OVFM Club Meeting Tuesday October 29th 2013

 

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Just two days before you all don your scariest costumes and go disturbing your neighbours by begging for sweets in the fashion influenced by an age old American tradition (who else could create something so annoying?) in celebration of All Hallow’s Eve, there is the small matter of the next OVFM club meeting which takes in not one, not two but THREE of our long standing annual competitions – The Mike Turner Plate, The Kath Jones Cup and The Vic Treen Trophy

A quick reminder of what is expected for each one:

 

The Mike Turner Plate is open to films with a maximum running time of one minute (or 60 seconds for those of you watching in black and white) on any subject, style or genre. Exceed this time limit and we’ll send the lads round to have a quiet word with you!

The Vic Treen Trophy is a film set to music although we hope you’ll be a bit more creative with the timing and editing of the music to match the beats or the tempo of the soundtrack, rather than just slapping a bit of Slayer or Jay-Z over footage of your holiday in Syria.

The Kath Jones Cup requires a comedy film of no longer than five minutes that has a definitive punchline to it; in other words a short comic sketch if you will. And make it funny. if you can’t just film someone falling over – that always seems to get a laugh.

 

Each film shown will then be scored by the club members with their top three personal favourites (should the number of films exceed this total) ranked in order of preference in their respective categories on the night with the winners to be announced at the Oscars next year.

Please reply to this post if you will be providing a film for any or all of the competitions (you are not limited to just one, you can enter all of them if you so desire), along with the running time, picture ratio (16:9 or 4:3) and media format (DVD, Mini DV, etc) as well as which competition it applies to. This is a tremendous help in planning out the time allotment of the meeting.

Good luck to all who enter their films this year. Here’s to a potentially fun and bopping evening!!

OVFM Club Meeting Tuesday October 15th 2013

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This is it folks – the final qualifying round of the annual Top Ten competition!

It has to be said that the response to this year’s competition has been disappointing with just twelve, yes TWELVE entries over the past four rounds. We know some people leave it to the last minute but we didn’t expect most of you to leave it to the last minute! To that end we hope to have a last minute surge of contributions to boost the entry total (otherwise the final will be a short one)  but not too many or we’ll never be able to view and judge them all.

Members who have been drawn to provide entries for this round are:

 

Charlie & Nellie Caseley

Richard & Jess Pugh

Ian Menage

Freddy Beard

Simon Earwicker

Hugh Darrington

Peggy Parmenter

John Ransley

Colin Jones

 

Please reply to this post if you will be providing a film at this week’s session, along with the running time, picture ratio (16:9 or 4:3) and media format (DVD, Mini DV, etc). This is a tremendous help in planning out the time allotment of the meeting.

If you don’t then have a film ready please let Brenda Wheatley know so that she can try to find someone else to fill the gap in the evening. If you missed your given round please bring your film along to this session, but it will only be shown after those drawn for that round, if there is time.

The results from the previous rounds can be found HERE.

Good luck to everyone who enters a film!

OVFM Conquers Kent Film Festival 2013!!

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OVFM Conquers Kent Film Festival 2013!!

by

Mike Shaw

Members of Orpington Video & Film Makers collected three major trophies and a commendation at the prestigious Kent Film Festival (held Saturday 28th September, in Canterbury).  The winning films were ‘Steam and Smoke’ (Best Photography) by Sam Brown, ‘Village Mosaic’ (Kent Award) by Barbara Darby,  ‘Enid Blyton – the Beckenham Years’ (Best Documentary) by Mike Shaw and Footprint Productions, and ‘Eastbourne ‘ (Commendation) by Mike & Jo Coad.

And the winners are....
And the winners are….

 

Congratulations to all the winners!

OVFM Club Meeting Tuesday October 1st 2013

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This week’s meeting is a special one as we pay tribute to two of our dearly departed club members, Mike Turner and Derek Allen, both of whom were highly

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prolific film makers.

We will take a look back at some of the films they made, both individually and together, and share our fondest memories of these two much missed members of our club.

It is hoped that members of Mike and Derek’s families will be in attendance on Tuesday night and it would be nice if you all were too.

Thank you.

OVFM Autumn Show 2013

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OVFM Autumn Show 2013

 

When the members of OVFM work so hard at producing films it seems only fair that they should get the best showing possible. At club meetings their work is projected onto a large screen, but when we put on a show at an outside venue we’re also able to attract a much larger audience.

Since the success of our annual Spring events we have been able to include this annual Autumn event to our social calendar.

This year’s Autumn Show will take place on  FRIDAY 1st NOVEMBER at 7:00 for 7.30 pm

VENUE –  Methodist Church, 19 Sevenoaks Road, Orpington BR6 9JH

DIRECTIONS – GOOGLE MAP

WEBSITE – http://www.orpingtonmethodist.org.uk/welcome.htm

Club members get in free but for others the tickets are £5 – which includes refreshments – and are available from our secretary Freddy Beard on 01689 813616 or by e-mail at beardfreddy@gmail.com

If you wish to help publicise this event please download this PDF version of the poster HERE

And if you want sample of what to expect at our shows then please take  a look at our showreel on our YouTube page HERE

For an entertaining and sociable evening get your tickets a.s.a.p. and bring along your friends and family!

See you then!

OVFM, Amateur Film Making For All

Directing The Talent
Directing The Talent

Orpington Video and Film Makers, or OVFM for short, is a friendly amateur film making club in the Orpington area. OVFM members make dramas, documentaries, comedies and experimental films.

OVFM has a large membership of all ages and abilities and can number amongst its ranks experienced award winning film makers and complete novices.

OVFM club film
OVFM club film

By its comprehensive programme of competitions, projects, club films and fun evenings OVFM actively encourages the members to get involved and to turn their own creations into films they’d be proud to show.

Orpington Video and Fim Makers are a club with a long history and is renowned for being a great place to improve your film making skills. The friendly members are helpful and enthusiastic and only to happy to share their knowledge and experience.

Amateur club film
Amateur club film

The regular club meetings are a mix of the social and the practical, with opportunities to show films, discuss film making and learn about technique.

To help newcomers to amateur film making OVFM runs coaching evenings. These evenings focus on the skills needed to make the best of your camcorder or equipment in general. Sound recording, lighting, editing and camera control are all covered as well as touching on the broader subjects of script writing, directing, and the multitude of skills necessary for a successful amateur film.

Crew Portrait
Crew Portrait

If you want to turn your shaky and ponderous video efforts into entertaining, informative and even exciting films why not come along and join us. We would love to see you.

OVFM Club Meeting Tuesday September 17th 2013

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After the disappointment of just two entries in Round Three of the annual Top Ten competition we hope that now the summer holidays are effectively over that there will be a greater response for round four. We hope you’ve been busy with your cameras catching the sights and sounds of whichever glamorous locale you invaded during this traditional period of getaways and relaxation, and we look forward to seeing the fruits of your cinematic labours.

The members who have been drafted for this round are as follows:

 

Bob Vine

Annabelle Lancaster

Alan Smith

Jim Morton-Robertson

Sam Brown

Andy Watson

Brenda & Roger Wheatley

Pat Palmer

Brian Pfeiffer

Mike Graham

 

Please reply to this post if you will be providing a film at this week’s session, along with the running time, picture ratio (16:9 or 4:3) and media format (DVD, Mini DV, etc). This is a tremendous help in planning out the time allotment of the meeting.

If you don’t then have a film ready please let Brenda Wheatley know so that she can try to find someone else to fill the gap in the evening. If your film is ready early please feel free to bring it along to any Top Ten night and if there is time we will show it.

If you miss your given round you can bring your film along to a later one, but it will only be shown after those drawn for that round, if there is time.

The results from the previous rounds can be found HERE.

Good luck to everyone who enters a film!

Guest Speaker – Tim Jones

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Let me tell you, if you missed our guest speaker Tim Jones, you have my sympathy, because you missed a real treat!

Tim is a Senior Lecturer at Christ Church College Canterbury in the Film and TV Dept. but more importantly than that he has a long association with OVFM. He was just twelve years old when first permitted to attend the club with Dad Colin. He rapidly became a fixture, not only making his own prize winning films but acting in club films too.

Tim’s informative and entertaining talk kicked off with some wonderful old clips of the club, ‘Meet the Members’, with a very youthful Colin, ‘The Making of Jumble Sale’, with a fascinating behind the scenes glimpse at the club in action, and then a snippet from ‘Jumble Sale’ itself showing Tim as a boy in his Star Trek outfit, height of fashion at the time I believe!

Tim remembered with fondness a regular club competition that involved in-camera editing and just one roll of cine film. The film maker didn’t see the results of his labours until it was shown at the club meeting. Talk about challenging! One film that particularly inspired Tim was a time lapse movie made by his dad of sky and clouds set to classical music. We watched Colin’s original ‘Skies’ and then a bang up to date film by Tim called ‘Night Garden’. Filmed over three years using a dSLR camera, long exposures and time lapse techniques. The resulting video was absolutely beautiful, with ethereal clouds racing across the star studded night sky, and plants twisting and turning in the foreground. Tim explained that as the camera was left trained at the sky for up to six hours at a time his main problem was condensation forming on the lens.

After a lively tea break, with Tim expertly fielding our numerous questions, we continued to the second part of the evening.

I think it’s fair to say that Tim is passionate about amateur film making and amateur film makers. Over the years he has devoted himself to seeking out and preserving the precious cine films made by amateurs in and around the Canterbury area. In his quest he has discovered a genuine treasure trove of historically important, socially fascinating and artistically significant footage.

Inevitably Tim’s own film making took a back seat for a while. The stories of the personalities he’d discovered desperately needed to be told though, so as soon as he had the time Tim started work on a documentary. Actually not ONE documentary but THREE about amateur film makers in the Canterbury area…simultaneously!

First we saw a clip from ‘Seeking Sidney’, about Sydney Bligh an amateur film maker from the 1920s and ’30s. Tim’s documentary features Helen, Sydney’s grand-daughter, as she goes on a journey to discover more about the man she never met. Part of the legacy of 16mm film that Sydney left behind is some unique footage of Count Zboroski. He was a racing driver who built the original Chiity Chitty Bang Bang, the car that Ian Fleming later used for inspiration for his story. Shortly before the Count died in 1924, in the Italian Grand Prix, he had a narrow gauge railway built around his estate. Sydney Bligh’s film of this railway is the only record of it that exists.

Tim showed us a clip from ‘Crooked Billet’ a 1930s film drama made by the Canterbury Cine Club, which Sydney was a member of. The club built it’s own large studio and its own sets and spared no expense in making the best amateur films it could.

The second of Tim’s documentaries, ‘CACS Film Unit’, features two members of the Canterbury Amateur Cine Society remembering the fun they had in their club in the 1950s. The old clips of Canterbury are absolutely fascinating as well as historic, and the enthusiasm of the two men for the club that was a big part of their lives is plain to see.

The third film is ‘Peter Watkins’. This name may be familiar to some as he is a film maker of high regard. Having started out as an amateur in the Canterbury area he went on to travel the world and make important films where ever he went, in fact he is still making films. When approached by Tim about the documentary he wished to make Peter Watkins was positive and encouraging…but with a couple of conditions! No, he wouldn’t be interviewed and no, he wouldn’t allow any clips from his films to be used! Never-the-less, going by the excerpt that we were shown, Tim has used his imagination and skill to produce a revealing and highly entertaining documentary that tells the story of a very special film maker.

In the excerpt we saw crew and actors talking about ‘Dust Fever’, a Western, filmed in a sandpit in Kent. The only copy of this film was sadly stolen and all that remains are black and white stills and Super8 cine filmed by the crew.

Films by Peter Watkins that you may know or have heard of are ‘The War Game’, about nuclear war, which the Government of the time put pressure on the BBC not to show it for many years. And ‘The Forgotten Faces’, about the Hungarian Revolution, which you can see on Youtube (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QtiZFnrOnrc).

With the evening at an end Tim had one last message for us, to record the memories of our club members for posterity and it’s faces and activities too. After all who knows when someone like Tim might want to make a documentary about US!

Thanks Tim for a very inspiring evening. I hope you’ll come back and keep us updated.

OVFM Club Meeting Tuesday September 3rd 2013

speaker

This week’s meeting sees us handing over the reigns to someone else as we welcome a guest speaker to share their wisdom and knowledge of filmmaking.

Stepping up to the plate is Tim Jones, who will be familiar to some of the longer tenured club members as he was once one of us.

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Tim Jones

Tim, son of Colin Jones, nephew of Thorvald Nlodvisson, the son of Gudleif, half brother of Thorgier, the priest of Ljosa water, who took to wife Thurunn, the mother of Thorkel Braggart, the slayer of Cudround the powerful, who knew Howal, son of Geernon, son of Erik from Valdalesc, son of Arval Gristlebeard, son of Harken, who killed Bjortguaard in Sochnadale in Norway over Cudreed, daughter of Thorkel Long, the son of Kettle-Trout, the half son of Harviyoun Half-troll, father of Ingbare the Brave, who with Isenbert of Gottenberg the daughter of Hangbard the Fierce, first joined OVFM when he was just a foetus and was making films before he could even walk. After graduating from nappies Tim won his first SERIAC award and became the one of the youngest members ever of the IAC to become a Fellow. Now able to walk by himself and earn his own pocket money, Tim is a senior lecturer at Christ Church College Canterbury in the Film and TV department, which is located round the back of the main building next to the dustbins.

Tim will be sharing with us memories of his time as an OVFM club member along with an illustrated talk on the origins of amateur film making. And if there is time perhaps we could encourage father and son to recreate their famous fan dance that won them second place in the “All Comers Humiliate Yourself For A Plastic Trophy Worth About 2 Pence” contest at Butlins in 1974 (narrowly beaten by Pinky the flatulent hamster).

You have been warned.

Sunshine, Showers, Slopes and a…SPITFIRE!

A Fuzzy blow-up of a Fabulous Flying Machine
A Fuzzy blow-up of a Fabulous Flying Machine

 

Sunshine, Showers, Slopes and a…SPITFIRE!

With ingredients like that the dish de jour must be the OVFM Ramble!

The gang gathered early and there was a palpable enthusiasm to get on and conquer what we would later call ‘The North Face of Shoreham Hill’. But for now we were blissully ignorant of the trial ahead and we set off with a spring in our step and a wag of our collective tails…energetically led away by Teddy the dog.

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The weather was lovely and the company lovelier as we strolled through glade and cross meadow with the picturesque vista of the downs before us. Deborah led the naturalists (no! I don’t mean those who undress in public!) in a hunt for butterflies while the rest of us put the world to rights and enjoyed the entertaining antics of our four legged companion.

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Just SOME of the butterflies spotted and photographed by Deborah
Just SOME of the butterflies spotted and photographed by Deborah

But then the hill struck! With the first flight of rough and steep steps stretching out before us, seemingly into the sky, the ramble claimed it first victims and we reluctantly bid farewell to two of our party.

Our Four Legged Friend Andy
Our Four Legged Friend Andy

 

Be Careful You Don't Step on any Nature!
Be Careful You Don’t Step on any Nature!

 

A Real Teddy Boy
A Real Teddy Boy

As for the rest of us we soldiered on. Clamp-ons were not needed…but only just, and by hook and by crook we muscled our way to the top. The climb was worth it (yes it was!) as the view from the top of the Darenth Valley was breathtaking (or was it that I was still out of breath!)

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We dallied awhile at the chalk cross and took in the scenery. The chalk cross was created in 1920 as a memorial to the local men killed in action during the First World War. Naturally our thoughts turned to war and the conversation of those old enough to childhood memories of the Second World War, bombing raids, doodle-bugs, rationing, evacuation and all the experiences and feelings associated with that time of turmoil.

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a039OVFMramble13

Rested and eager to reach our goal we set off downhill and into Shoreham Village, following the bank of the River Darent along by the old mill and behind the charming cottages with their tiny gardens that seem to dabble their toes in the cool water of the river. An angler we passed boasted proudly of the multitude of different fish he caught in that river but we spotted nothing but the odd leaf floating by.

Arrival at the pub meant time to break for refreshment. With a plan hatched to lunch and relax and then meet-up for afternoon tea in the Church we went our separate ways.

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The churchyard offers a great place to sit and from certain angles you can spy the chalk cross on the hill where we had been just a short time before. It’s a lovely view even when the storm clouds gathered ominously overhead. Fortunately the downpour, the torrential downpour, occurred while we were safe and dry inside the church enjoying our cakes, scones and tea…thanks ladies of Shoreham Village!

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Eventually we had to admit that we couldn’t eat anymore and that we must reluctantly take the bit between our teeth and begin the return journey. As we began the Shoreham Hill climb our ears pricked at the sound of an aeroplane, a very special aeroplane, and as we gazed up in wonder a beautiful Spitfire executed a turn in the blue sky above our heads! The sound was fabulous, and the sight of the sun glinting on it’s propeller a perfect picture. What a great climax to our ramble! The Battle of Britain Memorial Flight had been at an event at Biggin Hill over the weekend so it seems likely that this lone time traveller from seventy odd years ago was part of that party.

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With our spirits lifted we were given wings of our own and practically flew up the hill with Brenda at the head of our formation. Even the sun shone down on us to speed our way. Actually it was hard work tramping back…the hill definitely seems steeper since the last time! But we did eventually make it. Well done all.

To the OVFM Ramblers, I salute you!
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