I decided to turn this blog into a very personal one. I ripped off one of Empire's episode title to do so. But don't fear, this will still be relevant to movies--but my short movies (What a narcissistic bastard!). I'm not accomplished enough to actually dignify this post, but you gotta think big to be big right? Then you can go big or go home. Anyway, putting this to context, I always love creating stories and in each story that I wrote, there's a sliver of my personal self inserted in it. For this first part of the big 'Marcel-Tell-All', let me take you back to 2013, to my first ambitious short film, titled Cops/Thieves (read it as Cops and Thieves rather than Cops or Thieves). Yes, the slash is just for show. It's my first film cut me some slack.
Despite the shortcomings that are clearly visible in this film, I am still very proud of this baby. The story came from a very rough idea my friend (who is now studying film in England!) and I had, although whenever I told her this, she recalled nothing of sorts but I remember vividly that we talked about this idea. It came from us making two separate horror films that were set in our school which allegedly was built on a cemetery complex (a complete bullshit by the way, once you're old enough you realized it). Our school was really scary at night though. I made a movie titled The Classroom and she made one called 100 Ghost Stories (I still remember her phenomenal camerawork and premise). We sort of brainstormed more ideas, and then I came up with the idea of making a real slasher based on the card game cops and thieves (or police and killers who cares). We talked about it but never took it seriously. I loved sharing ideas with her because we kind of speaking in the same frequency and we ended up co-directing a play together, which I am also still proud to be a part of. She now specializes in sound department or art directing, my memory is stupid about this, but I know whichever is it, she's doing better than I do. Her latest film, which was short but superbly meaningful, won an award at a festival film. She being in any film school is already better than me, stuck in nowhere city with no foreseeable future in sight.
I revisited the cops and thieves idea after enrolling in college. I didn't know how the third act should be though, like who the killer is and why is he/she doing it-stuff, until several days before shooting. What I want to discuss here is not that big twist at the end though. It's more like how the film represented a certain moment in my life (ew, who do you think you are bitch). When I revisited this movie, I always see a pretty high amount of angst in it. This trait in the film might be attributed to the fact that I loathe going here to Japan for university. It shows a lot in this film through the atmosphere of the film, the violence, the mood, the colors. The one I draw upon from myself the most was the basic human action and reaction on the leading girl's character, which put her in a new situation with a new person she's not comfortable with. That's basically me in Japan, being reluctant to do anything, to learn anything.
The violence in the film was born not out of my masochistic/sadistic potential, fortunately. I was developing another angst-filled script just before this and was planning to do it Inarritu-style with the film being a very long tracking shot (this was 2012-2013, way before Birdman, btw). That script was titled 407, a room--much like the one in Cops/Thieves--which became a very haunted place for the main character. This main character is put in the same situation as Ella's character: new place, new people. 407 was the base for Cops/Thieves so there are many things in common. The main character in 407, found all the new people he met commit suicide in his room, only to find out he's the one who has killed himself at the end, not those people. The suicides were 'creatively' done, in some ways similar to the killings in Cops/Thieves. One hanged himself with some hangers, one poisoned herself by drinking soap and bleach, one jumped from the window, and the other one slashed her wrists with a scissor or a kitchen knife. I loved the idea of killing with hangers that I actually 'tried' whether it could work logically (I don't want to go into details but I can safely say it was not an attempt at suicide). You get the idea, 407 is the embryo for Cops/Thieves.
I like that this film represented a certain moment in my life. Like it was when I really really was in love with Cliff Martinez's music from most of his work. The entirety of the score in this film are all Martinez's music, from the soundtrack of the modern classic Drive to modern cult Spring Breakers. Even for the trailer I used one of his tracks for The Company You Keep. I feel that his music really fit the mood of the movie. I couldn't find a suitable moment, or a moment that deserved to be scored with his master track from Only God Forgives but I'm pretty content with the way it turned out. It was also when I was really really addicted to Metric. I still find them awesome but I don't listen to them religiously like I used to. Fun fact, instead of using 'Raw Sugar' for the ending, I wanted to use 'Synthetica' which is the other side of the pole from the former. 'Synthetica' has this energy that I wanted to show for my leading character but 'Raw Sugar', suggested by one of my DoPs, is the sensible choice to end the movie. When I'm successful, I'm gonna license all these songs so it could be legit used in the movie. I still get copyright infringement from YouTube, you know.
Next up:
Bridge of Spies review
also to come Part II of this Tell-All
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