I’ve been doing this stuff for a good chunk of my life – the only career I’ve ever had. And so when I’m talking about the quality of a day–the light, the crew, the shots, the vibe–I’ve got a fair bit to compare it to. Thousands of days on set. That said, today ranks pretty high on my list of epic days. It’s so late right now that I can barely type, but stay with me for a few minutes if you can stomach it, cause I’m about to lay it on pretty thick…
5:00am wake up call. More fresh snow on the gound. Sky is crystal clear.
6:00am roll out. We’re 30 people deep in 5 or 6 suvs.
7:00am arrival at snowmobile rental – same place we scouted. 15 snowmobiles with drivers haul us deep into the woods, along ridges and through valleys and into one of the most beautiful mountain basins I’ve ever seen. Moon is setting over the Wilson range as the sun is rising. Epic views is an understatement….
8:30am arrive at location. Almost 12,000 feet of elevation. Pure blue sky. Not a lick of wind. Unreal location. Crew mood is over the top enthusiasm – we keep talking how few people get to experience something like this – we all wish we could share this more easily.
10:00am. We’re shooting already. Today is entirely motion/video. We’ve got lots of toys. Stunning views. Epic snow. Hiking. At. This. Elevation. Makes. Flatlanders. Like. Me. Want. To. Pass. Out. But I love it.
10:00am – 6pm. We are crushing it. Stunning light. Multiple cameras catching every moment. We’re shooting handheld, on sticks, steadicams, cranes and jibs…and a helicopter. But not the big ones. This is the remote chopper that if you don’t know about you’ll be happy you read this post. My friends Tabb and Hugh at FreeFly Cinema are on set with us and we’re flying the AF-100 cine camera around like it’s god’s own eyes. Feeling like a kid in a candy store.
6:30 – 7. We nail the sunset shot. I mean nail it. Can’t wait for you to see this. High fives, hugs, fist bumps, everything all around. I’m humbled to be a part of this hardworking and talented crew.
7 – 10pm. Moving all the people and gear out of the mountains is a gigantic task. It seems like the people and gear multiplied while we have been up here.
10pm. Back at our car. Driving away from an amazing day.
10:45. Catch one of the last restaurants still open in Telluride. Scarfing.
11:30 Stumble back to the hotel. Must write.
12:00 midnight. Can’t do any of today the justice it deserves. Makes me feel lucky to be alive. Out.
If you ever start thinking you’re getting a tiny bit burned out, let me just give you a teensy bit of advice:
UNDER NO CIRCUMSTANCES CHANGE CAREERS
it doesn’t get better than that, amigo 🙂
got it?
’nuff said.
Man, I hadn’t read your blog for about 2 days (life got on the way;) and I felt like I was missing out. I had to rush to come to the blog stat and start reading, I couldn’t wait.
Even though you write ” It’s so late right now that I can barely type, but stay with me …” the emotion of the blog is the same and the excitement maddening. Thanks for one more day!
sounds insane…
Brilliant!