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Teen Preacher Electric
a film by
g r o o v y f i l m s . b i z
Written,
Directed & Edited by
J o h n H a r t m a n
Cinematography
by
J o h n H a r t m a n
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The "Epic Drama" Behind TPE
My parent's hadn't used
the old (1950s) straight 8mm movie camera since 1971. In 1980, when I was 15, I
filmed and directed a skit about a charismatic preacher (played by myself), with
three friends: Brad (15), and Mike & Tom (both 14). We had our problems...
Naive as we were, it was
basically assumed that when we pulled the trigger and when we heard the motor
running (it was a wind up), we were capturing footage. Having seen the old 8mm
flicks on our family projector, it was obvious a spotlight was required to
illuminate any indoor scene. Even so, we didn't illuminate the scene well
enough. The camera setting or the film itself may also not have been suited for
indoor use...can't say for sure.
After we finished, my father explained, "There was probably
no film in the camera," or, "The film was used up long ago." He said something
to that effect...something convincing me that we didn't capture the action.
Heartbroken I moved on, but never forgot about that day, so long ago.
In 2005, my father had
the two or three hours of Hartman family footage digitally processed onto two
DVDs. The footage was from the 60s and 70s. Our family had expected nothing
more.
In recent months, I've
been filming and projecting with super 8mm, so my father presented me with the
family footage. For some reason, though, he never told me about ever having
developed this cassette from 1980 (and one more cassette that I didn't know
about either, from 1981). For some other reason, these cassettes missed the
digitizing process.
So, you can imagine my
incredible joy and surprise at having seen this film. I always wondered what it
would have looked like, and now, 26 years later, I know. As a filmmaker, this
discovery is priceless because it’s the film debut I never even knew that I had.
At least half of the film
cassette didn't come out (we had no idea that these cassettes only allowed for
two or three minutes). Still, there was about 1.25 minutes of useful footage,
even though we filmed for a lot longer than that. There was enough essential
footage to build the film you see now, Teen Preacher Electric.
Additionally, clips from the 1981 reel and recent super 8mm footage, along with
computer-based special effects, have been included to round out the flick.
John 2-16-06.
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