Going to Hell has reached its target length of 90 minutes. The few people who have seen it, including Tom from Wysiwyg, say it’s thoroughly entertaining -“great viewing,” were Tom’s words – but have suggested that I should put some more stuff going right into the film, as it’s pretty much all things going wrong. Problem is, I don’t have any footage of stuff going right….
Soul Searcher
Soul Searcher: December 17th 2005
Apologies if any of you haven’t been able to access the site for the last few days. You’ve got the muppets at Telewest to thank for that.
Just a quick one to say that Neil and I have reached reel five of the surround mix, which is the fun bit with all the rumbling vats and Rick O’Shay sounds, Tom and I have recut a leaner, meaner Soul Searcher trailer, and Going to Hell is going just fine.
Soul Searcher: December 11th 2005
After peaking at a ridiculous three hours, Going to Hell is down to an almost-reasonable 102 minutes. I think it’s turning out pretty well. Tom Swanston and I caught up the other day to discuss progress on the DVD, which I have to have finished by January 23rd.
Neil and I spent Thursday and Friday on the 5.1 mix. We finally finished the stampede sequence after recording and laying some more Kurt Russells, stomping feet and breathing. Then we moved onto reel four, which we’re now about a third of the way through – that’s the end of the rain fight.
Soul Searcher: December 2nd 2005
Neil and I spent all of yesterday working on the nightclub crowd surfer/stampede sequence – about two minutes of the film. It seemed very empty, so we layered up a lot more sounds. I wound up voicing a bunch more extras, including the (female) crowd surfer. The first attempting at pitch-shifting my voice sounded like TV funny-man Joe Pasquale.
Right, so Wysiwyg. Soon after completing Soul Searcher, I advertised it as a film seeking distribution on Mandy.com. Wysiwyg’s Tom Swanston got in touch a few months ago and, after seeing a screener, saw the film’s potential. We met up a month ago for a chat and I found Tom to be very open and straightforward. (Unlike the used car salesmen of the Cannes Film Market.) The company is relatively small and new at present, but that’s a good thing because it means they’ve got something to prove by getting the film out there. Coincidentally, Diary of a Bad Lad – of Cannes Director’s Journal Crossover and recent Finchely Shooting People screening fame – is also being released by Wysiwyg next year.
Soul Searcher: November 30th 2005
I have just signed on the dotted line. It really is a dotted line too. Not dashed or continuous. Properly dotted. Like ellipsis gone made. Like that bikini from the Timmy Mallet song. I saw him once, at a church fete in Worcester. Days like that won’t come again. Wackadays, as they were known.
So this dotted line was at the bottom of a distribution deal. A distribution deal with Wysiwyg Films. A distribution deal for the world excluding the USA and Canada. Those are the salient facts. As to who Wysiwgy Films are and how the deal came about, that’s a story for the next journal entry – one that will be written once I’ve got the images of a man in novelty glasses beating children with a rubber mallet out of my head.
Neil and I did some more work on reel three today. Things seemed to go very slowly. Guess we’d better get a shift on now.
Soul Searcher: November 25th 2005
Neil and I did half of reel three yesterday. Neil got very excited about the Moat of Souls flashback sequence. To be fair, it does sound pretty huge now. In another scene, Kurt Russell made a guest appearance. Sorry, I mean coat rustle. I rustled Neil’s coat over an ADR scene that wasn’t noisy enough. Mental.
Thanks to the recent arrival of my long-awaited new computer, I can at last resume work on Going to Hell: The Making of Soul Searcher. That is, I can once I’ve recaptured all the footage – a tedious process if ever there was one.
Soul Searcher: November 19th 2005
The screening in Brighton was almost disastrous. A last minute room change and a lack of a crucial audio cable almost scuppered the whole thing, but after much faffing about setting it all up, with the audience already seated and probably annoyed from having been kept waiting for so long, it got shown. I’m not sure how well it went down, really. I think everyone was just waiting for the Alan Moore film that was showing afterwards. Still, they laughed in the right places.
During the week Neil and I finished reel two (not that we won’t be revisiting it, along with every other reel, once we get to the end) and moved onto reel three. The film continues to improve.
Soul Searcher: November 11th 2005
Neil and I remixed just over half of reel two yesterday. It’s frustratingly slow work and feels like painting the Forth Bridge at times, but it’s totally worth it. Soul Searcher is starting to sound like a real movie now. Looking back at some of the stuff we did in the original mix, it’s so shoddy. One scene had whole tracks overlooked. I guess that’s what happens when you only sleep three hours a day for a fortnight. I got another vocal cameo – as Clubber Girl 2 – just one word. What’s worrying is how convincingly feminine I sounded without any digital treatment. You just wouldn’t know it wasn’t her real voice.
I heard back from Jim Carl at Escapsim today. He’s going to track down some press for me, but he says the audience loved Soul Searcher.
Soul Searcher: November 3rd 2005
Yesterday Neil Douek and I got to the end of reel one in our surround sound mix of Soul Searcher. It’s quite strange to be shut in that studio again after all this time, and it’s very nice not to be under such pressure of time. Of course, it’s taking longer than we expected. You change one thing and you have to change half a dozen others so the mix stills works. The film’s already sounding much better. I’m getting my voice in it a bit more. So far I’ve done a tut for Gary and a nasal sigh for Ezekiel.
Soul Searcher: October 24th 2005
I’ve no idea how the US premiere went on Saturday, and won’t know for a few weeks when I get sent all the press cuttings. Unless someone who attended posts about it on this site’s brand new guestbook. That’s right, soulsearchermovie.com just went interactive.