Showing posts with label typewriter movie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label typewriter movie. Show all posts

Monday, September 24, 2012

Venice Type-In

The Venice Type-In was organized by artist L.A. Marler.
It featured 2 screenings of The Typewriter (In the 21st Century),
the artist's works, typewriter repairmen Ruben Flores of US Office
Machines and Ermano Manzorati of Star Office Machine,
Collector Steve Soboroff and 5 machines from his collection,
as well as several typewriters to type on!!!
3 typospherians also attended - BusterBullet of Streamlines Deluxe,
Annalese Stradivarius of A Machine for the End of the World,
and myself :)
There were many typers there... including 4 of Anna Strad's here:
The Royal, The Oliver 5, Remington Noiseless, and the Standard Folding


I brought my Corona Speedline. I must say that by my estimation,
the most popular machines were her Oliver 5 and my Corona.
They got a lot of typing done on them by probably near a couple
dozen different people. Now we both have to clean them!




Ermano's table (manned by his assistant Pedro) - each repairman
brought some typers to sell

Ruben's table - lots of kids around that were very curious about the typers
Jesse Flores RIP
The two repairmen are good friends
Ruben's brother Danny is also a typewriter repairman -
This is what he was using to degunk an Olympia...
He was doing repairs during the event!!! I watched him,
mesmerized, as his wizard fingers made a SM3 like brand new!
(No pic of the repairs in progress bc like i said i was mesmerized!
Had to take a pic of one of Ruben's customer's typers which he brought
i suppose bc he thought his customer would be there to pick it up.
It is an Underwood 5 with german keyboard. His customer
is a well-traveled Austrian and this typewriter has been around
the world. He said the rebuld took about 10 hours with multiple
parts replaced and cost the customer over $700!
The result: a beaitufiul and enviable machine!!!
Soboroff's table usually had a well-sized crowd around.
Here he explains how amazing his typewriters are.
Of course, he first warned this little girl: "Don't touch them!
They're worth more than you!" LOL
He didnt get tired of retelling the same stories about how he came to
collect famous people's typewriters ("Because they're one of a kind") or
how he got them (re: Cronkite's typer "i called up his lawyer right when
he died!")



He said he bought this forf $20k from a family friend of Hemingway's and he says its probably
worth $200K now
This he bought for $3500 while bradbury was still alive. He says it's probably worth
$75-100K now



He said this is probably priceless/ It was Lennon's from when
he was a child/early teenager.

I typed on this bad boy after Soboroff volunteered my services to help him
carry all his typers back to the car. Luckily BusterBullet helped too!
The cover of still shows the FBI Evidence tape. felt creepy typing on the machine.
I actually have a copy of the letter Kaczynski wrote to Soboroff.
He gave it to me as a souvenir... ill have to scan it soon.



just realized blogger is messing up some of my pics. stupid blogger blogspot!!! getting sick of it.
end rant.
k i added this pic before but somehow dumb blogger removed it or hid it behind another pic WTF






Thursday, August 9, 2012

The Typewriter (In the 21st Century) film screening @ AFI

The Typewriter (In the 21st Century) recently screened at the American Film Institute (AFI) in Los Angeles, CA on Monday 8/6/2012. We all know this film as the Typewriter Movie and have been eagerly awaiting its release. Let me tell you, it is everything and more it has promised itself to be and delivers well beyond our highest expectations.

Nestled near the base of the hills of Griffith Park and Hollywood, right off the 101 freeway lies the famous American Film Institute. It is the scene for this screening which had several distinguished guests including the filmmakers as well as several people featured in the film and some lucky guests of which my younger brother Chris and I were happy to be part.

For this intimate screening, the spotlights and red carpet were left for a later event. There were no limosines or paparazzi - (it was that secret and exclusive!) and I didnt hear about any after party at the Playboy Mansion. Nevertheless, there was a undeniable excitement in the crisp LA night air.

Once inside the Louis B Mayer Library, it was suddenly quiet as if we were in the wrong place - Alfred Hitchcock was rolling film somewhere. There were not any signs for the event. But out of the corner of our eyes, in a seemingly empty room , we spotted a green Olympia SM3 and it was like fingerprints at a murder scene: THIS WAS IT!

Director Christopher Lockett held attention at the door, his opera quality voice carried like a rising crescendo wave that maintained a height of those seen at Waimea Bay. He greeted us warmly and heartily - he was clearly in a fabulous mood and understandably so: he was right about to share his passion project with some friends. In a swift motion he gestured for us to sign in on the Olympia.

Clickety Clack.

Music.

This should be the way everyone signs in for any future Typewriter movie screenings, premieres, and showings be it at any film festivals or Regal Cinema. This was an initiation - and all it took was to type out your name. And a transformation occured and you were now truly ready to see the world of typewriters.

We took our seats and looked around the screening room. The audience itself was a mishmash/hodgepodge assortment of people but i immediately spotted Ruben Flores of US Office Machine and Ermanno Marzorati of Star Office Machines so we certainly were in very good company.

Once 8:30pm came around, Christopher gave an inspiring introduction to the film, sharing some details of the making of the film. A unbelievably paltry $9,254.00 was raised through Kickstarter and served nearly the entire budget of this documentary. Christopher likened this sum to "less than the craft services budget for an indie film" - that gives you a real idea of how stretched the filmmakers were for this documentary. Still, passion overcame the difficulties and challenges. Christopher shared some creative solutions such as hiring someone off Craigslist to do some supplemental shooting for $50.

The film began.

The preface showed what you would expect a typical documentary to start with: some history and facts which is fine since typewriters are over 100 years old... but that is all this film shared with those PBS-type documentaries. It presented its content in a hip and organized way. Slowly the cast of characters were revealed, their roles introduced and then each of their individual stories woven into a narrative whole.

The documentary explored how the relationship of people and typewriters was and how this relationship has changed and evolved through the typewriter's lifetime - some people had literally lived their whole lives with typewriters such as the repairmen; some had abandoned it only to find it again such as some collectors; some discovered the typewriter despite it being considered archaic and obsolete such as the younger generation who like to type; and some vigilantly kept with their typewriters against the blanket of technology such as authors like David McCullough.

The people interviewed had various opinions of the typewriter and its place as well as future prospects. One repairman said basically that typewriters will eventually die out. This was sad but certainly possible. A real poignant part of the documentary showed that a lot of the repairmen wanted to pass on their knowledge to their children, specifically sons, but their sons wanted to go a different route for a career. Bill Wahl shared that his son would have been the 4th generation to repair typewriters. Still, others felt that typewriters have a promising future because they are being discovered by the youth. And basically everyone expressed in some way that typewriters will always have a place because they capture people's imagination.

Although there are so many highlights of the film, my favorite parts of the documentary were those interviews with the repairmen especially the scenes with mid-90s year old Manson Whitlock who singlehandedly infused the film with such genuine humor I can still recall him and laugh. I feel these repairmen were, if not the heart of the film, then certainly its spirit. They personify the typewriter and its journey. They have gone through what the typewriter has - ups and downs, top of the world and near death and now, resurrection, a hopefully sustained one.

Also notable must be the interviews with authors specifically, David McCullough and Robert Caro. These 2 are men who have made their careers writing and doing so with their trusty typewriters. In fact, they are both so linked with their typewriters it might as well be a body part. It really hit home that this machine could play such an important part in someone's life as to be called a "partner".

And of course, I also enjoyed the parts that showed the collectors and those in the forefront of the typewriter's resurgence: the typosphere. I am glad Richard Polt is our ambassador as he represents the best of us and our intentions. Others shown were Michael Clemens and the Reverend Ted Munk who both had some great contributions to the typewriter story.

The film is such a treat to watch and like many of us will feel, you really need to watch it more than once because nearly every frame has at least one typewriter in it and at times (such as when interviewing Richard Polt who has the lovliest background of dozens of desireable typers), many!!! So there can be a lot of distraction for those of us whose eyes dart to any shape akin to a typewriter. Lots of eye candy in the film, alright.

The film ended to as much applause as 30 people could muster so much so that it was the applause of a crowd double and im sure the sound overfilled and poured down the hills and woke up Bruce Willis. Christopher Lockett had about a 20min Q&A and a lot of the audience sentiment was that we were particularly happy with the people assembled to interview for the film. I also overheard some platen recovery/Ames/West Coast platen discussion between Ruben and Ermanno - i guess this subject wont go away until we find a real solution.

Christopher mentioned that he read the Wired Magazine article Meet the Last Generation of Typewriter Repairmen and was inspired to do the film. He said that typewriters deserved an elegy but i believe what he ended up making is not at all a lamenting swan song but a chronicle of the seasons like that shown on National Geographic nature documentaries that present out of winter comes the spring.

Those of us who already live and love typewriters will only care for our machines more. I have a strong sense that this film will inspire and transform many curious into full blown collectors and members of the typosphere. It should elicit a conscious response from any viewer: either instill a reverence for the typewriter's past and/or evoke an active participation to join the growing movement.

That is the lasting message of the film. We can help the typewriter by spreading the word and keeping it alive. The same goes for this wonderful documentary, a real treasure for the typewriter: we should talk about it and spread the word about The Typewriter (In the 21st Century).


Tuesday, July 17, 2012

The Olympia and the Beast Within

Hello all -
I have a special treat for this blog entry and unfortunately, no typecast due to time & energy constraints (but i did buy a new printer/scanner this past weekend so we should be copacetic once i get some freakin sleep!)

First, i shall mention the boring: The new job.
It's going okay. Nothing to get excited about. There are some new things but its mostly old. It is nothing like i dream my dream job to be. But heck, theyre compensating me well enough for me to put my dreams on hold for the time being; furthermore, there are other goals to pursue such as putting food on the table and being able to support my family and getting the baby's college savings going again (not to mention, fueling this typewriter addiction). And remember this little tidbit too: i have a 2nd son on the way come december! And 2-under-2 is no joke!

Being away from the little one is tough and quite honestly a lot more challenging than i imagined. It's a hard adjustment to be going from spending 10 straight hours with him during the day to none at all except for the ride to grandpa/grandma's house and then back home. I think of him nonstop and miss him so ridiculously much.



Now on to the business at hand.

A couple nights ago, i submitted an entry real late just letting you know that i had a pretty worthwhile typewriter adventure once again in Los Angeles.

Now who's crazy enough to drive to LA the night before his first day on a new job? Apparently, i sure am.

I thought i was being rational thinking: once i start this new job, i probably wont have as much opportunity to just leave on a whim and drive to LA.

Well, so i took off at 8:30pm and drove what was supposed to be 45min to LA. Of course, being LA, there was traffic and it took me 1hr 30min to get there. So now it's about 10:15pm.




Why go to LA? well, typewriter business, of course.

And not just any typewriter adventure either.

This one had the makings of something memorable, and it was.


As many things do, It began with a craigslist ad:



in case you cant read it:


Not only did i want this typewriter but i was curious: a forthcoming documentary about typewriters...
Yup, It's this film. And the author of the ad introduced himself as the Director of the film who needed to sell some of the typewriters used in the film because he didn't have the space to keep them. So we arranged for me to pick it up at his place near the Griffith Obsevatory and Griffith Park - totally awesome location!


Christopher Lockett is a real cool guy  -cool bc he simply is. And also cool bc he gave me permission to blog about my visit!

He took the time to show me his place which is decorated sparingly but with sublime artistic flair such as his own photography. He's also a scotch guy, and that's something i really want to learn more about.

I checked out the typewriter i was to buy and it's nearly perfect.

Later he showed me his other typewriters including a Hermes 3000 with Techno font and a Hermes Baby. Stupid me, i forgot to take pics - but Mr Lockett will be sending me some pics that i can update this entry with. He really likes typewriters and knows their history. Also, being primarily a cinematographer, he has a true passion for photography; and consequently has a real nice collection of vintage cameras.


Perhaps the coolest part of the night was when he graciously let me watch some of the film. If you haven't seen any of it yet, check this out on YouTube. I saw some interviews - including some of Richard Polt, Ruben Flores of US Office Machine and Bill Wahl of Mesa Typewriter Exchange.


I'm sworn to secrecy on what i saw but it looks pretty darn good and it is right for us typewriter enthusiasts and collectors to be excited.


Mr Lockett knows the film by heart, knows all the people who participated including Michael Clemens,  Ton Sison and Ted Munk among others in the typosphere as well as all the repairmen and authors. He passionately narrated the sequences i was shown.

And the typewriter i bought? The Olympia SM3? Mr Lockett says that my machine is not only in those cutaway scenes but also appears on the movie poster - so that is nothing short of badass!!! Unfortunately the movie poster is still a secret.

Finally, as far as the hint i provided the other night...

"The Beast Within"

Well, that's in the movie and this i can share: It is what John Steinbeck etched into the back of his Hermes Baby - which so made an impression of Mr Lockett that he had to go get a Hermes Baby of his own. It's impressive!





Monday, July 16, 2012

Can't Sleep

It is the eve of my new job. I start tomorrow.

I've never been able to sleep the night before a big day: the start of a new grade at school, SATs, Prom, college, my wedding.

Tonight is no different.

So I went on a typewriter adventure!

It's past 1am and a little too late to tell the tale, but I promise I will soon.

A sort of hint: "The Beast Within"

It was cool and a lot of fun. I just got home from it a little bit ago.

For now though, good night Typosphere!