their adopted city. “The projects we’ve had outside of Seattle have all been suspended in one stage or another,” Mudede explains, “but the ones we’ve had in Seattle have all gone through because we’ve had this support.” And Devor: “We’re just down-on-our-knees grateful when somebody supports filmmaking. It’s a tough investment, but somehow it happens. And I’m proud.” 
Pop-upView Separately

Charles Mudede is a Marxist from Zimbabwe who makes poetry out of impenetrable philosophy, dogs’ assholes, and uncanny masses of energy shrouded in deep space. Robinson Devor is an American aesthete who bridges the gap—the gap where so many great ideas go to die—between full-bodied artistic commitment and the ability to get shit done. The two make movies together.

After watching 14 minutes of footage from Devor and Mudede’s next experimental documentary—about Sara Jane Moore, the first woman to fire a loaded gun at a U.S. president—the Genius Awards committee came to an awkward realization: Much as we tried (and for years we have), we just couldn’t keep ignoring Devor and Mudede’s films. Together, the pair (Devor as director and Mudede as screenwriter, along with New York–based cinematographer Sean Kirby) have completed two feature films, Police Beat and Zoo, both of which premiered at Sundance. Zoo also screened at Cannes. Their third feature, currently going by the title Untitled Sara Jane Moore Documentary, is a Sundance 2011 hopeful.

Self-conscious avoidance of these world-class local filmmakers was getting ridiculous—becoming the, um, rearing stallion in the room, if you will. So after months of deliberations and watching many, many other films, too, we simply couldn’t justify not giving them the award, even though Mudede also obviously has a day job here at The Stranger. (Mudede recused himself from all deliberations as soon as his name came into consideration, and he is donating his half of the $5,000 Genius prize to Northwest Film Forum.) This is major, genius-level filmmaking coming out of Seattle and bringing international attention back home with it. These movies matter.

New York Times critic Manohla Dargis called Police Beat one of the highlights of Sundance in 2006, describing it as “a delicately funny tale about everyday surrealism.” And of Zoo, she wrote: “Characters don’t just walk in this film; they float across the frame, pouring like liquid toward their inexorable destinies.”Untitled Sara Jane Moore Documentary will chronicle the very weird existence of Moore, the seemingly innocuous wife/mother/accountant who tried to assassinate President Ford in 1975 and was released from prison in 2007 at age 77. It shares the previous two films’ uncanny atmospherics, nearly imperceptible blending of reality and fiction, and mesmerizing, hyperchoreographed visuals.

Mudede and Devor met in 2002, when Devor was looking for a script consultant: “I was writing a script about an African child soldier, and I thought Mr. Mudede, given his African background—little did I know how middle-class it was—that he’d know about African child soldiers. He agreed to take a look at it.” On hearing this, Mudede let out a mad cackle: “I turned over the script to my mother—I really did! I said, ‘Look at this and tell me what is African and what is not African,’ because I had no idea.”

Devor had moved to Seattle after a decade in Los Angeles trying to make movies in the mainstream industry. While down there, he directed a documentary about Angelyne, the eccentric L.A. “model” and self-made celebrity whose pink Corvette and cryptic billboards (featuring nothing but her name and a painting of herself in a sexy pose) became a beloved staple of local counterculture kitsch. Angelyne’s career of delusion resonates perfectly with Devor’s later projects: documenting the humanity of outsiders and freaks, misguided revolutionaries and unrepentant horsefuckers.

Devor’s first feature, The Woman Chaser (starring Patrick Warburton, about a used-car salesman who becomes obsessed with making a movie), achieved moderate success, but Hollywood, it turns out, was a disappointing dead end. “The Woman Chaser turned out really nicely, I thought, and after that I had this mistaken notion that I could kind of do arty films and do my own thing,” Devor says. “But instead, I just was doing a lot of meetings in Hollywood and they weren’t going anywhere. So that period of disillusionment was good timing—it freed me up to go up here.”

Devor and Mudede teamed up to work on Police Beat—Mudede’s script partially inspired by his long-running Stranger column of the same name—a slow amble through a series of human transgressions, small and large, which caress and capture Seattle’s dark green, dark blue, dismal beauty. The film is almost pathologically restrained.

Devor describes the pair’s shared aesthetic: “It’s so important just to have a sense of atmosphere—a sense of place, but really atmosphere—and atmosphere is composed of light and sound and emotion. It could be a low-wattage emotion, a simple thing. Maybe because I don’t have a car and I’m happy to just sit in the woods and film something.”

“Charles is the most poetic prose writer in Seattle,” says Carey Christie, a local filmmaker and youth educator, “and Sean Kirby is the most poetic cinematographer. And Rob doesn’t want to tell stories, he wants to make poetry, and that’s why their collaboration keeps happening, and why it keeps getting better.” Like Police Beat, Zoo is a movie about transgression (man has sex with horse, man dies), and poetry, and the dusky, bucolic silhouettes of the Enumclaw plateau. It’s difficult to think of a less gorgeous way to die than a perforated colon, and a less glamorous instrument with which to perforate one’s colon than a stallion penis. But Zoo is a gorgeous, dignified, intellectually curious piece of art nonetheless. “Rob makes movies about people that don’t fit,” Christie continues. “He shows us how we are like them. It’s the reason I keep supporting him, because in person he can be a real asshole.” She laughs. “He holds local filmmakers to a higher standard, and in that way he presents our community with an opportunity for growth—I wish more filmmakers would do that.”

Why do Mudede and Devor keep choosing to work with the other?

“I enjoy the care he takes in filmmaking,” Mudede says. “Absolutely. I hate to say it, but when it comes to the artistic process, a lot of people are lazy. Or they give up before all the possibilities are investigated. And there’s a certain thoroughness to Rob’s work, not only in the writing process but in the way he crafts his films. And that sometimes goes against the producers. Producers are concerned with getting the most we can out of the least we can. Rob has a commitment to what’s going to cause the most grief. That’s really the creative process.”

And Devor: “I say this with great sincerity: If somebody offered me anybody, the most famous novelist, the most tenured professor, the most laureled screenwriter, American or European, I really would stick with Charles. I think it’s his commitment to originality that is the absolute key thing. He has no desire at all to do what has been done. It also is a slightly maddening thing, but it’s mostly very positive: He doesn’t need it as much as I do. By that I mean that only something that’s really exciting is going to stimulate him. If you’re in a company town like Hollywood, and you’re grinding things out, you’re going to sell out.”

Mudede and Devor are Seattle filmmakers—both agree that they couldn’t do what they do if it weren’t for their adopted city. “The projects we’ve had outside of Seattle have all been suspended in one stage or another,” Mudede explains, “but the ones we’ve had in Seattle have all gone through because we’ve had this support.” And Devor: “We’re just down-on-our-knees grateful when somebody supports filmmaking. It’s a tough investment, but somehow it happens. And I’m proud.” 

Source: thestranger.com

    • #Charles Mudede
    • #Photo
    • #Zimbabwe
    • #Robinson Devor
    • #documentary
    • #Sara Jane Moore
    • #Genius Award
    • #Zoo
    • #Cannes
    • #Sundance
  • 10 months ago
  • 1
  • Comments
  • Permalink
Share

Short URL

TwitterFacebookPinterestGoogle+

very, very rainy day in san diego. glad we made it to the zoo yesterday while it was still beautiful out :) despite the rain, @funshine and I are still planning on spending the day museum-hopping in balboa park.
Pop-upView Separately

very, very rainy day in san diego. glad we made it to the zoo yesterday while it was still beautiful out :) despite the rain, @funshine and I are still planning on spending the day museum-hopping in balboa park.

    • #Photo
    • #Instagram
    • #hipstamatic
    • #tejas
    • #AO BW
    • #san diego
    • #zoo
    • #rainy day
    • #Balboa Park
  • 1 year ago
  • Comments
  • Permalink
Share

Short URL

TwitterFacebookPinterestGoogle+

photo by Mike Ambs - @funshine high above the san diego zoo in the skyway - if I could, I would ride this back and forth 20 times in a row *nods*
Pop-upView Separately

photo by Mike Ambs - @funshine high above the san diego zoo in the skyway - if I could, I would ride this back and forth 20 times in a row *nods*

    • #Photo
    • #Instagram
    • #hipstamatic
    • #tejas
    • #blanko
    • #erica hampton
    • #san diego
    • #zoo
    • #skyway
    • #birthday
  • 1 year ago
  • 1
  • Comments
  • Permalink
Share

Short URL

TwitterFacebookPinterestGoogle+

photo by Mike Ambs - I’m pretty sure @funshine and I are going to be leaving the san diego zoo today with one of these panda bears :) 
Pop-upView Separately

photo by Mike Ambs - I’m pretty sure @funshine and I are going to be leaving the san diego zoo today with one of these panda bears :) 

    • #Photo
    • #Instagram
    • #hipstamatic
    • #tejas
    • #blanko
    • #Erica Hampton
    • #panda bear
    • #san diego
    • #zoo
    • #birthday
    • #inkstagram
    • #hug
  • 1 year ago
  • Comments
  • Permalink
Share

Short URL

TwitterFacebookPinterestGoogle+


i currently live in los angeles. i love to film things and read on the subway. i'm pretty sure blue whales are my power animal.

projects I keep busy with include

7x7s feature film loneliest mix

me @ mikeambs
  • @mikeambs on Twitter
  • Facebook Profile
  • mikeambs on Vimeo
  • mikeambs on Youtube
  • mike_1630 on Flickr
  • mike_1630 on Last.fm
  • mikeambs on Soundcloud
  • Linkedin Profile

@mikeambs

loading tweets…

Top

  • RSS
  • Random
  • Archive
  • ask me things
  • Mobile
Effector Theme by Pixel Union