It's nigh on impossible to make a film, say the cynics, unless you're willing to jump through various flaming hoops for some draconian film-funding agency. “Credit crunch, blah-blah-blah, no-one wants to put money into films any more, blah-blah, quack-quack”.
What a giddily teetering pile of bobbins this really is.
If you decide that 'the system' is out to hobble you, and prevent
you from getting your movie made, then you're instantly in a prison of your own
devising. On the other hand, if you
decide that you're going to knuckle down and not stop until your film is made,
then a whole wealth of possibility opens up.
Oh, don't get me wrong: it ain't going to be easy, but it's far from
impossible. In an era in which
film-making technology has become all the more accessible, it's arguably more
possible than ever before. If you can
get your film made by teaming up with this country's so-called gatekeepers,
then that's great. All well and
good. But that isn't the only route to
head along. If you end up thwarted and
wrapped in red tape from head to toe, then have faith: there is always another
way. Particularly in the low-budget
arena.
When I remind you that Stormhouse director previously Dan co-created
and co-directed the uncompromising indie web drama series Girl Number 9 with
Severance/Doctor Who writer James Moran, as well as co-writing and directing his own Prague-set thriller The Experiment, you'll start to get the picture of how
Dan is very much a doer, not a talker.
And that's key. Talking about
making films, funnily enough, doesn't get them made. It might be impressive when you tell people
you're going to make a film, but the enthusiasm in their eyes will soon ebb
away a year or two down the line, when you're still yapping on about it.
In May 2010, Dan and I had a fateful drink in a London pub. We'd previously collaborated on a couple of
shorts (Look At Me and Big Mistake, which you can find online) and a sketch
show series pilot called Splendid, as well as getting two feature projects into
development. We'd always clicked well
and fostered a strong working relationship, which is also vital: I'd urge any
writers and directors to find a kindred spirit or two and team up with them.
Dan had recently become somewhat obsessed with researching the
numerous events surrounding military bases in Suffolk's Rendlesham area. Various theories about UFO landings and
unexplained happenings had led to the region being dubbed "Britain's
Roswell" by the likes of The Telegraph.
And so, in that pub, Dan floated the idea of making a film based on his
findings.
"In 2002, the military captured a ghost". Those seven words were all we could talk
about for the rest of the night, and the weeks and months which followed. They were the cornerstones of what would
become the film Stormhouse.
Three months later in August, we were filming in Suffolk, at one of
the very military bases at the centre of all those mysterious occurrences. That's an incredibly fast turnaround in the
film world, but sometimes a combination of bullish determination, hard work and
intense creativity are all you need.
Well, actually, one of the main things you need is a great
producer. Enter Dean Fisher, who had
previously produced the 2009 Danny Dyer film City Rats and 2007 vampire flick
Night Junkies, and was already working with Dan on another film called The Man
Inside (which also now exists, having shot in Newcastle in July 2011, starring
the likes of Peter Mullan, Michelle Ryan, David Harewood and Ashley 'Bashy'
Thomas). It was Dean's hard work, along with the amazing cast and crew which he
and Dan assembled (including our leading lady Katherine Flynn, an LA resident
who luckily happened to be on holiday in Britain when we put out the casting
calls), plus finance from private investors, which helped bring Stormhouse
screaming into life. I wrote the script
and acted as executive producer (which, for a writer, just means more creative
control - let's make no mistake here, Dean produced this film).
It was about as memorable a film shoot as you could possibly
imagine. Shooting a horror film in a
military base in the middle of nowhere?
C’mon! That’s fun.
The base itself was bigger than some towns. From the security checkpoint at the front, it
was a good 10-minute drive into the base’s depths and maps were often
needed. During the drive, you’d pass
abandoned silos and couldn’t help but wonder what lurked within. It was rumoured that the base also contained
hidden underground areas to which no-one - certainly not a bunch of horror
film-makers - would be allowed access.
We lived on that base
for the duration of the shoot. Cast,
crew, everyone. Only the local catering
guys went home at night. We stayed in
barracks, or in some cases slept on air beds in the very rooms in which
terrifying events would happen in the movie.
We used one set of showers, employing the sensible routine of a piece of
paper stuck to the door outside, specifying whether guys or girls were using
the facilities.
Of course, because
Stormhouse is set in a military base, this was ideal for getting us all into
the right frame of mind. The cast
playing military personnel had an especially tough time of it, getting a little
‘method’ in terms of adhering to a strict military regime. They spent their days in their
soldier/officer garb, plunging themselves into the mindset. We had some fine actors among our military
cast, including the excellent Grant Masters (Major Lester), the outwardly-intimidating-but-actually-very-nice
Grahame Fox (Lieutenant Groves) and splendid Australian gentleman Patrick Flynn
(Justin Rourke, military technician).
Naturally, we also
enjoyed every scrap of built-in production value that the base had to
offer. Observation towers, massive stone
blocks, vehicles, whatever worked.
Sometimes things were in the wrong place for our purposes, but by
filming certain structures, we knew that we could employ the magic of CGI to
position them in the right place later.
The massive stone frontage of Stormhouse, for instance, which New York
‘ghost whisperer’ Hayley Sands approaches at the start of the film, is
superimposed. Behind it, was a mere hill
with a door embedded in one side.
When night fell, the
actors no longer needed to act being frightened: this was one scary place. All around wherever we were filming, it was
absolutely pitch-black. The virtually
non-existent mobile phone and internet signals all added to a real sense of
isolation which hopefully fed directly into Dan’s daily scenes. We constantly had to do battle with the most
persistent flies in the known universe, who were no doubt drawn by the fake
blood which covered us all. One fly even
made it into the film with a brief cameo (uncredited, because he refused to
sign the release form). At night, we
knocked back a few drinks and banded together in the mess room against the all-pervading
darkness outside, watching films or heading over to the production office to
watch the rushes so far.
Our creepiest and biggest
set, hands down, was The Holding Area.
This is the place where, in the film, the military have imprisoned a
supernatural entity within an Enclosure fortified by reverse electro-magnetic
energy. This knowledge alone gave the
area a sense of foreboding, but that sense quadrupled when we turned the lights
down inside. The Holding Area, see, had
been built inside the ‘Hush House’, where tests used to be carried out on
‘plane engines. Because of this, it was
100% soundproof. Once you were inside
the Hush House, it was just you and the silence. The Devil’s work.
On the final night of
shooting, we celebrated big time, with tables laden with booze and a rock
covers band playing into the early hours.
After all, we had no neighbours to take into consideration. There’s no doubt that the relatively
claustrophobic environment in which Stormhouse was filmed gave rise to not only
a more oppressive horror film experience, but the best sense of camaraderie you
could possibly want.
In many ways, making a
film is the easy part. Post-production
and the business side of things can be even scarier than the film itself. Some of the process is tremendous fun,
though. In April 2011, we hired a
huge cinema at London’s BAFTA and placed a post on the Film 4 FrightFest forums,
requesting volunteers to see an early cut of the film for free and give us
their thoughts. We were swamped with
replies and chose 40-or-so people to come and enter Stormhouse. Naturally, being the insatiable genre-hounds
that they are, the good men of FrightFest were also represented among the
audience.
That test-screening
was vital. Absolutely vital. We identified unclear story elements which we
needed to explain to the audience further, and then carried out more work on
it. After that came a world premiere at the Edinburgh Film Festival, the London premiere at the wonderful Film 4 FrightFest and the US premiere at the Los Angeles Screamfest. Hopefully we made people drop their popcorn at least three
times.
An edited version of this feature was originally published in the Film 4 FrightFest magazine Number 7.
Stormhouse is out on DVD today in the UK via High Fliers. Amazon UK link
Stormhouse on DVD at Amazon US via Lionsgate
Last year's blog about the BAFTA test screening
More behind-the-scenes photographs at my official Facebook page
Stormhouse's own official Facebook page. Hit 'Like'!
Stormhouse's Twitter feed
Stormhouse: the teaser trailer
Stormhouse: the US Lionsgate trailer
Stormhouse is out on DVD today in the UK via High Fliers. Amazon UK link
Stormhouse on DVD at Amazon US via Lionsgate
Last year's blog about the BAFTA test screening
More behind-the-scenes photographs at my official Facebook page
Stormhouse's own official Facebook page. Hit 'Like'!
Stormhouse's Twitter feed
Stormhouse: the teaser trailer
Stormhouse: the US Lionsgate trailer
* * *
My horror novella Beast In The Basement is a dark, twisted tale of obsession, revenge, censorship, blame culture and parental responsibility. In a big house in the countryside, an increasingly unstable author toils over a new hotly-anticipated novel which will close the best-selling trilogy of Jade Nexus books. A violent incident tips him into a downward spiral with horrific consequences. Read it before someone spoilers you! Beast is available for Kindle (which can be read on most devices) at Amazon UK, Amazon US and more. It can also be bought direct from me. More details here.
3 comments:
Damn right. No point whining about the system. Bypass it.
Inspiring stuff, and what a great concept for a Movie! Can't wait to see it.
Fab!
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