HelsinkiZim Posted August 3, 2016 Share Posted August 3, 2016 I make no claims to knowing the guy, being a part of anything other than being his fan for the past 3 years. He introduced me to blackmagic, because when I searched for blackmagic in 2014 his vimeo channel came up all the time. He started with, if I remember, the pocket and then moved on to the cinema camea. He built his own light systems and taught himself pseudo 3d animation to complete his money shots. His talent was his wife. Who, if I remember, was a painter or photographer, I don't know, but she was not shy. Yes, it sounds like a 'latching on to success' post, but really, I thought he was very strange. But I wathecd all his early videos like a hawk because he had, what we call, 'talent'. He got hired by some agency based on his shorts and I thought he was gone. Then a week ago I see promo for a film BASED ON HIS SHORT. To me, he is an inspiration. His movie is trending worldwide, its called Lights Out. Look through his videos to find his inspiration. Here's the profile https://vimeo.com/dauid Try to watch his behind the scenes if you can where he gets a bit nuts with piping and hardware lighting. We should support him fully! sanveer, Liam, JazzBox and 4 others 7 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
sanveer Posted August 3, 2016 Share Posted August 3, 2016 1 hour ago, HelsinkiZim said: I make no claims to knowing the guy, being a part of anything other than being his fan for the past 3 years. He introduced me to blackmagic, because when I searched for blackmagic in 2014 his vimeo channel came up all the time. He started with, if I remember, the pocket and then moved on to the cinema camea. He built his own light systems and taught himself pseudo 3d animation to complete his money shots. His talent was his wife. Who, if I remember, was a painter or photographer, I don't know, but she was not shy. Yes, it sounds like a 'latching on to success' post, but really, I thought he was very strange. But I wathecd all his early videos like a hawk because he had, what we call, 'talent'. He got hired by some agency based on his shorts and I thought he was gone. Then a week ago I see promo for a film BASED ON HIS SHORT. To me, he is an inspiration. His movie is trending worldwide, its called Lights Out. Look through his videos to find his inspiration. Here's the profile https://vimeo.com/dauid Try to watch his behind the scenes if you can where he gets a bit nuts with piping and hardware lighting. We should support him fully! I saw a couple of his Horror Shorts and he is quite talented. He even did the Foley and other bits himself. Very creative indeed. I am definitely looking forward to seeing this.b Thanks for the link. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
IronFilm Posted August 3, 2016 Share Posted August 3, 2016 The feature film trailer: Quote "he used an Alexa for most of it, though some parts were shot with a Blackmagic Pocket Cinema Camera." ^ quote from vimeo. As you can see here: He comments in the above video: Quote We had two Alexa XT and shot in raw. Interesting that Arri raw was chosen over ProRes. http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/movies/la-et-mn-laff-lights-out-david-sandberg-20160602-snap-story.html A squeal is already in the works: http://film-book.com/lights-out-2016-horror-film-to-get-sequel/ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JazzBox Posted August 3, 2016 Share Posted August 3, 2016 3 hours ago, HelsinkiZim said: I make no claims to knowing the guy, being a part of anything other than being his fan for the past 3 years. He introduced me to blackmagic, because when I searched for blackmagic in 2014 his vimeo channel came up all the time. He started with, if I remember, the pocket and then moved on to the cinema camea. He built his own light systems and taught himself pseudo 3d animation to complete his money shots. His talent was his wife. Who, if I remember, was a painter or photographer, I don't know, but she was not shy. Yes, it sounds like a 'latching on to success' post, but really, I thought he was very strange. But I wathecd all his early videos like a hawk because he had, what we call, 'talent'. He got hired by some agency based on his shorts and I thought he was gone. Then a week ago I see promo for a film BASED ON HIS SHORT. To me, he is an inspiration. His movie is trending worldwide, its called Lights Out. Look through his videos to find his inspiration. Here's the profile https://vimeo.com/dauid Try to watch his behind the scenes if you can where he gets a bit nuts with piping and hardware lighting. We should support him fully! He's great!!! I love also his BTS! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kaylee Posted August 4, 2016 Share Posted August 4, 2016 i randomly saw the lights out trailer the other day and i was like Wow.... that was good (i hate everything) talented dude great to hear more of his story. it is inspiring! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mercer Posted August 4, 2016 Share Posted August 4, 2016 Sandberg recently gave a 2 hour interview on Indie Film Academy's Podcast. A great interview where he goes in depth of his beginnings in filmmaking and how he rose to direct the feature film version of his award winning short that went viral overnight. He also gives a crap ton of BTS info... Including how he snuck off during break and shot some flashbacks with the BMPCC. http://www.indiefilmacademy.com/ifa-49-lights-out-director-david-f-sandberg/ IronFilm, Ivanhurba and Flynn 3 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ivanhurba Posted August 4, 2016 Share Posted August 4, 2016 2 hours ago, mercer said: Sandberg recently gave a 2 hour interview on Indie Film Academy's Podcast. A great interview where he goes in depth of his beginnings in filmmaking and how he rose to direct the feature film version of his award winning short that went viral overnight. He also gives a crap ton of BTS info... Including how he snuck off during break and shot some flashbacks with the BMPCC. http://www.indiefilmacademy.com/ifa-49-lights-out-director-david-f-sandberg/ That interview is pure gold! He sounds so humble and surprised on all of what happened after lights out. Really nice. Michael Coffee and mercer 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Liam Posted August 4, 2016 Share Posted August 4, 2016 Wow.. I watched the trailer and the short in broad daylight, on my phone, and was still screaming "oh shit!" Inazuma 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mercer Posted August 4, 2016 Share Posted August 4, 2016 41 minutes ago, Ivanhurba said: That interview is pure gold! He sounds so humble and surprised on all of what happened after lights out. Really nice. Yeah it is a great interview. I really enjoyed learning how he handled the tech and how he and his wife handled the transition to Hollywood and the Los Angeles lifestyle. 25 minutes ago, Liam said: Wow.. I watched the trailer and the short in broad daylight, on my phone, and was still screaming "oh shit!" Yeah, I love the simplicity of the short... it is merely circumstantial, but still tells a small story... I compare it to the the joke structure for short films... which I think Sandberg discusses in that interview... it's basically... Setup and Punchline. That short and this interview was one of the final nails in the coffin that got me to buy the BMMCC. For small, contained short films like Lights Out... they're great cameras. I wish I liked them better for larger scale projects. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Flynn Posted August 4, 2016 Share Posted August 4, 2016 The only movie that has legitimately terrified me is The Exorcist. I saw it as a kid and it truly left me traumatized. In a way, it was a good thing. Every horror movie since then seems like child's play. I still love em though. And I have difficulty even looking at stills from The Exorcist, even to this day it messes me up. Anyway, thanks to the OP. This is inspiring stuff. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mercer Posted August 5, 2016 Share Posted August 5, 2016 11 hours ago, Flynn said: The only movie that has legitimately terrified me is The Exorcist. I saw it as a kid and it truly left me traumatized. In a way, it was a good thing. Every horror movie since then seems like child's play. I still love em though. And I have difficulty even looking at stills from The Exorcist, even to this day it messes me up. Anyway, thanks to the OP. This is inspiring stuff. The Exorcist really is the scariest movie I have ever seen. That movie in 1972 went places that would never even get an R rating today and that was nearly 50 years ago. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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