"10- The Michigan Daily Weekend Magazine - Thursday, April 9, 1998 Student filmmaker does 'Final Cut' of ambitious horror film 0 0 Th Michigan Daily Weel D Weekend, etc. Column LET THE SUN SHINE IN By Elizabeth Lucas Daily Weekend, etc. Editor "As a kid, I saw 'E.T.' when I was 7. Then I picked up my dad's 8-millimeter camera, and me and my brother made a four-minute 'Return of E.T.'" For LSA junior Mike Stern, the rest is history. Stern has spent several years creating his own films. "I made short films in high school. I'd always be doing a video project and trying to get away with not writing papers," Stern said. After attending Michigan State University for a year, Stern transferred here "because there was no film com- munity there." He said the situaiion at the University is quite different. "It's pretty exciting. It's got some tal- ented people, Stern said. "Between the Michigan Theater and the different stu- dent film festivals, it's a pretty good place to be. And the interest in student filmmaking keeps getting larger and larger." Last year, Stern created the film "Thief" and worked as a cameraman on "Scratch," both of which won awards in student film festivals. This year, Stern's major project is an ambitious 30- minute film called "Final Cut." "We're using film - it's not like you just pick up a video camera and start making a movie," Stern said. "We're using Panavision cameras, which is what the studios use, there's a 30-per- son crew and about 100 extras" A project of this size is unusual for a Mike Stern Student filmmaker student film, Stern said. "It's not a Hollywood production, but the breadth of production is definitely Hollywood in scope," Stern said. "We're doing the same amount of work that a studio puts into making a two-hour film." Production on "Final Cut" will take almost three months, although making a film usually takes much longer. "We've been killing ourselves" Stern said, pointing out that the cast and crew work for 12 hours at a time, on average. The film's cast and crew are largely composed of students. Stern said he had been "lucky enough to work with really talented people." "Final Cut," which stars LSA seniors Robbie Simon and Dana Swinehart. Engineering sophomore Stacey Waxtan, and Music sophomore Charlie Jett, is a horror movie involving a group of student filmmakers. "It's about our film group and how we're making a self-reflexive horror film," Stern said. "The events in the film start to happen in real life, and there's a race to edit the final film." The "final cut," Stern explained, is a Hollywood term for the final editing on a film. Though Stern conceded that "it's kind of easy to do a blood-and-guts -movie,' he said he would like to work in other film genres as well. "I'd like to do a romantic comedy next," he said. As might be expected, Stern had def- inite opinions on his favorite films. "'Field of Dreams' is my favorite movie of all time," he said. "It makes me weep - it's a touching movie. And 'Back to the Future'- as a comedy, I always go back to that:' Perhaps surprisingly for an indepen- dent filmmaker, Stern said the colossal Hollywood epic "Titanic" was his favorite movie of the past year. "The film department would say it's Hollywood crap, but I like Hollywood crap" Stern said. "And I'm a big James Cameron fan. I just didn't realize how big a geek he was till he got up there and made a fool of himself" Will Stern someday rise to Cameron's prominence in Hollywood? He said he plans to move to Los Angeles after grad- uation and "get to work." "I'll probably en~d up working in development - the story department, reading screenplays," Stern said. But it's probably safe to say that Stern will eventually return to his roots in filmmaking. "I like the collaborative part of film- making," Stern said. "I'd call myself a storyteller before I called myself an artist. With film you can work with actors and create visual movements with the camera and tell your story. If I can share a smile with someone through my films. then im a happy man," It's four o'clock in the morning. The sky is pitch black, and you'd prob- ably be able to see the stars if the lights of Ann Arbor weren't drowning them out. Maybe the night is cold, and you're pulling your jacket as tightly around you as possible to keep out the chilly winter air. Maybe the night is warm, and you unbutton your shirt a little so you can feel the warm breeze on your skin. Maybe you've just spent a long evening studying for a history or chem- istry midterm, trying to catch up on two months of reading you just never really got around to doing. Maybe you're drunk and coming back from a party on a Saturday night. Maybe you're with a friend, returning from a long conversa- tion at Rendezvous that lasted until they kicked you out to sweep the floors and mopped up the table. Whatever you're doing, whatever the weather is like, you know one thing: It's late, you're in college, on your own and you've never felt more alive in your entire life. You think back to when you were in high school, and every once in a while. you'd go to bed at one or two in the morning on a "school night." Back then. staying up until one or two in the morn- ing was quite an event. You'd only get about five or six hours of sleep, and how insane was that" Your mom would shake her head in disappointment and crease her brow in worry. "You ' e got to get more sleep:' she would sa\. "You're going to get si'ck. But that was then, and now you're in collgCe. You can do whatever you want. Sick? You're yonni.- -you don't et sick. Or if yoii do. vou get over it. Sleep' You're young - you don't need sleep. There are too many fun or important things to waste a lot of time sleeping. Now you stay up almost every night until at least 3:30. Maybe even four or five. You don't have class until noon, anyway. You can still get some rest, you just have to sleep through most of the day. If' you have class in the morning, you skip it. Or maybe you take a nap dur- ing the afternoon. However you manage it, you find some way to stay up late almost every single night. College is about nights. That's when all the real living happens. That's when everyone has CHRIS fun - when every- FARAH one dances, or ._, drinks, or talks, or v hangs out. Staying up late is as funda- mental a part of school as expensive books or eccentric professors. Late nights are just as large a part of my college experience as anyone else. My average bedtime is probably about three, at best. I love to stay up late talking with friends in the library (come on - like anyone really studies in the library). I love hav ing all that untapped time in front of me. being able to lounge in good company on the edge of being asleep and awake, when bits and pieces of dreams swirl together with reality. I love to rem- iniscee to share the great stories of the Dist. or talk about the uncertainty of the tliure. But as much as nights are an essential part of life, I realized a little w hile ago that I was missing out on something. I'm not talking about missing out on sleep, or better study habits, or anything like that. I'mn talking about mornings. Unfortunately, with late nights came late wake-up times. Often, I wouldn't even see daylight until early afternoon. It wasn't like there was much I could do about it, of course. If I was staving up late, there was no way I was going to wake up early to see the dawn. It just wasn't going to happen. Then I took ajob that changed all that. In one of the more foolish decisions of my college career, I decided to start working on the Michigan Daily Online staff. I've always been a busy person, and I'm pretty good at juggling a lot of dif- ferent activities at one time. So why not? I asked myself. I soon realized why not - the hard way. Starting to work at midnight or one in the morning to put The Michigan Daily on the Internet is no treat. Unless you really enjoy talking to yourself, or you have some very interesting and loyal imaginary friends, working by yourself for upwards of three hours is far from pleasant. Then, of course, comes the working with computers. N figured out why computers to work when vou need Somehow, they just knoxw he you over in the best way poss most critical time. Yet we put up with it. We shoulders or breathe a sigh o tion. "The computer crashes And then we start over. No seems to say, "Why the hell things work?!" If you buy a just stops for no good reason die of the highway during rus don't just shrug your shoulde "Whoops, there goes the reboot. You buy a new damn car doesn't just stop working rand that actually does what it's s do. Not so with computers - only products in which peri( The final word on "The Final Cut" Courtesy of Mike Stern Mike Stern directs and stars in the horror film, "The Final Cut." I i 1 * Starring: Music sophomore Charlie Jett, LSA senior Robbie Simon, LSA junior Mike Stern, LSA senior Dana Swinehart and Engineering sophomore Stacey Waxtan * Crew members: LSA seniors Chris Chung (cameraman), Gordon Eick (special effects), Jeremy Horelick (producer) Robert Lundy (cinematographer) and Max Thompson (sound) Afth , MMMMMMM - * Screening date: Saturday, April 25 in East Hall Auditorium; time TBA. ___________________________________________________ U I Put the paper chase behind you -I.. 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