Thursday, November 26, 2009
Documentary crazy thoughts and pie charts...
Monday, November 23, 2009
Documentary snapshot at a glance

Wednesday, November 11, 2009
Article from the Airdrie Echo
An Airdrie father and son have combined specialties to develop a small business which creates and distributes an innovative educational product.
Greg Lammiman, a retired teacher, joined forces with son Dallas Lammiman, a talented 20-year-old filmmaker, to form Movie Makers – an Airdrie based operation that recently completed its second of two educational films for children.
"Subitize Me: Amazing Math" is a 20-minute adventure film starring 12-year-old Airdrie twins, which focuses on the fundamental math skill, subitizing.
Subitizing is mandated in the new math curriculum, but for most people, including teachers, it's a term we have never heard before, Greg said.
"Subitizing is quite simple," he added.
"It means to quickly see how many without counting.
"Perceptual subitizing is when you instantly see one group of objects, such as dots on a dice."
An individual can only subitize up to five or six objects in this way.
Greg said perceptual subitizing is when you quickly combine numbers of objects to arrive at the total.
"When you see seven on a domino, you may recognize six as on a dice, then see one more and arrive at seven," he added.
So with Greg's skill set as an educator and Dallas's creativity, they went to work on the project that took 18 months to complete....
Sunday, November 8, 2009
Saturday, November 7, 2009
"Pro Foam Fighter" pilot episode
I shot this friday before supper, spent a few hours lat night and an hour this mooring to make this up. Tom has got web series thing stuck in my head, and I am wondering about doing something like this every once in a wile. It is a fairly niche audience, so I don't know how well most of you will follow what is being said, but critiques are very welcome.
Thursday, November 5, 2009
Behind the scenes on Subitize Me: Amazing Math (Article)

Subitize Me was shot entirely on a green-screen stage, and takes place in fully CG sets made from scratch and contains over 250 visual effects shots. In the end, every shot seen in the film is a visual effects shot in one way or another.
Now, for all the geeks who just need to know, we used Blender for all our 3D work, and Apple's Shake for the compositing. I did a little work in Apple's Motion as well, and a few of the titles were done in Final cut pro itself.
Wile that is impressive for a film of this kind, effects and cool eye candy do not make a movie, what is really special about
this film is how he handled the meet of the film. The script.

This is a math film, a sit down and learn something film. I wanted the film to be more than numbers, it had to connect with kids. As a child I was not a math lover, so I knew I wanted to make sure we had the kids attention. The math concepts in Subitize Me are powerful, as we made the film I found that my math skills were even improving in little ways. Story engages people, and that includes children. Stories are a powerful teaching tool, a vehicle that communicates ideas and principles strongly. The kids want to watch films like this, they get engaged by the story and learn all kinds of important lessons along the way.

I always try to use everything I have at my disposal to make sure our films are accessible and engaging to kids, little things like making sure the camera is positioned at a child's hight rather than adult hight can make big differences. In Subitize Me I created worlds that were full of color, and fit in to a child's point of view as much as plausible. We even endeavored to write dialog that, wile being grammatically correct, was also what you would except to hear from child. There is a lot of little details to think about that can easily be missed.

Subitze Me was a lesson in time management for us, we created a project that was much larger and more extravagant than it should have been from a business perspective. That is really good thing for people who will be using this product, they get a lot of bang for their buck.
Written by Dallas Lammiman - Project Artistic Director.
For more information see www.MovieMakers.ca