Slam Alex Hillkurtz!

Slam_Alex

Alex has been directing second unit for Nancy Meyer and is currently boarding for “Despicable Me 3”

Alex_SLAM-BOOK-QUESTIONNAIRE_Page_01
On “The Intern,” set with Nancy Meyer, Alex Hillkurtz shooting
Second unit in which he storyboarded the entire film in LA and then to went to NY to shoot Second Unit Directing.

What is your idea of perfect happiness?
Browsing in a really great bookstore, with the smell of coffee coming from the adjacent café, and hours to go before closing time.

What is your greatest fear?
My greatest fear is saying what my greatest fear is, so I’m not going to. Sorry to be contrarian right up front, but I believe words have power and I’m not putting that out there for the universe to interpret.

Who are your favorite artists?
Rembrandt tops my list, while others were painting standard portraits of the rich and influential, he captured people’s souls. He was miles ahead of his time in style and technique. He also wasn’t afraid to show his progression through various versions of a sketch; they’re like Dylan bootlegs. I also love Corot with his romantic landscapes. No one paints trees like Corot, and there’s always that mysterious woman in red at the heart of all his paintings. I love Whistler’s evocative images of London and Venice. I love illustrators N. C. Wyeth and Howard Pyle for the sheer power of their storytelling. I could go on and on…

How did you become a storyboard artist?
I went to film school and was shocked, SHOCKED upon graduation when no one hired me as a director. After a year and a half of PA work, I met storyboard artist David Lowery, and immediately recognized the coolness of his job. I grew up copying Joe Johnston’s illustrations from “The Art of Star Wars”, so I always knew what storyboards were, but until that moment, it never occurred to me that it was a job that you could make a living at. I put together a portfolio of fake scenes that I made up, and told people that’s what I did now. After a while, and many persistent phone calls, I got hired at a visual effects company doing all their illustrations and boards. It was a pretty great training ground, but quickly became limiting. From there I got an agent and went freelance – many commercials, low budget features, that sort of thing. I gradually outgrew the agent and began working on larger budget films.

What is the trait you most deplore in others?
Having selfish disregard for others, lack of empathy, lack of imagination, and people who have no vision.

Who do you admire the most?
Wow, there are many I admire, but consistently I come back to Peter Matthiessen. He lived a full life and wrote so clearly and eloquently about the places and events he experienced.

Alex_SLAM-BOOK-QUESTIONNAIRE_Page_02Alex also shot as Second Unit Director for Nancy’s last film, “It’s Complicated.”

How do you spend your time when you are not working?
I love backpacking, and urban sketching. Also astronomy. And reading. And buying books I may not get around to reading.

Where do you see yourself in 5 years?
I’m not sure. I’ve never been good at making five-year plans. But I’m looking forward to meeting who I become.

What is your favorite genre?
Probably noir. I do love sci-fi, but that’s not really a genre.

What is your greatest regret?
My greatest regret is not spending a semester of high school in Australia when I had the chance. I stayed home because I had a girlfriend. I should’ve taken that trip! It might’ve lead to a bigger life. But then, that one Trip Not Taken has taken on mythical proportions with me. It’s become my own personal Four Feathers, and has spurred me to go on many adventures that I otherwise might not have done.

Who is the greatest love of your life?
My wife.

4-aAlex with Tiffany Hillkurtz in London.

What is your current state of mind?
I’m conflicted. Don’t mind saying. In the best of times this means I contain multitudes. Most of the time it means I’m torn.

Alex_SLAM-BOOK-QUESTIONNAIRE_Page_03Alex taking a break in the snow at a dog sled race in Iditarod, Alaska, 2014.

Which talent would you like to have?
I would love to be able to speak any language fluently.

Alex_SLAM-BOOK-QUESTIONNAIRE_Page_05Alex living the dream in Marin on a friend’s refurbished BMW riding free with wind blowing his hair.

If you could go back into time, what would you do differently?
I probably wouldn’t buy that shirt that’s sitting in my closet still unworn. Actually no, I’d still buy the shirt, you never know. What I would do differently is I’d speak up more. Too much has passed me by because I was silent.

If you could change one thing about your art style, what would it be?
I’d love to be more spontaneous in my art. People always say my work is so clean, and I agree, it is. I think ultimately storyboards need to be clear and readable. I’ve seen gorgeous drawings that are actually very hard to read. So clean is good, I’ll take clean. But I would love to have a more spontaneous feel to what I do.

What programs do you use?
I’ve been using Corel Painter as my primary drawing tool for over a decade now.

4-bAlex in Dordogne, France

What programs do you want to learn?
Maybe SketchUp, and there’s always more to learn with Photoshop. But I don’t know. I’m reluctant to get sucked in to having too many tools. When I take pictures I like a 50mm lens. When I sketch I have a small watercolor set, one pen, and two brushes. I’ll never be that guy who seamlessly switches between 15 different programs with custom settings and a million plug-ins. I’m not a Luddite, but I like what I like, and there’s something to be said for being good at using what I have.

If you could switch careers what would you do?
I always wanted to be a paleontologist and dig up dinosaur bones in Mongolia.

What are your most treasured possessions?
I’d say my two cats, though I don’t think I possess them. So probably one of my beat up and well loved leather bags. They’re perfect for carrying my sketching gear.

Alex_SLAM-BOOK-QUESTIONNAIRE_Page_07Dashi the cat, sitting comfy in shredded script.

What do you regard as the lowest depths of misery?
Not being seen.

Describe your character?
I’m kind, little too introverted and quiet. You’d probably think I was boring at a party, but get me one on one and we could have amazing conversations.

Which Director would you pick to do a movie about your life?
If it was during the 1970s maybe Coppola; 80s probably Oliver Stone; 90s maybe Michael Mann; the aughts Danny Boyle or Soderbergh. Whoever’s at the top of their game? Who’s that now? Iñárritu or Cuarón probably. That would be amazing!

If you were to direct a movie, what would be your genre?
I suppose it would be an adventure road picture/drama with a splash of comedy and a rich heart of spiritual transcendence, with an undertone of biting satirical comment on the dehumanizing nature of our materialistic culture. Is that a genre?

What is the quality you most like about an artist?
Having the courage to be bold, or imaginative, or expressive. But I don’t only associate courage with strength. It takes courage to be compassionate. It takes courage to be vulnerable.

What do you most value in your friends?
The ability to listen.

What do you think of your critics?
I think they may have a point.

Who are your favorite heroes?
Bernard Moitessier and Antione de Saint-Exupéry. They went there and sometimes didn’t come back. I also draw inspiration from Peter Freuchen, Farley Mowat, Herman Hesse, Seamus Heaney, Lance Mackey… I’ve got a whole personal pantheon.

What do you think of this life?
It’ll do. It’s the best one we’ve got.

What do you most dislike in this life?
I absolutely deplore the notion that we are not all connected. Also, creation myths taken literally – that brand of dogma has lead to most of the destruction in this world.

How would you like to die?
I always thought Tibetan sky burial was a cool idea, though that’s more something to do after you’re dead. As far as how I’d actually like to go? Don’t know; whatever I’d be doing I’d love to be able to see the stars at night.

What would you like to come back as, if you were to be reincarnated?
I would be a white-collared swift. Have you seen those things fly? Holy shit it’s spectacular! It would be that or a raven.

What is your Motto?
“Sometimes you want to figure out the gears in the projector, sometimes you just want to enjoy the movie.”

And for the coveted question, what was working with Angelina Jolie like?

Working with Angelina is an absolute pleasure She’s a very intuitive director. Rather than talk about specific shots, she’s much more interested in how a scene or sequence should feel. This leaves me with a lot of freedom while boarding. Things will naturally get more specific as we go along and revise, but it’s always in service of the emotions of the scene. Plus, I love that she makes films that are important to her personally.”

Alex_SLAM-BOOK-QUESTIONNAIRE_Page_09 copy

Slam Sylvain Despretz!

Slam_SYLVAIN

Storyboarding veteran who is quite legendary himself, working with such heavies as Ridley Scott, Stanley Kubrick and Roman Polanski to drop a few names is now editing and transitioning into a masterful filmmaker himself.

Headshot

What is your idea of perfect happiness?
A complete cosmic void. Total wiped out of the past, without memory or anticipation – an eternal non-being without consciousness or object-subject relations. Absolute zero. Not being here at all in any way.

What is your greatest fear?
That reincarnation is inevitable, and that I have to come back to human life.

Who are your favorite artists?
Jean-Claude Forest, Jean “Moebius” Giraud, John Singer Sargent, André Franquin, Jean Léon Jérome, Andrew Loomis and Otomo.

How did you get into Storyboarding?
I got into storyboarding by committing a mistake. I thought it was going to get me into a good position to direct films – how foolish! A journalist once interviewed me at the end of it said, “Before I spoke with you, I had not realized that you basically have a glorified shit job.” I got my start when I took a portfolio of drawings into a notorious New York sweatshop that provided storyboard frames to advertising agencies – they hired me on the spot. It was pure abuse and total exploitation, but I quickly learned how to do the job on my own and acquire clients directly. I ended up being hired at a prestigious advertising agency and there, I met some directors including a couple of famous ones…

What is the trait you most deplore in others?
I deplore people who go back on their word. Especially when they do it, as it is a commonplace these days, as if it were no big deal. I deplore the fact that everything we are taught or told is a lie…that we have to spend most of our lives unlearning false, and weeding out the bullshit so we can glimpse a tiny bit of truth. I deplore that no one wants the truth and that ultimately, denial is the greatest human activity.

Who do you admire the most?
I admire Robert Fripp, Thadeus Golas, John Goodsall, Michael Powell, Hal Ashby, Sydney Lumet.

How do you spend your time when you are not working?
Playing guitar, editing film, traveling, reading sleeping.

Where do you see yourself in 5 years?
In a wooden cabin by the sea, or working in South America.

What is your favorite genre?
Psychological Drama, thriller.

What is your greatest regret?
The PanAm stewardess with the town car at JFK.

Who is the greatest love of your life?
Judy.

What is your current state of mind?
Headache.

Which talent would you like to have?
Jim Hendrix’s, David Gilmour’s.

If you could go back into time, what would you do differently?
I’d go to Sarasota, Florida, in 1990 to make a documentary film about an old friend who has since passed away.

If you could change one thing about your art style, what would it be?
I’d make it look original.

What programs do you use?
Premiere, Advanced Disc Catalog, Winmap, VLC.

What programs do you want to learn?
After Effects.

If you could switch careers what would you do?
Make movies, or play guitar in an instrumental band.

What are your most treasured possessions?
A Kazuo Yairi nylon string guitar, a Roland GR-500 Synthesizer Guitar, and a 1976 rosewood neck Fender Stratocaster Guitar.

What do you regard as the lowest depths of misery?
Having to remain an illustrator much longer. Strike that. Being an illustrator as long as I have.

Describe your character?
Euphoric when I eat the bear, gloomy when the bear eats me.

Which Director would you pick to do a movie about your life?
Hal Ashby.

What is the quality you most like about being an artist?
The illusion of life. The ability to apply attention even handedly to all elements of a composition.

What do you most value in your friends?
A kind heart.

Who are your favorite heroes?
The leaders of the psychedelic movement, astronauts, musicians of the 70’s. Tad Golas, Steve Hackett, Bob Fripp.

What do you most dislike in this life?
It would be more practical to list the few things I do like. I do like garden variety of animals: Cats, mice, and birds. I love birds. I dislike the inevitable boredom of committed relationships. I dislike the Protestant obsession with busy-bodies and the money-God which permeates all life and filters all relations in the USA. I dislike the ubiquitous presence of religions in our lives and the presumption of an entitlement to respect all the stupid people with crazed ideas about reality placed upon us. I dislike the Soul-less fat cats who contribute to the pain of our daily lives with their cold greed. Many of those, being people I have to take money from in order to survive.

How would you like to die?
Ripped apart by wild beasts. Eaten savagely by a shark.

What is your Moto?
“Life is a sham.”

SD_Pic_01

Sylvain stands here, in Northern Chile, South of the Peruvian border in a makeshift cemetery by the ocean, standing yonder behind him is the Big Andes Mountains, taken three years ago on a road trip.

SD_Pic_02

Carthage sunset, illustrated for Director, Roman Polanski’s “Pompeii.”

“It would be more practical to list the few things I do like. I do like a garden variety of animals: Cats, mice, and birds. I love birds.”

A journalist once interviewed me at the end of it said, “Before I spoke with you, I had not realized that you basically have a glorified shit job.”

Worthy Companion

DTHW1210_LeftView_RGB

SPECS

13.3” Contiq Companion 2’s last generation had only two models, with the difference being the size of the internal SSD (256 or 512gb), now you have various different builds with price points ranging from $1299 tp $2499 depending on how much memory you need!

New Screen – In what used to be a 1080p 13.3″ screen, you now get 2.5k (2560 x 1440) of screen goodness. It is color accurate up to 73% Adobe 1998 & 96% SRGB. Overall the display just looks much better!

New Power Button – The old power button could easily get turned on accidentally while being carried in the protective case, this can no longer happen as the new power button has a locking slide.

Thicker Power Connection – The power connection on the Companion 1 was pretty small and could be considered delicate, the new power connector is much thicker and seems to fit more solidly inside the Companion 2.

Front Facing Speakers – The speakers in the first generation Companion were not very good…in fact I rarely used them because I could never hear anything. The new speakers are not only much louder, they are facing the user, helping to amplify the sound you hear.

USB 3.0 ports – Now all USB ports are USB 3.0 (You get three in total)

More Express Keys – You now get 6 customization express keys, up from four from the 1st generation. These can be customized per application, so the same button can do different things depending on what application is currently active on your screen.

SD Card Slot – With a full SD card slot, you can now easily backup/store/ offload your images off of SD cards directly onto the tablet…no more need for a card reader…at least with my Sony full frame mirror-less camera.

Input Display – You can now finally use the Companion as a secondary display (works on both Windows and Apple computers). Historically you could use the device to power other displays, but now it can be used in addition to your current computer setup as a secondary Cintiq display (with full pressure sensitivity). This is probably the most sought after requested feature of this the new generation of Companions.

New Screen – In what used to be a 1080p 13.3″ screen, you now get 2.5k (2560 x 1440) of screen goodness. It is color accurate up to 73% Adobe 1998 & 96% SRGB. Overall the display just looks much better!

New Power Button – The old power button could easily get turned on accidentally while being carried in the protective case, this can no longer happen as the new power button has a locking slide.

Thicker Power Connection – The power connection on the Companion 1 was pretty small and could be considered delicate, the new power connector is much thicker and seems to fit more solidly inside the Companion 2.

I am salivating over the Companion 2, I think it’s the best invention since sliced bread, because it enables the user to be able to be apart from the wall socket even though the battery lasts roughly 4.5 – 5.5 hours, it’s worth it! And I am so looking forward to the sale sometime in April, 2015.

Five Stars out of Four. -Ryon Jayne

 

Unboxing the Cintiq Companion 2

The How To:

Most often we wonder how did he/she do that? And then you go to youtube and it’s that simple! Voila! We can create a play list of with some informative videos that might make you want to draw, play, practice or learn. Please by all means email our web ninja at ninja@boardartistgroup.com for any suggestions or videos you can recommend for this topic, thank you.

Here are some links to Storyboarding and creating some good angles:

 

1) Here’s an interview with Steven Spielberg on Storyboarding (1978)

 

2) Storyboarding tutorial:

This video is about choosing angles to make the story through the point of view of character. If you identify with the character, the character becomes more relevant to the viewer’s emotional involvement. To choose what to show with angles and composition Background designs also helps to create schematic of the scene.

 

3) How to make a storyboard:

 

4) How to draw Storyboards with UK artist, Gus Russell:

 

5) Learn how to draw a city with One Point Perspective:

 

6) How to draw with Two Point Perspective: