Shirtless Actors Prepare for PICNIC at Antaeus
I also did some more work for the Antaeus Theatre Company this month.
Specifically, I edited this thing written and directed by Diani & Devine.
Not a front for a secret organization.
Written by Rob Schultz (human).
I also did some more work for the Antaeus Theatre Company this month.
Specifically, I edited this thing written and directed by Diani & Devine.
I did more work with Nintendo this month.
It's possible I also found time to play some Triforce Heroes and Super Mario Maker, and an overwhelming amount of streetpass games while I was transferring footage and prepping the edit.
Two videos went up from this event. The Cosplay Choir and a Super Mario Maker promo.
This year's E3 experience was much less frenetic than last year's. The Treehouse Live booth, an improved version of my after-the-fact schematics from last year, is now run by Nintendo. So instead, I helped to produce some videos for their YouTube channel. In brief:
I'm really glad I got to work on some more stuff for Nintendo this year. Plus, I had a little more time to wander around the show floor (as evidenced by the Yoshiller videos). I haven't played a Star Fox game since the original, but of the demos I played on various systems it was the most fun game I got to try.
Of course the internet is always mad, but it really struck me this year how wide the gulf was between the angry, angry online opinion and the truth of actually being on the ground. This is a shot from just before the end of the last day of E3, when booths are turning to tumbleweeds:
* editor
** co-editor
*** assistant editor
**** dude playing game demos, then suddenly cameraman
Here's something I helped to make this week. Watch it on your awesome smart phone.
It's like, the hardest thing, to find a project you really believe in. Whenever I talk to fellow movie crew kinds of folks and ask them how many projects they've done that they're really proud of, the numbers are always discouragingly small.
Here's a new teaser for Diani and Devine Meet The Apocalypse. I think this may take the crown for best movie I've ever worked on, and this video barely scratches the surface of why.