Tag Archives: documentary

Sea Monkey documentary

mattkprovideo.com/2018/09/26/sea-monkey-documentary/

Remember those “sea monkey” ads that ran in comic books seemingly… forever?

http://www.fanpop.com/clubs/childhood-memories/images/39875237/title/sea-monkeys-ad-old-comic-book-photo

Somebody did a youtube  video documentary on this scam/novelty:

 

 

 

History of Ralph Bakshi

mattkprovideo.com/2018/08/30/history-of-ralph-bakshi/

The History of Ralph Bakshi (part 1) – Animation LookbackThe History of Ralph Bakshi (part 1) – Animation Lookback

 

https://www.ralphbakshi.com/

Ralph Bakshi’s imdb

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ralph_Bakshi

 

 

 

 

Vidor movie description

From a very old version of  a website I haven’t had in years.

http://web.archive.org/web/20010309013751/http://www.kordelski.org:80/vidor2.html

 

The Story:
On September 1st, 1993, Bill Simpson, 36, was murdered 11 hours after leaving  the housing complex in the notoriously all white and allegedly racist town of Vidor, Texas. Simpson was the last African-American to leave Vidor after a failed government experiment in forced integration.
 

Because the blacks in the Vidor Housing Complex received so many death threats, Simpson’s death is shrouded in mystery and conspiracy. After a wave of criminal trials and investigations by the Beaumont Police, The FBI, The Texas Commission on Human Rights, and The Texas NAACP and The Vidor Police, most of the story’s participants were under court gag order or went into hiding.

 

A five year investigation by filmmaker Matt Kordelski,
now attempts to answer the question,

“What Really Happened?”

 

An exhaustive search has resulted in exclusive interviews with many eyewitnesses and participants, most of whom refused to speak up at the time of the murder.

The list includes Vidor residents, friends of Simpson, local and state government officials. Even representatives of the “Invisible Empire,” (Ku Klux Klan) and the right-wing Nationalist movement all agreed to speak their minds on this story.

 

Featured interviews include:

William Hale, Director of the The Texas Commission on Human Rights.

Richard Stewart, the Houston Chronicle reporter who covered this story from beginning to end and whose family befriended Bill.

Ross Dennis, the president of the Vidor Housing Complex Tenants’ Association.

Gerald Guilbeaux, Vidor resident who was featured on the Montel Williams Show exposé on this story.

Doris and “Skeeter” Haire, members of a Vidor Christian group that saved Simpson from a Beaumont Crack House.

Tom Oxford, attorney for East Texas Legal Services.

Mike Daniels, the lawyer who initiated the “Young vs Kemp” suit that led to the forced desegregation of 36 counties in East Texas.

Klan Grand Dragon Charles Lee and some local and regional Klansmen.

Lydia Faye Washington, the woman who saw Simpson’s murder and could identify the shooters. She gave her only interview ever for this documentary.

The Conspiracy:

For many people, Bill Simpsons death has been given an all too easy answer. Police say the death was simply a random drive-by shooting by a local Black street gang. Stories swirl around the area that the shooters knew who they were shooting, and some even say a secret witness saw a white man pull the trigger.

Simpson had received countless death threats from white supremacists in Vidor, and some of his fellow Vidor complex residents say they heard of a specific plot to kill him, which a local Klansman even boasted of participating in.
The Klan:

There were 5 known Ku Klux Klan factions operating in Vidor. The two most important were the White Camelia Knights of the Ku Klux Klan from nearby Cleveland, Texas, led by Grand Dragon Charles Lee. Lee is the Klansman whose face adorns the famous Texas Monthly cover “Vidor: Inside Texas’s most hate filled town.” Michael Lowe comes from Waco, Texas, and represents the Texas faction of the national Knights of the Ku Klux Klan operating out of Harrison, Arkansas.

Another group is located right in Vidor, The Knights of the White Kamellia. Note the different spellings of “Camellia,” a southern flower. The Vidor group uses a “K” and the Cleveland group uses a “C,” although of similar ideology, these groups are not officially aligned.

In the Summer of 1993, after the announcement that Vidor’s housing complex would be desegregated, local Klansmen and Klan supporters called in “reinforcements” from other Klan groups in Texas and the surrounding region. They organized several large rallies in Vidor and at the county courthouse in Orange, City, to generate opposition to the integration of an infamously all-white town. They were also accused of conducting and/or arranging acts of intimidation in and around Vidor to let both blacks and whites know the Klan wasn’t going to take this sitting down.

Criminal charges were filed against Klansmen from the various factions, but most were unprovable. The Camellia Klan allegedly drove their bus through the housing complex brandishing weapons. Someone hung a “White Power” sheet on a highway overpass. Threats were made to the city leaders who publicly supported integration and various anonymous threats to blow up or burn down the complex were made.

Klan leader Michael Lowe participated in a publicity stunt arranged by an Australian version of “A Current Affair” wherein Lowe showed up at Bill Simpson’s door to “talk.” Klan leaders Charles Lee and Michael Lowe were both sent to prison for short jail terms, not for any particular criminal activity but for refusing to surrender their secret membership lists.

BST

mattkprovideo.com/2018/08/19/bst-2/

 

 

http://web.archive.org/web/20010205145200/http://www.kordelski.org:80/resume3.html

“Blood, Sweat and Teeth,” © 1999, One Horn Productions.

Executive Producer: Vic Feazell, Director: Adam Warren, Lead Shooter and Editor: Matt Kordelski.

“Vale Tudo.” Its a Brazillian word that means a fight where you use everything you’ve got, no matter how unconventional, to succeed. We found ourselves saying “Vale Tudo” a LOT while making this independent movie.

This video takes a look into the life of an ambitious young athlete, (David “Rhino” Rivera) training to become an “Ultimate Fighter” and his experiences at his debut fight in Macon, Georgia. It took about a month to shoot and just under five months to edit.

I was NOT the director, I was one of 3 creative forces at work here. Adam Warren (the director,) was still a local Austin celebrity because of the hype from his independent film Rhinos, and met Rivera while judging a “hardbody contest,” and convinced the Vic Feazell, (the Rhinos producer) to bankroll this documentary. Adam wanted a slick MTV type production, Vic wanted to concentrate on the fights, while I wanted an “introspective” PBS style documentary. Like any great compettition, I’d like to think we brought out the best in each other and the 3 way struggle helped the film.

We looked at the most acclaimed fighting documentary, “Choke,” as well as many other “Ultimate Fighting Championship” (UFC,) and “Extreme Challenge” tapes and came to the conclusion that what made the best of them work is when they focused on WHO was fighting and not just the violence. The “Rocky” movies, especially “Rocky III” get you involved in the characters and you WANT to see the hero win and get an emotional satisfaction from seeing the villain humbled (pro-wrestling mastered this decades ago). I think this is why pro boxers hold a pre-match press conference so that the fans can see them argue and boast.

While David Rivera was neither hero nor villain, we knew we had to capture his humanity so that the audience would be emotionally invested in seeing if he won or lost.

We shot most of the interviews and training scenes on a BetaCam UVW 100B wi th either natural location lighting or a basic Lowell light kit. Adam was also running a handheld mini-DV most of the time. We built up a stock pile of footage of Rivera at Jiu Jitsu class, a boxing gym, and interacting with his family.

While Adam Warren was an inexperienced director, he was an awesome “producer” in the sense that he knew how to pry open doors and get people to cooperate that we couldn’t otherwise. He made instant friends with a lot of the fighters and got them to relax and agree to in-depth interviews and got them to let us follow them into their dressing rooms and into the ring.

The Macon City Auditorium has a 360º balcony, so I set up the Betacam on a tripod to get a basic master shot. Adam had his mini-DV on a steadi-cam and Chad Nell was getting extra footage on a hand held Hi 8. We used the auditoriums normal lights, but afterwards I wished we had been more aggressive in getting the auditorium staff to shut off the house lights and use their spot light. At first I thought the hand held cameras were a bad idea, and we should just stick with theTripod bound BetaCam. However, when we got into editing I saw how Chad and Adam’s shots taken from right next to the ring gave the scenes an intimacy and immediacy that the wide shot lacked.

One potential problem became an asset that I have deliberately duplicated many times since. Chad left the “date and time” turned on while he shot, so some other best shots had amateurish numbers across the bottom and were theoretically un-usable. It broke my heart that the best close ups couldn’t be in the movie. I transferred ALL of the DV and HI-8 to big 90 minute Betas, brought them into the Avid (MC1000,) and started to delete footage I knew we’d never use. Before I dubbed the footage back to tape, I made a last ditch effort to save those golden Hi-8 shots. After several failed experiments, I came up with a way (okay, I’m sure lost of other editors were doing this way before me, but I did come up with it on my own) to reduce the color saturation to zero, increase the contrast, and use a 78% mask wipe on the horizontal edges, and VOILA! It looks almost identical to letterboxed, Black and White 16mm documentary film. The letter boxing hid the “date and time” and the B&W effect gave that footage a gritty film look. Its’ hilarious to me when I read reviews that rave about the “film” scenes, and how those parts are so much better than the BetaCam scenes. Its consumer grade tape thats had its picture quality reduced even further! I also rendered some of the scenes through Adobe After Effects to add radial blurs to draw attention to some of the best punches and kicks. I even tried to “film look” some of the BetaCam footage, but except for some rough hand held work, most of it was obviously doctored video tape.

It was extremely difficult find the right balance between story and action, and theres no real way to please everybody. I’ve gotten wildly mixed reactions from folks who have seen it. “Not enough fighting” “Too much fighting,” “Too much music,” “Not enough music.” I’ve learned what kind of criticisms to take to heart, and what to dismiss someones personal preference. A lot of the feed back was kept in mind when we shot and edited the follow up movie, “Rage in the Cage.

Rare Old HD Special Effects And Action Scenes

mattkprovideo.com/2018/08/13/rare-old-hd-special-effects-and-action-scenes/

At 1.28 that looks pretty real. I am assuming / hoping its a camera on dolly track and someone tugs it on a robe at the last second. I think the footage is speeded up.

2.40  I think thats Hitchcock’s STRANGERS ON A TRAIN

Strangers on a Train (film)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strangers_on_a_Train_(film)

I 3.22 we see the words “dan marruffo ”

I googled “dan marruffo  race car movie”

and found :

The Dan Marruffo footage is 2 minutes in….  I suppose thats documentary / newsreel footage of a real race.

 

I’ll keep searching and keep you posted.

Green Screen Airplane Model

mattkprovideo.com/2018/08/02/green-screen-airplane-model/


<p><a href=”https://vimeo.com/34719856″>A Small Trip To The Making Of Visual Effects – Miniatures Effects</a> from <a href=”https://vimeo.com/toupin”>TOUPIN</a&gt; on <a href=”https://vimeo.com”>Vimeo</a&gt;.</p>

 

Behind the scenes documentary showing how filmmakers used a combination of old timey models and practical effects mixed in with green screen and cgi.