Six months later, Dust to Dust is on-line for your viewing pleasure. The story of its creation is almost as epic and ridiculous as the film itself. For Spring break 2008, Cameron and I drove halfway across the country in pursuit of adventure. We spent an evening in a border town in Mexico and slept in a public park in El Paso on our way to New Mexico to take on the Chihuahuan Desert. We spent 3 days hiking and running out of water and getting dehydrated and nearly dying before we returned to civilization. On our drive home, inspired by our near-death experience and the vastness of the West Texas wasteland, we began writing the story of Dust to Dust. I sat in the passenger seat and scribbled in a notebook while Cameron rattled off Joel Pishano's most memorable one-liners. Sorry! I don't want to bore you with my nostalgic rambling...

Some web updates and stuff:
1) We would like to make a newsletter option for you so we can inform you when we add new blogs or make site changes, so stay tuned for that.
2) We have made updates to the About Us page and we created new Synopsis and Music pages. Definitely check out the music page as it is being constructed by the man himself, Kevin Holdiness.
3) Dust to Dust has already started to make its way around the web. We have had mentions on zombie-nation.net and zmdb.org.
4) We have begun to spread our proverbial “presence” around the web. Our blog is now showing up on LiveJournal, Blogger, and Myspace. Soon, hopefully StumpleUpon, Digg, and other bookmarking sites will be pointing back to theblackestdawn.com. We also will be posting the videos on video hosting sites.

Cameron and I held our first spoken Character Study last weekend. Character studies are typically written exercises that writers use to learn more about a character. The writer will write pages and pages of background information on a character: scenes from his past, relationships that have shaped him, objects that have been important to him, habits/rituals, etc. I don't particularly like the physical act of writing, so a spoken, improv character study seems like just the thing to really get the creative juices going. It certainly worked well this time. Cameron and I sat in StrangeBrew coffee shop for 2 hours and recorded our conversation on a handy voice recorder. A few more of these sessions and it will be time to write the script for Episode 3.

Lastly, while things may not be meeting our unofficial preproduction “schedule,” as we have progressed the purpose of this next film has evolved and the need for it to be perfect has become more evident. Therefore, the original “schedule” is really meaningless. Ever since Zombies, I have thought of The Blackest Dawn Chronicles as “fun films”... practice... side projects... throw aways. But I see now the potential for something bigger. Not only can this third episode be a great, well-rounded film, it can be the calling card that all of us here at Ghost Town need to break into the film industry. So, I will continue to post on our progress. It's going to be a fun ride.

LET'S RIDE!

Johnson T.

 
 

Hi there.

New news! Hurray! The DVD's came in today! All 50 of 'em, and they look great. The packaging looks really professional. I unpackaged and tested one and it worked fine.I wholeheartedly recommend www.mixonic.com for disc duplication and replication.  These DVD's will sell for $10 at the premiere. JUST A REMINDER: all of the money raised at the premiere will be going to finance the third film in The Blackest Dawn Chronicles.

Cameron and I have been cooking up a few goodies for the premiere on Monday. A few of the extras are tightly-kept secrets, but I am glad to say we will have a blooper reel following Dust to Dust. It has been loads of fun going back and revisiting the challenges of being on set as well as the funny moments.

The Winston County Journal ran a piece on the movie premiere in today's paper. You can read the article here.

I've saved the best news for last. Cameron and I met for 2 and a half hours in the MSU library last night and... inspired by our Blackest Dawn iTunes playlist... we finished the plot outline for Episode 3! It was a very exciting moment. The creative juices were really flowing for both of us and we bantered back and forth and pantomimed and imagined until we beat out an incredible ending to the story. This third film will be sooooo different from anything we've offered so far. Hopefully, the ending will set the stage for an epic blockbuster feature in the distant future, but I think the ending we've imagined will be satisfying in and of itself. This story will take the world we've created and the precedents we have established and really give them depth and humanity and feeling. The trick is to continue to not take this world too seriously, because we really do love it.

I will continue to delve into our thoughts on Episode 3 and bring to light some of the actual events and themes of the story in future posts. Meanwhile, Kevin Holdiness, the composer of The Blackest Dawn's original music, will be sharing some of his thoughts on The Blackest Dawn music and the art of film scoring itself. That's all for now.

Carry on my wayward son,

Johnson T.

P.S. In case you were curious, The Blackest Dawn playlist consists of Evanescence, Hans Zimmer, Howard Shore, Enya, and of course a little U2.