Next week we go into production for my Tell-Tale follow-up “The Pit and the Pendulum – a musicabre”. I hope to post some on-set diary entries; if I find time; we’ll see…
Either way more news on my next short musical film will be forthcoming, so the time has come to set up a designated Pit and Pendulum page here on Notes from a Composer.
Currently it includes links to previous articles about the project. Over time the page will surely grow, just like the Tell-Tale page has.
To go to the Pit and Pendulum page, click it on the black banner above, or click here.
Next week “The Pit and the Pendulum – a musicabre”, the follow up to my first musical Edgar Allan Poe short film adaptation “The Tell-Tale Heart – a musicabre“, goes into production.
So now is a good time to share a little hint, some visual foreshadowings, of some of the horrors planned for this new film…
What you are looking at are test shots I took with my phone in my bathroom. They will serve as guides for some very particular shots we are planning for “The Pit and the Pendulum – a musicabre”.
Do you remember when I teased this picture of a face cast as a hint of what’s to come for P&P? Perhaps now you can deduce why we needed to make that face cast…
We visited Harvard Glacier. Which is just left of Yale Glacier. And up from Vassar Glacier, Bryn Mawr Glacier, Smith Glacier… in College Fjord, Alaska.
I’m not kidding. There is a College Fjord with about a half dozen glaciers named after ivy league schools, all part of Prince William Sound.
And from Whittier, Alaska, an hour or so from Anchorage, you can take a day trip cruise to those glaciers and more. Which we did, enjoying some grand views and spectacular glacier calvings and fun animal sightings.
The marina in Whittier.
The route we took was almost the same as the dotted line outlined here. We didn’t take the Barry arm, but instead went to the Blackstone and Beloit glaciers (to the left on this map).
The Billings glacier is one of the first we saw from the boat.
Ed being “the King of the World”. That allusion will come back to haunt us later…
Mountain Vistas, Sweeping Inlets, and Alaskan Animals
Turnagain Arm is a narrow branch of Cook Inlet, in the northwestern part of the Gulf of Alaska. It received its name when Captain Cook went down that way, sure he had found the Northwest Passage from the Pacific to Atlantic oceans. He was wrong, and had to turn back again.
Tides are extreme in Turnagain Arm. The day we touristed there it was mostly low tide.
Here are two maps to orient you to Turnagain Arm’s location just south of Anchorage.
Ed, to the right, and his sister Shonti.
A Dall Sheep on top of a mountain…
Zooming back from the Dall Sheep …
… zooming back …
… back to from where I took the pictures of the sheep.
If you happen to be in or near London this weekend, you can see my award-winning short film musical Edgar Allan Poe adaptation (deep breath) “The Tell-Tale Heart – a musicabre” this Saturday at 9:30pm (London time) in an actual movie theater (take that, Covid!) as part of the Romford Horror Independent Film Festival in Romford just east of East Ham (deep breath) in London!
from the Fixion Fantastic & Horror Film Festival in Santiago, Chile!
Or rather, a …
Mención Especial por Música: Danny Ashkenasi por The Tell-Tale Heart-A Musicabre (USA)
(Looks so much sexier in Spanish…)
Further down the webpage they do list the winners in English as well, but I prefer reading the announcement in Spanish (and not just because of the incorrect conjunctions) …
That bear at the top is a bit of a teaser. We’ll see him, and his bear companion, and just how close they got to us, later in the post.
Let’s start at the beginning, driving up to Denali National Park, home to Denali, heretofore also known as Mount McKinley, at 6190.5 m (20,310 ft) the highest peak in North America and third-most topographically isolated summit on Earth after Mount Everest and Aconcagua.
Our first views of Denali were from hundreds of miles away, as it rose over the horizon viewed from the south by a lake.
We were very lucky with the weather. Denali is often obscured by clouds. Only 30% of the time – or 1 out if 3 days – is the mountain visible.
The two days of our travel up to Denali and our tour in the Denali National Park were both one out of the three days.
Denali is an Athabascan word meaning “the high one”.
The Alaska Range, as seen from Talkeetna.
In case you need some orientation…
The hotel in Talkeetna where we caught the above view of Denali boasts this big grizzly.
There’s a Butte, specifically the Bodenberg Butte, in Alaska. It sits north of Anchorage in the Mat-Su Valley, and it makes for a lovely, steep hike and a really good spot on top from which to get some spectacular views of the mountain ranges, river valleys, and glaciers that surround it.
The above and below pictures show Bodenberg Butte in the foreground with Pioneer Peak towering behind.
This picture includes the Matanuska River curving in front.
Here’s a primer on how the Ice Age glaciers formed the region and the Butte.
Here’s a map detail of the region. The red marker points at Pioneer Peak. Matanuska River ambles along Route 1.
First some pics on our drive to the Butte. Byers Peak AKA Matanuska Peak is up ahead.
“The Tell-Tale Heart – a musicabre“, my musical short film Edgar Allan Poe adaptation, has been making the festival rounds since November 2019. And it’s still going strong, even though a one year to 18 month festival run is (so I’ve been told) the maximum one should expect for any short film and I have long ago stopped submitting it to festivals. But Covid 19 disrupted the 2020 festival season and in many ways has stretched it deep into 2021. Festivals postponed or cancelled, screened on-line, put on some version of in-person screenings or managed some combination of these options.
For me, long past the 18 month mark, it appears that the festival run for “The Tell-Tale Heart – a musicabre” is still ongoing, and just looking at June alone, very busy. Now there is another festival announcement to share. The Halloween Horror Picture Show will be screening Tell-Tale in August.
This will mark Tell-Tale’s third screening in Florida. And like its first Florida screening in Dunedin, back in January, 2020, before the pandemic shut-downs, it will be an in-person rather than virtual event. Interestingly, Dunedin is just a hop-skip away from Tampa, where The Halloween Horror Picture Show is located, so it might seem like a bit of a homecoming.
Except that this year The Halloween Horror Picture Show is not taking place in Tampa but will be part of Megacon Orlando August 12-15. Tell-Tale will screen Friday, August 13. Orlando is where Tell-Tale had enjoyed its second Florida film festival screening, albeit virtually, last August at the Orlando International Film Festival.
I expect I will be sharing more about Tell-Tale’s third Florida adventure when it takes place in August. For now, if you plan to be in Orlando then, keep an ear out for disemboweled hearts beating under floorboards. If they sound like cellos, they are courtesy of “The Tell-Tale Heart – a musicabre”.
presenting this June 24 – July 1 in Hollywood, CA.
The Skiptown festival was supposed to take place last fall, but, you know, Covid 19. But now it’s going forth late June, which means it’ll be an even busier festival month for my musical Edgar Allan Poe adaptation than I thought in my last post.
Meanwhile, I’m pleased to share the three nominations “The Tell-Tale Heart – a musicabre” received:
It’ll be a busy festival month of June for Tell-Tale.
On June 5th, as previously announced, my musical Poe adaptation will screen again in London at the Romford Horror Independent Film Festival.
But that’s not all. Also in early June, Tell-Tale is scheduled to play in Cleveland, Ohio, at the long delayed but finally happening International Horror Hotel!
(More on that in a later post too… watch this space!)
Yes, yes, I know, those are daffodils and not cherry blossoms behind me… the cherry blossoms will be the centerpiece of this post though…
Ed and I returned to the Brooklyn Botanic Garden. It’s cherry blossom time. Last year the pandemic closed the gardens, and nobody except for BBG staff got to see the blossoms of the cherry esplanade bloom.
This year the Sakura Matsuri Festival – a weekend affair coinciding with cherry blossom season, with performances and stands and massive crowds – was again cancelled; but the gardens have been open to the public – with limits – so this year the blossoms could be enjoyed again by the public.
Ed and I got our ticket for Sunday morning, which also just happened to be our anniversary. It was an overcast sky, which makes for a less vibrant viewing of the cherry blossoms. But that will make for a different set of pictures of them, since I have already posted sunny views here and here (that last one also includes the Sakura Matsuri Festival) …
Perhaps it’s fitting that this year’s views of the cherry blossoms are not so sunny, but a more cautious burst of color in a grayer world, like a hopeful pink emerging from a long gloom…
The blossoms at the esplanade are in first bloom now. Peak bloom will likely happen by this weekend.
Some tents and amps are set up for musical performances, but not on the scale of previous festivals
The cherry blossoms are of course not the only attractions this time of year. Here are some other views of the gardens than shone even if the sun didn’t.
The last trip I took before the pandemic lock downs was to the London International Filmmaker Festival in February 2020. I am happy to report that my short film musical Edgar Allan Poe adaptation (pause for breath) “The Tell-Take Heart – a musicabre” will be playing publicly, not virtually, in London again, in an actual theater with actual humans in actual seats, at the Romford Horror Independent Film Festival, taking place June 5th and 6th.
I will not be able to attend. As the festival programmer explains: “Because of the period the festival will be running in is still going to be within “social distancing protocol” we are advising that filmmakers do NOT travel in from outside the UK. We don’t want you to incur unnecessary costs, or end up being trapped here because of potential limitations that may occur, this pandemic is pretty much a “moving feast”.”
How apt for a Horror Film Festival programmer to refer to the pandemic as a “moving feast”.
So I will not be able to attend. But those of you living in London and surroundings can see “The Tell-Tale Heart – a musicabre” screening at the plum 9:20pm, Saturday, June 5th, time slot. Perhaps even with a special virtual introduction from yours truly…