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| D.I.B.
Pictures Entertainment photo |
Tara
Fischer in “Reason.”
(Click picture to see larger image) |
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| D.I.B.
Pictures Entertainment photo |
Shooting
a scene in Bivas Biswas’ short film “Pour Amour, Pourquoi,”
actresses Dona Wood (left) and Tara Fischer discuss
marriage and houseplants. Sound engineer James “Mac”
Moffat holds the boom microphone and Earnest Robinson
(far right) works the camera.
(Click
picture to see larger image) |
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Cut.
Print. Hurry up!
by
Chris Moore
TRAMONTO
– February 19, 2006. 5:30 p.m. An independent short film
director and his production manager are racing down I‑17,
with the director of photography bouncing around in the
back seat, swerving in and out of traffic, hurtling toward
Marjele’s Sports Grill in Phoenix to make a 6 p.m. deadline
to submit their 7‑minute film, “Pour Amour, Pourquoi,”
to the Almost Famous Film Festival “48‑Hour Short
Film Challenge.” They made it at 5:53 p.m. with seven
minutes to spare.
March
10, 2006. 2:30 p.m. An independent short film director
and his executive producer are racing down I‑17,
this time with a sense of déjà vu, swerving in and out
of traffic, hurtling toward Independent Feature Project’s
(IFP/Phoenix) office at 24th Street and Thomas to make
a 3 p.m. deadline to submit their 3‑minute film,
“Reason,” to the “Dead of Winter Challenge” film competition.
They made it, again, in the nick of time.
Good
thing, too. “Reason” was awarded Best Film, Best Director
and Best Editing in its competition and “Pour Amour, Pourquoi”
won not only Best Film but garnered other awards for cinematography,
acting and story.
Nobody
knows, at this point, what last‑minute hoops filmmaker
Bivas Biswas will have to jump through to deliver his
next film, “Magenta,” on time, but it seems pretty likely
that he’ll make it. The projected film, on which shooting
was completed in January, “started out as a film noir,”
according to Biswas, “but ended up a comedy.”
Slated
to run about 12 minutes (longer than most of Biswas’ films),
post‑production on “Magenta” has changed course
as well. Due to Biswas’ time commitments on his other
short films, editing has been taken over by Biswas’ frequent
director of photography, Earnest Robinson. When Biswas
recently asked Robinson for an update on his progress,
Biswas says he told him “it was in my Honda, now it’s
in my Mitsubishi.”
When
“Magenta” is done, it will probably end up in Biswas’
Toyota Rav 4, hurtling down I‑17 or some other freeway
to be delivered to one festival or another with the clock
ticking and the deadline about to expire.
And
he’ll probably make that deadline, too, cutting it short
as usual.
With
his own production company, D.I.B. Pictures Entertainment
(www.dibpictures.com), Biswas is no stranger to working
(not just driving) on tight deadlines. In fact, his films
sometimes have strict time constraints. His film “Wish
I Could Be There” was made for the New York Minute Film
Festival which requires all entries to be exactly 60 seconds
in length–and oddly enough the plot of Biswas’ film involves
a son trying to get to his father’s deathbed before it’s
too late.
Given
his penchant for filmmaking on the edge, Biswas, who emigrated
from Calcutta, India in 1997 to attend Arizona State University,
is a frequent contributor to the Almost Famous Film Festival
(A3F) “48‑Hour Short Film Challenge,” which requires
filmmakers to produce short films in only 48 hours from
start to finish. Not surprisingly, Biswas has shown pretty
well under these circumstances.
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His
first A3F entry was a bittersweet comedy “First Date,” a film
he only ended up directing because the original director became
very ill and asked Biswas, who was cinematographer on the project,
to take over the film.
“I
didn’t believe it could be done in 48 hours,” he said, but he
met his deadline and the film won Best Film, a third‑place
award for acting and an honorable mention for story. From there
it went on to be the third most popular comedy on iFilm.com for
four days and among the top 150 films for a month.
His
next A3F entry, a psychological thriller called “Apt. 3157,” won
the award for “best use of dialog.” At the International Horror
Sci‑Fi Film Festival, “Apt. 3157” won Most Promising Filmmaker
for Biswas.
This
year “Pour Amour, Pourquoi” (For Love, For What), a witty
marital strife comedy, delivered just in time to meet the
A3F deadline, won Best Film and took second place for both
ensemble acting and story and a third place nod for cinematography.
“Wish
You Could Be Here,” “First Date” and “Apt. 3157" and
the still unfinished “Magenta” all star an actor, Tom Blackwood,
who consistently delivers intriguing performances. “We’re
really lucky to have an actor like that,” Biswas said about
his long association with Blackwood. But with
“Pour Amour, Pourquoi,” Biswas introduced a new talent,
the actress Tara Fischer, who is also in “Reason” and will
undoubtedly appear in future Biswas films.
Biswas
first saw Fischer at a seminar when he was getting his cast
ready in preparation for the A3F competition. He was immediately
struck by “her presence,” he said, “and I knew I wanted
to work with her.”
Neither
knew the other, and nothing happened that day. It took some
persistent cajoling with Jae Staats, founder of A3F, and
a lot of e‑mails before the actress Biswas was referring
to as “Terra” and the actress “Tara” were united via an
e‑mail from Fischer to Biswas.
“Jae
said this is a perfect opportunity for you,” Fischer said
Staats told her. “This is the director who won last time.
You need to do this.” She did.
“He’s
got an eye,” Fischer said. “It’s the way he sees a scene.
And he’s easy to work with because he comes across clearly
to his actors about what he wants.”
And
what he wanted next was “Reason,” an atmospheric ghost tale
that could be referred to as a thimbleful of M. Night Shyamalan.
Dark, bluish and creepy, “Reason” doesn’t waste a single
frame and manages in three minutes to create a puzzle it
will take audiences far longer than that to figure out.
It
also posed the biggest challenge yet for Biswas–and the
shortest shooting schedule, this time only 12 hours.
On
March 5, due to a complicated series of events and misunderstandings,
Biswas was surprised to find that he did not have an entry
in the Phoenix Film Festival for 2006. His entry had somehow
slipped through the cracks. Because he really wanted to
be a part of the festival this year and he knew that the
winners of IFP/Phoenix “Dead of Winter Challenge” competition
would be screened at the festival, he snapped into action
to get a film ready for the March 10 deadline.
“I
had to give it a shot,” said Biswas. “If we don’t push ourselves,
who will?”
One
problem was that there were only five days until the deadline
and Biswas had no script, no crew, and only one actress,
Fischer, and his cinematographer Robinson, ready to work.
Another was that the rules of the competition required that
the movie, in addition to being three minutes long in the
mystery/thriller/suspense genre, contain a specific line
of dialog (“I need a line here.”) and use a pizza cutter
for a prop.
By
March 6 he had a script written, but “a day before the shoot,”
Biswas said, “we still didn’t have everyone cast.” Patti
Tindall, who had appeared in Biswas’ “Love Letters,” finally
agreed to play a role “as long as she would be free at 3
p.m. to pick her daughter up from school,” Biswas chuckled.
The
role of the main character, however, was still not filled.
Biswas had asked Arturo Martinez, the brother of Valec Martinez,
Biswas’ production coordinator and sometimes director of
photography, to help out on the crew. Arturo had already
acted for Biswas in “Magenta” and after he read the script
for “Reason,” he regaled Biswas with such an in‑depth
analysis of the character that the role became his.
With
the cast, crew, and script in place, filming began on March
7 at 6 p.m. at the Scottsdale home of the film’s executive
producer, Ann Pattison‑Bingham, because it was too
long a drive for everyone to go to Biswas’ house in Tramonto.
Under
the circumstances, shooting went surprisingly well, aside
from the scene which contained the required line of dialog
and the pizza cutter that had to be rewritten and reshot
for two hours. This caused Pattison‑Bingham’s wrist
to get so sore from holding a frigid garden hose on a window
for three hours to complete the first shot of the film that
she demanded “Water Sprayer” credit.
“Once
we started, we just kept going and finished it,” Biswas
said. And by that time it was 6 a.m., only 12 hours later.
“That
was a long night,” said Fischer, who turned in her second
striking performance for Biswas in “Reason.”
“Earnest
(Robinson) drove to work straight from the set,” Biswas
said. After a quick stop at home for a shower, Biswas went
to work his day job as a software engineer. He took the
next day off to edit the film and on March 10 they were
on I‑17 speeding toward the finish line.
One
deadline Biswas did miss this year was the cut‑off
for entries for the Sundance Film Festival, but he doesn’t
plan on letting that one slip away next year. Sundance can
be a very important stepping stone for short‑filmmakers
on their way to making feature films, and that’s where Biswas
and his D.I.B. Pictures Entertainment are heading.
The
films of Bivas Biswas have won 10 awards in the past year
and “Pour Amour, Pourquoi” and “Reason” are currently with
the selection committee of the Cannes Film Festival Director’s
Fortnight for possible inclusion. He already has a slot
in the 2007 Phoenix Film Festival. And he even has a feature
project called “Game of Time” that he wants to direct.
“I’m
ready to move on from shorts,” Biswas said.
Probably,
all he needs to make that happen is a deadline, preferably
a short one.
Reach
the reporter at cmoore@thedesertadvocate.com.
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