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Jessica Grynberg
Contact Information*:

Leichhardt
United Kingdom
Contact Type: Artist
Bio/Filmography Films Compilations Screenings Press
Bio:



Filmography/Awards Info:



1. Why did you make this film?
> Oh that's a hard one - why does anyone make a film or paint a picture? ...
I
> was crazy about film and wanted to make my own and had written a short
> story/diary scribble about a girl stuck inside a bubble on Sydney's Oxford
> Street - it was kinda my own urban spirirtual metaphor and the film grew
> from that>> 2. How long did it take to make this film?
> Nadine (the producer) and I got together in July and we were shooting by
> October I think - that was in 1997. It was a VERY close shave for the
> premiere at Melbourne International Film Festival in August 1998 - we had
to
> get the answer print express couriered to us from the lab, and now it's
> March 2000 and the ball is still going.
> 3. What was the biggest challenge you faced in making this film?
> ABSOLUTELY EVERYTHING! Every aspect was a challenge- finding locations,
> casting, finding a DOP, dealing with 5 different sound recordists, having
no
> money to pay anyone so having to settle with what we could. We had several
> different make-up artists and the film was shot in a very contrasty black
> and white stock and Beatrice's lips looked different on different days of
> shooting. On some days she looked like a trasvestite. We had to cut around
> her lips. It wasn't necessarily that we didn't think about those things
but
> we didn't have a choice. It sounds riduclulous now looking back. We were
so
> green but so keen and everything we had to learn from scratch. The
learning
> curve was enormous and for that it was worth it, but it completely took
over
> our lives. I don't know if you can make a film without becoming completely
> obsessed and at the moment I find that a bit frightening.
> >> 4. Do you have any "war stories" that you would like to tell us about
> >>the
> >>making
> >> of this film? The lab processed a day's worth of stock as colour
instead
> of black and white so we had to reshoot an entire day and that was the day
> with the bus and all the extras- major effort...because it was rainy
season
> in Sydney and of course everyone had other things that paid them to do,
but
> Nadine pulled it off and got everyone back on board. But we scored some
> extra stock because the lab felt bad so it kinda worked out in our
favour.>>
> >> 5. What can you tell us about the technology/equipment that you used?
> >> Camera? Editing? Software? Hardware? Film stock? Video tape stock?
Sound
> >> equipment? Etc. The equipment was vintage or archaic depending on how
> romantic you feel about shitty old film gear. But Anthony Jennings our DOP
> is a major trooper and can make anything look good. It was an Aarii 16mm
> film camera... I can't remember what stock we used it was negative not
> reversal. It was fine grain and high
> contrast B+W. It's not worth mentioning the sound gear cause all our sound
> ended up being post-sunk. Sonal Joshi did an amazing job with the sound
> track. She's a name you'll hear more of. We had cut on SP Beta and
finished
> with grading and a small amount of FX in a Fire edit suite and finished on
> Digi Beta. We had no money left at all to go back and cut
> the neg, but when "Bubble Numb" was selected to premiere at Melbourne
> International Film Festival the Australian Film Commission gave us a
> $5,000 post-production grant so it could be completed on film. There's
> a few seconds of colour at the end of the film so we did kine tests and
> decided to blow up the Digi Beta to 16mm instead of forking out a fortune
to
> get the neg cut and effects re-done and we kinda liked the eerie look of
the
> kine as well.>>
> >> 6. Do you enjoy one aspect of filmmaking more than any others?Being on
> >>set.
> >>7. In what country or region do you live? Is it important to your art?
> >>If so, in what way? Sydney, Australia... I'm not sure how directly it
> informs my art but it informs me because I was born/grew up there and
> although I've travelled a lot and am writing this e-mail from London -
> Sydney is my home/heart. Even when I'm playing around with my video camera
> my films tend to be a little self-reflexive and in that way Sydney must
come
> out. But Beatrice could really be anyone anywhere who has lost their lack
> lustre for life.>>>> 8. What does "Microcinema" mean to you?
> I don't know I'd never heard the word before you used it, but I like it.
It
> sounds like a word that I can handle and do on my own which is probably
what
> I'll try and do next.
> >> 9. What does "Independent" mean to you? Doing it on your own... I
> suppose it's more an artistic than financial (though I suspect the
original
> meaning was to do with funding sources & distribution) consideration for
me,
> though the lines are increasingly blurred (they probably always have been
to
> some extent). I suppose "microcinema" can afford to be trully
"independent"
> because the stakes are not so high and that is it's allure.>>
> >> 10. What are a few tips you can give to other filmmakers?>>Just make
it.
> >> 11. Do you have ideas for another film? If so, will you share them
with
> >>us? I always get very shy about my ideas - I should've written that in
the
> big challenge question. I mean sharing my ideas/thoughts with other people
> is often a challenge. But now that you've asked YES.>>
> >> 12. Who is your favorite film director?13. What is your favorite film?
> I'm rather fickle or explorative - it depends how you look at it but my
> favourite director and film changes all the time. At the time of making
> "Bubble Numb" it was Kieslowski's (sp? aaggh) "Three Colours Blue" and his
> "Decalogue". I was also watching a lot of Maya Deren's experimental films
> and was interested in how she was playing with sound. I was also watching
a
> lot of Brunel. I love Ken Loach. I hate Hal Hartley. I love the Cohen
> Brothers' love of cinema that infuses their films, I love their
whackiness.
> Anything with Tom Hanks sux. "Underground" was excellent and I laughed so
> much in "Black Cat White Cat" that I was sore for days.>>>> >>



This Contact appears in this database if Microcinema International has screened a film directed by the Contact, a film directed by the contact is featured in a DVD distributed by the Blackchair Collection Shop, or featured an organization or activity linked with the Contact. This database is used for commercial as well as informational, non-commercial purposes. It is a historical archive of Microcinema International's activities.

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