Hello, everyone! Welcome to an incredibly news-heavy post.
Well, the first season of Gatewalkers has been completed, and I must say that it’s a very surreal experience. A chapter of my life that began in late 2011 has come to a close. To commemorate that, I thought I’d give you some of the raw numbers regarding what went into making the season.
Gatewalkers folder:
Well, the first season of Gatewalkers has been completed, and I must say that it’s a very surreal experience. A chapter of my life that began in late 2011 has come to a close. To commemorate that, I thought I’d give you some of the raw numbers regarding what went into making the season.
Gatewalkers folder:
Created Sunday, May 6, 2012 at 4:10PM
Contains:
14,274 files
336 folders
Comprising 817 GB of information.
That last bit made me glad (for the first time) that we hadn’t
been shooting in HD.
As many of you know
by now, we do not have the funds to continue with Season 2, so that has been
put on indefinite hiatus. However, that’s not to say we’re quitting entirely.
As some people may remember, for years I wrote stories in an
as of yet unnamed sci-fi universe. However, once I started work in the world of
normal business, that pretty much fell by the wayside. Following the filming of
Othersight we took a few days off. In that time away from technology I
radically reworked and updated the universe, then dashed off a script in about
a week and a half. It didn’t really speak to me, so it was laid aside for
Gatewalkers. Fast forward to the Gatewalkers cast party.
As a sort of improve party game, I had the cast and crew
play the parts of people in that universe as they try to solve a mystery, while
one tries to erase all the clues. What followed was four and a half hours of
hilarity, which we duly recorded because, why not? Fast forward to early this
year. I’m now burned out, the strain of juggling a rolling post-production
schedule, all without money or resources, has taken its toll. After much
thought, prayer, and council, I decided to finish the season and just let it be.
I also resolved three things. One, the next time I pick up a camera, it will be
to make beautiful images. Often in the rush of production just getting the shot
is an achievement. Next time, we’ll take our time. (There were days where we
could do that in the Gatewalkers shoot, and the shots always got compliments.)
Two, that (until I start getting paid for this,) I would only work with people
who didn’t stress me out. Often in the name of “the mission” I would align myself
with people who would take more than they give, and that’s just not worth it in
the long run. Three, I’d stop trying to help God.
Sometimes I think that we get the impression God needs great
things from us, that if we’re not trying to change the world, preach a sermon
with our every act, then we’re somehow failing Him. We’re not using our gifts
for His glory. But if that was true, David would never have drawn the attention
of God, he was just a shepherd. It’s about relationship and using what you have
well. So to that end, I will simply try to tell good stories, borne of the
things I hold dear, and treat the people I work with as God would have me to.
In the spirit of all of the above points, our next project
will be a crazy little sci-fi action comedy (yes, you read that right.) With a
plot by me, but pretty much written by the cast, we will be bringing a much
abridged version of the game we played at the cast party to the screen.
Featuring such characters as Rogers, the worst ranger in the galaxy; Hex, the
annoying ship’s AI; and Venill, the semi-legitimate arms dealer, this story
will take you on a madcap chase from the offices of Fed Com to the sewers of
Iode, from the Temple of the Assassins to the depths of The Vault.
Filming begins late next week. I hope you’ll join us for
this wild ride.
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