Posts Tagged ‘The Caves’

The Caves To-Do List

Friday, January 22nd, 2010

The Caves is a Cultural Romance Epic set in the real-world but written with traditional mythological motifs based on modern mythology grounded in Hard Science, set on a global scale, as the backdrop for an odyssey revolving around a group of highly-romanticized characters on a journey into the familiar unknown.

-I spent the first 3 weeks or so of the new year coming to that conclusion, and while it may not say anything specific about the plot, story, or characters, (which are still in development) it definitely defines The Caves. It took a lot longer than I thought it would to nail that down, but I now have a 3-page document outlining exactly what The Caves is, my goals for the project, and the Genre.Faces 2

I’m not quite ready to say anything less vague than that at the moment. My writing process is somewhat unique in that the actual plot is one of the last things I design. I come up with situations, lines, characters, ideas for plots and jot them down (I have folders full of these). From a storytelling standpoint there is no 3-Act or 5-Act structure or anything like that -The story is just a juxtaposition of vignettes -snippets of plot here and there that the audience has to either piece together on their own or just sit back and enjoy the story until the characters figure it out.

It’s a variation of a method of storytelling proposed by Ted Elliot and Terry Rossio, writers of the Pirates of the Caribbean movies, on their website http://wordplayer.com. The idea is that you’re seeing the story from the perspective of the characters -so there could be all sorts of awesome cool stuff happening, but you’re only going to get to see the things that are along the side of a road the characters happen to be taking. This idea of a highly detailed, yet incomplete universe that embraces the reality of the unknown is a lot like Christopher Nolan’s Batman-universe in The Dark Knight. I don’t know if he was directly inspired by Ted and Terry, but The Dark Knight is a perfect example of this type of storytelling at its best.

Faces 3Basically just juxtaposing different ideas. In The Caves the goal is sort of to take obscure, outlandish, sensationalized concepts like Sci-fi B-Movies of the 1940′s-50′s and Anomalee-of-the-Week Pulp Gothic Horror stories like THE THING FROM THE SWAMP and THEY CAME FROM OUTER SPACE, and juxtapose them with sort of A-list production values and grounding them in real/hard science. A-Movies of that era were kind of like Film Noir, Murder Mystery, and Classic Romance movies -with a lot of humor and cultural themes and dramatic sophistication.

So The Caves is sort of like a merger of those (The exotic/mysterious with the classic/familiar) presented in a serialized episodic format.

To do Hard Science  -to live up to that goal of accuracy and believability requires a LOT of extra research though, especially with a story that has so many different facets like this, so I’ve spent a good year and a half just researching a lot of basic things, and I’ve still got at least 4 weeks worth of story research left before there will be anything resembling a plot.Eyes

I also spent a lot of time watching old movies, obscure by today’s standards from that era, in addition to all the classics, to get a really clear idea of what the tone and mood of The Caves will be. I think it will be immensely helpful when I go to write, to have a guide that lets me sort of control the tone and mood the scenes take in addition to the actual content, basically so I can change any scene at will to be within the realm of a different genre (I could take an action scene and make it suspenseful instead or take a horrorific scene and make it funny) Because the characters are the focus of the story, the plot isn’t restricted to any particular genre, so I’m basically free to take the plot wherever the story wants to go, which is going to be a real help.Faces 1

I broke one of my New Years Resolutions which was to make a blog post at least once a week, while working on this Genre Definition as it took longer than I expected.

I sent an email to Paul Caggegi which he read on his podcast, The Process Diary, in his 100th episode this week. (You can click the link to go listen to it if you’d like) The episode was a feedback episode, but he started by providing a really insightful commentary on the process of creating art. After listening to it I became inspired to share here on my own blog some of the process I’ve gone through over the past year and a half with The Caves. I’m planning to be a little more open with my process since a lot of my time is spent in a tiny little room just working on story development, so it’s kind of unrealistic to expect to be able to post awesome, cool finished professional looking concepts and artwork every week. I think, if you’re interested in how the creative process works it will be really interesting (if not, well I’ll try and promise pictures lol) It’ll definitely help me with my New Years Resolution, and perhaps get some early feedback.Eye 2-2

I’m finally shifting gears now though, as I want The Caves to be as much a visual experience as it is a literary achievement, so I’m going to be spending the last week of the month learning to paint.

I’m not aiming for any particular style, but in the realm of digital painting I tend to like the look of speed painting and sort of concept art style… which are also not too elaborate to do, but I want to also try at least one really sort of high quality image per episode if I can. It all depends on where my skills are at and also sort of, what the focus of a particular scene really needs to be -some scenes are going to be pretty simple while others may actually need to showcase some kind of highly detailed object or character as a sort of visual component of the narrative, but I’m going to just sort of experiment with different styles and the episodes will probably contain a collection of artwork with various influences. I’ve got a whole list of tutorials and online workshops/ pdfs to go through -probably enough for a lifetime, so I’ll be following those and just honing my skills.Painting Practice

There’s also a new contest at CGSociety called The B-Movie CGChallenge which I was really psyched to read about because it fits so perfectly with the type of work I was planning to do. So I’m going to enter that. I don’t plan to win, but to get some feedback on my art skills as a learning experience will be really helpful.

I’ve also still got a lot of notes to sort out… (The notes never really end). I’m hoping to be able to reveal some kind of actual synopsis by the end of the month, and possibly some teaser images to go with it, but we’ll see how things go. For now, I’ll just show you my To-Do List:

  • Learn to Paint/ Draw
  • Plot Arrangement/ “Soft” Outline
  • Visual Design/ Begin Blog Setup
  • Finish Story Research
  • Concepts
  • Hard Outline
  • Write Pilot
  • Illustrations
  • Blog Optimization +Launch

So… I still can’t really determine an official launch date. Ideally I’d like to get it up before the end of February. Mid to lateish-March might be more realistic, but the end of February is my working target for the moment, so February 28th give or take 2 weeks, but probably sometime in March.

In the meantime I’ll be making posts… every few days or so, at least once or twice a week, with updates on my progress. And I will be divulging more and more information regarding the plot as time draws nearer to the launch so look forward to that.Drawing Practice

For now, I’ve scattered some of the drawing studies I’ve been doing about this post. These are all from a few months ago, but it was the first time I had really drawn anything in many years, so it’ll be a good check to see how much progress I make with my skills over the next month and a half or so before The Caves launch. (If all goes well, these long posts will get shorter and filled with more and more images of better and better quality instead lol.)

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The Familiar Unknown

Friday, January 1st, 2010

Happy 2010!

And for the record it feels like a good one, although I can’t remember the last 2010 that came around which explains the “unknown” part of the title. The “familiar” part is that strange feeling that I’m exactly where I was progress wise this day last year…

It’s not deja vu. I started 2009 the exact same way I’m starting this year, writing a blogisode series called The Caves due for release… I’m gonna throw out February 15th (give or take a week or two) -we’ll call that semi-official for the time being… but in reality a lot has changed and much progress was made. The Caves as it is currently is completely different than the series a year ago. The year has not been a waste. While progress has been slower than I’d like, I’m very happy with the story and even if it makes no money whatsoever the extra year was well worth it.

(Tho hopefully that won’t be the case cause I’m quite in debt.)

So, I move on from here into the unknown. One of my New Years Resolutions is to try to set more accurate deadlines and more strongly consider keeping them so I intend to do that this year. Another resolution was to blog more often, so I’m going to make posts at least once or twice a week and that should keep this blog alive much more effectively than my previous posting schedule lol.

I’ll be starting this weekend with a post to introduce the premise behind The Caves and divulge a little bit about the plot. There will also be some preview(s) here on the blog with more info, synopsis, artwork, teaser images, etc. between now and the launch. Any preview though is still at least a week away. I’m keeping myself busy this week learning digital painting, and from there I’ve got about 3-4 weeks worth of story research left before I can finalize the outline and write the first episode(s), but the month will probably go by fast and you’ll have the first episode or two for your Spring Break reading.

Over the course of 2009 I also made a lot of notes and various progress on some other projects I’ve been writing to various degrees, the bulk of which fell on to The Last Patriarch (which I still intend to produce as an animated movie after I re-write the script), The Studio, a second “blogisode” series which may or may not come to fruition this year, and Ninjas of the Orient (an idea I’ve had in mind for a while about… Ninjas in the Orient… with one intention to explore the boundaries of human capability in terms of stunts, so practical effects and live action -probably a very big budget so you can set that aside for a long while lol but I’m slowly working on it)

Those have been my main focus in 2009 so any other projects I’ve worked on in the past besides that have faded a little into the back of my mind, but may or may not be totally forgotten.

On the note of things forgotten, I’ve also had some thoughts the past couple months of making a webcomic of Sherlock Dog, an idea I had when I was 8 or 12 or something about one of those really hairy dogs that can’t see anything cause of its fur as Sherlock Dog and his trusted dalmation companion Watson. The only reason I haven’t is lack of interest, coming up with good storylines is not all that inspiring I’d want to inject it with a lot of complex mystery plots but that would probably be a mistake. It’d be fairly easy to render and good practice in writing simple plotlines though.

I’ve had the idea since before Sherlock Holmes came out in theaters, though the timing shouldn’t be ignored. I was somewhat disappointed when I went to see Sherlock Holmes in theaters. There was a lot of talking -it wasn’t really the action/adventure mystery I was expecting -I have to watch it again to catch half the stuff that was said. But even the mystery storyline wasn’t all that good. It seemed like the villain was going through a lot more trouble than he needed to achieve his goals also which always makes him seem kind of silly -almost like he was setting clues out specifically for Sherlock to find.

The characters were awesome, and very well written/portrayed, and without revealing what happened, I liked the ending, but the story wasn’t up to par and the it was just kinda weird. The effects weren’t that good either, certainly nothing as awesome as the giant vacuum cleaner robot who sucked up the top of the Great pyramid in Transformers 2…

Or Star Trek of course which was by the far the most epic movie of the year. Not just for effects, the storyline was really good too and the characters were hilarious. All in all, 5 movies made my Top 100 this year (the full list can be viewed at the end of this post) Star Trek was the best, ranking in at number 18, Avatar a close second at number 23, Sherlock Holmes at number 40, Inglourious Basterds -47, and Transformers 2 made it on to the list at number 80.

So this will be a great year. I’ll be posting about The Caves soon, but in the meantime here are some blogs I follow that are worth checking out:

Project Durian -3rd Blender Open Movie “SINTEL” -The concept this time was Epic Action/Adventure and the plot that they’ve revealed so far involves a girl, a dragon, and they said it would be good lol. The blog itself is updated sometimes several times a week and is my favorite current blog. It’s gonna be an awesome short film come May.

MYST -The Motion Picture -If you haven’t heard of the bestselling computer game series of the 20th century you should play it immediately. Although, these guys are trying to make a movie based on the book series not necessarily the computer games which are arguably harder to translate to film its one of the movies I’ve been wanting to see since I was a kid and played the games. What’s cool about this blog is that they’re completely independent and are not attached to any studios (yet) They got the rights from Cyan to do the project and wrote their own original script and have been working towards a production deal ever since.

Finally, The Process Diary -”The blog and podcast showing you how it’s done by going out and doing it!” is a really cool blog. It features podcast interviews with a lot of cool webcomic and animation hobbyists and professionals that are really inspiring as well as video tutorials aimed at computer graphics techniques in Blender.

To close out this post, I’ll wish everyone a great year and finish with a few lists:

Things I’m anxiously anticipating in 2010:

  • The Final Season of LOST
  • INCEPTION -July (The movie with a plot that Christopher Nolan insists on keeping secret, and will continue to do so until his death. There might be some kind of clue in the movie itself but don’t count on a full synopsis.)
  • PRINCE OF PERSIA: Sands of Time
  • CLASH OF THE TITANS
  • BLACK SWAN -Natalie Portman and Mila Kunis as rival ballet dancers, and they have “aggressive sex”.
  • IRON MAN 2
  • Season 8 of 24, Season 2 of The Secret Life of the American Teenager, and the continuation of the best season of House yet sound pretty good to me too. And new episodes of Community and Stargate Universe should show up sometime this year too.

Things that should really have been in production last year -Stop screwing around and make them:

  • BATMAN 3
  • PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN: ON STRANGER TIDES-Starring Willa Holland as Jack’s daughter and Natalie Portman as the Queen of England hopefully. (At least they settled on a title…)
  • BOND 3
  • NATIONAL TREASURE 3

My Top 100 Favorite Movies as of Jan. 1st 2010:

1. The Dark Knight
2. Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest
3. Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s End
4. Casino Royale
5. The Empire Strikes Back
6. Star Wars
7. Revenge of the Sith
8. The Lion King
9. Attack of the Clones
10. Return of the Jedi
11. Pirates of the Caribbean: Curse of the Black Pearl
12. Lady and the Tramp
13. Casablanca
14. Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull
15. Contact
16. Quantum of Solace
17. The Bourne Ultimatum
18. Star Trek
19. Gone With the Wind
20. His Girl Friday

21. Down With Love
22. Jurassic Park
23. Avatar
24. Princess Mononoke
25. National Treasure 2: Book of Secrets
26. Alexander: Director’s Cut
27. National Treasure
28. Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade
29. Wall-E
30.The Mummy

31. The Big Sleep
32. Lost in Space
33. Aladdin
34. Sabrina
35. X-Men III: The Last Stand
36. The Godfather Part II
37. Batman Begins
38. The Thin Man
39. Roman Holiday
40. Sherlock Holmes

41. The Mummy Returns
42. Thunder Birds
43. Troy
44. The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King
45. Spider-Man
46. Star Wars Episode I: The Phantom Menace
47. Inglourious Basterds
48. Breakfast at Tiffany’s
49. Nausiaa of the Valley of the Wind
50. The Godfather Part III

51. Titanic
52. Shadow of a Doubt
53. It’s a Wonderful Life
54. The Shanghai Gesture
55. Ace in the Hole
56. The Departed
57. The Goonies
58. Star Trek: First Contact
59. Blood Diamond
60. Star Trek: Nemesis

61. The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers
62. Howl’s Moving Castle
63. Star Trek: Insurrection
64. 300
65. Indiana Jones and the Raiders of the Lost Ark
66. Cruel Intentions
67. Pearl Harbor
68. The Godfather
69. To Have and Have Not
70. Peter Pan

71. The Incredibles
72. Iron Man
73. Heat
74. Nancy Drew
75. Bolt
76. Schindler’s List
77. Heaven Can Wait
78. Up
79. 3:10 to Yuma
80.  Transformers 2: Revenge of the Fallen

81. Transformers
82. Mission: Impossible
83. X2: X-Men United
84. Spider-Man 3
85. The Prestige
86. Gladiator
87. Basic Instinct
88. Closer
89. Double Indemnity
90. Mission: Impossible 2

91. Spider-Man 2
92. Finding Nemo
93. March of the Penguins
94. The Bourne Supremacy
95. All the President’s Men
96. Forrest Gump
97. X-Men
98. The Sum of All Fears
99. Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow
100. Singin’ in the Rain

101. 101 Dalmations (obviously)

This list is subject to fluctuation and is by no means set in stone. While the top 5 are generally pretty hard to break, the other parts of the list often move around from time to time as my interests change. Movies I’ve just seen tend to move up or down a bit too until they eventually settle in somewhere. Any movie that made this list I highly recommend watching though, especially anything in the top 30 those are “Must-See”s.

As an end note, the title of this post, “The Familiar Unknown”, is a phrase I came upon during my research for The Caves and thought it was cool, so I’ve adapted it into a sort of tagline for the series ->”Take a step into the Familiar Unknown.”

And you can do just that, when I introduce you to The Caves this weekend.

Until then,
-Mik out.

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