|
|
| 
|
 |
 |
 |
 |
|
|
|
MAIN
CAST
Ben – PHIL THOMAS
Norris – CHRIS COURTENAY
Steve – STUART MANGAN
Keith – TOBY WEIDMANN
Laura – KAREN FISHER-POLLARD
Emma – SHARON GOSLING
Trevor – DAVID WILLIAMS
Florence – AMANDA LIBERMAN
The Tube Killer – PAUL SHUBROOK
Megan Andrews – LETICIA FERRER
Zombie#1 – NIK JONES
Zombie#2 – JOHANNA THALMANN
Zombie#3 – SIMON LLOYD
Old Ben – PAUL TERRY
Couple On Date – TIM WASS & WENZIE NG |
THE
CREW
Promo Art: Digital Illustration/Graphics – HELEN
STIMPSON
Artwork – DAVID LEWIS
Model Photography – CLAIRE SHEARMAN
Model – MARTIN BRETTLE
Special Effects & Make Up – CATHERINE McAULIFFE
& PAUL TERRY
Lighting – LETICIA FERRER & SCOTT CHARNICK
Music by PAUL TERRY
Soundtrack Engineer – JAMES BELLAMY
Story Developed by TERRY WILLIAMS
Executive Producer – SCOTT CHARNICK
Produced by PAUL TERRY
Written & Directed by PAUL WILLIAMS |
'TUBE
KILLER WALK' CROWD
Ana Gillespie, Louise Richards, Damien Ball, Neil Morris,
Jessica Hepburn, Rebecca Kemp, Cookie Rameder, Gary, Sarah-Jane
Rawlings, Sam Coote, Lisa Maguire
ZOMBIE HORDES
Jess Pavirajah, Boris Thomas, Cristina Piriz, Danielle
Pepper, Marcus Scudamore, Martin Stiff, Stephen Dawkes,
Martin Eden, Ness Coleman, Anne Marie McBride, Alex Camley,
Daniel Walters, Paul Castleton, Jason Marchant, Cookie
Rameder, Franklyn Howe, Kate Lloyd, Ross Lawson, Mitchell
Ward, Paul Kinch, Becky Clark, Dave Meads, Matthew Watson,
Emma Duncan |
|
| DEAD LINKS |
| How
do you make a love story/time travel/horror epic?
Click on the links below and find out how. |
| TOTAL
TEMPORAL DISPLACEMENT From brain to page. |
| MERELY
IMPROBABLE From page to screen. |
| A
LOVE STORY From chords to soundtrack. |
| VIDEO NASTY Images and video. |
| PARADOX
PREMIERE The movie event of 2003. |
| WHAT
I DID ON MY HOLIDAYS Stuart Mangan recounts his time on set. |
TERMINATE Web only scene from Paradox.
|
| TOTAL
TEMPORAL DISPLACEMENT |
What
is a paradox? According to the battered old dictionary
at home a paradox is ‘that which is apparently absurd
but is or may be really true.’ And I think that
just about covers it.
Paradox is a love story/time travel/horror film.
In short: Back in 1999 Ben gets struck
by lightning and starts to see visions of the past, namely
vision of a murder know as the Tube Killer who stalked
the underground in 1949. The flat Ben lives in was the
Tube Killers lair. He also meets a girl who lives in the
flat in the future. He is warned by two time guardians
to stop mucking about with time as it has serious consequences.
Ben doesn’t listen and uses information from the
future to meet the girl from the future in the present
but this ends the future. The Tube Killer escapes out
of the psychic scar that Ben has been using to travel
through time and starts killing again in the present.
Ben ends up an apocalyptic future, infested with the soulless
corpses of the Tube Killers victims. Then Ben helps kill
an older version of himself and finds that his friends
have turned into freedom fighters in a zombie city. And
then things get really complicated...
|
| A
MULTI-LAYERED, MIXED-GENRE MISH-MASH |
Paradox started life as a horror film idea I had after wondering
around in the cold after a clearly mad tour guide on a
Jack The Ripper walk. It was bitter, it was dark, it was
a part of East London you wouldn’t want your worst
enemy to be caught alone in, especially in the dead of
the night. But the mad tour guide (with hair far too curly
for his own good, and a bright yellow puffer jack far
too puffy than was clearly necessary) made the tour come
alive and made the biting wind not seem to matter. It
was the birth of Norris and the germ of an idea that would
grow into Paradox.
It started as a simple ghost story/slasher film. Tourists
on a ghost walk around the capital were slowly being taken
and killed by the very killer they thought had died decades
ago. The killer started with the stragglers at the back,
the shadows taking them. They disappeared unnoticed by
the rest of the crowd, all of them hypnotised by the over-enthusiastic
tour guide. More and more go missing and finally the crowd
realise they are all in mortal danger and run for there
lives – but it’s too late. The tour guide
laughs manically as he feeds his master, the hungry ghost
of the Tube Killer. As a result, what starts to appear?
Zombies! Hurrah!
There’s something about zombies – no, scratch
that – there’s something about zombie films
that just lends itself to a low budget. I have never seen
a big budget zombie fest (I’m ignoring Resident
Evil on purpose because it stunk more than a room
full of decomposing skunks). The Evil Dead, Bad Taste,
28 Days Later, Dawn Of The Dead all low budget gore
films that use zombies to great effect. There’s
something inherently fun about dressing your mates up
as decomposing corpses then slicing their heads off with
a spade – or is that just me.
That was the initial idea a nutshell. Meanwhile, in my
clogged head, many ideas clashed and bled into one another
and as I worked on the Tube Killer other stories wove
themselves in.
The big issue we here at EHP face on a daily basis is
the lack of that papery thing most people call money.
We need it and have none of it. To make a film, even a
short, is an expensive endeavour and EHP has dipped into
overdrafts, credit cards, other peoples wallets to scrape
together the cash to make the films we have. With this
in mind I started to think how we could make a low budget
film with a large scope? Gladiator in a shoe
box. The idea was to set a story in one place, but at
three different times – past, present and future.
One set – big story – low budget. This lead
onto the prickly problem of time travel!
Films and TV series that have attempted time travel or
messing around with time: Back To The Future 1, 2
& 3, The Time Machine (duh!), When Peggy
Sue Got Married, Minority Report, Twelve Monkeys, Time
Bandits, Bill & Ted’s Excellent Adventure, The
Terminator, Timecop, Donnie Darko, Star Trek 4 –
The Voyage Home, Groundhog Day, Quantum Leap and,
of course, Doctor Who. This is by no means all
of them, this is just a selection; some good, some bad,
some spectacularly awful; I’ll let you decide which
category each of the above fall into. They all do one
thing though, and that’s prove how difficult time
travel is to handle. There are many rules and time travel
can easily get away from you and get very complicated
and covered in paradoxes before you can scream ‘88
MILES PER HOUR!’ A classic example of this is Terminator and you can read how in our web-only scene from the forthcoming
improbable marathon that is Paradox (oh, the
shameless plugging).
With time travel it’s easy to slip up, to suddenly
have a gap in your plot the size of a black hole that
is sucking the audience in and leaving them with an expression
of total bafflement – remember the expression you
had after watching the Architect scene in The Matrix
Reloaded? Same one. How did I manage to avoid the
Black Hole Suck (official term)? I ignored it. In fact
I went even further, I made it part of the story. As a
twisted result of this Paradox, with all its
time travel, alternate versions of the future and people
killing older incarnations of themselves it sort of makes
sense. Sense in its own improbable, inexplicable, mind-bending
way.
So, that explains the time travel and the zombie bits,
what about the romance? Now, I’m a romantic at heart.
Forget all the selling your soul, possessed pens, and
the living dead stuff, I want to make romantic comedies.
In all seriousness as I have said before, we as an audience,
watching film, always need to relate or root for someone
on screen. The audience needs to see something and say
to themselves ‘I know exactly what you mean’
or ‘I know someone like that’ or ‘I’m
like that’, and when your dealing with the realms
of Sci-Fi and fantasy you have to anchor your story to
reality. The love story and the friendships in Paradox have to work otherwise the story falls apart. No-one’s
going to watch zombies devour a screaming victim and tutt
to themselves thinking ‘The same thing happened
to me only last week’. But everyone’s been
in love, been in a friendship, been dumped, been the dumper,
been hurt, been infatuated, been drunk, been struck by
lightning. In order for the audience to come on this journey
with you, through a zombie infested, time-twisting adventure,
they have to believe. That’s were the love story
comes in.
So, that’s how to write a time travel/horror/comedy.
Now, how about filming it? In 2003 we made a trailer and
some completed scenes... just got to film and edit the
other two hours and we're laughing!
|
| MERELY
IMPROBABLE |
From
page to screen: the creation of a promo trailer.
‘How do we make this thing?’ we thought to
ourselves. If we were just selling the script we would
hock it around film production companies and funders until
someone said ‘Kid, let’s make a movie!’
– to complete this picture the character should
be chopping on a fat cigar. However, we don’t just
want to sell the script, we want to make it – that’s
a whole different approach.
We are selling not only the Paradox script, but also the
idea that we are the ideal people to make it – future
filmmakers! We have to make funders believe in EHP as
much as we do. So, to accompany the script, we made a
promotional trailer and here’s a short summary of
how.
‘OH SHIT INDEED, MY BOY!’
Back in the cold January of 2003 we gathered a group of
friends, family and actors and shot a selection of scenes
from the script of Paradox. PT and I pulled out of the
scripts key scenes, pivotal moments, and anything we thought
was funny and, with the help of Scott Charnick, ordered
them into a shooting schedule.
Now, it's known that a film is written three times: once
when you write it and redraft, redraft and redraft; second
when you shoot it, and compromise, improve upon and rewrite;
and thirdly when you edit, re-shoot, test screen and re-edit.
The upshot of this is that the focus of the film, over
time, should become sharper and sharper until it could
fry an ant. Sometimes this works – sometimes it
doesn’t. Also, the main point to remember is that
a film is never finished – it’s just left.
You could go on refining, re-editing and re-shooting forever,
but you have to reach a point where you are happy (the
catch 22 is that you are never happy).
The point I am trying to reach is that filming a script
is usually more an exercise in preparation and orgainsation.
It’s easy to get lost and forget what you have filmed
and what needs to be filmed – this is were the strict
preparation comes in. So, while PT, Scott and I bashed
the scenes we were going to film into a few days shooting,
we were also trying to assemble a cast!
A few months before shooting EHP had arranged a read-through
of the Paradox script, gathering a group of actors
with the help of EHP regular and superstar Amanda Liberman
(who later went on to play Florence). The read-through
produced a mixed bag, but the two wonderful things it
did produce was the beautiful Karen Fisher-Pollard (who
played Laura) and the faultless Chris Courtney (Norris).
The role of Steve I’d written specifically for Stuart
‘The Man’ Mangan, a fact he still can’t
believe today. That was half the cast, but we still needed
more and, most importantly, we needed a leading man!
The trailer was going to be very crash, bang, wallop,
and I knew in my head that it was more important for the
people to look the part because of the short amount of
screen time they were going to have. They had to convey
a lot in a short space of time and, in my minds eye, I
had a clear vision of them - I only had to find them in
real life. PT found Keith and Emma when he looked up from
his desk at work and saw Toby Wiedmann and Sharon Gosling
(Keith and Emma). We were almost there, but still no leading
man!
Ben was the pivotal character, the man the whole story
revolved around, the linchpin, the keystone, the –
the leading man. We searched high and low and finally
found that the answer and the person was staring me in
the face. Phil Thomas and I worked at the Science Museum
to make ends meet, me with the film company and Phil with
his design work. He was the only man who spent hours sculpting
his hair to make it look messy – I’m sure
this is a contradiction. He looked the part, he was the
part, he didn’t want the part!
It
took a while to convince Phil he was the ideal man for
the role, and even days before the shoot he was convinced
I’d find someone else – he always considered
himself an alternative. Truth is when it comes to using
non-actors there’s a little rule I follow: actor
can play any role you give them, non-actor can play themselves
or a heightened version of themselves. Phil was Ben, he
just didn’t know it yet.
The
cast had been cast, the best bits of the script picked,
the locations prepped (PT’s flat and Amanda and
Karen’s flat) – we were ready to film.
We
had ten days to film selected scenes and it all went very
smoothly thanks to a fantastic cast and, of course, PT
and Scott. Sure lights blew, cast forgot their lines (Phil
was the main offender), things went missing or weren’t
there, but it didn’t matter. There was such a good
feeling about the project that everyone gave 1000% (yes,
I know that’s not a percentage).
Some
of the highlights included:
Phil’s
First Day. It would seem simple – walk
down the hall, stop, drop the comics you’re holding,
pick up an iron, CUT! It took 12 takes.
Tim
and Wenzie. Kissing is never an easy thing to
do, but kissing in front of two men, one of which is shoving
a camera in your face, is next to impossible. Tim and
Wenzie came through and Wenzie didn’t even flinch
when PT flicked fake blood in her face.
Toby
Wiedmann. I write some impossible speeches sometimes
– ok, most of the time. The character of Keith had
some tough dialogue to wade through, but Toby nailed them
all.
Make-up. Thanks to the talents of Catherine McAuliffe and PT the
zombies never looked so dead.
The
Zombie Horde. Ah, the power of film. Before the
shoot EHP went on a recruiting drive for zombies. We needed
one shot of a few of zombies walking towards the camera,
at night, down a dark alley. What we got was 30 people
stumbling down a rain soaked cobble street. I will remember
that moment for the rest of my life.
Norris. Chris Courtney got the character of Norris more than even
I did, and I created him (Norris that is, I can’t
take credit for Chris). He breathed life into my words
and made acting look easy (which, trust me, it isn’t).
My
Dad. Look, my dad can not act! He delivers his
lines in this strange flat tone and when the camera’s
on him he goes as stiff as a board. However, after the
premiere, the one character everyone remembered was Trevor
played by my dad. I wish I never wrote that ‘pretzel’
line.
Karen
and Phil’s Bedroom Scene. It took us a
couple of hours, the room was as smoky as a jazz club
once we’d finished, but they worked so well together
the scene came out great.
Amanda’s
Monologue. Last shot of the ten days; 10.30pm,
one of my stupid long monologues, Amanda trying to get
her head round it, me wanting it in one shot. It took
a few attempts but we got it, and my dad has comic-timing
in his blood.
Bubble
Bath Burst. Phil bursting out from under the
suds was a great moment – and he did it three times.
The
Whole Damn Experience. Each time I get behind
a camera I forget how much I enjoyed it the last time.
After a shoot your always worried about the shots you
didn’t get, the converge you forgot, that the days
of filming become a distant memory. But when your back
behind the camera you remember why you're doing it. Why
you spend all the time writing, preparing, organising.
The film had an amazing bonding experience for cast and
crew. You have such an intense time you feel like you’ve
know everyone forever and are sad when the film is wrapped.
I guess that’s why, soon after it’s all over,
my fingers are dancing over the keyboard again, coming
up with a new way of getting everyone together again.
PW
26/02/04
|
|
 |
 |
 |
 |
| Ben
and Emma get personal. |
Ben
and Laura get even more personal. |
I
promise you there are some zombies in this. |
Norris
wins the stare out competition. |
 |
 |
 |
 |
| Oh
look, it's "Keith". |
Florence
pouts for Britain. |
Ben
and Keith find out Darth is their father. |
We're
in a tight spot! |
 |
 |
 |
 |
| Tramp
1 Zombie 0. |
Tramp
2 Zombies 0. |
We're
in a tight spot! |
Not
so cozy. |
 |
 |
|
| Trevor
takes offense to the 'shirts and jumpers don't mix'
comment. |
Bath
and wash my clothes - perfect! |
|
|
|
|
| |
|