The Tech Check by H.P. Mendoza

"The theater itself, that venue, is a big part of what the festivals bring to the party; the filmmaker brings the film. The tech check is all about getting it right. Doesn't everyone deserve to get it right? Shouldn't everyone care about g…

"The theater itself, that venue, is a big part of what the festivals bring to the party; the filmmaker brings the film. The tech check is all about getting it right. Doesn't everyone deserve to get it right? Shouldn't everyone care about getting it right?" - Richard Wong

I/IV.
     When I arrived in Boston for the screening of I Am a Ghost, I was already aggravated about requesting a tech check three times and getting no response. All I wanted was to calibrate the projector and sound before our movie screened to a sold out audience. Fifteen minutes before the screening, I finally get to meet Chris Hallock, co-director of programming for Boston Shudderfest. He seems frustrated and confused, almost as much as the patrons who are all standing on the sidewalk wondering where to pick up their tickets. (Both screenings were co-presentations at The Somerville Theatre by the Boston Asian Film Festival and Boston Shudderfest.) Apparently, he's been waiting to hear back from multiple people of his own. This is the frantic life of the film festival. Against my better judgment, I become the pest, again. "So, can I get a tech check?"

     Chris gladly walks me into the theater and I see the setup: a jumble of wires, a THX pre-amp and amp and random DVI, VGA and HDMI cables running from the floor to a big projector obscured by a wood casing. It looks very similar to the setup I have at home. This is the Somerville Microcinema. "For some reason," says Chris, "we can't get a picture." At this point, I'm damning the gods. Not only am I unable to calibrate the picture, there is no picture! Chris looks at me with a somber smile that manages to simultaneously say "I'm sorry" and "We'll make it happen." And all I kept thinking was "if we'd scheduled this tech check, we could have fixed this earlier instead of fifteen...no, thirteen minutes before the film is scheduled to screen."

     So, what's the big deal, huh? Am I being a diva for asking for a tech check? I don't think so. When you consider how much time, effort and money I put into every single shot of the film, it would suck to have all of that blown by a simple technical problem at the projection end. Richard Wong (Director: Yes, We're Open, Cinematographer: Snow Flower and the Secret Fan) chimes in about this.

RICHARD WONG: Any given theater is essentially the funnel in which a person's film is squeezed. I think everyone at this point knows how much work goes into a film's picture and sound. When you are talking about films that are playing film festivals, there's even more at stake. You're trying to make an impression on the audience, trying to lure buyers, trying to make a name for yourself. The theater itself, that venue, is a big part of what the festivals bring to the party; the filmmaker brings the film. The tech check is all about getting it right. Doesn't everyone deserve to get it right? Shouldn't everyone care about getting it right? The filmmakers, the audience, the festival and the theater. Shouldn't that just be the standard?

David Kittredge (Director: Pornography: A Thriller) echoes the sentiment, while talking about the invisible expense of filmmaking. 

DAVID KITTREDGE: You're a filmmaker, you've made a film. You've spent loads of money (yours or other people's), you've stressed and sweated and lost sleep and spent weeks or months or years to make this film, hopefully with minimal casualties. The one thing you owe to yourself, your film, and your audience is to do whatever possible to ensure they experience the film correctly. So do a freaking tech check. These people have paid money, taken time out of their day or evening to spend time with your film. Your film most likely isn't made for a lot of money. Most likely it doesn't have stars. And yet these people have placed their trust in you, they're making a bet you'll show them a good film. You owe them. You owe everyone who worked on the film. You owe yourself.
"Look, the projection is just wrong. This isn't an opinion, you're projecting it wrong." - David Kittredge

"Look, the projection is just wrong. This isn't an opinion, you're projecting it wrong." - David Kittredge

II/IV.
     So, I'm standing there behind the projector staring at a jumble of wires, not knowing what I'm allowed to touch when Chris Hallock's festival partner, Mike Snoonian, walks in. He looks at me and asks, "Mendoza?"

     "Yes."

     "So, what's happening, right now?"

     "Well, there's no picture," I say, with despair. "Not even a menu. It's a black screen."

     "Ah," he says, noticing my frustration. "One question: When you shot the film, did you remember to take the lens cap off?"

     Funny. Mike smiles, knowing that he had to get it out of his system, and jumps into action. The tech check has begun.

     Dealing with the proper people, and dealing with them properly, is something Frazer Bradshaw (Director: Everything Strange and New, Cinematographer: Babies) does regularly. Thankfully, he does so with empathy.

FRAZER BRADSHAW: I make friends with the projectionist and get them on my side. I never dare be unpleasant, since that will usually get you nowhere, and the fate of my film's presentation is in their hands. I happen to have a theoretical knowledge of how projectors work, and have, at times, been able to get access to the projector to tweak settings myself. If one is met with hostility or unwillingness, it's probably because the projectionist feels defensive and that he/she is being accused of doing a poor job. No one likes that!

DAVID KITTREDGE: I'm not met with hostility as I am nervous defensiveness, because they were like"Holy shit. The film looks like crap and in my prep for all the afterparties and awards ceremony and making sure some PA picked up the cast from that movie from Guam, I completely forgot to make sure there was someone around who knew how to fucking work the projector." Of course, they don't say that. Generally they try to spin it, say "Well this is the best we can do." Or better yet, they argue: "Really? I don't see what's wrong with the picture!" This is even more hilarious when the picture is obviously wrong - anamorphically stretched, or out of focus, or slanted in some weird way to the left or right. Then, it's "Well look, I'll try to fix this, but we may just have to live with this."

     And that, dear filmmaker, is when you pull your trump card. It's the card no filmmaker should ever pull. Because I adamantly believe you can't pull it unless you're willing to throw it down on the table.

     It's the Diva card.

     You say the following: "Look, the projection is just wrong. This isn't an opinion, you're projecting it wrong. One of two things is gonna happen. Either we get the projection to screen the film correctly, or I take my tape and we cancel the screening right now. Period." That's when, in my experience, a real projectionist somehow is found and (after a couple of quick menu selections) the film suddenly looks right again.

As far as pulling your film from the festival, Philip Perkins (Sound: Salvador, Nova, Independent Lens) concurs.

PHILIP PERKINS: I have met with resistance from venues to making adjustments and changes to accommodate a particular film and even to doing a tech check at all. This is why the director him or herself really needs to be present and willing to go right up the festival chain of command to get what they want in this regard. Usually that seems to get things taken care of.

     The most common reason given for refusing a tech check is lack of time, running late etc--again, filmmakers must be willing to stand very firm to the point, maybe, of intimating that they might not allow their film to be shown if they don't get at least a brief tech check. I believe it is that important. The reasons for hassles over tech checks are often down to defensiveness of the technical staff (i.e. they don't understand what is being asked of them and don't want to admit it), their private issues with the venue management, the policies of that particular venue, info about the film not being passed to them in advance or downright laziness. Diplomacy is very important in this situation, balancing politeness and gratitude with making it understood that want your film shown as you intended it to be. This can be a tightrope, to be sure, and easier to manage if you have an associate with you.
"Get with the program, people!" - Philip Perkins

"Get with the program, people!" - Philip Perkins

III/IV.

     For some veteran festival attendees, however, the responsibility is solely in the hands of the presenter, not the creator. Quentin Lee (Director: The People I've Slept With, White Frog) has this to say.

QUENTIN LEE: I know many filmmakers who showed up at their screening, including me, and have gotten pissed off at the movies being projected wrong. My sense is that I have been to festivals over two decades and I haven't really heard of the need to tech check a movie. The "tech-check" really falls on the burden of the festivals/exhbitors as they are responsible for screening the movie right.

     But what if the responsibility is left solely in the hands of the venue? Do you run the risk of having a bad presentation that you could have prevented? Richard Wong speaks about the worst presentation ofColma: The Musical.

RICHARD WONG: One that really actually hurt the film was a press screening for Colma where I was not given a tech check. The presentation was terrible. The colors desaturated and contrast cranked.
"The presentation was terrible. The colors desaturated and contrast cranked." - Richard Wong.

"The presentation was terrible. The colors desaturated and contrast cranked." - Richard Wong.

RICHARD WONG: (cont.) So when reviews came out that came from that screening, they uniformly blasted the technical aspects of the film. I'd venture to say it distracted them from the film itself, as it would any audience.

PHILIP PERKINS: I've had a lot of cringe-worthy screenings, many of them back in the old 16mm film-print days. Anymore the worst issues seem to be the venue not playing a film mixed as surround in surround, playing a film mixed as stereo in mono, much too loud, much too quiet, distorted audio due to a misaligned or broken system, and a terrible dislocative sort of playback that comes from having the speakers in the wrong position (i.e. not behind the screen for the L/C/R, but far left and right instead, or some variation on this).

In addition, there can be lip-sync issues, although these are far more rare than they used to be. My main beef is with projectionists who will not change their patches or the settings of their Dolby Cinema Processor boxes to accommodate a video playback in which the audio has been encoded as an LtRt--Dolby Pro Logic in a stereo track-- so that we get our surround back instead of a comparatively lifeless stereo presentation. This is an ongoing issue as venues who formerly viewed surround as being exclusively the province of 35mm film presentations and video playbacks as being stereo only, are now getting virtually all new independent work sent to them in some form of video, usually with 2 channel audio. Get with the program, people!
Chris Hallock and me at the screening of I Am a Ghost co-presented by Boston Asian American Film Festival and Boston Shudderfest.

Chris Hallock and me at the screening of I Am a Ghost co-presented by Boston Asian American Film Festival and Boston Shudderfest.

IV/IV.


After surmising that the problem with the blank picture was a faulty cable, it left us with two minutes to do the tech check. "I'm sorry, guys," I said to Chris and Mike. "But I really want--"

"All right," said Mike, clapping his hands, excitedly. "Let's do the tech check." I didn't even have to ask. We turned the projector on, and after waiting for the picture to come on, we saw an unsightly mess. The picture was far from optimal.

"This must be killing you, man," said Chris, apologetically. Just his acknowledgment of my potential pain was more than I was accustomed to from other festivals. "We have to get this picture right."

Just then, a festival staff member walked into the theater, already pointing at her watch. "We should be starting now."

"We can't start yet," said Chris. "The picture's not ready."

"Ok." The festival worker looked like she understood. "How much longer?" Me, Chris and Mike all looked at each other, searching for a reasonable answer. "Ten minutes?"

"Done," I said, and the festival worker ran off to deal with the waiting audience.

Chris nodded. "All right let's go."

I'm going to save you all from the tedious descriptions of the tech check, but I'm going to list dialogue from our ten minute session, just to give you an idea of the teamwork involved. Whose voice is whose does not matter:

"Left."/"Good?"/"More."/"It's not doing anything."/"Can we keystone?"/"It's getting worse."/"The color is off."/"Fix the blacks."/"Good?"/"Lemme see."/"What's with the temperature?"/"Hey, how about this?"/"Perfect! Analog keystoning."/"That's too far, now."/"Yeah, it is."/"Here, use this!"/"Don't hurt yourself."/"Louder"/"What's your mix?"/"LtRt"/"Let's do this."/"No, the center channel isn't matched."/"Is there a discreet EQ?"/"Let's go stereo."/"Louder."/"Louder."/"Louder."/"Holy shit, we've got it."

Through teamwork and care, the three of us got the picture and sound right. And boy, did we ever. A sharp picture with detail in the blacks. Perfect saturation and no moire (a problem with lots of un-tech checked presentations that want to "zoom" into the picture), perfect channel separation and house shaking bass. I'd say it was one of the best technical presentations of I Am a Ghost, ever.

RICHARD WONG: I will say that some theaters and festivals are really great about this. The Castro in San Francisco we've played at many times with various festivals and they have been open to making time to make sure the presentation is good. Usually it means coming in at 9 or 10 in the morning, which is by all means fine by me. Whatever it takes!

PHILIP PERKINS: Filmmakers--tech check yourself, with your own ears, every situation! Don't take technicians' words for things working fine! Ask someone you trust to listen with you! Ask questions!

FRAZER BRADSHAW: At the end of the day, the filmmaker has very little control over how their films will be exhibited. We'll never know how bad our films look on consumer TVs and we couldn't do anything about it if we did. We have some control over festival theatrical, if we are there to manage it, and have the technical chops to do so. 

This is a shout out to Chris Hallock and Mike Snoonian of Boston Shudderfest. Without your hard work, dedication and willingness to help (not to mention our collective geekiness), I Am a Ghostwould have looked like total amateur hour. The teamwork before the screening was exhilirating, and many festival presenters could learn a lot from you two. From all of us at the I Am a Ghostcrew, we raise a glass to your attention to detail and love for movies.

DAVID KITTREDGE: You can't rely wholly on anybody on your team to know everything. Which is why, if it's your movie, you need to know the basics of everything. Every technical aspect. The camera. The codec. The workflow. Everything. Making a movie can take it out of you. Literally-it can take your money, your time, your health, in many cases your relationship, your sanity, your friends, your sobriety, and any sense of well-being. Of course, it's worth it anyway. 

David Kittredge is the director of PORNOGRAPHY: A THRILLER, (Winner, Best First Narrative Feature, FilmOut San Diego, 2010)

Frazer Bradshaw is the director of EVERYTHING STRANGE AND NEW, (Winner, International Critics Prize, SFIFF 2009)

Richard Wong is the director of YES, WE'RE OPEN, (Winner, Best Screenplay, LAAPFF 2012)

Philip Perkins is an Emmy-nominated Sound Editor/Mixer/Recordist for over a hundred films and television shows since 1976.

Quentin Lee is the director of WHITE FROG, currently on the festival circuit.

Happy Halloween! by H.P. Mendoza


Pictures of the cast and crew of I Am a Ghost at the Hawaii International Film Festival.
Photo 1: H.P. Mendoza, Jeannie Barroga, Anna Ishida and L.A. Renigen pose in front of a Yes, We're Open sign.
Photo 2: Titus Chong (moderator, HIFF), H.P. Mendoza, Anna Ishida, Jeannie Barroga on microphone, L.A. Renigen.
Photo 3: Producer Mark Del Lima with partner H.P. Mendoza in a rare photo, together
Photo 4: Anna Ishida shields her eyes on the balcony of the HIFF Hospitality Lounge

What a crazy month! I Am a Ghost had 8 screenings at Pollygrind, DC Asian, Hawaii International, Tucson Terrorfest, TriCity Fantastic Fest, Boston Asian, Shudder Fest and Bram Stoker UK and walked away withBEST DIRECTOR and BEST ACTRESS at Tucson Terrorfest! We're so honored and thrilled!

We're a little bloodshot from traveling, and there are more festivals coming up (in four days, to be exact) so let's rest and share some San Francisco news. Anna Ishida is being honored with a San Francisco Bay Guardian GOLDIE AWARD for Theatre and I'm being honored by SF Film Society along with film critic Judy Stone, quarterly DVD magazine Wholphin, film festival volunteer extraordinaire Ninfa Dawson and and filmmaker Terry Zwigoff for Essential SF!

This is a good year of recognition. As the year comes to a close and I Am a Ghost travels to more festivals, it's time to start thinking about distribution. These laurels sure would look good on a poster or Blu-Ray cover. :)

EDIT: We just won BEST PICTURE at the Bram Stoker International Film Festival in the UK!
Check out the gorgeous award that's being shipped to us! 

I can't list all of the upcoming fests yet, until they officially announce, but here is where you can see us next:

SAN DIEGO ASIAN FILM FESTIVAL
November 2 @ 9:15pm
November 6 @ 8:00pm

ST. LOUIS INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL

November 17th @ 11:59pm

Remember, we're a team of two, Mark Del Lima and me. We don't have the millions of dollars to make television commercials or post billboards and advertisements everywhere. All we have is the time we put into outreach, social networking and blogging. This outreach includes making trailers, spots and posters. Couple that with the amount of money and work we put into festival submissions and deliverables, and you have a pretty clear picture of how independent a film can be. The festival circuit is a pure experience: we make the movie, you come to watch it. But it can only continue through people like you, so remember:

I AM A GHOST on IMDb (Rate us!!!)
I AM A GHOST on facebook
I AM A GHOST on twitter

And here are two videos, from us to you, to enjoy this Halloween.

Round Two! by H.P. Mendoza

I had the chance to take August and September to work on some other projects I'd neglected for a while, as well as work at IDEO which is always intense and fulfilling (if not intensely fulfilling). But now, October is upon us. It's round two.

I'm so grateful and humbled by all of the attention our film has been getting, and I'd like to ask everyone who has said anything nice about I Am a Ghost to click on the following link to either Rate, Like or Follow the film:

I AM A GHOST on IMDb (Rate us!!!)
I AM A GHOST on facebook
I AM A GHOST on twitter

We ended round one of the fests with 9 screenings in Mexico City as part of Mix Mexico and Macabro Mexico City International Film Festival. We kick off this second round of festivals with the Pollygrind Film Festival in Las Vegas, a genre festival celebrating its 3rd year.

9/28 - Pollygrind Film Festival
10/5 - DC Asian Film Festival
10/13 - Hawaii International Film Festival
10/26 - Boston Horror Film Festival (co-presented by the Boston Asian Film Festival)
10/27 - Bram Stoker Film Festival of the UK
11/2 - San Diego Asian Film Festival

There are more festivals coming up, but I can't officially announce them, yet.

And here are some NEW review links!

"GRADE: A
Smart, original, and unsettling. Highly recommended for fans of ambitious horror films." - Joe Bendel, Libertas Film Magazine


"WONDERFUL!
[I Am a Ghost] will spark a complex dialogue for years to come." - David Calbert, Arts Engine


"FANTASTIC!
It's one of the most original and remarkable ghost stories I've ever seen. From a style and atmosphere perspective, it is very Kubrickian in appearance and tone but from a purely conceptual standpoint, it's unlike anything you've ever seen. The last twenty minutes of this film are some of the most intense and incredibly terrifying moments I've seen in a genre film this year. " - James Cortez, Planet of Terror


A TOUR-DE-FORCE PERFORMANCE!
Mendoza made the best casting decision of his career." - Chris Hallock, All Things Horror


"Lensed, scored, and edited with a skill so methodical and "savant" in nature, it's almost jarring to watch something so rooted in technical brilliance. - Chris Conduit, The Conduit Speaks

"UNCOMMONLY SCARY!
Destined to be a cult classic." - Brian Hu, San Diego Asian Film Festival



Thank you all for supporting the film for this long! We're halfway through the festival run and the movie keeps finding its audience, thanks to the word-of-mouth and general support from all of you. And remember:

I AM A GHOST on IMDb (Rate us!!!)
I AM A GHOST on facebook
I AM A GHOST on twitter



More soon! H.P. 

H.P.

New York! by H.P. Mendoza

Wow, what a trip. I'm home for a few days, having landed back in San Francisco, yesterday, before I head back to New York. The screening of I Am a Ghost at The Chelsea Clearview in Manhattan was a success. Unfortunately, neither Anna Ishida nor Mark Del Lima could make it out to New York. Rick Burkhardt and Jeannie Barroga were in attendance for a really in-depth Q&A that bled into the surprisingly well attended afterparty/meet-and-greet, afterward.

Martha Tien, Sophia Giddens and Lesley Qin of the New York Asian American Film Festival all made the whole process very approachable, and I STILL managed to not see everyone at the afterparty. I discovered that a bunch of people came to the screening from out of town! When I asked them how they heard of the film, they mentioned the Dread Central article:

"Buzz Growing Around H.P. Mendoza's I Am a Ghost" - Dread Central

It's because of this article that I suddenly started receiving lots of requests from festivals, journalists and filmmakers. And it brought these horror fans to The Chelsea Clearview. Some from Philadelphia, some from Pittsburgh and one very knowledgable guy from New Jersey who seemed to have all of the same touchpoints that I had, which told me that he had to have been my age. Within minutes of talking to them, I felt like the film has found its audience. Thank you to Avery Guerra and Doctor Gash from Dread Central for the coverage!

I was happy and proud to see so many people in the audience, lots of whom were fellow filmmakers, composers, actors and playwrights. I had to catch up with a lot of them via facebook, though, because it was next to impossible for me to talk to everyone by the time the party was over.

And after doing a bunch of interviews and trying to get reviews, they're starting to trickle in, and I want to post this one by Joe Bendel.

"SMART, ORIGINAL AND UNSETTLING! Anna Ishida [gives] an extraordinary performance." - Joe Bendel, j.b. spins 

As more pieces trickle in, I'll post them here. But for now, I'm signing off with a thank you to everyone who supported the film in New York. Thank you ACV, Dread Central, Quiet Earth, Core, Bram Stoker Film Festival, B-Movie Celebration, Avery Guerra, Darryl Pierce, Frederick Gorey, Courtney Jones, Nicholas Reiner, Robert Hood, Chris Evangelista, Lewis Tice, Robert Hood, Susan Chinsen, Chucho Quintero and Edna Campos. In the course of one week, so much attention has been thrown on I Am a Ghost, and I'm so thankful.

Oh, and by the way...we also got accepted to: 
MACABRO: Mexico City International Film Festival!

More on that, later. ;) 

H.P

"AMAZING! I Am a Ghost [will] scare the life out of the living." - Jamie Laughlin, Dallas Observer by H.P. Mendoza

I'm picking the Dallas Observer article because it "gives good pull-quote". But during my festival stay at theAsian Film Festival of DallasI Am a Ghost has been covered by three Dallas publications, which is beyond flattering! One of the pieces is for the Dallas Voice, an interview by Arnold Wayne Jones. 

HAUNTED FILMMAKER, by Arnold Wayne Jones, Dallas Voice
Click here to read the interview.

The festival was amazing and I got to spend time with directors Dave Boyle and Mye Hoang of Daylight Savings and Viette, respectively, and they showed me around seeing as how I'd never been to Dallas before.

With the hospitality and general warmth of the AFFD crew, headed by Alicia Chang and Steve Norwood, the I Am a Ghost experience was warm, welcoming and supportive - everything I was told to expect from the South. :)

Thank you, AFFD, for the familial treatment and especially for the genuine and heartfelt support (even if executive director Alicia Chang covered her eyes and turned her back to the screen for the final 20 minutes...hahaha) 

H.P.

★★★★★ "POWERFUL! A meaningful work of art." - Jonathan Newman, Philadelphia Examiner by H.P. Mendoza

Well, it's been a busy month for I Am a Ghost.


We had a midnight screening at the First Unitarian Church of Philadelphia, an amazing venue set in a sanctuary built by architect Frank Furness. We also had two screenings in Mexico as part of MIX Mexico, but three more screenings were added making for a total of FIVE screenings!

Unfortunately, none of us were able to attend any of these screenings, but we were reviewed in the Philadelphia Examiner!

Click HERE to read the review!

One of my favorite parts of the review is this:

"Anna Ishida, an actress whose prodigious talent and emotional capacity carry the film forward and enable Mendoza's whole enterprise...can be seen as an eerie correlation to Nicole Kidman's role in Amenabar's work, and arguably displays a much more powerful performance than Kidman was ever able to summon."

I agree. Anna Ishida's performance is something to behold and I'm glad someone has finally written about it in a review. (ed. It was written in Filmbalaya that "Anna Ishida's portrayal of the ghost was simply terrific.")

Thanks to all who came to the midnight screening a Stay tuned for future postings about Dallas, New York and more! 

H.P.

The Los Angeles Asian Pacific Film Festival! by H.P. Mendoza

Wow. VC (Visual Communications) sure knows how to throw a festival. It was quite a week. A week that led up to a night that I was not ready for. A night that shook me so much it left me ending my sentences in prepositions.

I'm at the awards ceremony, sitting at my table with the guys from Sunset StoriesValley of Saints and Derek Nguyen of Seeing RedParvesh Cheena and Iris Yamashita are presenting awards. I'm noticing how well spoken and confident the winners all seem. I'm just about to lean over to Derek to ask if the winners were notified way in advance when suddenly my name is called for Best Screenplay for Yes, We're Open! I'm so stunned, and cameras are going off (there are pics of me floating around, at my table looking like an idiot that I won't share here) that it takes me a while to get to the podium. Before I get to the microphone, Yes, We're Open producer Theresa Navarro sends me a text saying "Hooray! Best Screenplay!" Theresa was in New York. Apparently, everybody was ready for this award but me.

So, I give my speech. Or, "speech". And as I'm giving my speech, my phone is vibrating like crazy in my hand. (I was busy taking pictures of all of the award winners with my iPhone when I was called on to stage, and didn't have the wherewithall to know where to put it during my "speech".) As I sit back down after the speech in qutotation marks, I look at my phone and notice a ton of tweets, texts and facebook notifications. One of them reads, "Congrats on getting Best of SF Weekly!" I'm too shaken to even know what that means, so I shove my vibrating phone back in my pocket.

After the awards ceremony, I'm walking around trying to say my goodbyes (I had to hop in a cab to the airport to catch a flight to San Francisco, ASAP) and my congratulations to all of my friends. I'm also trying to find the space to text and or call Rich Wong and the rest of the Yes, We're Open crew. I see Parvesh standing in the middle of the courtyard and I'm wondering if he'll remember me from the time we met for 3.5 second during Fruit Fly in New York. I walk up to him and introduce myself, and sure enough he remembers those 3.5 seconds as if it were only 2 years and 10 months ago. He introduces me to his boyfriend Gregory and tells me that he thought the script for Yes, We're Open was really funny. I tell him that means a lot coming from him. He then asks me to stop and it suddenly becomes a contest about which brown guy can blush harder.

I hop in a cab to LAX and I decide to go through all of my notifications when I come across the message about the SF Weekly. It doesn't have a link attached to it, just the message. I go to Safari and do a search on "SF Weekly, award, mendoza" and there it is:

I Am a Ghost gets Best New Horror Director in SF Weekly's Best of 2012! (To which Richard Wong said, "Hmm...it's still May") Click HERE to see the article!

So, in one hour, I won Best Screenplay for Yes, We're Open, Best New Horror Director for I Am a Ghostand Parvesh Cheena called me funny. VC, your festival has got me aflutter.

Thank you to L.A. Renigen who knows the importance of being as generous to the universe from whom you demanded generosity. Thank you to Quentin Lee for the clothes, parties and a surprise second viewing of I Am a Ghost! (Thanks for noticing the projection! Haha!) Thank you to David Kittredge and Rob McClary for the super support and dinner. Thanks to the Yes, We're Open Crew (Rich, Irene, Seng, Parry and Lynn) for coming to the screenings of I Am a Ghost! Thanks to Bao Nguyen, Dave Boyle, Mye Hoang and Goh Nakamura for the unending support that's spanned multiple festivals. And thank you, thank you, thank you to the Kickstarter backers who came out to both screenings in Los Angeles!

Thanks so much to the staff of VC, Abe Ferrer, Dave Magdael and especially Anderson Le of VC, who personally championed I Am a Ghost. I've talked with a bunch of the other filmmakers, and we all agree that we felt really taken care of. (There goes that preposition thing, again.)

And congratulations to all of the winners at the Los Angeles Asian Pacific Film Festival! Click HERE to read more.

 

H.P.

From San Francisco to Chicago! by H.P. Mendoza

What a great experience it was to premiere in San Francisco with THREE sold out screenings. I really do believe the two extra sold out screenings happened because of the generous write-ups of the film, especially the Composable Thumbs review.

We were so happy to see a lot of friends and family show up to the screenings, as well as a lot of the people who pledged on Kickstarter (who I've listed in the previous blog post.) And thank you to all of the filmmakers who came to support the film with such kind words; Dave Boyle, Tanuj Chopra, S. Leo Chiang, Goh Nakamura, Richard Wong, Christopher Hollstein, and Quentin Lee among others. Thank you all for being there!

And now, we move on to other festivals. I Am a Ghost will be playing at the Gene Siskel Film Center in Chicago as part of the Asian American Showcase on Friday the 13th! Thanks to Tim Hugh for his kindness, warmth and enthusiasm over the film and his clever idea to program the film on a night when people want to get scared. :)

So, on to the second festival of this long journey. Thank you so much, everyone! And remember to spread the word about the film, share it on facebook, and like our page! We couldn't have filled up those theaters without you!

H.P.