Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Valentine's Day: "The Perfect Square"


Something I thought of in class and later created on Paint Shop Pro called, "The Perfect Square." Geeky, I know...

Tuesday, February 9, 2010

Franklin Hall, A Work In Progress



Construction workers stood out walking amongst students trying to settle into their destinations in Franklin Hall today.

If I didn't know any better I'd say I had walked into a room resembling one of those Midwestern towns having been struck by a tornado. An entire metal grid remained exposed due to missing drop ceiling tiles, leaving wires and silver central ventilation ducts exposed for the students to bear.

"Great...," murmured a disillusioned instructor after looking at the ill equipped room she was going to be in for the next 18 weeks.


Below is a picture of a newly renovated Franklin Hall lecture room still needing some construction touch-ups.

Monday, February 8, 2010

Little Love (Short Film)






Here's the trailer for my 2010 short film called, "Little Love."


Margin Films director Quentin Lee of "Ethan Mao" and "Drift" directed this project shortly after the post-production of his 2009 feature, "The People I've Slept With."

Without giving too much of the plot here's my description of the film: It's about the choices people make (good or bad) that challenge the relationship amongst a close group of friends. Pursued desires following consequence. Oh yeah, did I mention I'm doing "tasteful" nudity in this.



Please visit the film's main website for information regarding festival screenings:
Little Love Film

You can also help support this project by searching for "Little Love" on Facebook.

Actors -
Michael Massei as "Andy"
Derek E. Villanueva as "Rafael"
Travis Oakden as "Markus"










LA City College (Pictures)

Los Angeles City College (Holmes Hall)- February 8, 2010.

I took the following three pictures using my Canon Mark II after purchasing a red 77mm Hoya filter for my 24-105 EF zoom lens from Freestyle, today.

This semester I signed up for a Philosophy 9 class with Instructor Julio Torres. A course covering modern symbolic logic. Ugh, another course dealing with math and stuff that is rather abstract for me.Before reaching my destination, I found a couple of vacant rooms in Holmes Hall that were completely empty at 3:20 P.M. for what I thought, were perfect shots.

I took advantage of the window lighting in the first two pictures.

The third picture is from "Tully's" Coffee shop located on campus. Coincidentally, Jose Acosta (my recent subject matter) happened to be the patron in the shot.






Sunday, December 13, 2009

The 80-year-old In The Room

So I picked up the first Collegian issue and I assume, that you were baffled like I was when I read Meuri Picazo & Kari Van Horn's article titled, "Winter Intersession Cancelled." Are you kidding me? Not only does the College Board of Trustees increase the enrollment fee to attend this campus, but increased fees to attend a campus that is practically a construction zone with never-ending projects.

LA City College now offers Los Angelinos less programs than before. What a way to welcome 80 years in business. What's to celebrate? Seriously, If you pick up any of our old archives located in the Chemistry Building, Room J-106, or in the library you'll see for yourself the beginning of our campus and the eight decades it has been running. 1929 was an unprecedented year to commence a college, specially a year that marked the first Wall Street crash. Imagine starting a community college during a time when the country faced one of its toughest financial crisis. But the impossible happened and now it looks like our campus is struggling to keep a steady heart-beat during another troubling time for our state and country.

Well, here we are walking across an 80-year-old campus that offers students a non-existent academic in sports. Administration has decapitated the entire department over-night, fortunately leaving behind the Volley Ball team to represent the whole sports department as a basket-case. No offense volleyball players and fans, I don't watch any of your games, but that doesn't mean I don't care about you. I do.

I can't help but say that this campus reminds me of an unhealthy 80-year-old. At this age, we're lucky to be even alive. A senile old-man who has happened to lose track of its purpose and who can barely remember its own name. LACC is that senior citizen whom has run up his bills. Millions in debt. Broadly illustrating that it too mismanaged money during our youthful healthy years. LACC has failed to allocate money on the side in case of that financial emergency. Academically, the school is and will be under a microscope for a period of time to prove that it can meet accreditation. That's like being under hospice care because we're not able to prove that we can be on our own. This campus was on top of its game many years ago, but now it is visibly showing signs of age.

The People I've Slept With

Independent filmmaker Quentin Lee currently attending LACC discussed his provocatively titled film, “The People I’ve Slept With,” a sexually charged comedy about a young promiscuous woman determined to find the father of her child after receiving news that she is expecting a baby. The 89-minute comedy just premiered at the Honolulu International Film Festival.

Quentin explains how he and screenplay writer friend Koji Sakai came up with the title of their current project.

“When we were developing the script, we threw a bunch of potential movie titles onto the table and the one that everyone fell in love with was, ‘The People I’ve Slept With,’ because it was catchy and to the point,” Lee said.

Lee met Sakai at a professional networking meeting. After reading some of his previous works Lee decided to collaborate with Sakai with new script ideas. In this film the creative duo bring to life the carefree playgirl, Angela, played by Karin Anna Cheung from the movie “Better Luck Tomorrow.” In this new age role, Cheung fearlessly bares it all for the cameras without remorse. To keep track of all her lovers, Angela takes a Polaroid of the people she has slept with and uses these photos to create baseball-like cards that showcase the prominent sexual features of her former partners, like the pepperoni-nipple guy, the five-second guy, the nice but boring guy, or the well-endowed guy.

Audiences in the theater laughed and cringed at the same time when they witnessed Angela's unorthodox ways in collecting DNA samples to help her piece together who the father of her baby.

“To prepare for this role, I decided to change my diet because I knew the character was going to get pregnant,” Cheung said in a recent phone interview. “I turned to organic foods, minimized dairy portions and took out junk food completely for six months in order to get that pregnancy glow.”

Gabriel, Angela’s flamboyant gay best friend is played by veteran-actor Wilson Cruz, who has appeared on film and television, “He’s Just Not That Into You,” and “My So Called Life.”

“Half-way through the first shoot, I felt like I knew [Cruz] for a while. He is naturally amazing,” said Cheung.

This is the sixth feature-length film directed by Quentin Lee which premiered Sunday, October 18 at the Dole Cannery Theater in Honolulu.

In 2004, the Hong Kong native wrote and directed “Ethan Mao,” a dramatic film about an Asian teenager excommunicated by his family after his mother discovers a homo-erotic magazine in his room. The 88-minute film takes audiences through young Mao’s shoes as he faces the consequences of homophobia in the family and documents his descent into the life of a hustler.

The central theme throughout my work usually relates to someone’s quest for a connection,” Lee said. “It’s basically the running theme of my life, which I believe is a theme of humanity. This quest is often painful and arduous, filled with drama, fear, comedy and passion.”

All of Quentin’s films have been produced outside of major film studios and describes the film industry as one of the hardest businesses to pursue. The writer/director/producer further comments on the financial perplexities that a film encounters before production. In his case, as a director and writer, he faces an uphill battle in finding producers to invest and jump-start an “indie” project.

“Making an independent film is hard all the way from production to distribution,” he said. “It takes so much talent; work and faith to make an indie film that may or may not do well. Luck also plays a big factor.”


The director mentions his recent plunge into the world of documentaries.
“0506HK” is the title of his personal documentary that helps him understand Hong Kong, years after his migration to the United States. The eight-part documentary reviews real life accounts of people that have made the cross-continental transition from U.S. to Hong Kong, post England’s 1997 decision to hand over the region to China.
Readers can watch snippets of Quentin’s work by visiting his website at www.marginfilms.com or on YouTube to catch his trailers for his work.