 
A
few little stories about the making of the film...
The
Boarder was produced as one of 23 Directing III class
projects shot on Super 16mm film in the fall semester
of 2004 at Florida State University Graduate Film School.
The MFA program at FSU requires that all students work
on each other's films in every crew position (producer,
DP, editor, designer, sound mixer, gaffer, etc.), so juggling
various responsibilities during the semester becomes a
monumental task. The initial idea for The Boarder was
pitched in late summer before a short semester break.
Work on the script commenced in August 2004, followed
by 3 days of filming at a private residence in Monticello,
Florida over the weekend of October 10th (which, coincidentally,
is the director's birthday).
The
film was edited in 6 days on an Avid DV Xpress, followed
by 6 more days of sound design and a half-day re-recording
mix. As luck would have it, The Boarder was destined to
become the first FSU film to undergo the digital intermediate
process, an advanced color timing and image enhancement
session. Director Susan Bell and DP Greg Jardin traveled
to Miami to supervise the DI process, which allows precise
color correction and shading of the image. Here the many
digital visual effects that were created in post were
combined with the original photography and all were then
output back to 35mm film.
The
3rd day of production dawned and the crew was clustered
in the kitchen of the location. A false floor had been
assembled and lights hung over the leather bag sitting
on it. Above, Susan held a jar filled with a special concoction
of "soul liquid," including glow stick fluid and oil.
The crew readied themselves.....
The
idea was to drop the jar and have it break, thus making
one of several visual effect plates necessary to produce
the illusion of the soul turning into smoke. Previous
tests with Mason jars had proven that they were unbreakable
under the present conditions, so production designer Shannon
Gregory had substituted a mayonnaise jar. But there were
still doubts about this jar breaking upon contact, so
the director decided to drop it herself, with a bit of
force.
Everyone
nonessential cleared from the area, Susan told the AD
she was ready. The camera rolled and she SLAMMED down
the jar. In hindsight, it was a bit more force than necessary.
The jar shattered spectacularly upon impact and oily liquid
flew everywhere. The crew's clothes were ruined and the
kitchen was covered in glowing oil. Shards of glass were
all over the floor. But luckily no one was hurt and the
camera caught it all behind a protective clear filter,
which was now a bit on the oily side. Good thing it only
took one take, because it was a mess to clean up.
I
have a taste for the macabre, a fear of what lives under
the bed and an undying love of things that go bump in the
night. I am a big scaredy cat at heart, and I like working
in the horror/thriller genre because I get to see (and be!)
the woman behind the curtain frightening other people. The
Boarder is my third short film in this genre and the most
reliant on visual effects. It was an adventure learning
about this new realm and I hope to bring my knowledge to
bear in future film projects. My entire production team
did a fabulous job bringing the 1940's to life over a span
of three days in October 2004, and I hope Charlie's quest
to learn the boarder's secret keeps you on the edge of your
seat.
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Florida State
University School of Motion Picture Arts
A3100 University Center, Tallahassee, Florida 32306
Kathy Barber, film festival
coordinator
Susan Bell, film director
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