ArtView March 2015 | Page 37

cookies in Donald so thus endeth my director’s diet in a flash! Has it been challenging trying to make an endof-the-world movie on such a small budget? Every day was a challenge because we simply didn’t have enough money to do the things we wanted to achieve, but we devised strategies to make things work without money, and put a lot of emphasis back on the landscape and into the performances. When a director works with good actors it makes a world of difference and my film was no exception. The hardest thing for me was trying to stay focused (and awake) while multitasking – that usually involved directing, running camera, driving long distances, helping to serve up food, location managing, 1AD, and applying touch-up makeup, sometimes all at once. But in saying that we worked with people who understood that the only way to make our movie was to wo rk collectively. In fact, every day, the cast rolled up their sleeves and helped out behind the scenes, which made me all the more proud to have them in my movie. Frank loves his coffee and was kind enough to share his own when he realized how crap my instant version was being served in plastic cups. I did though develop a DIY approach to fixing easy solutions with no budget, especially in one instance when the screw to the mattebox frame broke, and I devised a way to hold up the side flags with Blu-tac and chewing gum. It worked flawlessly! How much of the film has been shot already? We’ve filmed nearly half the script in November/ December 2014, and have 15 shoot days to go. But in saying that, a lot of the really hard scenes have already been filmed. I made sure during the scheduling process that we tackled the hardest things first and got them out of the way. You’ve already staged a very successful crowdfunding campaign on Indiegogo this year for another film. Was that the reason why you selected the same platform to raise money for The Last Man in Vegas? We tried very hard with the first campaign and raised over 230% of our target amount, which made completing The Tailor of Autumn a straightforward task. We also found that Indiegogo are a nononsense, easy to use platform with quite an elegant backend for campaign authors. The one thing I liked the most was how simple it was to engage with our supporters, and I’m looking forward to meeting new people along the way with our current campaign. We also learnt that crowdfunding isn’t just an online process, so we have several pop-up events planned over the next 8 weeks to engage and build an audience instead of waiting for them to come to us. You filmed most of The Last Man in Vegas yourself. Can you tell us any thoughts about your approach to cinematography? I really like films that were shot between the late 1960s and early 1980s, and of these some standouts are Catch 22, 2001, Battle of Britain, Apocalypse Now, Close Encounters of the Third Kind, Jaws, Gandhi, and Raiders of the Lost Ark (I could watch them a million times over). One thing I love about these films is that the DPs used lenses and camera moves to advance the story rather than to mask it, and that’s exactly the approach we’ve taken in Last Man where the future is primarily shot on a 21mm