Across the U.S. and in Canada, assistant editors, assistant audio mixers and assistant graphic designers at AICE member companies are channeling the spirit of Russian film theorist Lev Kuleshov as they prepare to enter the 2017 International Camp Kuleshov trailer competition.
The leaders of AICE’s Camp Kuleshov committee–editor Kathryn Hempel of Cutters in Chicago, who co-founded the very first trailer competition back in 2002, and editors Chris Franklin and Val Lasser of Big Sky Edit in New York–have announced several changes to this year’s contest. This is the third year that assistants at all chapters will be working to the same brief and with the same set of source films.
Led by Hempel and Franklin, the Chicago and New York chapters conducted informal focus groups with former CK winners to gather suggestions to improve the CK experience for assistants, and came away with several valuable insights that led to these changes, according to AICE executive director Rachelle Madden.
The most notable change is that all categories–Editing, Graphic Design and Audio–will be working from the same list of source films. In the past, each category had its own list of potential films to re-imagine according to each category’s rules. As with years past, any assistant at an AICE company–or freelance assistants sponsored by an AICE member company–can enter any category, regardless of their specific discipline.
The list of source films for this year’s competition runs the gamut, as usual, including everything from Hollywood classics like “The Maltese Falcon” and “The Music Man,” to silent gems like 1929’s “Man With a Movie Camera,” to social satires like “Zoolander” and to films made by Oliver Stone. As with all CK competitions, the films are arranged via genre. This list includes Political Thriller, B Movie, Science Fiction, Film Noir, Dystopian Drama, Heist Film and the alluring Worst Movie Ever Made. For a full list of films and category rules, along with information on how to enter, click here. Deadline for entering is September 5, 2017.
As with the 2015 and 2016 CK competitions, the category winners from each chapter will then go head to head for the coveted “Lev” Award, named for Kuleshov himself. The goal of Camp Kuleshov is for the entries to not only be entertaining and to reflect ingenuity, creative thinking and mastery of craft, but to also function as true feature film trailers or TV promos do: to act as advertisements which promotes and sells the new ‘film.’
In Editing, the brief is to select one of the films on the source list and cut a trailer no longer than ninety seconds which promotes the film as a picture of a different genre, or as if made by a different director. Entrants can also choose to select two films from the list and cut a trailer which promotes the ‘mashed up’ film as a picture of a third genre.
Major changes are taking place with the Graphic Design category. In past years, this assignment has ranged from creating an opening title sequence for films that lacked one to designing posters for films that positioned them as from a different genre. “With last years ‘opening title sequence’ brief, we realized most of the entries could stand alone as trailers in and of themselves,” explained Big Sky’s Lasser. “So this year’s Graphic Assistants will be faced with the same challenge as the Editing Assistants, and that’s to make an awesome trailer. They’ll be working from the same list of films and genres as the other categories, but their entries should be driven by compositing, animation and manipulation using the tools of a graphic artist.”
Entrants in the Audio category will be tasked, as before, with choosing a 90-second snippet from a film on the source list and creating a sound design with a different intention than the original. Assistants are reminded that they’ll need to ensure their work molds the scene into something new, rather than recreate what was originally there.
Also new this year is the introduction of “At Large” entries. These will be for assistants at AICE companies not located within a recognized chapter, or for those in cities whose chapter is not participating this year. The chapters holding CK competitions include Chicago, Detroit, L.A., New York, San Francisco, Texas and Toronto.
Finally, the Camp Kuleshov committee is assembling a list of senior editors, artists and mixers who will serve as ‘camp coaches’ during the time that assistants are working on their entries. They will be available to help guide the assistants through their creative processes, offering advice and mentoring (but not solutions).
Cutters’ Hempel said, “I’m thrilled about the passion and continued involvement and support that keeps our Camp K competition and festival thriving, both locally in the individual AICE chapters and globally on the International AICE stage. The participation from all the assistants–as well as the senior artists and editors, support staff and owners and EPs who judge, mentor and support their efforts–fills me with pride for our amazing community.”
As An Exec Producer and Actor, Sterling K. Brown Finds “Paradise”
As an executive producer and star of the new Hulu series "Paradise," Sterling K. Brown put the hours of TV he watches to good use and cast actors he admires.
"I got a chance to hire people that I am a fan of," said Brown in a recent interview. "I remember meeting Julianne Nicholson at the Emmys the year that she won for 'Mare of Easttown.' I was so geeked out that I got a chance to be in the same room with her ... Now I get to be on a show with her."
Brown is known for his role as Randall in the series "This Is Us," which ended in 2022. He was nominated for an Oscar for his supporting role in "American Fiction." In "Paradise," Brown is a Secret Service agent to James Marsden's president of the United States. A shocking murder is revealed shortly into the first episode which unspools a deeper mystery beyond just whodunit.
"When James became available, I was like, 'please.' I had just finished watching 'Jury Duty' and this dude is so funny." "Paradise," said Brown, is an opportunity for Marsden "to show something that a lot of people haven't had a chance to see him do."
Marsden says Brown is one of Hollywood's good guys.
"He's one of the most graceful, generous, good human beings that I've been fortunate to meet in this business. He's so humble and cares so much about not only his work, but the people around him. He wants everybody to be great. When I think of people I need to be more like, it's this man."
"Paradise" has themes of climate change, privilege and the pecking order of who in society gets saved during an emergency. There's a relevance to the series which Brown says is coincidental because Dan Fogelman — creator and writer of "This is Us" — conceived "Paradise" 10 years ago. It makes sense to him though why it... Read More