Short Films in Focus: Ava’s Dating a Senior! | Features


This might be a loaded question, but can you walk me through the process of creating a scene with these people, and then the editing process? 

The essentials are straightforward: I have an idea for a scene. I talk about it with the kids. During lunch we do the scene, in one continuous take, for about 30 minutes. There is an iPhone on each kid in the scene (if it’s three kids, then three iPhones) and I have a Lav mic on each kid, going into a TASCAM DR-70. I let them improvise and keep bringing them back to the central thesis of the scene and feeding them lines in the moment, when their tangents get too off-topic. Then we airdrop all the footage from the different phones to my computer. I sync and stack the footage in Final Cut and then I edit a rough piece together by the end of the day, to be sure of what we need to shoot the next day. It’s run and gun; but it allows the movies to stay loose and the plots to develop organically. But in the end, it’s hours of footage, which translates into months of editing. 

What went into the idea for the short?

I try to let the stories kinda come to me. I’ve had some of these students for six years, and so I’m privy to some gossip from time to time. Then, based on a nugget of truth, I will try to create a very light fictional narrative around it. For example, in “Ava’s Dating a Senior!”, Ava was in fact dating a senior—and there was a lot of drama surrounding that. It reminded me of a lot of memories from my own freshman year in high school, and so I focused the movie on Silas—who is in love with a girl in his grade, but is jealous because she is dating someone that, essentially, he believes he can’t compete with.  

What has the response been like to both/either “Teenage Emotions” and/or “Ava’s Dating A Senior!”? 

I am overwhelmed by the response to both. Both “Ava’s Dating a Senior!” And “Teenage Emotions” premiered at Slamdance and got great reviews. We just put “Ava’s Dating a Senior!” online two weeks ago and were blessed with the Vimeo Staff Pick badge, which has allowed a lot of people to find it and watch it. 

In both films, you seemed to have avoided the trappings of using phones and texting as part of the narrative and keeping the interactions almost entirely personal. It makes the film seem timeless, in a way. Was that important to you? 

You can view the original article HERE.

Khloe Kardashian Swears Daughter True Torments Her with Whales For Fun
Thalia Releases New Música Mexicana Album “A Mucha Honra”
Chrisean Rock Says She Stopped Drinking, Smoking to Focus On Football
Harvey Weinstein’s 2020 rape conviction overturned by New York appeals court: The latest
J.Hud and Jovovich Can’t Save This Apocalyptic Thriller
Kraven the Hunter Release Postponed Until December 2024
Speed Kills: On the 25th Anniversary of Go
Dead Boy Detectives Review | A Great Spin on Neil Gaiman’s Comic Series
Dylan Thomas, Patti Smith & The Tortured Poets Story Taylor Swift Tells
‘Connections’ answers and hints for today, April 27
Jon Gosselin Teams Up with DJ Casper to Release New Music
BIBI and Jackson Wang drop sultry music video for ‘Feeling Lucky’
Taylor Swift, Travis Kelce Hit Vegas Hot Spot with Patrick, Brittany Mahomes
Sonny Vaccaro Says Caitlin Clark Deserved Michael Jordan-Esque Nike Deal
O.J. Simpson’s Bank Of America Credit Cards Sells for $10K at Auction
Devin Haney’s Promoter Wants Ryan Garcia Rematch On ‘Even Playing Field’
Young Sheldon Ending Questioned by Star: ‘Who Cancels This?’
Blue Bloods Season 14 Episode 7 Review: On The Ropes
Blue Bloods’ Donnie Wahlberg and Bridget Moynahan Share Heartfelt Emotions as the Series Ends
Elsbeth Season 1 Episode 6 Review: An Ear for an Ear
The Best Sunglasses at Nordstrom
Your Chic Guide to Mother’s Day Gifts This Spring
Best Spring Clothes From Gap
Anok Poses for Amina Muaddi, Dr. Barbara Sturm’s Chic Dinner