Here’s the trailer for the 2009 God on Film series. Check it out.
Commercials
23
Mar 09
God on Film Trailers
A couple of trailers I worked in the last couple of years for a series of church services I helped out with for Jacobs Well Church in Minneapolis. The first one is for 2007 and the second one is 2008. The trailers turned out pretty well, see if you can’t guess their inspiration.
8
May 07
Don of La Mancha Directors Cut
I’ve put the original letterbox edition of Don of La Mancha up on youtube.
Also, there’s a high-res version of the original posted by memelabs, the sponsor of the contest, here.
I like the letterbox version a little better, but the original is still pretty cool. Check it out. And thanks everyone for the support!
8
Sep 06
Voting for “Don of La Mancha”
Don of La Mancha: the Quixotic tale of a misguided man, his frustrated sidekick, and a world full of windmills.
For those of you interested in my film and want to vote for it on windblows.us, please follow the link and directions below.
To vote, you need to register yourself with the system. they just require an email address and a password so that they can keep track of who voted…not to send you junk mail.
To register, there’s a tab that says Login on the right hand window. Press that, and then click Register Now. Fill out the information…then vote. That’s it.
If you like the film then vote for it…if not…well please support me anyway and pass this email on so that other people have the chance to vote for it. The contest runs for the rest of this month, actually 9-28-2006, so spread the word.
Thanks everyone for your support!
Matt
8
Sep 06
Don of La Mancha in Five Weeks
Thank God that August is a long month because I never could have finished Don of La Mancha if it wasn’t. Jeff always finds these contests at the last minute…or maybe he just holds on to them to make me have to jump…j/k…but anyway it’s been a fast and furious ride for the last 32 days, and I want to take a rest, but there’s no rest for me these days.
There never really was a script for this thing until about two days before the shoot because I kept having to change the scenarios as problems crept up. I basically knew within a day of finding out about the contest that I wanted to do something with a Don Quixote theme; from there I just needed to figure out how it would be done. I pulled in a lot of help from friends at the office and pretty much everyone I knew. They gave me a lot of ideas for locations and props I could use to create a surreal landscape for my Quixote story. Also, they gave me a lot of encouragement.
My first week was pretty much buying stuff from ebay and trying to figure out the costume. I wanted something that looked like it had been put together peicemeal out of kitchen supplies…so I went to Target and spent entirely too much on a colinder, tin foil, a cake dish, and a bunch of other strange stuff that no one but a little kid would ever think to make a suit of armor out of. Then it was off to Manards to round out the rest of the costume. I took all this stuff home and spent about 5 hours banging holes in things and covering other things in tinfoil. I live in an apartment and my neighbors probably think I’m nuts by now. Who builds a six foot windmill and a suit of armor in an Eagan apartment building? I got some wierd looks that night. Anyway, here’s what it looked like when I was finished. Very idiotic…but very cool.
I scouted out locations before the shoot and found several different parks and places that could work for my shoot. I wanted a lot of differnet locations to go along with Sancho’s narration and I wanted all the locations to be fairly close together. My only real scene specific location was the Windmill Cafe which is situated on HWY 13 between Eagan and Savage in the lower Twin Cities area. I was a little worried that the owner might back out on my. I’d called them up and even shown up for a visit to chat, but you never know what you may get come shoot date. The owner was really nice and we didn’t have any problems shooting.
The footage that day was gorgeous and I wish I could have used more of it. I’d love to shoot a film or something there one day.
You can’t see it, but the woman that throws Don out of the Windmill Cafe is dressed as Dulcinea. Unfortunately I opted for using the wide angle lens to capture both the epic feel of the surroundings and to add a Monty Pythonesque feel to Don Quixote’s running about. It looks better on a television, but I can’t complain with the final result.
I shot four scenes that afternoon, including the baseball diamond scene…in which I added the background windmills in CG…and one that ended up on the cutting room floor.
Check out the before and after pics of the windmills, they turned out great!
I would have liked to have shot more on the first day, but I had yet to receive my windmills…and such is the problem with ebay, as well as the plight of filmakers everywhere: nothing goes like you planned.
I received my windmills a few days later. We had planned to shoot the first shot of Tim destroying the windmill in a nearby field before finishing the indoor scene with Sancho in my living room. I was on a tight schedule and we didn’t have a lot of time to mess around. Unfortunatly it was raining out and tornados were dropping all around the Twin Cities area. Tim got suited up and we waited, watching the storm clouds pass overhead.
A few cast and crew memebers called their families. Most were all right though Tims sister’s car had been destroyed by tennis ball sized hail earlier that evening. We kind of laughed it off, but it wasn’t really all that funny and after one failed attempt to shoot the outdoor scene, we gave up.
A few days later the weather still wasn’t cooperating. Beyond that, I still had to find an actor willing to play the man with the hose. The first few people I asked decline..which I guess in retrospect was a good thing because the ultimate result of that was my asking Ray to play the part. Rays a talented guy and was way over qualified, but he loves doing this stuff and it’s great working with him. We had to move the shoot date to accomodate and I nearly had a conniption thinking about how many times I’d have to go to the equiptment rental places just to get a single shot, but it all worked out. I got my last parting shots, broke a couple golf clubs in the process, and everything was in the can.
Overall, this was one of the most complicated shoots I’ve ever worked on. It had its ups and downs but turned out really well in the end. If you get the chance, check out the short over at windblow.us, and vote for “Don of La Mancha”. Voting polls are open through the end of September, 9-30-06.
If you have comments on the video, or anything on the site then feel free to let me know. Also, check out the rest of the pictures on the Official Photos page.
Later.
Matt Kudej
Resident Director
14
May 06
Firefox Commercial: Something Different
So they finally posted my commercial up on the Firefox Flicks Site. It looks like it’s getting decent marks, though unfortunately they took down comments section. If you have any constructive feedback, then feel free to post a comment to this site. I always like to hear peoples opinions.
Anyway, you can check out the commercial here, and I may post higher quality version in the next week or two, so check back.
Later!
17
Apr 06
The Shoot
I borrowed my best friend’s house for a Saturday afternoon and rented myself a light and a mic from the one of the local equiptment places around town. The place is called Cinequipt in either Minneapolis or Des Moines. They are pretty cool and give great rates to indy and low budget filmakers. Check them out if you get the chance.
We set up shop in the house at about 11:30 am. Jeff and I had most of the gear up and running by noon, and the rest of the crew trickled in. We swapped out some of the pictures and set up the scene. Mary Beth is a graphic designer and handled a lot of the set design, but we all had a hand in the final product.

The first actor to show up was Ray. I staggered their walk in times so that we wouldn’t have everyone there all at once…besides, why waste all their time if we don’t have to; acting tends to be a lot of sitting around anyway, so I made the choice to limit that as much as possible. Once we got Ray into wardrobe, we talked about how we wanted to set up the shot…and what Ray should be doing during the shot. We ended up giving him a remote control and a glass of grapefruit juice…since Ray is allergic to milk we opted not to use it…though in hind site, Ray ended up drinking the whole glass of grapefruit juice when we weren’t looking, so maybe milk was the better way to go…you the man Ray!
From there, Ray kind of did his thing. We changed camera angles, tried it a few different ways. Ray was always a pro, and looks great on camera. Check it out yourself when it comes up on Firefoxflicks in the next couple of weeks. I’m not sure I’ve ever had a shoot go this smoothly, but then Halle showed up, and then it got interesting…
I couldn’t have cast a better little girl. She was perfect! She had energy to spare and threw herself with reckless abandon all over my scene! She was great! …of course those are the same qualities that make it difficult to work with kids. At one point she finished her scene and immidiately ran down the hall and dissappeared. We didn’t see her again for ten whole minutes…I’m going to have to put up bloopers clips now…but anyway, she was at times difficult to rein in, but she looks great on camera. It’s funny with kids, especially young ones, because they never really do the same thing twice. I recommend, that if you ever try shooting something where there is a kid involved that you don’t bother turning the camera off, because they will probably give you more while you are trying to coach them on the scene then when you actually turn the camera on and let them go. I’m glad we had Mary Beth there to calm her down between takes, and her father was a big help as well.

Steve did a great job considering it was his first time acting. He had the perfect look for the commercial and was a big help in coaching his daughter. The one thing that I’d mention is that it’s easy to get distracted and spend more time as a director working with your child stars than working with your adult actors; especially on these indy shoots where you have limited crew and you’re doing a number of jobs. He did a great job despite everything that was going on, but next time I’m getting a cameraman and doing it right. Thanks Steve…couldn’t have done this without you.
If you want to see some pictures of the shoot, Jeff took a bunch; check them out in the photos section. That’s Alan with the sound equiptment…he’s also a writer of many things…including future projects that will be posted on this site. Stay tuned for info on our cable access sitcom as well as other short films. Jeff is the one holding the boom. Mary Beth is the only other girl in the pictures besides Halle.
