Posts Tagged ‘yevgeniy’

Pre-Production of the Post-Protest

Posted: 19th November 2010 by Anthony van Winkle
Categories: Behind-the-Scenes Photos, Episode 5 - "Reversals", On Location, Photography

On the pre-production, location scouting, and new photography techniques in the “Death of Dariya” sequences

The shoot of Dariya’s death brings together some of our earliest cast members from the Night Zero project, while incorporating all the advances we’ve made over the last three years of production. Yevgeniy, Nadia, and Dariya date back to our first office shoot at the end of episode one in June of 2008—before dedicated costume design, before multi-point lighting, before shot cards and camera-optimized shoot schedules. That all three of these cast members have stuck around so long is something for which I am incredibly grateful; that in such time our production quality has grown exponentially is something of which I am incredibly proud.

Pre-production for the shoot was in some ways simple and in some ways challenging. For the simple side, we already had the full cast and costumes from previous episodes, so the only challenge was scheduling everybody at the same time. When dealing with some pretty prolific theater and film actors, that’s hardly an easy task, and must be done many months in advance. The downside to scheduling like this, though, is that once the cast is locked down for a date, whatever location we want to shoot at has to be available as well; if not, we are faced with having to either scout and secure a new location, or try and reschedule the entire cast and crew.
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An Intertwining Web of Tales

Posted: 1st October 2010 by Anthony van Winkle
Categories: "Devon", Behind-the-Scenes Photos, Concepts & Development

On the evolution of the “Devon” vignette’s storyline

As time moves forward and Night Zero moves towards the finale of its serial story (coming Summer 2011), I become more and more certain that I will continue producing vignettes at least through the end of next year, if not indefinitely. They are so much fun to produce and the ideas in store are limitless.

Development of the “Devon” vignette went through a number of different concepts and drafts, although the visual focal point of two characters meeting in a dark bar was a constant in all of them. Knowing that Serling was a character to be created and killed in the span of the story, it was a challenge to construct his character justifiably without excessive exposition or gaps. The earliest drafts saw him betraying Yevgeniy for favor with the powers that be, but as a character he was hard to understand; later revisions established him entirely on Yevgeniy’s side, but this lacked the tension that I wanted to build between the two men. In time it settled in the middle, where Serling was playing both sides and trusted by neither, and I’m quite happy with the result.
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Discovering Devon

Posted: 27th August 2010 by Anthony van Winkle
Categories: "Devon", Concepts & Development

On the origins and backstories for creating the “Devon” vignette

The Night Zero blog has been quiet for a while, which can only mean one thing: busy busy busy! With the post-production of the Devon vignette, rolling into production of episode five, and an ambitious new comic-shop-outreach program, the Night Zero crew has been working their collective butts this last month, but I’m happy to be back here on the blog.

This new vignette seems the perfect place to start, and if you weren’t positive that Devon is Yevgeniy, there you go. This isn’t a case of actor recycling—Yevgeniy as an assumed name has always been part of the overall backstory, just never overtly addressed until now. You can catch mentions of it throughout the various vignettes and episodes, or just check out his character bio on the cast page.
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Between the Lines

Posted: 1st January 2010 by Anthony van Winkle
Categories: Behind-the-Scenes Photos, Concepts & Development, Episode 3 - "House Calls"

On transforming dialogue-heavy scripts to character-driven photocomics

During the course of Episode Three production I was often reminded of my experiences directing in theater, and one of the ways in which I found parallels between the two is in unwritten action. A stage script contains strictly the dialogue spoken by the characters and the essential (required) elements of stage directions. There are no instructions on how the characters carry themselves, or when they stand and move about the room, or even the mood and tone with which they deliver their lines. Everything is subject to the director’s vision and the actors’ interpretations, which is one of the reasons why a single show can be produced so many times and still be a different experience (for better or for worse). I don’t have as much experience on film, but I do know that (for the sake of storyboarding and cinematography) the stage directions are much more abundant and precise.

Through three episodes of Alexander’s scripts, the production team has gotten more comfortable with the logistics of shooting and can spend more and more of their energies focused on their particular unique tasks. Having story cards, the camera operator can spend less time worrying about what the angle is going to be and instead think about which lens and cropping to use. Having shot setup lists, the director of photography and gaffer can spend less time figuring out where the lights will need to be and instead work with more complex setups faster and more efficiently. And having an experienced team to handle all these aspects of the shoot and keep the production rolling, I can partially step out of the producer role and put my energies towards the finer aspects of directing. One such aspect that I’ve been pleased to explore (in episode three particularly) is the non-central action of the story– everything that happens that’s not in the script.
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On shooting the Episode Three scene at Yevgeniy’s house

Scratcher catchers has the distinction of the longest script-to-shoot leadtime (12.5 months), and up until recently Jezebel held the record for shortest script-to-shoot (2.5 weeks). Sisters is probably going to forever hold the shortest shoot-to-online turnaround (6 hours), and here we finally get to see Yevgeniy’s house, which tops the chart for longest shoot-to-online turnaround (10 months). It seems so long ago that we all got together to shoot our first scene from Episode Three, and yes, that’s because it WAS so long ago. And thanks to the shift from single-storyline to segmented scenes, this one photoshoot comprised the entirety of Katrina and Ben’s commitments for the Episode. Good for them, getting it out of the way early, but still a bit sad for everyone not having as many excuses to work with them throughout the year.
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Back to Business

Posted: 13th February 2009 by Anthony van Winkle
Categories: Behind-the-Scenes Photos, Episode 2 - "Quarantine", On Location

On the first gathering of the principal cast members, and the challenges of an ever-expanding production

The Volume One books have arrived, and are simply gorgeous. We’ve already started shipping out some preorders, and will have them all en route by next week. If you haven’t yet ordered your copy, it’s easy to do so now.

At long last we’ve returned to Marion, Claire, and all our friends in the New City. While “Jezebel” was a fun and interesting diversion, it feels good to be back on track and moving forward with our serial story “City Planning.” This second episode, “Quarantine,” will run until mid-Summer, and has got plenty of fun within it.
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