KashifPasta.com

Hi, my name is Kashif Pasta and I'm an 18 year old Muslim filmmaker and Student from Vancouver, Canada. More on who I am, what I do, and how we can work together can be found here.

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I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again: Jeff Goldsmith’s Creative Screenwriting Magazine Podcast is essential listening if you’re at all interested in films and what goes into writing them. For a recent episode, instead of his usual brilliant interview with a screenwriter, he posted the James Cameron & Peter Jackson Q&A from ComicCon 2009 (mp3 link) to commemorate the current releases of Avatar and The Lovely Bones.

As always, some interesting news came out of the show, in this case information that has become more relevant over time. Great comments like the directors’ thoughts on 3D, a detailed overview of Peter Jackson’s King Kong ride @ Universal Studios (apparently set to open Summer 2010, he says), and Peter Jackson elaborating about TinTin’s unique aesthetic (trying to get realistic hair, skin and cloth, while keeping Hérge’s original art and making everyone look believable sounds like a real challenge) are all great and fascinating, especially being chronologically closer to all of the above. But the information that stuck out most to me is the clip I’ve embedded in this post: some of James Cameron’s plans with the Avatar DVD.

From the clip/podcast:

One of the things that I wanna do for the DVD of Avatar is […] a video track that’s the reference cameras that show what the actors did, and cut it in parallel either with a scene or several scene or maybe the whole movie, I don’t know. So you can go all the way through the film, and you can see what the actors did and you can see what it looks like in the final scene. And you will see that it maps absolutely perfectly.

I would imagine that the Blu-Ray would use some of that video commentary track tech that I keep hearing about, but to have at least a few scenes on the DVD would be great as well.

You might remember that Robert Rodriguez did something similar for the Sin City DVD, which had a great special feature of the entire, pre-VFX film cut together and fast forwarded to end up with a runtime 14 minutes, but this would be a whole other deal, not to mention much harder to put together.

If Cameron manages to follow through on this plan, not only would I love it, but the collective minds of children everywhere will be blown and entire worlds of possibility will open up to them, just like when I was 9 or 10 and rented The Phantom Menace on DVD. It honestly changed everything I thought about film, and the immense detail contained in the Lord of the Rings DVDs certainly didn’t hurt, either.

What do you think? Do you want to see Avatar without effects? Do you even care? Or are you the type (I’m not judging) who doesn’t like special features at all because they take away the magic? I, if you can’t already tell, think they add to the wonder, and would love to see the alien world of Pandora replaced with a warehouse in Wellington as soon as I can. It fascinates me, because unlike the Home Tree, I might be able to actually go there.

He also mentions before the above clip that while facial capture was the main problen they had to attack for Avatar, motion capture in terms of body movement was “used extensively in Titanic”. I had no idea.

permalink Another week, another new episode of Sick Feats!
I really feel like this episode is our best yet. It’s District 9, a film that both Ben and I loved a lot but had no shortage of things to talk about. We also get (relatively) in depth about Avatar vs. District 9, and how we kinda prefer… well, just listen to it (and watch the film along side if you can, that’s the point!) and enjoy!
Check it out on iTunes
in your browser
or hit up the mp3 file directly!

Another week, another new episode of Sick Feats!

I really feel like this episode is our best yet. It’s District 9, a film that both Ben and I loved a lot but had no shortage of things to talk about. We also get (relatively) in depth about Avatar vs. District 9, and how we kinda prefer… well, just listen to it (and watch the film along side if you can, that’s the point!) and enjoy!

Check it out on iTunes

in your browser

or hit up the mp3 file directly!

permalink Episode Three of Sick Feats is up! Listen here, or download the mp3.
In episode three of sick feats, we watch + comment on the Spielberg/Lucas classic, ‘Raiders of the Lost Ark’, with a brief appearance by guest commentor Jackie Murchison.

Apologies for some of the audio issues; we recorded this episode in different cities and are working out the related issues.

sickfeats.mevio.com for more episodes; we’re now on iTunes and the Zune Store!

This weeks music: “Maxwell’s Silver Hammer” from the Beatles’ “Abbey Road” album, available now in the Beatles box sets and as an individual album at a store near you.

Episode Three of Sick Feats is up! Listen here, or download the mp3.

In episode three of sick feats, we watch + comment on the Spielberg/Lucas classic, ‘Raiders of the Lost Ark’, with a brief appearance by guest commentor Jackie Murchison.

Apologies for some of the audio issues; we recorded this episode in different cities and are working out the related issues.

sickfeats.mevio.com for more episodes; we’re now on iTunes and the Zune Store!

This weeks music: “Maxwell’s Silver Hammer” from the Beatles’ “Abbey Road” album, available now in the Beatles box sets and as an individual album at a store near you.

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mkpmedia:

Less than 24hrs after I told Ben Wright (star of such classics as our short films Open Doors and Like a Soapbox) my idea for a podcast for us to do last night, we are now starting what we hope will become a regular podcast - taking various popular DVDs and recording our own comedic insights and thoughts in the form of a commentary track. Today we recorded our first episode, and it’s a fun one.

I hereby present to you Episode One - Twilight, the film adaptation of Stephanie Meyer’s classic novel.

Neither of us had seen the film before, but we hope to provide both comfort and company for all those forced into watching the film, as well as a fun re-watching for fans with a sense of humor. It works as a standalone podcast, but is really a lot better when you have the movie to go with it.

Download the mp3 here (right-click and save as), and enjoy!!!

The musical accompaniment at the start and end of the track are from Childish Gambino’s “Get Like Me”. It’s a free download, so have fun with that.

P.S. if the tagline in the above image was more prominently in the film’s marketing, I would have been a lot more interested in seeing it earlier. The film didn’t follow through on the promise of that question, but it still seems like a really powerful theme to explore.

UPDATE: Episode Two is out and you can subscribe to us on iTunes!

permalink SO EXCITED TO LISTEN TO THIS. Also, if you’re interested in film or writing, this podcast is a fantastic resource and source of entertainment.

SO EXCITED TO LISTEN TO THIS. Also, if you’re interested in film or writing, this podcast is a fantastic resource and source of entertainment.