| The history of this little fan
film project is extensive, but not wholly inspiring. As it turned
out, it was really nothing more than an exercise in amateur movie making.
But the desire to make what it was supposed to be, brought together myself,
Nick Michalak, and Jason Pavlik as great, honest friends. But don't
let any this negativity get you down about this short fan film. It's
surely a rough piece, and admittedly imperfect in many facetts, but it
is a worthwhile download. A lot of hard work and passion went into
it.
For a very long time, Jason Pavlik of Darien, Illinois
was highly intent on making a FRIDAY THE 13TH fan film. Planning
to start it several times, possibly countless times, but never getting
anything off the ground. Whether it'd be lack of resources, time,
money, or whatever else, it simply never happened. Come early 2003,
with a mere post in a dicussion thread at Fridaythe13thforum.com by Jason,
he & I got into contact with one another. First emails, then
phone calls, and eventually in-person. It was a joint desire to create
a FRIDAY THE 13TH fan film that brought us together, and we were both very
anxious to get to working on it. Weeks passed with Jason being quite
busy between his classes at the College of DuPage, with his band Red X
Rebellion, and other concerns. Meanwhile, I was in the early months
of my now year and a half unemployment streak. My anxiousness kept
on building and building as I kept on pestering Jason week after week about
it. Then came Memorial Day weekend, and equipped with my family's
JVC S-VHS camcorder, Jason, his girlfriend Heather, and myself ventured
off to Waterfall Glen in DuPage County, Illinois to shoot some preliminary
scenes for what was then titled "FRIDAY THE 13TH: PILGRIMAGE." Nine
minutes of footage was ultimately shot on that day through a varying number
of takes. Not a very productive day, and the plans to shoot further
scenes later on were short-lived.
A few weeks later, as just a fun activity and exercise
for myself, I chose to edit together the existing footage. The nine
minutes worth was edited down to a little more than three minutes worth.
Not a very satisfying movie at all. It wasn't until September that
I actually scored the short and added opening and end title credits to
it. It debuted online Tuesday, September 16th, 2003. A few
hundred downloads in the many following months, but no reaction, no response,
no feedback. Didn't really matter since it was such a painfully incomplete
piece of work that was never dubbed anything but "test footage."
But come 2004, I had the desire to do something more with
the movie. There were several planned scenes, which were good, but
obviously never shot. Also, one cut always bothered me, but with
the footage I had, there was no way around it. So, I chose to shoot
some extra footage and a new scene. Though, with Jason & Heather
now relocated to Miami, Florida, it really wasn't possible to include them
in any such plans, but Jason gave me all the encouragement I needed - "go
for it." I did a bit of planning in March, and focused on shooting
insert shots of a lake - one to certainly be seen as Crystal Lake in the
completed movie. I had just the right place in mind. A sizeable
body of water in Orland Park's Tampier Lake. A very nice lake with
a pleasant atmosphere and very welcoming grounds. Though, not even
a week ago, May 9th I believe, I found an expotentially larger lake along
107th Street in Lemont, IL. Don't know it's name, but I'll certainly
do more research and location scouting on it for my next fan film project.
Anyway, in early April, I went out to shooting various shots at Tampier
Lake. The first outing did not produce desirable results. The
lake looked too bleak, and it was too cloudy, rendering the beautiful gleam
of the sunlight reflecting off the water moot. I went back a few
days later when it was much clearer out (and much less windy). I
got far more shots from various points around the lake, and the results
were much better this time around.
In the weeks leading up to more pleasant weather in the
Chicagoland area, I tried to find a place to shoot the new scene, which
would star only myself. The location was near impossible to find
- a narrow, isolated stretch of road with dense forestry on both sides.
The closest I could find would still be subject to some degree of traffic,
but I had already settled on another location. A somewhat isolated
Bachelors Grove Woods forest preserve parking lot off of 143rd Street in
Oak Forest, IL - about a mile west of the infamous and heavily reported
as haunted Bachelors Grove cemetery (which I have been to many, many times
without a singular supernatural or paranormal incident to report on).
The scene to be shot is one I had scripted for quite a long while.
It was when we still planned to finish shooting the fan film in May / June
2003. Major thanks goes out to my wonderful sister Diane for helping
me shoot the scene on the afternoon of Saturday, May 8th. Couldn't
have done it without her or anyone else. It's difficult to operate
a moving camera while acting in the scene at the same time. But she
did a good job, and has received a '2nd Unit Camera Operator' credit in
the movie.
By the time I had completed shooting this new scene, I
had already begun editing together Jason & Heather's scenes with the
lake footage and such. But with all the footage now completely shot,
I could go full force on the editing. I shot and edited my scene
in just one day, but I had to return to the location again the next day
for a pair of establishing shots (the first two in my scene). But
then, no more shooting. Just editing. I let Jason preview the
rough cut - no music, no titles, no screams, no transitions or dissolves.
He suggested the idea of the classic FRIDAY white out to end my death scene.
That was the biggest obstacle in the editing process. I had done
such a dissolve in the original edit to transition from the opening credits
to the first shot of the movie. It didn't have the desired effect,
but it wasn't very important. I tinkered and tinkered with the dissolve,
but nothing better came about for this re-edit. I went searching
on Google.com for a plug-in transition, and I found out one....but it was
a demo. A demo which places a large red X over your video.
Essentially, and obviously, it was useless. So, I kept on hunting
and hunting for what seemed like an eternity. Hours and hours of
searching and about 10 Google searches later, I came upon nothing.
It wasn't until the ideas from both Hank Braxtan of BraxtanFilm and Guiboche
at the FanMadeTrailers.com forum that I got the right idea of how to do
it in Premiere. Simply put, an additive dissolve coupled with keyframed
enhancements of the 'Lightness' feature in the 'Hue & Saturation' video
filter in Adobe Premiere 5.1. The only other thing that caused any
bit of trouble here was getting the speed of the clips just right, and
the freeze frame to be just that - one singular frame. Ultimately,
a computer screen snapshot and the marquee tool in Photoshop remedied that
problem.
The last phase of the editing began with the scoring and
putting together the opening and end credits sequences. Scoring for
the scenes from the original cut were not difficult as I used the same
music clips, but some re-timing was required where insert shots were added.
The main task was my scene, and for that, I throw another big "Thank You"
out to Hank Braxtan for giving me over 30 tracks of FRIDAY THE 13TH score
tracks. Most of them from the first four films. I used the
one entitled "The Next Victim," a piece of score from the third FRIDAY
THE 13TH. It fit just perfectly with my scene. I also used
a small snippett of score from another track for the fade out from the
Dylan/Heather make-out scene for a bit of dramatic closure to fit with
the fade out. The only part of the whole scoring that I'm slightly
disappointed with is that the music in the Dylan exposition scene isn't
loud enough. In the original PILGRIMAGE edit, the music was a little
too loud, and made some of the dialogue in that sequence a little difficult
to discern at times. I wanted to avoid that, and unfortuantely, the
music doesn't come out as prominently here. Though, if you listen
with your headphones (which I highly, highly reccommend as there is some
suttle audio bits in the movie) you can hear that score much better.
The final, final pieces that need to be finished were
the credits. For the opening, I really wanted to use the original
intro to "Wounded Ground," which Jason had composed back in 2002.
I had heard the intro on an old demo recording, but with a rattling snare
drum in the background, I coudln't use that original recording. So,
Jason agreed to re-record it for the opening titles, and a fine job he
did. It is a truly moody and haunting piece of music that really
sets up a chilling atmosphere for the movie. Also, it fits well over
my animated FOREVER HORROR logo lightsweep I created in Adobe After Effects
5.5 (Production Bundle). I added in some signature FRIDAY THE 13TH
sound effects to heighten the mood of the music and to help give a slight
bit more dramatic dynamic to it, but not much added as the music is effective
on its own. Now, the very last bit to compelte was the end credits.
The credits were created in Adobe Photoshop CS, edited together in Adobe
Premiere 5.1 with the use of the additive dissolve, and the 'motion' feature
for the scrolling segment. I had agonized over what music to put
over it. I really, really wanted a song, but it had to be dark, heavy,
and brooding. The first thought was towards Alice in Chains, mainly
"Get Born Again." Though, the lyrics didn't gel with the movie.
They simply weren't appropriate to it. I searched and searched, and
finally, I settled on probably my favorite track from the 1919 - ETERNAL
Black Label Society album - "Life/Birth/Blood/Doom." That tolling
bell, that slow, heavy brooding sound was the best fit for the end credits.
I edited the credits together to best fit the song, as you have or will
probably notice. I used the program Peak DV 3.21 for Mac OS X to
edit together three parts of the song - the intro, the start of the chorus,
and the outro chorus. I edited it together seemlessly. Peak
DV has really proven to be a highly valuable audio editing tool for me.
Before everything could be completed, I had to apply a
widescreen matte to certain footage which was accidentally not shot that
way. Unfortuantely, Final Cut Pro & Express were being seriously
stubborn programs. It was a tiresome process that lasted too long,
but eventually everything was completed, edited, scored, and so on and
so forth. The last step was compression for the web. Experimentation
was really the only thing holding me up here. I wanted to utilize
the Sorenson Video 3 codec, but the file simply came out too large for
download (about 229 MBs, if I remember correctly). I eventually settled
on the old trusty MPEG-4 codec, but I kicked up the bitrate to 536 to ensure
the best quality possible. So, I uploaded it after 10pm on Sunday,
May 16th, and that was the end of it all. It's available for your
download and your enjoyment. Please, send us feedback on it, or post
your comments at the thread on Fridaythe13thforum.com! |