Some
writers are born entertainers, not only in print, but also on film. I'm not one
of them. Put a camera in my face and all I think about
is how I wish I could recreate the images and impressions recorded by a video camera the way I can
edit pictures and perceptions formed by words on a page. What I wouldn't give to transform the me in the video lens into a younger, wiser, more fascinating version. Love being behind the camera. Hate being in front of it.
Image from Island Sting |
I'd accepted the fact that I was going to create
a pathetic product when my thoughtful husband reminded me that we live in
the City
of the Arts, home of the renown and highly acclaimed
University of North Carolina School of the Arts. We’re surrounded by young cinematographers,
directors, editors, producers, and
screenwriters.
Zach filming through a magnifying glass |
Enter talented Zachary Strum, class of 2012, UNCSA's School of Filmmaking. Poor Zach. I fought his HD camera every step of the way. (Did you catch that? HD camera. Every pore, wrinkle, smudge,
every-everything would show!) I
didn't simply turn away from that camera, I ran away from it. When that didn’t
work, I tried to blink it away from me. Don't believe me? Watch the video.
I may not have liked the camera,
but the photographer behind it was delightful. In spite of the challenge my discomfort presented, Zach produced
an informative, entertaining, and spot-on accurate film. When I didn't play well
with the camera, Zach simply worked around me. He shot in late winter when our yard
and gardens—once nothing but a woodland jungle—were brown and dormant, but he envisioned how spring and summer would transform the property. That vision inspired his entire production.
In addition to keen vision, Zach has sensitive hearing. Corners
inside my home and sites beyond its walls spoke to him. Old files, photos, and papers
told him more than my nervous words could. I’m pretty sure he’s a dog
whisperer, too.
Zach wove hours of film plus old and
new stills into three minutes of video, then set it to music performed by Whistling Tom Bryant, a world class performer, who inspired a character in my 2011 EPIC winning novel, Island Sting. It took much more
than precision of craft to produce this video, a creation that honestly
and vividly introduced this author, Bonnie J. Doerr (a most reluctant subject), to the world. It took intuition, sensitivity, insight, ingenuity,
persistence, patience, and kindness.
If the film appears jerky as you view it, it's only because Zach jam-packed it with those tiny, magical digital thingies that hold incredible amounts of information. It's smooth as silk when viewed in a studio. If only I had a studio. Then maybe I could convert the images into a younger, wiser, more fascinating me.
If the film appears jerky as you view it, it's only because Zach jam-packed it with those tiny, magical digital thingies that hold incredible amounts of information. It's smooth as silk when viewed in a studio. If only I had a studio. Then maybe I could convert the images into a younger, wiser, more fascinating me.
This film is as much about Zachary Strum, filmmaker, as it is about Bonnie
J. Doerr, author. Watch for his name at the end. I'm betting you'll see it on the end of a major movie one day.