Name: Anthony Carpendale
Age: 36
Star sign: Scorpio
Home town: London
Currently based:
Hove/Brighton.
Occupation:
Freelance film-maker
(camera operation,
direction, editing,
post production).
How do you get your
name out there?
Social networking,
video hosting sites,
blogs, screening
events, and some new
projects will hopefully gain some
word of mouth.
Have you been busy?
I (recently) took a two-year
hiatus when my girlfriend was
diagnosed with kidney failure.
I tried to keep working, but soon
secondary conditions became
too complicated and I performed
her dialysis every day for a year.
We’re aiming to be super-busy
from now on.
Current assignments:
I’m finishing off some
projects from years ago,
including comedy-horror
music videos for unsung
geniuses Dissolved and
Thumpermonkey Lives!
Otherwise I’m focusing on
new plans, including an
anthology horror feature
I’m currently writing.
Alongside those
projects I’ll be experimenting
with collective film-making,
some of which will also be
anthologies. I’m also working
on a documentary with my
girlfriend Helen about organ
transplantation and donorship.
I donated a kidney to her just
shy of a year ago and the whole
experience showed us the
potential for a documentary.
Shooting where?
UK this year. I would love
to shoot in Japan, as it’s an
amazing-looking place. I made
an overloaded short out of the
random footage I took six years
ago, but wish I’d shot a feature.
What types of productions
have you mostly shot?
Mostly short films, music videos,
performance films, gigs and
show reels. The films I’m not
embarrassed about are on my
webpage.
You say you deal with ‘the
micro budget guerrilla side of
things’. Tell us more!
I’ve always liked to improvise
and shoot hand-held on the
fly, capturing whatever looks
most interesting in a location
(often without permits) or a
performance without being
restricted by highly scheduled
shooting scripts. Shooting
micro budget means crews are
tiny or non-existent. It can be
exhausting due to having to take
on multiple roles including post,
but creativity and energy can be
at the forefront.
What was your first ever
shooting job?
Dole Scum, a short film I made
without a crew in 1999, shot
on a temperamental clockwork
Bolex 16mm camera that I had
no real clue how to use. The script was based on a very funny
UK underground comic strip, and
I managed to dupe the Prince’s
Trust into giving me funding by
convincing them that the film
was a worthy bit of social realism,
when in reality it was a stoner
comedy about unemployed
slackers. It looks ropey now, but
was fun to make.
Most recent, interesting
assignments?
I’ve been shooting French street
artists Generik Vapeur, who drive
around on giant cameras and
hang full-size cars from a steel
washing line with giant pegs. I
also made three improvised short
films in 48 hours as part of a local
film challenge. It proved how
easy it is to shoot my style on a
DSLR.
Current equipment you use?
What editing systems do you
use?
I am currently shooting a lot
with the Canon 550D due to its
versatility, lightness and lens
options. Ideally I’m looking to
get the 5d Mk II or 7d as soon as
possible. It’s fantastic that you
can now get beautiful results on
such low-cost cameras.
That said, I do miss the
ruggedness of the camcorders
I used to shoot with, such as
the Sony PD150 and the Canon
XM1. You could toss those
things around and shoot in the
crappiest weather conditions
and they’d still keep going.
Other gear you have access to?
Old 16mm film cams such
as Bolex and the Russian
Krasnogorsk, various Super 8,
Canon HV30, and a Fisher Price
Pixelvision PXL200 toy camera,
which generates soupy, grainy
black-and-white visuals recorded
onto cassette tape.
Equipment “wish list”?
RED cam primarily, in whatever
version I can get my hands on,
with a nice set of primes.
What piece of gear do you wish
someone might make?
I’m all for miniaturization and
objects that can morph into
something else, so some kind of
Steadicam/Slider /tripod combo
that you could fold up and stuff
into a back-pack would be nice.
I am looking forward to the day
when affordable DSLRs can shoot
at 4K or higher resolution, on
memory cards that can hold 24
hours of footage (I like to film
continuously.
Best thing about your job?
Just the ability to be creative
and work with interesting, like-minded
people.
Contact details:
T: 011 44 (0)7837 886094
W:
www.vimeo.com/antcarpendale