Rated T for talent
- Share via
Young Chang
The somewhat obscene lyrics of a song by the Swedish group Clawfinger
will bring together five young filmmakers today for 15 minutes of campus
fame.
Their film “The Conditioned Response” will debut tonight at Orange
Coast College’s Film and Video Festival, but each member of the
production team wants a career that will last more than a fleeting
quarter of an hour.
Producer Elisabeth Morth, who also wrote “Response,” hopes the 32nd
annual event will get her work noticed.
“I just hope for people to watch the film and hopefully appreciate
it,” said the 26-year-old film major who moved to the United States two
years ago from Sweden.
William Hall, chairman of the film and video department at OCC, said
the festival serves almost as a report card from the school to the
community on how students are doing.
More than 1,000 students are enrolled in the college’s film and video
program, which produces about 300 projects every year. Half of these
students continue on to four-year schools to earn bachelor’s degrees, and
the other half try to go directly into the business.
The festival previews the best of OCC’s best.
“So everyone could come see our creativity and proficiency,” Hall
added.
A team of judges watched more than 60 film entries and chose about a
dozen for the three-hour festival, which is generally rated PG-13. Each
work had been previously turned in for a grade at an OCC film class, and
genres include comedy, documentary, experimental video, music video and
even foreign-language projects.
“We picked [the films] to show a variety of styles of filmmaking,”
Hall said. “To highlight not only our advanced students, but even our
beginning students because we make sure even our beginning students have
the opportunity to be shown in the festival.”
The longest film is 25 minutes, and the shortest is about a minute.
They may, technically, fall in the short film category, but each of OCC’s
dozen works tells a complete story.
“The Conditioned Response” is a psychological thriller about an insane
writer who obsesses over a girl.
Morth was inspired to write the script after hearing the opening
lyrics of the Clawfinger song “The Biggest, the Best,” which go something
like “Nobody is perfect but I’m pretty [expletive] close.” As the
producer, she played the role of mom and oversaw her directors, actors
and editor.
For first-time director Jerome Hurd, who had only worked on shorter
pieces, including music videos, before his involvement in Morth’s
project, the experience taught him that everyone looks to the director
for pretty much everything.
The 20-year-old, who admitted his first hurdle was to stop being
nervous, said he learned how to talk to actors -- to encourage them while
being honest about needed improvements. He also learned how to better
work with technicalities, such as lights and cameras.
“This experience has taught me more than any other class,” Hurd said.
Editor Kana Hotta and directors of photography Jed Scus and Krystof
Andres worked to keep the mood of “Conditioned” dark by using minimal
lighting and music.
The black and white film was shot in Costa Mesa, Huntington Beach and
Irvine -- in venues that included the Coffee Bean & Tea Leaf and Hotta’s
apartment.
“Everything actually went very smoothly,” Hurd said.
FYI
* WHAT: Orange Coast College Student Film and Video Festival
* WHEN: 7 to 10 p.m. today
* WHERE: Orange Coast College’s Robert B. Moore Theatre, 2701 Fairview
Road, Costa Mesa
* COST: $5 donation to be collected at the door
* CALL: (714) 432-5180
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.