EDITOR/COLOR ARTIST STEPHEN HENS LAUNCHES KIDDKOLOR; COLLABORATES ON ROB BENEDICTS’ NEW FILM “THE SIDEKICK,”
MAKING ITS WORLD PREMIERE THIS WEEK AT COMIC-CON
Los
Angeles -- (July 18, 2013) – Editor/Color Artist Stephen Hens has
launched KiddKolor; a new “micro company,” providing crafted edit, color
and finishing services to the entertainment industry. Hens and
KiddKolor have collaborated with Writer/Actor Rob Benedict and director
Michael Weithorn on their new featurette “THE SIDEKICK,” making its
world premiere at Comic-Con 2013 later today at 3 pm in the Indigo
Ballroom, followed by a Q&A with the filmmakers.
To view a trailer from the new film, with color by KiddKolor, go here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-mvoZsCw3v4
“THE SIDEKICK” (www.thesidekickproject.com)
is a 30-minute featurette, directed by Michael J. Weithorn (“The King
of Queens,” “A Little Help”) and Writer/Actor Rob Benedict
(“Supernatural,” “Waiting...”), featuring a powerhouse cast including
Ron Livingston (“Office Space,” “Swingers”), Lizzy Caplan (“Mean Girls,”
“Cloverfield”), Jordan Peele (“Key and Peele”), Martin Starr (“Knocked
Up,” “Superbad”) and Jason Ritter (“Happy Endings,” “Parenthood”). “THE
SIDEKICK” is both an offbeat take on the super-hero genre and an
allegory about the struggle to find your purpose in life even as you are
being...re-purposed.
“When we set out to make this featurette,
one of our primary mission statements was that it not look like an
independent short,” comments Filmmaker Rob Benedict. “We wanted this to
appear to be like any big-budget, super hero feature that could morph
into a banal world where people just happened to be super heros. This
put an enormous amount of responsibility on our Colorist Stephen Hens,
who was the hero of our postproduction journey. He was able to elevate
our project into this amazing realm where you could shift between a show
down on a rooftop to four guys talking in a Laundromat; from an evil
lair to a boring lunch at a sushi restaurant. He brought character to
the vision of the movie, which we honestly thought could not be done.
Without Stephen this would just be another short. He helped to make it
more than that.”
KiddKolor was hired for “THE SIDEKICK” by Nathan
Adams of Cinematomic, a company providing full-service post-production
for web, television and theatrical projects. Cinematomic leverages
relationships with freelance artists working from micro-companies or
home studios, a concept that Adams calls “in-sourcing.” “By
decentralizing post-production, we’ve created a ‘facility-free’ solution
for clients on more sensible budgets to achieve high-quality results.”
Adams believes that “micro-companies” like KiddKolor and Cinematomic
represent the evolution of post-production.
“I was thrilled when
Nathan called me to do finishing work on ‘THE SIDEKICK,’” says
KiddKolor’s Hens. “I found Rob and Michael to be incredibly open and
collaborative. They had shot the film with two very different looks, and
after an initial pass, it was clear that it wasn’t working. We did a
second pass that got us closer. Then it was time to throw the playbook
out the window. The filmmakers let me do my own pass, and we decided
together to just focus on making this a beautiful film, which I believe
we did.”
With KiddKolor being a “micro company,” Hens was able to
take on the project and work within the filmmakers’ budget. “The
economic structure of KiddKolor has given me the opportunity to return
to being an artist, taking on projects that I feel passionate about
since I am not beholden to bill by the hour to a multi-million dollar
facility. This also gives me the freedom to collaborate one-on-one with
my clients until we get it right,” explains Hens. “Because the cost of
technology has dropped so significantly over the past few years, with
KiddKolor, I don’t have to compromise on quality. We are running the
same technology found at any of the top-name facilities out there today.
Clients’ budgets can be applied directly to what you see on the screen,
not to maintaining outdated technology or infrastructure.”
In
addition to “THE SIDEKICK” featurette, KiddColor also recently
collaborated with production company atSwim on a new Jeep commercial
with Director Tom Gatsoulis. “Stephen has always been the creative end
of many projects we have done together,” notes atSwim Producer/Partner
Daniela Humi. “Coming back to his new company was like coming home. We
always loved to work with Stephen, who brings new ideas on how to make
any project better. atSwim had already worked with Stephen on a
five-spot Acura campaign, so there was no thought about using anyone
else. Stephen is considered part of the atSwim family. He is always
available, always creative, and always understanding to the production’s
needs.”
Adds Director Tom Gatsoulis: “Stephen is certainly very
creative, but he is also intuitive. On the Jeep spot, I gave him my
vision for what I wanted to see, and he showed me several looks; all of
them were in the zone. We had a lot of inclement weather on that project
-- shooting in the desert, which had sunshine in the afternoon, and
then gray skies and snow in the morning. Stephen was able to make the
whole piece look very cohesive overall, but also maintain skin tones and
make it look very real. For someone who shoots car commercials like me,
who cannot control the skies unfortunately; working with Stephen is a
dream.”
Hens is currently working on a children’s educational web series for www.CHALKPreschool.com
inspired by the unique teaching approach of the actual brick and mortar
CHALK Preschools. Created and produced by Capozzi Productions, due to
debut this fall. KiddKolor is also working on a profile piece on Kelia
Moniz for Ford. “Another component of KiddKolor which has been very
refreshing,” adds Hens, “is the diversity of projects I’ve been able to
work on already – a featurette, a commercial campaign, and a web series.
I am finding that clients have a lot of great content that they just
don’t know what to do with. The distribution platform is no longer the
driving factor. Often times now clients say: ‘We have this piece of
content. Let us know what you can do with this.’ As an artist, I love to
hear that.”
In terms of technology, KiddKolor keeps its
standards at the same level as multi-million dollar facilities. To
achieve this, the company utilizes Avical, one of the most trusted names
in calibration in the industry. Avical utilizes the same technology and
expertise to calibrate all of KiddKolor’s systems that the studio uses.
That means client’s picture will look the same at KiddKolor as it does
at Company 3 and it does at Sundance, etc. Technically, the KiddKolor
studio is calibrated by David Abrams of Avical, who works with such
studios as DreamWorks and Paramount. KiddKolor is built on a technology-
based foundation. Equipment and support choices offer the broadest
palette of creative tools that work seamlessly in the background, so
that the artist and client can focus on elevating their content not on
antiquated workflow conundrums. The KiddKolor DI theater is a perfect
example of this, running a Sim2 DLP Darkchip processor 1080p projector
that outputs 14 foot-lamperts; the same as theatrical specs at a local
cinema. Driving the projector is a custom-designed Hackintosh "The
KiddKolor Corrector" with the 4th fastest possible configuration for the
Mac platform for real-time playback and rendering all in one energy
efficient enclosure.
Stephen Hens is an editor, colorist and finishing artist.
http://kiddkolor.tumblr.com
www.facebook.com/thekiddkolor.com
Monday, July 22, 2013
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