William Mapother

Blog Archives

Blog Categories

Blog Archives

Archive for the ‘Acting’ Category

What are the Odds?

Posted on: December 1st, 2010 by wmapother 4 Comments

Life, the universe and everything is crazily random, as we know, and the movie business doesn’t straighten it out any.

Last autumn I shot Another Earth, a tiny indie drama.  We shot nearly all my scenes in mid-New York state, at an old, unheated country house  owned by the director’s friend, and the entire crew could almost fit around a table at McDonald’s.

Cut to a bit over a year later.  The 2011 Sundance Film Festival just announced its line-up (here) for January…and Another Earth was accepted into the Dramatic Competition Category, in which only 16 films were selected from among 1,102 films submitted.

The NY Times reports on the trends in this year’s selections here, including this photo of Brit Marling and me, and USA Today has a piece on the line-up here.

The director, my fellow cast, the producers, the crew and the casting director are all here, and there isn’t earth enough and time to thank them.  But thank you.

Posted in Acting Projects, Press

Mo Mo Mo-Cap

Posted on: October 26th, 2010 by wmapother 11 Comments

Just when you thought (and I prayed) that I couldn’t look any freakier or wear weirder outfits, here comes this:  motion capture, aka performance capture.

Cribbing from (and probably ruining) the Wikipedia entry, motion capture, aka mo-cap, means recording movement (eg, of humans) and using that information to animate characters in computer animation.

It’s the same process they used in this little movie you may have heard of, Avatar.  In fact, just for your viewing pleasure, you can see a short clip of the process and how it looked in the movie here.

So last week I did mo-cap for an upcoming videogame.  No, I can’t tell you which one.  Game companies get a little tweaked out when actors announce early, so I’m going to shock everyone and keep my mouth shut for a change.  Zipped lip.  But I will say that it’s part of a franchise.  That’s quite popular.  Which is — okay, really, that’s enough.

It was a blast.  Basically, you wear a suit covered with 55 or so reflective dots, and while you act out a scene in a big open room, 70-80 cameras are reading your movements via the dots.  Then the data from the cameras all gets combined to create your movements in a 3D digital world.

Monitors were set up on the edge of the room showing our characters (okay, fine, our avatars), so as we moved, our avatars moved (though their faces stayed the same).  Our mo-cap is animated, whereas Avatar was more lifelike, so we looked nothing like our avatars on the monitors.  It was a bit weird at first, and then it became nothing but fantastic.  Especially, I think, to the actresses, almost all of whose avatars were, in the time-honored tradition of videogames, really hot.

The director, producers, and crew were terrific, as were all the other actors.  Everything was fantastic.  Except for the skin-tight black suits.  That I could have done without.  I’m not sure how exactly, given that they’re a necessary part of the process, but if I were King of Mo-Cap-ville, the first Royal Order would be to improve the suits.  Somehow.  I don’t know how.  I’m the King.  Just make it happen.

Posted in Acting Projects, Photos of Wm, Videogame

(A little too) up close & personal

Posted on: October 20th, 2010 by wmapother No Comments

Check out this insightful NY Times article discussing the risks of “overexposure” with HDTV.

And audiences wonder why actors are self-conscious about their appearance. With hi-def television, it could get a lot worse — for both actors and the audience..

 

[This is another in a continuing series of potentially helpful, hopefully practical posts to actors on practicing their craft or surviving the trying.  I bear no responsibility for how this or any of my posts might ruin your life, lead you to law school, or make your parents sick with worry.  For more of the same, click the ‘Info to Actors’ category at left.]

Posted in Acting Tips & Info, Random, TV

A little Burrower love

Posted on: October 14th, 2010 by wmapother 6 Comments

‘The Burrowers’ didn’t get the love we might’ve gotten if we had a theatrical release, but that doesn’t mean the movie’s been forgotten.  It’s on at least one blogger’s ‘Best you haven’t seen” list here.

Posted in Acting Projects, Press, Video (Online & Home)

My Candidacy for the SAG Board

Posted on: August 26th, 2010 by wmapother 4 Comments

My three-year term on Board of the Screen Actors Guild is ending, and I’m running again (for the eggs, of course).  SAG members should receive their ballots today — I’m at #43.

I’m running on the slate of Membership First.  Our primary goal:  Merge all of SAG & AFTRA actors into one union.
Below is a bit more information on Membership First.
If you’re a SAG member, please vote.  It’s your union.  Exercise your voice.




Imagine the benefits of merging all actors into one union:
    • Hassle-free qualifying for just one Health & Pension
          plan.
    • Simplicity of a single dues payment.
    • Unified membership focused on actors’ financial
          security.
Sound pretty good?  We think so, too.  
Join us in supporting a SAG-AFTRA merger of All Actors into One Union.  
One purpose.  One voice.  
Q: What kind of SAG-AFTRA merger does Membership First support?
A: One which brings all actors — and only actors — into
       one union.
Q: Who does Membership First mean by ‘actors’ in an all-actors union?
A: Principal and background actors, stunt performers &
       pilots, dancers, singers, puppeteers.
Q: Why not also merge with AFTRA’s non-actors (broadcasters, journalists, DJ’s, etc.)?  Isn’t more better?
A: Not in this case.  They could vote on our contracts —
       but they have no experience with actors’ concerns.
       In fact, they have conflicting interests which could
       make them vote against actors’ concerns.  Also, they
       don’t increase our leverage because legally, they can’t
       walk out with us.  Merging with them threatens the
       very strength we need this merger to achieve.
Membership First’s Balanced Approach to Merger:
• Merge all of SAG & AFTRA actors into one union.
• Hire an outside merger consultant.  Merging unions is
     highly complex and costly.  It requires innovation and
     specialists.  It’s too important to be created by Board
     members/SAG staff alone.
• Include the members:  Conduct town hall meetings,
     caucuses and surveys.
• Preserve the financial security of SAG’s Pension & Health
    Plans.  The problems of combining SAG’s & AFTRA’s
    plans have not been resolved. Membership First would
    do so before merger.
• Protect every SAG member’s right to vote.  All members
    could vote on this merger.
MEMBERSHIP FIRST:  A VOTE
FOR A MERGED, 
ALL-ACTOR UNION
Membership First Candidates 
(as listed on your ballot):

For more info, please see www.membershipfirst.blogspot.com           
Membership First endorses these independent candidates:
#3   John Tremaine   #4  Mobin Khan       
#17 Leigh French      #48 Rico Bueno

*Not paid for with SAG funds*


Posted in Acting Tips & Info