| FUNERAL
ARRANGEMENTS |
| EHP's
first feature film project. Was making it a walk
in the park or a total nightmare? Find out here
and click on the links below for more Wake
related joy. |
THE
WAKE ON TOUR
Where and when is
it showing? Find out as The Wake tours
the world. |
THE
PREMIERE
Find out all the gossip from glitzy screening. |
BUY
IT NOW!
The DVD and other Wake goodies available
from the EHP shop. |
THE
WAKE POSTER
Click here to see Mirrored Image's poster for the
film. |

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| CAST:
Callum - DANIEL CARTER-HOPE
Hannah - BRIGITTE JARVIS
David - CHRIS COURTENAY
JJ - FRANCÉ COSTELLO
Marcus - DANIEL MCLEOD
Miss Musgrove - KATHLEEN KIMI
Terry Adams – DAVID ADEANE
Donald Jacobs - STUART OLESKER
Dan – JOHN COOPER-DAY
Aunt Madeline – ANNE ETCHELLS
Matthew – MATTHEW DUQUENOY
Mr Pepper – NATHAN GRIGGS
Tina – VICTORIA JOHN
Greg – JAMES BARRON
Anna - NOTZARINA REEVERS
Marie – KAREN HURLEY
Callum’s Client#1 – IAN CONNINGHAM
Callum’s Client#2 – JAMES JEFFREY
Mum
in Park – MARIA BARROWS
Child#1 – ROSIE BARROWS
Child#2 – SORREL BARROWS
Child#3 – TANSY BARROWS
Child#4 – VIOLET BARROWS
DOCUMENTARY:
Professor Trussell – LUKE DIXON
Alex Quentin – SCOTT CHARNICK
Brodie Smith – STUART MANGAN
Kylie – LAURA-ROSE KAVANAGH
Tracy – LOIS KING
Cabbie – GLEN LEE
Chief Inspector Curtis – GEOFFREY ODDS
Dancer – VICTORIA GILLMON |
WAKE
EXTRAS:
TIM WASS
ALISON WASS
DAN KAMENSKY
DAVID LEWIS
HELEN STIMPSON
BRIAN TERRY
PATRICIA TERRY
HAMISH MCGHIE
COOKIE RAMENDER
SCOTT CHARNICK
VICKY CHARNICK
LIAM ROBERTS
SHARON ROBERTS
DAVID WILLIAMS
DAN KAMENSKY
JAY CUNLIFFE
STANISLAW PALEWEK
JULIA COLEMAN
CREW:
Make Up - PHILIP CARSON
Still Photography – SANTIAGO ARRIBAS PEÑA
Sound Technician - ELINA KOKKONEN
Camera Assitant - LIATTE MILLER
Production Assistant - LIAM ROBERTS
Edited by THE BOYS
Production Design HELEN STIMPSON & DAVID LEWIS
Director of Photography - EUGEN GRITSCHNEDER
1st Assistant Director - JOHANNA THALMANN
Executive Producer - SCOTT CHARNICK
Produced and Scored by PAUL TERRY
Written and Directed by PAUL WILLIAMS
Duration: 93 minutes
Shooting Format: miniDV |
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THE
CHRONICLES OF A TRUE WYRM HUNTER |
Story:
Paul Williams Photos: Santiago Arribas Peña.
Way
back in the mists of time, in January 2004, I wrote
a script called The Wake. Little did I know
back then that it would take over two years of my life
and become Evil Hypnotist Productions’ first feature
film.
Having completed five shorts, I wanted to move into
the area of feature film production. I always found
shorts very restrictive. Whereas some people thrive
under these constraints, I always seemed to end up trying
to compress a feature into a short. I wanted to see
if I could tell a story over a broader canvas, explore
character development and, most importantly, tell a
good story. |
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The
inspiration for The Wake came out of two events
that changed my life and affected me deeply. In the
space of a year I lost my mum to cancer and a close
friend to illness. Before that year I’d never
been to a funeral – let alone a funeral of somebody
I cared about and loved. After being to two I saw the
effect death had on people and on myself. The damage,
the scarring – but also the hope. Death makes
you seriously look at life. What you are doing? Where
you are going? My mum and my friend Phil were both inspirational
people and they will forever push me to keep going and
stretch myself.
When I sat down to write The Wake I wanted
to talk about death, but not in a depressing way. We
all know death is painful, but I wanted to explore the
other side of the coin. How death can change you in
a positive way.
I came up with the idea of the figure of Donald Jacobs,
a man who spends his life providing for his family,
working every hour to keep his wife and kids in the
lifestyle to which they’d grown accustomed. However,
by doing so he’d lost contact with his family
– alienated himself from them and himself. So,
he decides to change his life. Not in a small way, but
in a dramatic, mythical way. He tears up his office
and makes himself a suit of armour – dressing
like his favourite fictional character Sir John Greystone.
He then mounts his steed (office chair) and heads out
onto the streets of London to perform heroic deeds. |
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I
wanted to explore how his actions affected people even
after his death. How, just because somebody has stopped
breathing, they don't stop influencing and inspiring
people. At his wake the people that seem to know Donald
best are not his friends and family, but the people
who encountered him in his eventful last few months.
They know him as an urban hero, a man of wise words
and powerful actions.
When
a lonely man, Callum, accidentally stumbles into the
wake, he becomes embroiled in the families lives and
in particular the life of another lonely woman, Hannah.
I wanted the characters of Callum and Hannah to portray
the opposite ends of the theme I was exploring in The
Wake. In broad terms Callum represented cupid and
Hannah represented death. They are the light and dark
of the story, but also the grey in-between when we learn
that they are very similar to each other. The Wake
script told the story of these three characters, intertwined
around Donald’s wake. |
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Once
a few drafts had been hammered out, with the help of
the editing skills of Paul Terry, the script was ready
to be sent out to see if we could drum up enough interest
to get it made. I wrote the script knowing we were going
to produce the film ourselves, without a big budget
– or a budget, so I made sure all the scenes were
sent in places I knew we could shoot in. So the huge
final shoot out on the International Space Station had
to be cut. We secured a great cast and crew who committed
themselves on the strength of the script and the story
we were trying to tell.
The
role of Donald Jacobs was taken by my old lecturer,
and supporter of EHP since its formation, Stuart Olesker.
The difficult role of Hannah was snapped up by Brigitte
Jarvis, who relished the prospect of getting her teeth
into such a twisted sister. Callum was harder to cast
– we needed someone to carry the film, someone
to act as the audience inside the world of the story.
Dan Carter-Hope was a friend and actor who physically
resembled Callum, but he was more of a comedic actor
- Callum was very much the straight man. We considered
other actors, but no-one seemed to fit as well as Dan.
I gave him a copy of the script and talked him through
the character. Dan came onboard with great enthusiasm
and didn’t mind playing it straight (only while
the cameras were rolling though). |
| The
rest of the cast fell into place thanks mainly to the
help of two of the cast members Kathleen Kimi (Miss
Musgrove) and EHP regular Chris Courtenay (Dave the
dentist).
I
sent the script to my friend Johanna Thalmann who, at
the time, was in her final year at the European Film
College in Denmark. She was looking for projects to
work on after she graduated, but I didn’t expect
her to pick mine – or to bring three colleges
from the film school (Eugen Gritschneder, Liatte Miller
and Elina Kokkonen) to help make The Wake.
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| In
an ideal world we would have had a longer pre-production
period, but when you have no budget you have to make do.
So a month before the August shoot we got the actors together
and did script read-throughs and, picking out key scenes,
we got certain actors together to develop their onscreen
relationships. While this was happening we were finalising
locations. In the end we used my dad’s house, offices
in the Science Museum (were I worked part-time), Brigitte’s
flat, Dave Adeane’s flat, a mini, and a small scout
hall in Essex. |
| I
met my crew the day before we started shooting. Not
ideal. If you can’t form a good relationship with
the crew then the film is doomed – especially
one they are doing for the love of the script and coffee
and cookies. The good news was that after a awful first
day’s shooting (nothing to do with the cast or
crew just the heavens above for raining and raining
and raining), we all fast became friends and those friendships
drove us on to make The Wake the best film
we could with all the limits we had.
The
very short three week shoot was divided up into three
sections. First was Hannah and Dave’s story –
which we shot in the first week. At the weekend we started
to shoot Callum’s story. The second week was the
wake itself. We shot the principal characters and the
speeches during the week and then on a crazy Saturday
that I will never forget we got in all the extras we
could muster and shot with the background action. It
had to match in the edit to make the audience believe
that it was all shot at the same time, that the hall
was always full of people. We had no time to stop and
think if it would work, we just had to trust that we
had shot it right. During the hall week we also spent
two days in a cramped toilet, with two actors, a director
of photography, a sound person, a director and a very
hot light. The final week was Donald’s story,
finishing Callum’s and any pick ups we could do.
After a exhausting, inspiring, caffeine driven month
principal photography for The Wake was finished. |
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Everyone
went home and the core of EHP (myself, Paul Terry and
Scott Charnick) sat down to watch the hours and hours
of footage we had to see if we had a film. What we had
was a lot of footage. By Christmas 2004 we assembled
a rough cut that came in close to two hours and, most
frightening of all, had bits missing! The main part
that was not in the first cut was the important Donald
Jacobs documentary, which would provide this urban hero
with a past. All we had filmed during the shoot was
the hilarious Dave Adeane playing Terry Adams waxing
lyrical about his adventures with Donald. We needed
more – more Donald stories and they had to be
in colour.
I
had decided very early on that The Wake was
a black and white film; the main colours of a wake after
all are black and white. But I wanted Donald’s
story to standout, to slightly jar against the main
flow of the story. We achieved this by doing two things
– one, we shot it in a documentary style and two,
we shot these sequences in colour. This gave Donald’s
story a mythical air – the stuff of chatter by
the water cooler or coffee machine. What was true and
what was over-blown hysteria? The audience would decide. |
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Over
the next few months I gathered together the missing
pieces, shooting the documentary segments myself. We
had the help of the EHP elite, like Stuart Mangan playing
Terry Adams fan Brodie Smith and of course our very
own Scott Charnick playing literary agent Alexander
Quentin. Also new victims who filled out the roles of
D.I. Curtis, Professor Trussell, Tracy and Kylie, and
most memorably The Dancer. Another cut was finished
by June and the story and film was starting to take
shape.
The
score was another challenge all together and one faced
not by me, but by EHP co-founder Paul Terry. Paul has
put music to every film EHP has produced, but he had
never composed a feature score before. The Wake
had many themes running through it and a tone that shifted
from comic to emotional – the score had to tie
all these themes together, ride the changing tones –
make the film a whole. It was a huge task.
While
Paul was holed away in his home studio scoring The
Wake, we had a preview screening fast approaching
as part of the Portsmouth Film Festival. We continued
to hone the edit, but it became clear that the music
wasn’t going to be ready for the November preview
so we called in the help of another master musician,
Hamish McGhie. |
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| Hamish
was not only in the film, but EHP had also shot a music
video for his band Fourthwall. Hamish and I worked on
a preview score for The Wake and ended up with
nine songs for the film. These, combined with some old
Paul Terry classics, formed the music for the preview
copy of The Wake screened in Portsmouth.
When
you make a film, or any piece of work to that matter,
you become so involved in it, so close to it, that you
stop seeing the work as a whole. You only see the parts
that make it up. In the films case you only see the
edits, the sound pops, the clunky dialogue – you
don’t watch the film as a film. The Portsmouth
preview screening was an eye opener, the first time
we watched the film with an audience. We saw the film
in a whole new light and from the reaction of the audience
could tell where the film worked and where the pace
dropped, where the plot was clear and where it was baffling.
After the screening we cut ten minutes out of the film
and that was the best edit we had done during the whole
year of post-production. |
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| The
final, final cut was locked by Christmas 2005 and February
24th 2006 had been booked for the premiere. The heat
was well and truly on. Paul was still working hard on
the score, that would turn out to be the best work he
had done for EHP so far. It was a rollercoaster of a
score matching the films emotions punch for punch. It
was jazzy, sexy, funny, heart-warming, tragic and epic.
Over a year’s work fitted onto the film like a
glove and one of the proudest moments of the whole two
year production was laying the music onto the finished
film. After countless hours of filming, editing, rendering
and scoring, it only took us a few hours to marry score
and screen.
Two
years. One film. A lifetime of memoirs and firm friends.
My
only regret is that my biggest fan and friend never
got to see the film. I like to think that somewhere
my mum is sitting down with a big tub of sweet popcorn
and waiting for the opening credits to roll.
For
Susan Williams. |
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