STBD Season Five: Halloween Special Revealed!

The Making of the Season Five Halloween Special involved:
- 17 scripted pages
- 1 significantly improvised scene
- 2 hours of raw footage
- 7 shoots over 5 days
- 16+ hours of editing
Fun Facts, Scene by Scene:
* Initially, cast members Rick Hertzig (Glenn), Courtney Jenkins (Tabitha), Trent Wolfred (Pryce) and Ann Turiano (Caroline) worked with creator Justin Kownacki to develop ideas for a vampire-themed episode. When we couldn't agree on one specific script, each contributor wrote 1 or 2 outlines, the best portions of which were combined into one script -- primarily based upon Courtney's outline.
* The original script ran 17 pages and included a lot of screen time for Tim (played by Ryan Ben). But when Ryan's availability dried up due to a stage play he'd been cast in, the script was rewritten on the fly to excuse his absence.

* The "meat" Dierdre eats in the kitchen is actually wheat bread soaked with fake blood.
* The two angles of Caroline stumbling upon Dierdre in the kitchen -- Caroline's and Dierdre's -- were filmed 9 hours apart; Dierdre was not present during Caroline's angle.
* When Caroline wakes up in bed, she's fallen asleep reading a copy of The God Delusion by Richard Dawkins -- a work that seeks to disprove the existence of God.
* Liz was mauled by Caroline in record time -- actress Jennifer Koegler had tickets to see a stage production of "12 Angry Men" 20 minutes after that shot was filmed.

* When Glenn enters Affogato, he's greeted telepathically by 3 of the 4 vamps -- but not Dierdre (listen closely -- we never recorded her audio).
* If you look closely, you can see Tabitha and Liz looming in the window behind Glenn as the men plot their defense in the courtyard.
* The "go on three" exchange between Rich (Erik Schark), Leo (Will Guffey) and Glenn was completely improvised, several times over. The best portions were included in the finished sequence.
* Rick Hertzig (Glenn) spent the better part of a day whittling the handles of a hammer and a plunger into stakes -- on his own time.
* Liz's "burning" reaction to the holy water? Baking soda, food coloring and vinegar.
* Leo stabs Tabitha with the utility knife usually kept in the trusty STBD camera bag (which he also uses to whittle stakes in the men's room). Makeup artists Jim Schmeichel and Ashley Leshen took great care to keep the tool intact for future use, but it was errantly left in the camera bag and confiscated during a routine security check at the JFK airport in New York City the following weekend. Oops.
* Leo clubs Caroline with a hammer, but he makes impact with a dummy's head wearing a wig. Unfortunately, actor Will Guffey missed the mark on the dummy's head and failed to trigger the blood packet attached underneath.
* Leo then stabs Dierdre in the back with the same hammer -- which, in closeup, is actually a piece of cardboard with Dierdre's fishnet shirt stretched across it and a blood packet rigged underneath.
* Liz's scarred arm, the aftermath of the holy water burns, was a latex application created from scratch in the back room of Affogato and applied over 30 minutes.
* When Dierdre bites Glenn, she doesn't actually have vampire fangs. That's because she wouldn't have been able to get a grip on the blood tube running up Glenn's neck. Unfortunately, the tube was attached a little too securely, and actress Lacey Fleming couldn't dislodge it with her teeth. This created an FX misfire, which led to the same shot being filmed two nights in a row. Footage from each take was used.
* When Leo stakes Dierdre with the Mathis 4 Mayor sign, he's actually shoving the stake-tipped end of the sign post through another cardboard / mesh / blood packet contraption rigged by the makeup artists. (And the staking was actually performed by Rick Hertzig, as Will Guffey had already left the set.)
* For the wide shot, in which the audience sees the sign run through Dierdre from front and back, Lacey Fleming was fitted with a waist-only harness that supported the severed ends of a second, "prop" version of the sign. That harness prevented Lacey's full range of motion, requiring Rick Hertzig to help her to the ground even as Glenn himself was dying off-camera.
* The finished episode was edited over the course of 7 days, including several "bursts" conducted in the hallway at PodCamp Boston 2 (and in the car en route).
* The music for this episode was graciously donated by local Pittsburgh artist Paralyzed Circuitry and nearby label High Noon Records -- the latter of whom came through with great tracks via email just as editing was wrapping up. Perfect timing!
Questions? Comments? Leave them below!
Labels: behindthescenes, fx, halloween, makeup, somethingtobedesired, stbd, vampires, video production, web series
5 Comments:
Is anyone else not suprised that even in the guise of a predatory master vampire, Dierdre wouldn't greet Glenn?
Poor bloody Glenn.
The "go on three" scene is really similar to a scene in Lethal Weapon 2. They have that discussion while Danny Glover is stuck on a toilet rigged with explosives.
I figured it was made in homage.
Some things never change, even in the afterlife...
As for "go on three," it wasn't recorded in homage, so much as it is a natural observation. It also appeared at the tail end of episode 2-8, going back three whole years...
Plus, I myself (Justin Kownacki) have never seen any Lethal Weapon film in its entirety. (Though I have seen National Lampoon's Loaded Weapon... in the theater...)
I find interesting that you guys chose the Bellevue Cemetery that is shown in the first scene because its so small and rather unknown, and because I'm from Bellevue and its cool to see some of my town online! What made you guys pick that cemetery?
Anonymous: We actually film STBD quite regularly in Bellevue, both at the Affogato cafe on Lincoln Avenue and in the space at 517 Lincoln Avenue -- formerly "517521 / ThinkTank," now operating as "Your Mom's / Creative Treehouse." We do less filming on the actual streets of Bellevue, but it happens on occasion.
As for why we chose the small cemetery in Bellevue to open our episode, it basically came down to timing. We had another cemetery in mind, but when that location fell through, we were forced to scramble for a different one on short notice. Some Bellevue locals suggested there was a small cemetery nearby, so we zipped over to it (initially the wrong one, as mentioned in this post, and then corrected) and filmed what we needed with literally about 10 minutes of daylight to spare.
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