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.

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.

permalink So in addition to our show now being on iTunes (subscribe here!), episode two is now up for your listening + viewing enjoyment. This week, as made apparent by the album art, we did a commentary for Pixar’s “Up”.
So if you have any small children who insist on watching this on a constant loop, you’re in luck. Enjoy.

So in addition to our show now being on iTunes (subscribe here!), episode two is now up for your listening + viewing enjoyment. This week, as made apparent by the album art, we did a commentary for Pixar’s “Up”.

So if you have any small children who insist on watching this on a constant loop, you’re in luck. Enjoy.

permalink [Flash 9 is required to listen to audio.]

Pete Docter’s 1 min. pitch for the original Monsters, Inc.

I’m a sucker for a great story. Enough that I want to build my whole career on storytelling, in fact. So when someone inherently great at it, like speakers on The MothThis American Life, or say, Oscar-winning screenwriter and Pixar feature director Pete Docter (Monsters, Inc.Up) throws one our way, I get pretty engrossed and excited about it.

On a new episode of Jeff Goldsmith’Creative Screenwriting Magazine Podcast (a show great for so many reasons that I won’t get into here), Pete Docter and the eternally entertaining Bob Peterson sat down to talk about Up and their own histories for an altogether too-short 1 hour, 12 minute podcast.

About 22 minutes in, while talking about how much films change over the course of their development, Jeff pressed Pete for what the story of Monsters, Inc. originally was. While I love Monsters, Inc. in a big way, the film he described sounded pretty amazing, and one I’d still love to see in the future. I highly recommend listening to the minute-long audio file in this post, but, if you can’t access it for whatever reason, I’ve transcribed it here below. And make sure to check out and subscribe to the free Creative Screenwriting Magazine Podcast so you don’t miss an episode of insights, stories, and fantastic interviews with screenwriters from every genre. Also in this episode is Pete + Bob confirming that they’re currently developing their next film together.

“Well, my idea was that what it was about was about a 30 year old man who is like an accountant or something, he hates his job, and one day he gets a book with some drawings in it that he did when he was a kid from his mom, and he doesn’t think anything of it and he puts it on the shelf and that night, monsters show up. And nobody else can see them. He thinks he’s starting to go crazy, they follow him to his job, and on his dates, and all this— and it turns out these monsters are fears that he never dealt with as a kid. And each one of them represents a different kind of fear. As he conquers those fears, the guys who he slowly becomes kind of friends with— they disappear as he conquers those fears. It’s this bittersweet kinda ending where they go away, and so not much of that stayed

[…]

it sounds better as a pitch than it did at the time— anyway. “

I’m down.

Other recent Pixar-related stuff on my blog: Pixar University and Wall-E/Buy’n’Large easter eggs in the Toy Story 3 trailer!

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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.

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David Stripinis on Waiting for Technology (from Twitter):

  • Filmbot: must totally agree with Stu from recent Redcentre why am I worrying about cameras a year away when i can shoot with what I have now.
  • davidstripinis: @Filmbot exactly. It's like deciding to make a film about a single mom, but waiting till Dakota Fannning is old enough for the part.