“On The Lot”

There have been dancing contests, singing contests, and various other assorted talent contests gracing our TV screens over the past few years.  Now, finally, there is a contest for filmmakers.  It’s about time!

On the Lot is a new FOX reality show “brought to you by reality show mastermind, Mark Burnett, and legendary producer and director, Steven Spielberg.”  It works similiar to the way American Idol works.  Out of the hundreds, perhaps thousands, of applicants who submit their short films online, only 16 will be chosen for the show. 

Over the course of a season, they will produce new short films every single week in different genres such as comedy, horror, mystery, drama, etc.  That’s one week to go from script development, to pre-production, to shooting, to post-production.  Whew!  Makes me tired just thinking about it.  Viewers at home will get to vote for their favorites and the contestant with the least votes goes home. The filmmaker left standing gets a $1 million development deal with DreamWorks.

On The Lot will air next spring on FOX, but the search for the 16 finalists has already begun.  Hundreds of short films have already been uploaded to the official On The Lot website located at http://www.thelot.com/

When I’m able steal a few minutes away from other obligations, I love to go to the site and check out the submissions.  Quite a community has developed there already.  Once you sign up on the website, you can rate the films you watch using a star system and leave comments about the films if you wish.  Similiar to MySpace, you can blog, post photos, have a friends list, and a favorite films list, among other features. 

Just like American Idol, people of various talents and abilities are trying out for this contest, from absolute beginners to those who have been making films for many years.  Watching the films and reading the comments is a learning experience in of itself.  Some of the more experienced filmmakers offer constructive criticism in their comments, which can help one develop an eye for what works and what doesn’t in a film.  Whenever I watch one of the films, I find myself analyzing what I think is right and wrong with the film and then I go read the comments and see if I caught what others caught.  Of course, taste is very subjective, so I skip over comments that are personal opinion and pay attention to the comments that deal more with the technical and artistic aspects of filmmaking.

When I first found out about On The Lot, I knew that it would be a must see show for me, but it has become even more now because a friend of mine has entered the contest.

John Meredith is a beginning filmmaker whom I met in a filmmaking class last year.  He wrote, produced, directed, and starred in the film he submitted entitled Boy Trouble.  The film also features his darling daughter and a neighbor girl.  I’ve got to hand it to him, he’s much braver than I am.  He made this film with absolutely no crew!

Many in the online filmmaking community have taken the time to help John out by offering some great constructive criticism.  Whether he is chosen as one of the contestants of the show or not, I know that with his love for filmmaking and his determination, he’ll continue to grow and develop as a filmmaker.

Check out John’s film at http://films.thelot.com/films/1559.

Addendum:  John just read this post and gave me the low-down on the actress (whom I described as a neighbor girl above) in his film.  Her name is Tasha Trujillo. Tasha was second runner-up to Miss California in 2004, is currently host of the nationally broadcast TV show Latin Eyesis a San Francisco 49er cheerleader, a former San Jose Sabercat Cheerleader, and was Miss San Francisco Bay Area in 2004.  She is 25 years old.

The Search for the Man in Red

Mike McCafferty and company are at it again.  This time they invade a shopping mall.  Their mission?  To find the man in red, who isn’t what he claims to be, before they get thrown out by mall security. 

The result of their endeavour is called Store Trek: The Wrath of Klaus

Check out the two versions and watch our heroes try to save an entire civilization from being consumed by mirth and merriment. 

Short Version 

Extended Version

10 Day Take

Do you have a great idea for a TV show?  Would you like the opportunity to go to Hollywood to produce it?  Well, then, you might want to consider entering Ziddio’s 10 Day Take contest.

The winner gets flown out to Hollywood for 10 days and is given a budget of $50,000 to produce their TV pilot, as well as access to a team of experts and execs to help with the shooting.

Now, $50,000 is peanuts when compared to Hollywood’s budgets, but what an experience that could be and, who knows, it might even open up some doors and start a career for a budding filmmaker.

Even if you’re not interested in entering the contest, you’ve got to watch the first video.  Doesn’t that remind you of a certain Fry’s Trek experience? 

Joel Bissonnette in This Week’s “Standoff”

I’m really sorry to post this announcement after the fact, but I didn’t find out about Joel Bissonnette’s (Arnaud De Fehrn) guest appearance in Standoff until after the show was over.  Literally five minutes after the show was over, I found out.  And, yes, I missed it.

The good news is that you can go to Standoff’s MySpace page and watch the episode there on demand.  It should be up for three weeks.  How cool is that?

On another note, remember Jonathan Glassner?  To refresh your memory, he was one of two executive producers who came on board after Matt Greenberg left I-Man.  Well, he’s now working as Co-Executive Producer/Director on Standoff.  Interesting how so many I-Man alum end up working together again on different shows. 

If you enjoy the behind-the-scenes stuff, then you gotta check out this cool video in which Glassner takes us through the making of an episode of Standoff

To Boldly Film Where No One Has Filmed Before

Mike McCafferty in Star Trek Parody

Here’s a fun little no-budget short that Mike McCafferty and company shot recently called Fry’s Trek.  It’s a Star Trek parody filmed at a sci-fi themed Fry’s in the LA area.  (Why can’t we have themed Fry’s in the Bay Area?)  It’s been getting quite a bit of attention over at YouTube with over 20,000 hits to date.  Even Wil Wheaton, who played Wesley Crusher on Star Trek:The Next Generation and had a guest role on The Invisible Man, linked to the video on his blog.

As usual, Mike nails the role of Captain Kirk.  And do you recognize the character of Matt Fry?  Yep, that’s Jason Makiaris, who had a guest role on The Invisible Man as Dr. Murav. 

It’s fun to watch these guys try to keep in character even as they are being kicked out by security.  Ah, the joys of guerrilla filmmaking. 

Fry’s Trek