VEB FILM Leipzig - Open Source Film Netlabel

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Download: DVD „Biker's Soul”
The adventurous travel of a German motorcycle club to the religious heart of Russia. A film about the universal spirit of motorcycling.
» funny, sharp, ironic and intelligent.. « - Europe's #1 Motorcyle Magazine
» Without doubt a true insider tip! « - Europe's #1 Motorcyle Travel Magazine
High speed download of the DVD image (english) incl. extras. Play it with the free VLC Player or burn a DVD. Feel free to copy, screen or remix this Free Culture Film!
Download Bikers Soul
4,20 €
or $5.90
DVD „Biker's Soul”
The adventurous travel of a German motorcycle club to the religious heart of Russia. A film about the universal spirit of motorcycling.
» funny, sharp, ironic and intelligent.. « - Europe's #1 Motorcyle Magazine
» Without doubt a true insider tip! « - Europe's #1 Motorcyle Travel Magazine
Collectors Edition in a Digipak · 63 minutes + 40 minutes extras · audio commentary of the filmmaker · in English, German and Russian
DVD Motorradfilm
11,98 €
or $17
Download: DVD „Route 66”
Gonzo-Documentary, 104 Min · English & German audiotracks · NTSC

High speed download of the DVD image. Play it with the free VLC Player or burn a DVD. This film is Free Culture: you are free to copy, screen or remix the DVD, even commercially!
Download Route 66
4,20 €
or $5.90
CD „Route 66 Soundtrack”
Parking Lot at San Diego International Airport” - the original motion picture soundtrack of one of the first Open Source movies, for which Bechholds had to quit with the traditional European performance rights organization to make this Free Culture movie happening.
CD Route 66 Soundtrack
9,98 €
or $12
DVD-Download „Biker's Soul”
DVD „Biker's Soul”
DVD-Download „Route 66”
CD „Route 66 Soundtrack”

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ELIZA

 
You: 

„Biker's Soul”: finished

I'll try to get at a cleric involved in every future film project of mine, since our Open Source road trip documentaryBiker's Soul” has been blessed from the beginning, while our sci-fi feature film „The Last Drug” is giving me nightmares for years now.
It's completed and going straight to the pressroom. The netrelease under a Creative Commons license will follow in early 2010 - as soon as I come up with a sponsor. Meanwhile, let me share some production details:

Camera

I have been using the Sony PDX10P for 3 films now. It's a 1/3" chip 3CCD handycam - technically outdated, but still in use in a certain niche, last time I saw it was in Long Way Round. I can still recommend it for productions like these - it's extremely robust, tiny & handy and has a great full automatic mode, which I almost always used, since it's so reliable. Colors are good, sharpness is okay for SD and auto focus is fast and precise with some faults at extreme back light.
What I don't like anymore is SD resolution: I'm missing the sharpness, the possibility for jump cuts, keying and motion stabilisation. Another drawback is the bad low light capability - if you are gonzo filming on a trip like this there are always low light situations where you just can't pull out a video light. If you are on a tight budget and you can live with these limitations: the camera sells for under $1000 on eBay - I found it always better to buy outdated professional equipment than the newest consumer stuff for the same price.
For my next road trip documentary I'm thinking about experimenting with a Canon EOS 5D Mark II. Not a dedicated video camera, but I have the feeling, that you can achieve extremely interesting esthetics, that will work excellent in a gonzo style documentary.

Color Correction

I did the color correction in Adobe Premiere and all it took was a correction of the RGB curves. Maybe some saturation adjustments here and there.
My 63 minutes project file was very unstable after I put those effects on every clip. More than 20 crashes a day was quite common - I was hoping CS4 would be more stable, but I have to admit that my editing workstation is an antique 2GB Dual Core E6600. My new system is about to arrive, now that I finished the post production, how stupid is that.
After rendering I'm running every frame through a Photoshop Action as well, using the new "vibrant" adjustment to desaturate everything but the skin tones. My color correction school was this: Professional Photoshop: The Classic Guide to Color Correction. I don't like the writing style but I learned a lot.

Editing

I like Adobe Premiere. Quite unstable when you max out your system, but it perfectly fits my workflow: SD capture here, HD capture there, this codec here, that codec there, drag in some internet files, edit in photoshop and throw it back in a second, create some minor animations - it always works the way you expect it. I'll stick to Premiere.

In January I'll get back to our feature film production The Last Drug. I learned quite a lot with this documentary - although I didn't expected to. I hope this will help me getting The Last Drug done - I certainly feel the urge to get my hands on it again.

Jesus, this text reads like shit. I'm just to tired to write a proper english right now.

„Sita Sings the Blues” sources online!

Animator Nina Paley turned into a Free Culture activist after she was harassed by a major label, releasing her feature length animation film „Sita Sings the Blues” last year.
Nina just released the complete sources under Creative Commons by-sa!

Creative Commons Day Hamburg: 8.8.2009

On Saturday there will be a Creative Commons Day in Hamburg, Germany, with films, lectures, presentations, live music & party.
The event was organised by the Pirate Party, which also did a nice Open Source open air film festival in Hamburg last year - we received some great feedback back then.
Route 66” will be screened at 2 pm - admission will be free. Sounds like a nice event, I'll try to be there at the after party.

Reuse, Remix, Mashup... why Open Source is also important for moving images

Guest article from Open Source filmmaker Tim Baumann of the Valkaama Open Source film project

An important part of what the whole Open Source Movie thing is all about is to enable others to use the material we produce for their own purposes. And one really great example for such a usage of Valkaama is West Latta's tutorial on how to make a film score on audio tuts+. So let's shortly analyse why an Open Source Movie like Valkaama which uses an OS compatible license such as the Creative Commons by-sa is needed for people like West to safely use external clips in order to do such great stuff as film score tutorials.

Liberal licenses like the Creative Commons licenses you can apply in order to give others the freedom to use your own creative work within a safe legal framework. The license hereby clearly states the DO's and DON'Ts when it comes to handling the material. So why is an Open Source compatible Creative Commons license the best choice?

As you probably know there are 6 standard CC licenses which consist of one ore more of the following modules or conditions: by (Attribution), nc (Noncommercial), nd (NoDerivs) and sa (ShareAlike). If you now make some research you will quickly find out that most of the few free movies you can find on the web are using the condition nd, and almost all of them the condition nc. So why is that counterproductive for people like West? And furthermore, why he couldn't make his tutorial without access to the movie's sources?

First of all free movies licensed under nd conditions don't allow you to make any modifications to the material. Hence they are useless for any reuse, remix or mashup and... no tutorials with these. Second of all, the nc module is quite a trap. On the webpage West's tutorial is published it is possible to gain access to premium content (source files, bonus tutorials and more) by paying a monthly fee. Although this particular tutorial which uses scenes from Valkaama is freely accessible the fact that it is also offered within a commercial framework clearly infringes the nc term. The same applies to the small commercials displayed on the webpage.

Well, so much for the licenses... As for the sources, why exactly are they needed? The reason for this is quite simple, yet important: the source tracks containing the dialogues can be downloaded separately from our FTP Server. Since they aren't mixed with music yet, you can simply add another film score without having to separate voice and music before. A task which is nearly impossible by the way.

Resources:
- Tutorial "The Process of Score Composition" Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4
- Tutorial videos on vimeo: First draft, Final score


Note: This version of scene 56 still has some color grading issues we're trying to fix in the forthcoming BETA of Valkaama.

(cc) by-sa valkaama.com

Free & Open Source Footage

The original video footage of The Last Drug is about 60 hours (780 GB): 28 hours (365 GB) documentary film footage in standard definition TV quality filmed in South America, mostly Peru, Bolivia, Argentina and Paraguay. And 32 hours (415 GB) in high definition quality from the studio shooting. This footage will be released under Creative Commons BY SA, as well as the film itself. You are thereby free to use the footage for your commercial and non-commercial projects as long as you name www.vebfilm.net as the source and as long as you apply the same modern license to your project.

The computer science faculty of RWTH Aachen is supporting us with the hosting on a 100 MBit connection. Credits go to Kamran Ghanaat, who is creating the torrent and will be the first seeder.
He downloaded the 780 GB in 11 days (screen wget -r -l inf -np -A .avi [URL]), by the way and didn't loose single bit (checksum control: 1. sha512sum -b * > CHECKSUM.SHA512 in the root of the footage of his server, 2. copying "CHECKSUM.SHA512" to the root of the footages on our server and 3. comparing the checksum: sha512sum -c CHECKSUM.SHA512).

Not everybody will need the complete footage, therefore we will create different distributions: for VJs, for documentary filmers, for creating music videos, for remixing the movie etc. We are looking for "early adapters" that want to create their own distribution of the Drug already - which can hold your name, of course: vebfilm.net - The Last Drug Footage - VJ Herb Distribution.

Going to Jail for Making Art

Interview with the simpatico animator Nina Paley about how her award-winning, feature-length film Sita Sings The Blues is blocked from distribution because of copyright restrictions on music used in the film:

License: Creative Commons BY SA, Source: QuestionCopyright.org, Download: mp4
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Budget Meter DLD

Donation for „The Last Drug”

We will be active participants in a free culture of connectivity and production, made possible as it never was before by the Internet and digital technology, and we will fight to prevent this new potential from being locked down by corporate and legislative control. If we allow the bottom-up, participatory structure of the Internet to be twisted into a glorified cable TV service — if we allow the established paradigm of creation and distribution to reassert itself — then the window of opportunity opened by the Internet will have been closed, and we will have lost something beautiful, revolutionary, and irretrievable.

The future is in our hands; we must build a technological and cultural movement to defend the digital commons. We release all movies under a Creative Commons License, that allows you to share, remix or reuse them, even commercially. Help us to show other artists that this freedom can work by breaking The Last Drug even:

Donations

Latest Donors

2010-07-25
“Super Film!”
$42,00 for
Biker's Soul

2010-06-11
“Kleine Spende für Route 66. Hab mir den Film mehrmals angeschaut. Finde ihn und die Musik sehr gelungen. Weiter so!”
$28,00 for
Route 66

2010-05-18
$7,00 for
„VEB FILM Leipzig“

2010-05-15
“100 stimmige Minuten”
$7,00 for
Route 66

2010-05-02
“THX 4 yr contribution to the myth!”
$7,00 for
Route 66

Thanks to

LEITS
für: VEB Server Hosting seit 2006

Hallo Pizza
für: Catering während der Dreharbeiten

Marian
für: Audiohardware

airstream4u
für: Requisiten

arroway textures
für: 3D Rendering

astaro
für: Cash

Top 5 Donors

2007-08-08
“Good luck for your new movie from Nedeos.TV”
$1.000,00 for
Route 66

2006-05-01
“astaro internet security unterstützt das Open Source-Filmemachen”
$1.000,00 for
Route 66

2005-01-17
“Herzlichen Glückwunsch, als erster Open Source Film habt ihr es geschaft den Open Source Gedanken auf eine neue Ebene zu heben. Macht weiter so! Gruss Polluxxx”
$750,00 for
Route 66

2009-12-24
“marcusrose audio | film | musik - Berlin, 200€ für „Der Geist der Biker”, Weiter so! ;O)”
$200,00 for
Biker's Soul

2010-05-01
“Super Film "Der Geist der Biker" von Stefan Kluge. Produziert bitte weiter so, es ist DER einig richtige Weg !! Beste Grüsse Dieter. melk.com”
$157,41 for
Biker's Soul

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