
Sorry for the lack of updates but I’ve been very busy both with the holidays and of course, editing. The pilot is very nearly complete, have everything cut together and colour corrected, just need to make a few corrections to the visuals and fine tune the audio and we should be set. Although we’ll likely have a completed final cut before the end of this week, I highly doubt the pilot will debut online before the very end of January.
If you’re curious about the production, there is an on-set documentary viewable on Facebook. Things went very well. We held a brief rehearsal the night before filming to give everyone a chance to get on the same page, which proved to be beneficial. We had 25 pages to shoot on our production day, which is just a ridiculous amount, but all the actors were prepared and although it was a long and exhausting day, things generally went very smoothly.
We had a scene on a dance floor that required extras. Of course on our budget, we weren’t able to pay them, which made procuring extras very difficult (especially on the weekend before Christmas). We had 17 people confirm attendance as recently as the day prior to filming. I fully expected less than half to show up and I was right, we had 3 people actually come through (one of whom may or may not have been pulled off the street, I’m not sure on the specifics). This could’ve been disastrous but we ended up changing the context and purpose of the scene that we required the extras for, and it actually ended up working out for the better and probably comprises my favourite scene of the episode.
That said, some of our other bar scenes are sorely lacking extras, despite some manipulation to the audio the place looks awfully bare, but that’s just something we have to accept when you embark on a project like this. We had a crew of about 14 people and just about every one of them appear on-camera as an extra at some point. Speaking of the crew, unlike past projects, the entire crew was comprised of either friends or friends of friends, the vast majority of whom have no experience outside of my previous projects (or any professional aspirations in this field). Amazingly, working with a non-professional crew was not a liability at all. We had four locations to hit in one day, all the moves went great and we were either right on time or even early in relation to our schedule.
The trailer for the pilot has been posted online for about a week. I haven’t been promoting it very hard, focusing instead on the editing and planning on ramping that up once the final cut is locked. The response to the trailer has been mixed, which is what I expected. Some people seem to be excited, which is great, but others can’t seem to either get over the technical aspect of it or understand why they would want to watch a show that aspires to be about “real life”. That said, I’m more than confident that we do have an audience out there, and it’s just a matter of finding them that’s the hard part.
I’ll get into the intentions behind making this pilot (and with essentially no money) and my thoughts on the finished product in the next blog, which in all likelihood will come shortly before the episode’s online debut.
Happy new year,
Pavan
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