Directing Talent Reflection
Keni

blake kathryn
Misplaced Lens Cap
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
YOU ARE THE REASON
occasionally subtle
d e v o n

Andulka

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
Monterey Bay Aquarium

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noise dept.
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official daine visual archive
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
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@byxami-blog
Directing Talent Reflection
Script Production and Analysis course reflection.
Agravoy (2015) critique and Seconds (2016) reflections.
The film I chose was Agravoy (2015), written and directed by Jacob Nizzola. I found the film on Vimeo, but you can find it here. Agravoy is a creepy horror short about a stalker and his secret partner in crime. The film features three actors, Orion Ben as Woman, Barrington De La Roche as Helios, and Adam Nash as James. While I did enjoy the movie, the actors' performances were not a huge part of telling this story. However, each actors' body language appears natural, a feat unto itself. When the film begins Helios seems to be just another crazed stalker, however, after watching Woman and James have sex, Helios' furry tosses him into a violent rage. Helios struggles to open the door to get to James, but he's locked in his apartment from the outside. James sees the knob to Helios' place tremor and decides to open the door. Helios drags James into his creepy apartment as Woman smiles, and then casually walks to her apartment one door over, chanting rituals and exposing herself to Helios through a hole in the wall. We see the interactions between Woman and James through Helios's POV until the final scene. A frail wooden chair and old shredded papers decorate his place; the only light source comes through holes in the wall separating Woman from Helios. Nizzola, Anthony Neale (Production Designer), and Eben Bolter (Director of Photography) utilize high contrast and low contrast, muffled dialogue, and gritty set designs to create separate mood between Helios' rundown place and Woman's--seemingly wholesome--apartment. The sound team fluctuates between a string-heavy score and sudden silence to enhance the mood. However, overall the film parades a dark, romantic tone throughout. Agravoy features the typical three act structure. The beginning sets up each character; Woman undresses, apparently oblivious to Helios' stare, and James, when approached by the lovely Woman, takes her offer to spend some time together. Although I didn't know Woman worked with Helios, in retrospect, she's playing her role in the trap from the very start. Act two's conflict comes from Helios' jealous rage, ever growing through the film. Nizzola uses violent camera shakes from Helios' POV to demonstrate his emotions when James tries to kiss Woman, and during their lovemaking scene. By act three, Helios has seen enough and his attempt to break out of his apartment lures James to his death, the climactic resolution. However, there's a short epilogue where Woman's real role becomes evident. Lines, composition, and light subtly moved the point of interest from one shot to next. It can be argued that the Editor and DP's combined efforts stole the show. The film's pacing frequently varies. Editor, Thomas Jones, progressively enhanced the speeds at which he cuts between Helios and James, subconsciously heightening tension as the movie progressed. The imagery in Agravoy tells the story with little-needed assistance from the actors. Each department head used their influence on to create a gloomy mood which dominates the picture. It's difficult to point out individual units when the film works so well as a whole. Our film, Seconds (2016), is a risky attempt to utilize every department to create a movie that ultimately is a metaphor for something more. We used high contrast and a variety of angles to complement the ominous tone I felt from the script. While the film is about a drug addict, we don't see a point where the protagonist does anything to change his life; it's a gift from the judge. This approach to conflict resolution works for our story because the visuals reflect the off-center lifestyle the protagonist leads. However, we did run into a few issues during production, per the norm. As the producer of the film, supplies were my responsibility. Our script called for an insert of child custody paperwork, but my printer broke the morning of the shot. To rectify the situation, I came to set with a few papers and suggested the director use the actor's response to tell the story instead of the custody papers. We still planned on doing pickups before the final cut, but our professor and peers said the film didn't need the insert to get the message across.
Nizzola, J. (Director), & Tom van den Broek (Producer). (2015) Agravoy [Video file]. Retrieved from https://vimeo.com/189560918
Revolution is not the apple that falls when it's ripe. You have to make it fall.
Ernesto “Che” Guevara
Goals throughout Full Sail’s Film Production Masters Program
My name is Byron, Mr. Miller if you’re artsy.
Research material. Gotta keep in the know, ya know?
I believe the same can be said for sins, but to understand such a way of thinking requires an open mind and a journey through endless nightmares.
A. (2014, January 25). Comments on: Aristotle´s Ethical Theory: “On the Concepts ... Retrieved November 13, 2016, from https://aquileana.wordpress.com/2014/01/25/aristotles-ethical-theory-on-the-concepts-of-virtue-and-golden-mean/feed/
Sit in a room and read--and read and read. And read the right books by the right people. Your mind is brought onto that level, and you have a nice, mild, slow-burning rapture all the time.
Joseph Campbell and the power of myth [Motion picture on DVD]. (1988). United States: PBS.
Mastery Journey
I’m Byron. My passions are theater, film, and any form of collaborative art. Oh, by the way, I’m a writer. I spend too many hours touring fantastic worlds in the confined spaces of my mind. I usually write myths based on current political issues.
I currently have two projects in development: Capsule in a Dream (CIAD), and Black Day (Black Day). CIAD is an R-rated feature length sci-fantasy that follows a revolutionary heroine’s struggle to create a new government aboard an intensely segregated spacecraft. Placed in America during the roaring twenties, Black Day is a musical about a young woman’s struggle to move her family to the big city to escape the collapse of American farmlands.
Today I’m enrolled in Full Sail University’s Film Production Masters program. I hope to learn how to be an active Producer in the current ever-changing indie film and television markets. With outlets like Amazon, Netflix, YouTube, Apple and more seeking original content, it’s safe to say we’ve entered an unprecedented age of entertainment where networks and video on demand services have an overwhelming desire to procure new material. As such, new, edgy content has found a way out of the shadow of safe, redundant content. I will take advantage of the digital age to produce anti-establishment content, geared toward starting debates about religion, government, and reality as we know it. For the next year, I’ll create bonds with like-minded artists who seek more than money or fame. I believe the driving force behind all artists is a desperate yearning for change. As an artist, my goal is to stand beside the voices of revolution as we scream from a change in a world of monotony.
In short: I create worlds to distract people from our mundane existence. Allow me to entertain you.