Monster in a Box

1992, directed by Nick Broomfield

This was the first intro I filmed in Lisbon, near where we used to live in the Parque das Naçoes area of town, which was built for the 1998 World’s Fair. For this video, I had a little fun with the audience by starting out with a Cookie Monster sketch from “Sesame Street.” Spalding Gray is one of the greatest storytellers who ever lived. I remember that I had tickets to see him at the Moore Theater in Seattle, but the show was canceled at the last minute and never rescheduled. Only later did I learn that this was due to the about the near-fatal car crash that was the beginning of the end of his life. Sadly, I never got to see him perform live.

The Third Man

1949, directed by Carol Reed

This was my first time filming an intro in Porto. We weren’t actually living here yet, but my work paid for an apartment here for a month since I indicated that this was where I wanted to live in Portugal. It would take another year before we finally moved from Lisbon to Porto for good. In this case, I had a friend of mine who was visiting from the US serve as my cameraman. This was filmed at Jardim de Morro, which is one of the busiest viewpoints of the city. I remember it took a lot of takes to get some relatively clean audio.

Bells Are Ringing

1960, directed by Vincent Minnelli

My favorite movie musical of all time! I filmed this intro while on vacation with Derek in Brussels. For quite a while, I pressed Derek into service as my cameraman for these videos (until I eventually got a tripod, along with some other equipment). He’s just holding the camera steady in his hand, so it’s amazing it came out as stable as it did (not withstanding the part where I go entirely out of frame). Also, there’s an iPhone microphone dangling from my ear because that was my only way to record my voice without getting all the crowd noise as well.

A New Leaf

1971, directed by Elaine May

I was introduced to this movie by my mother. She had a wonderfully sophisticated sense of humor, which I like to think she passed on to me. Starting with this season, I made a pointed effort to always include at least one film by a female director each year. I never mentioned it to anyone explicitly, but I think that the film series was better for it. This video starts with the New Year’s fireworks at Disneyland Paris. This was a stopover on my emigration trip from the US to Portugal. You can’t bring tripods into Disney theme parks, so I had to hold the camera in my outstretched hand for the whole video.

Amélie

2001, directed by Jean-Pierre Jeunet

My first filmed introduction was born of necessity. I was travelling in New Zealand at the time, so I filmed this (unfortunately backlit) video from my hotel balcony and sent it in since I was unable to be there in person. In a way it was the “proof of concept” for what came later. This video also features a “signature cocktail” that was created to accompany each movie, and the trailer for the next month’s film (“The Parallax View”), two features that would eventually go by the wayside.