Magic Bullet is a short-film adaptation of The Cure a feature film script that Errol Schwartz wrote mid-2010. In the process of seeking funds for the feature film, Schwartz decided to make a short and hopefully use it to pique investors interest in the feature. To make this short calling card more compelling he thought, Why not shoot it on a smartphone?
“We shot Magic Bullet on the iPhone 5 and used a specific casing designed by Phocus to mount DSLR lenses to the phone. Because of the iPhones small sensor, shooting at night or in poorly lit places results in very noisy footage. To minimize noise we lit our sets as much as possible without over-lighting. Due to the poor dynamic range of the iPhone, over-lighting will blow out the whites. In addition, in order to ensure that the iPhones sensor would capture workable footage we shot with fast prime lenses. We used two f/1.4 Carl Zeiss lenses a 35mm and 50mm. The faster the lens, the more light gets to the sensor.”
The Filmic Pro application allows you to specify various important capturing formats like aspect ratios, frame rates, audio and video encoding, and resolution, to name a few. A key feature is that you can set and lock focus, exposure, and white balance independently. However, says Schartz, “when we would play back a take, the app tended to drop our settings, making it quite a bit time-consuming to replicate the previous setup. We recorded audio externally with the Zoom H4N. Our grips were homemade and built by our co-producer, Humphrey Bande.”
The film was edited in Premier Pro and After Effects. “I used Red Giants Magic Bullet Looks for the colour grading and used Adobe Audition for post-sound editing. My 15 mid-2010 Macbook Pro froze and crashed a lot during post-production. It delayed me because I didnt know what was wrong Was it the Adobe software? The After Effects plugins? The lack of hard drive space? A virus? After many online searches for solutions, including some frustrating back-and-forth with Adobe, an Apple technician took a peek under the hood and found that my poor old Mac only had 4GB of RAM. I upgraded my RAM to 8GB the largest amount for the mid-2010 Macbook pro. What I also learned is to always edit from an external hard drive this allows you to move between computers and the workload doesnt overwhelm your computers internal disk.”
“Magic Bullet has won prizes around the globe. Schwartz says that is represents the sum of what he learned over a very short period of time four months through online tutorials. You can follow the film on twitter (@MagicBulletFilm) and Facebook (Magic Bullet Short Film), as well as IMDb (http://imdb.to/1aRp3ay).