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Filmmaker challenges City of Dayton | Arts and Entertainment
 

Home > Blogs > Arts and Entertainment > Archives > 2008 > July > 24 > Entry

Filmmaker challenges City of Dayton

Foodies and filmies mingled together Tuesday night, July 22, at the Cannery Art & Design Center downtown when two events - Restaurant Week “Sneak Peek” and “From Sketchpad to Screen: The Storyboards of J. Todd Anderson” - collided together to create one perfectly delicious evening of entertainment.

The Cannery played host to the first portion of the evenings events when it rolled out samples of 10 participating restaurant week menus that included Bahn Mai Thai Cafe, Bullwinkle’s, Barleycorn’s, Chappys Tap Room & Grille, Chin’s Ginger Grill, Coco’s Bistro, Fleming’s Prime Steakhouse and Wine Bar, Jay’s Restaurant, Madison’s Bistro and The Chimneys Inn. The food was fantastic … the venue was hot, hot, hot likely due to the number of people in attendance (over 250) and the number of heating elements going to cook food. Many choose to cool off outside. Those who stayed indoors didn’t seem to let it get to them.

Following the restaurant week sneak peek, those attending ambled down to the 520 Gallery to see a rare display of chronological storyboard work by Oakwood’s very own J. Todd Anderson.

Anderson was on-hand to present more than 1,700 storyboard drawings for his work on three well known films - The Coen brothers’ “The Big Lebowski” and “No Country for Old Men” (the winner of last year’s best picture Academy Award) as well as George Clooney’s “Leatherheads.” The stellar exhibit, which is on display and open to the public through Aug. 2, benefits Film Dayton, a volunteer organization that supports regional filmmaking.

Anderson told the crowd that he is currently in Ann Arbor, Mich., doing preproduction on Drew Barrymore’s roller derby film, “Whip It!”

“In order to get movies to come to you, you have to give them incentives,” explained Anderson who named Michigan and Iowa as two examples of states that have offered tax incentives to lure big and small budget productions in.

Anderson followed by challenging the City of Dayton to honor its visionary forefathers and lead the state of Ohio in offering incentives for film productions to come to town passionately stating to audience applause that, “it has to start somewhere.”

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Anderson then called for an audience member to volunteer to be a “director” and help him illustrate just how his role in a film works. Mike Herrlein happily volunteered to lend a hand and joined Anderson on the stage. Anderson asked Herrlein to describe and set up a scene for a movie so that he could storyboard it for the crowd to see (see photo below) - a process that occurs before a film ever begins filming. Those listening were in for a treat. It was a visual lesson packed with humor and technical terms like “inserts,” “set-ups,” “band aids,” “tracking” and “panning.”

“The script is intellectual … when I draw it, it becomes existential,” explained Anderson. “Now you see it … it’s like I’ve uncovered a drawing for them [the director]. From then on the vision of the picture has been established.”

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The Nick Kizirnis Band played music to help close out a great evening that proved that when events and organizations come together to become greater than the sum of their parts everybody wins. Here’s hoping the City of Dayton takes Anderson’s challenge on, perhaps working with Film Dayton, to show the state what can be possible.

Any thoughts or opinions about the film community in town? What about offering incentives to bring film productions in to town? Click here to see more photos from the event.

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