Saturday, February 28, 2015

Bella Vita - water cinematography

Once Chris Del Moro and I decided to make Bella Vita, the first call I made was to my old friend Scott Kassenoff.  Scott has shot with me on Singlefin: yellow & One California Day.  He specializes in shooting from the water and loves to shoot film.  We discussed our desire to visually "raise the bar" with Bella Vita and a big part of my focus was telling the story from "in" the water.  I wanted the audience to really feel like they were with the surfers.  Obviously, there are many fantastic digital cinema options these days.  (I'm currently testing the RED Dragon for #REDirectsurf and I am very impressed by it's ability to handle light, dark and shoot slow motion, all very important things for capturing surfing)

But with Bella Vita, Scott and I wanted to pay homage to our previous work (shot on 16mm and super 16mm), yet explore it on a more cinematic scale.  So he suggested shooting 35mm Film in the wide-screen format.  For those who don't know, 35mm was the staple for Hollywood for many years and although filmmakers like Steven Spielberg, Christopher Nolan and Quinten Tarantino still use film, many have switched to digital.  Note:  there is an interesting documentary on the subject of digital & film in Hollywood on Netflix called, "Side by Side".


I loved Scott's idea.  It was bold, 35mm is a larger format film negative so the equipment is larger.  With a big Hollywood crew, the larger gear is just part of the machine but on a small independent Documentary, the endeavor was monumental.






We were able to find scott one of Don King's old surf-housings for an ARRI film cam and it was off to the races.  Scotty, Myself and our assistant Johnathon Taylor shlepped two 35mm camera bodies, batteries, lenses, film-magazines, raw film stock and peripherals along with two super 16mm film cams and 3 small digital cinema units all over Italy.  The gear filled up two Jeeps.  That's a lot of stuff for 3 guys guys to handle... but I'm so proud of the accomplishment.  Below is a short video with a few of Scott's water clips, truly beautiful imagery!










Bella Vita's Water Cinematography from jason baffa films on Vimeo.

Wednesday, February 18, 2015

Ziobaffa - imported by surfers

a short clip i put together with the stylish, chris del moro for our ziobaffa wine collaboration.



ZIOBAFFA - Imported by Surfers from jason baffa films on Vimeo.

music by the honolulu jazz quartet.  written by dan del negro.
dandelnegro.com

youtube - death to intellectual property?

I haven't spent much time on youtube in the last several years but recently, I was kind of amazed to see how many clips from my films (DVDs) are posted by other people.  Not only do they post the clips but they run ADs before them?  So potentially, these cats are generating revenue off of my work.   numbers like... 77,009 views and  52,000views - if all those people stepped up and bought a DVD or rented the film digitally, we could go make more films.

I suppose people are excited to share things they like but is there absolutely no realization that what they are doing is illegal and actually takes away revenue from the filmmakers?  

Part of me says, cool, share away- hopefully it promotes the work on some level.  Another part of me says, what a minute, that's chicken shit- I spent time and money creating that content and why should you get to give it away.  I don't really want to start policing the internet for piracy.  I know it obviously happens, I just wish people would think a little more about the consequences of what they are doing.  aka @someGuyNamedDave   sorry about the rant.  #ScratchingMyHead