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‘Summerhood’ Screens at VFS
Friday January 29th 2010, 1:01 pm

Classical Animation grad Jacob Medjuck is either completely mad or a genius. With a devoted crew that included talented VFS alumni from Film Production, Sound Design, Foundation, and Digital Design, he wrote, directed, and co-starred in his first feature film Summerhood.

Jacob recently gave a special screening of the film and shared some war stories with current VFS students from Film Production, Digital Character Animation, Classical Animation, Acting, and Entertainment Business Management.

Everyone who attended would likely agree that the shooting of Summerhood was not without its drama.

After only two weeks of pre-production, Jacob’s team began to shoot a 140-page script with a large cast of child actors, all of whom had very limited work schedules and “hands-on” entourages. The impending winter weather threatened their filmic illusion of summertime. They were missing a lead actor, which meant Jacob had to step in and direct from in front of the camera. And then, to top it all off, their budget fell apart — coming out of pre-production, they only had a few grand with which to pay everyone.

“Every Monday we had $0, and every Friday we paid our cast,” Jacob explained. While shooting, he spent many lunch hours dialing for dollars, raising money to keep moving forward on his dream project.

In the end, he had a four-hour film that made no sense. It took another couple of years’ worth of re-editing footage before they finally had a film ready for audiences. Then came the challenge of finding distribution — the field to which Jacob now devotes much of his energy.

Not surprisingly, he’s got some interesting plans for the future…

You can read our recent VFS Blog interview with Jacob here or see more images from his talk on VFS’s flickr page here.

 
 
2 Comments
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It took “another couple of years’ worth of editing”? Wow… that certainly doesn’t make me feel all too comfortable…raises a lot of questions – a problem I’m facing whilst considering attending VFS: questions. I have a million of them.

Comment by Garrett Wiwcharuk
02.05.10 @ 11:37 am

Hi Garrett,

Good art takes time and effort. Jacob freely admits that he made mistakes early on, but he showed the determination and persistence needed to work through to a fantastic end result. Remember, it wasn’t necessarily 2 years of full-time editing, but balancing that with gaining funding for the project, getting audience reactions, and then re-editing, etc.

VFS stresses the importance of training our students to plan out their projects to the very last detail. As Jacob explained, he and his team only spent two weeks in pre-production, which was not enough for what they were aiming to accomplish for this film. But sometimes plans change and filmmakers need to improvise. For those times, when you need to rely on instinct and training, VFS shows you how to rise to the challenge. We are a full-time intensive school and the students that come here can expect 50 – 60 hour weeks and long nights – fully preparing you for the realities of a filmmaking career.

Our Admissions Advisors are always on hand to answer your questions, even if you’ve got a million of them! Fill in the form at http://vfs.com/speaktoanadvisor and someone will get back to you soon.

Thanks!

Comment by VFS Community
02.05.10 @ 4:34 pm



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