*whew* quite the wake-up call today at #IFPlab regarding distribution budgeting - at lunch now with Erica… I love all the little dioramas at this cafe’.
Even after a full night of rest, we’re both still trying to take-in all the information from yesterday’s lab; we went through post budgeting, deliverables, music usage, fair use vs licensing… a lot of numbers, a lot of nuanced legal issues.
Source: mikeambs
In the screening room - about to get started. cc @ftomfilm #NYC
Posted earlier today: the first day of Labs went great! We all sat together and watched through the first 20 minutes of each selected film; all of the projects look so great. Anxious for the editing session tomorrow morning - lots of work to do!
Source: mikeambs
As of my writing this, there are 11 12 different Chrome Experiments under the webGL video collection - I am writing for two reasons, 1) because I would like to help add to that collection, and 2) I need your help in doing so.
An Open Proposal to Google Creative Labs
The short of it: I have a feature documentary - titled For Thousands of Miles, or FToM for short - about bicycling across the United States, I would like to release this film online for free using a special player that takes full-advantage of webGL to expand and share additional stories within the film that otherwise could not be shared in a linear manner.
Why approach Google Creative Labs? To be blunt, I can’t accomplish this alone. To build a collection of in-depth experiences tied around an hour and forty minute long film will require a tremendous amount of teamwork and technical skill that I alone do not possess.
I can see three roads to take here, 1) find a way to fund and organize this team independently, as I am not independently wealthy, this option raises more questions than it answers; 2) reach out to the same Creative Lab that built projects like ROME or Wilderness Downtown, the same Lab that best understands what challenges exist in building an experience like this; or 3) admit that I’m over my head and lost, and abandoned this idea.
My hope is that the people at Google Creative Labs have been waiting, waiting for a chance to show that webGL can be used outside of just animated shorts and music videos, waiting to show that the technology can expand traditional films in a truly unique way, a unique way that TV or movie theaters cannot even come close to matching; my hope is they’ve just been waiting for the right kind of film.
I will do my best to list out aspects of this special player that I know exists in other examples, but some of these elements, such as streaming an HTML5-friendly movie file, vs pre-loading an entire movie file, are things I have yet to see done with more prominent webGL video projects.
Also, all of the non-linear story-lines exist only in pause-mode of the feature film, that’s an important note, in play-mode the film is full-screen and has no scrub-bar, volume control, or pause / play button; clicking anywhere on the film while it is playing will enter pause-mode and from there all kinds of things open up for the viewer that are specific to scenes.
Having said that, here we go:
- Maps view: Selected scenes of FToM that take place on the open road, which many do, will be matched up within a mix of Google streetview, Google maps and even Google earth view. UI Notes: 1) streetview would take advantage of webGL to render color-filters that more-closely match the currently paused-scene in the film, also, the current scene will snap as closely as possible to the streetview-world around it, 2) Earth View would especially apply in scenes near heavy mountain ranges, such Glacier National Park, 3) Maps view tied to scenes in the film will help reveal the overall path taken between Washington state and Maine.
- Areas of the film that reveal specific locations in maps will allow users to submit photos from those locations - most of the routes in the film are from popular bicycle paths across the country, it is likely a huge collection of other traveller’s photos and videos could be used to connect strangers through the film that have taken similar journeys.
- Selected scenes that contain narration will let viewers use pause-mode to dive into different versions of the script. Much of which was handwritten or typed out on a typewriter, the pages often have early notes and ideas sketched out in the margins, some lines in the film were scribbled down on napkins, and all of this would be explorable to viewers.
- Moments of FToM that feature music will let viewers download music, share that piece of music to their blog or twitter account… other pieces, pieces that feature original music created for the film, will show behind-the-scenes footage of the music creation process.
- Certain footage in the film has been used in supporting videos, for example: a scene of the two main characters saying goodbye for the next 4,000 miles plays out both in the feature film as well as in an earlier making-of series, this connection will appear in pause-mode allowing the viewer to shift from continuing that scene in the film, or branching off into the making-of regarding that scene.
- Several moments in the film touch on early influence, relying on archival footage from as far back as the 1920s - pausing the film during these scenes would let the viewer watch original newsreels mentioning the people in that scene, or read through autobiography excerpts, scanned letters that are now in the public record.
- Using either browser-cookies or connecting accounts (facebook, google +, etc) viewers can visit the film from other computers and pick up where they left off, most importantly with unlocking moments or features in the film’s player, such as: commentary tracks that could be switched on and off, or downloaded from within the player to iTunes, etc. This might be represented as a Daisydisk-like sunburst diagram of how much of the project you’ve explored, the middle diagram might represent the film itself, and the outer rings might represent different experiences. Whatever visual approach is used, the viewer will be aware that they have explored, say, only 40% of the film - and give ideas to where additional stories are linked.
- Certain moments of the film would unlock different views, views that wouldn’t be available on first loading the site. Say, for an example, you stop the film 16 minutes in, these scene happens to reveal a map location of where it was recorded, it also links to a special view that shows a US map with highlighted areas of where scenes happen, and you can jump to a scene by location vs jumping to a scene by timecode.
- Weather elements in pause-mode: During a 4,200 mile bicycle trip across the country you experience a fair amount of weather: snow, rain, fields of floating pollen. During the scenes in the film where these kinds are visible, the viewer would see an extension of this in pause-mode. WebGL rain or snow would fill the browser window that borders the paused / contracted video-window. Other features would come about in these paused scenes, say script exploration or a making-of for a piece of music in the film, but around them there would be light or heavy rain, or a snow storm spinning around the script pages related to those scenes.
- Sound Design will be an important part of the viewer experience in pause-mode, just because the viewer has paused the feature film doesn’t mean the mood and experience is broken; supporting SFX will be important in pause-mode to help keep the viewer in the world of the film, even when they are, say, venturing off into script archives.
I’ll end the list here for now. I believe the above serves as a good starting point for what could be built around For Thousands of Miles using webGL. Here’s to hoping this open proposal finds its way into the right hands. If anyone reading this wants to contact me, you can do so at info @ FToMfilm. Thanks for reading.
photo by nathan kane via instagram
@erica_hampton and @mikeambs… You guys are the best. @FToM care package totally made my day! #stayawesome
We still have a whole box of care packages to take to the post office - but I’m happy these are starting to make their way to such great people. We’re getting near the end of our stock, but if you write us asking for one, we’ll be happy to send whatever we have left.
Source: thingsilikeon
photo by erica hampton via instagram
Finally got the FToM care packages around. The stack to the right will be mailed tonight. The stack to the left will be on hold until the shipping tubes I ordered come in. :)
Source: thingsilikeon
Archives : Originally posted July 27th, 2007
Larry & I were interviewed by CNN headline news for a show called “News to Me”. The interview is going to air 4 times:
Sat (28th) & Sun (29th) @ 12:30 and 5:30pm (ET) on Headline News.
Since we’re still on the road for another 2 weeks, it would be really awesome if someone could TiVo it, it should only run around 2 minutes. I’d love to post it here on the blog, along with a longer version of the conversation.
Archives : Originally posted July 5th, 2007
We’ve been on the road for 33 days now - when we left from Anacortes, Washington, we were meeting different people traveling by bicycle every day - some we got a chance to talk to on camera, some we just got a chance to introduce ourselves to. But somewhere after the badlands of North Dakota - everyone has disappeared.
Not sure if the bulk of people are ahead of us, or behind us - we’re in Fargo, North Dakota at the moment - and after a few videos finish uploading to JETSET’s servers, we’ll be heading east towards Dalbo. I know some of you might be taking the north fork after Fargo - either way, if you are anywhere on or near the Northern Tier - we’d love to hear from you.
Let us know where you’re at, and where you’ll be heading - we’ll do our best to find you. We’d really love to talk to as many different people out riding this summer as possible.
Also, we’re keeping pace with Larry, above is a picture of Larry (he’s looking a bit rough here, but trust us, he’s super nice) - if you cross paths with him, we’ll be close by. Hope to see you out on the road.
Archives : Originally posted July 2nd, 2007
Yesterday, while in Minot, we ate breakfast at Schatz’s, where our waiter had an outrageously cool dekotaaa accent - half-way through my breakfast burrito I said to Amanda that I had a good feeing about finding a bike in this town.
For those of you new to the blog, a few weeks ago, in Idaho, the bike was (mounted to the rear of the van) backed into a tree, and the frame snapped. It was sad.
Ever since, I’ve been looking in every bike shop we passed for a new used replacement - with no luck. So after eating we ran back into town, returned some rain coats we bought at Target, bought some Coldstone icecream, and went to Val’s Cyclery. When I asked if they had any used road bikes, they took me to the back and pointed to the only one they had in the store - which they had gotten only that morning.
It was a beautiful / sexy red Schwinn road bicycle - light as feather - and cheap too. $175 as is, it was obviously much, much more than that new. Barely ridden.
We paid, strapped it to the back of the van, along-side my old now-deformed bike, and drove east on the 2 to catch up with Larry. He about had heart-attack when he saw the bike - we popped off the pedals from my old bike and put them on the new one, and I rode about 5 miles with Larry, into the strong winds (which are blowing the wrong way, east to west, and have been for days).
We stopped at Ganville to look for two girl bicyclist we’ve been hearing so much about, but no one was there. The town had a cool vibe to it, in an old abandoned kind of way, so I leaned the bicycle up against the back of the van and walked around taking some video. As I reached the end of the block (only about 200 feet away from the van), Amanda called my cell phone, she was crying when I answered. “Your gonna’ kill me”, she said, and I knew what happened right away. Amanda was far more upset than I was, she felt horrible, but luckily the damage wasn’t to the frame this time. There was a tiny amount of bend’age near the derailer, but the rear tire came out all crazy.
We woke up this morning and drove an hour back into town - the guy at the bike shop was a bit surprised to see us again so soon. But “yay”, he managed to bend the frame back into place, and found a cheap replacement wheel. She’s back in business!
We spent about an hour poking around an old abandoned farm house yesterday evening. I love old houses - so much subtle history to them: the 1967 copy of reader’s digest on the floor… the years and years worth of pigeon shit covering everything… the two flower-patterned kitchen chairs left behind… the scattered baseball cards in the stairway leading to the second story. The empty rusted-out bed-frames in the master bedroom - from the looks of what’s left, 40-some years ago, it used to be a really fantastic little place.
[5 hours later]
We just finished hanging out on the side of the road with Larry - this head-wind is “sucking his will to live” (Wayne’s World quote). But joking aside, when he caught up with us, he was not too happy. I know the feeling… I sympathize.
We’re on our way into Esmond, ND - Larry wanted to push on past Devil’s Lake, but it’s another 26 miles straight into the “light breeze”. Half of this town is gone and boarded up - it’s been like that a lot lately.
Well, we just arrived at the park for the night - covered pavilions, quarter-showers, volleyball pit - cool place. The cafe’ is about the only thing still open this time of night, I think we’ll go check it out.
Archives : Originally posted June 17th, 2007
[Written on the 14th] Day 13 of filming. We crossed over from Idaho to Montana yesterday evening, the change was almost immediate: it’s definitely big sky country. very beautiful here - we spent a lot of time at Kootenai Falls & the “Swinging Bridge”.
Shooting is going good - we have more landscapes then we do conversations with people, but we’re working to fix that, and find the right balance of time spent filming Larry’s interactions and also just filming some of our own. In some cases we roll first and ask permission later, in other cases we approach a person and ask if it’s okay to film them… and before they agree/disagree they say a bunch of great stuff we don’t get on camera.
Larry is doing amazing - it’s unbelievable how much road he covers in such a short amount of time. Yesterday we found him on Hwy 2, after Troy, he stopped a bit and talked to us about how good of a day he was having, and then he quickly took off. Not more than five minutes passed while we dug out the steadicam and set up a shot from the side of the car, and we drove for what seemed like forever before we caught up to him again.
[Written on the 16th] Larry took the day off in Libby yesterday to relax and do some fishing. I figured the crew was in desperate need of a brake also, so we did absolutely nothing all day. I have to admit - it was nice.
Amanda, myself and the crew went out to dinner at one of the only places still open past 6pm, besides all the dark and depressing casinos… ‘The Antlers’ restaurant. Just before our orders came out from the kitchen a guy walked up holding a folded newspaper and asked if we were from around here…
Long story short - we were up till 3 in the morning, hanging around the campfire with Brett, playing guitar, drinking beers, and talking about anything. And even though he was a vocal-creationist :) he was a really, really nice guy - very good singer/guitar-player… it’s too bad Larry wasn’t with us.
I know this post is all over the place - but I’m trying to go over the last few days, while thinking about the next few ahead of us. And I’m sorry I haven’t been updating more often, the EVDO card we bought before leaving isn’t exactly working too often in the mountains here. Which is a bit annoying, but we’re hoping it picks up.
We killed the bicycle we brought with us for filming - backed it up into a tree and bend the frame 30-some degrees. The pedal is stuck in the rear spokes, more money we have to spent that wasn’t budgeted out.
Speaking of the budget - I suppose this site wouldn’t be a very “personal and behind the scenes look” if I wasn’t honest about our financial situation. I always feel awkward about bringing it up, because I want to avoid sounding like a sympathy-case, but we are about 10 days away from being completely broke… with only a $300 credit card to get us back to LA, actually, scratch that, half of that is gone right now.
But fear not (fingers crossed), we have someone who is possibly going to see the project through with some funding. Yes, we are cutting it close, and yes, it’s a bit stressful, but I’m sure if we just stay focused on the project that things will work out.
I have more footage to share, but, sadly, Whitefish has a very poor internet connection and I’m having a hell of time just checking my email - I don’t think uploading entire movie files is going to happen. Maybe on the other side of Glacier Park. Till then.











![Archives : Originally posted June 17th, 2007
[Written on the 14th] Day 13 of filming. We crossed over from Idaho to Montana yesterday evening, the change was almost immediate: it’s definitely big sky country. very beautiful here - we spent a lot of time at Kootenai Falls & the “Swinging Bridge”.
Shooting is going good - we have more landscapes then we do conversations with people, but we’re working to fix that, and find the right balance of time spent filming Larry’s interactions and also just filming some of our own. In some cases we roll first and ask permission later, in other cases we approach a person and ask if it’s okay to film them… and before they agree/disagree they say a bunch of great stuff we don’t get on camera.
Larry is doing amazing - it’s unbelievable how much road he covers in such a short amount of time. Yesterday we found him on Hwy 2, after Troy, he stopped a bit and talked to us about how good of a day he was having, and then he quickly took off. Not more than five minutes passed while we dug out the steadicam and set up a shot from the side of the car, and we drove for what seemed like forever before we caught up to him again.
[Written on the 16th] Larry took the day off in Libby yesterday to relax and do some fishing. I figured the crew was in desperate need of a brake also, so we did absolutely nothing all day. I have to admit - it was nice.
Amanda, myself and the crew went out to dinner at one of the only places still open past 6pm, besides all the dark and depressing casinos… ‘The Antlers’ restaurant. Just before our orders came out from the kitchen a guy walked up holding a folded newspaper and asked if we were from around here…
Long story short - we were up till 3 in the morning, hanging around the campfire with Brett, playing guitar, drinking beers, and talking about anything. And even though he was a vocal-creationist :) he was a really, really nice guy - very good singer/guitar-player… it’s too bad Larry wasn’t with us.
I know this post is all over the place - but I’m trying to go over the last few days, while thinking about the next few ahead of us. And I’m sorry I haven’t been updating more often, the EVDO card we bought before leaving isn’t exactly working too often in the mountains here. Which is a bit annoying, but we’re hoping it picks up.
We killed the bicycle we brought with us for filming - backed it up into a tree and bend the frame 30-some degrees. The pedal is stuck in the rear spokes, more money we have to spent that wasn’t budgeted out.
Speaking of the budget - I suppose this site wouldn’t be a very “personal and behind the scenes look” if I wasn’t honest about our financial situation. I always feel awkward about bringing it up, because I want to avoid sounding like a sympathy-case, but we are about 10 days away from being completely broke… with only a $300 credit card to get us back to LA, actually, scratch that, half of that is gone right now.
But fear not (fingers crossed), we have someone who is possibly going to see the project through with some funding. Yes, we are cutting it close, and yes, it’s a bit stressful, but I’m sure if we just stay focused on the project that things will work out.
I have more footage to share, but, sadly, Whitefish has a very poor internet connection and I’m having a hell of time just checking my email - I don’t think uploading entire movie files is going to happen. Maybe on the other side of Glacier Park. Till then.](http://25.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_m3vzxghTNc1qzrm1ko1_1280.jpg)