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LAFCO has done everything so far without outside funding. We depend on
support from members and from the communities we serve. To find out how
you can help with a small donation, or to purchase DVD's, CD-Roms and/or
videotapes of our fantastic short films, please email tao@lafco.tv
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THE LAFCO FILM
BUS is coming to town! The
LOS ANGELES FILMMAKERS' CO-OP has built a film bus loaded with
all you need to make and screen your films, including editing,
sound, lighting and camera equipment. YOU can step aboard with
nothing but your imagination, your story or a script, and shoot
the movie of your dreams. (read
more...)
In August 2001, LAFCO started it's North
American Tour, visiting small towns and allowing artists used
to working in other media to make films for free. See photo
galleries at top.
LAFCO
AT BURNING MAN 2002: FANTASTIC PICTURES!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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LAFCO presents:
The 100x100 Feature Film project
Make a one minute film or video portrait of someone you know
That's all there is to it (click for details)
EXTRA!
Read what the press has to say about LAFCO (scroll down)
Los Angeles Times
November 22, 2001
Jim Heid:
Mac Focus
Filmmakers Are Taking the Bus
At first glance, the graffiti-painted school bus looks like something
most moms would steer kids away from. But this is no vandalized vehicle--it's
a Mac-based video production studio piloted by an edgy group of Los
Angeles filmmakers working to bring movie making to a wider audience.
The bus belongs to the Los Angeles Filmmakers' Co-op,
or LAFCO for short, and it's a rolling testament to the democratizing
power of personal computers. The bus and its drivers are three months
into a yearlong, cross-country road trip focused on enabling artists
in rural areas to experiment with the medium of film. When I caught
up with them, the bus was parked next to an artist's barn near the
Mendocino County town of Albion, population 398.
LAFCO was founded by Tao Ruspoli, who in 1999 was the sole bidder
on an EBay auction for a 1985 Chevrolet Bluebird school bus. After
driving his $3,000 find from Colorado to Los Angeles, he replaced
its seats with custom-built furniture that now houses video-editing
workstations. In the back of the bus, a seating area doubles as a
screening room, complete with a ceiling-mounted video projector and
surround sound audio system. "The idea grew as people brought
their visions to it," said Ruspoli, 25. One of those people is
Alfonso Gordillo, 26, a UCLA film school graduate who helped found
LAFCO and shares in bus-driving duties with Ruspoli and a third member
of the team, photographer Roger Mona Webster.
Eloquent and Euro-handsome, both Ruspoli and Gordillo are multilingual,
and when their trip began, they made ends meet by working as interpreters
for international conference calls. Now that their travels have taken
them to areas that often lack cellular phone service, they're relying
largely on donations and video sales. They've also received funding
and advice from other LAFCO members, including independent filmmaker
Julian Dahl, who serves as a consultant to the group.
The LAFCO bus got its initial road tests in the L.A. area, where the
team toured local high schools. After longer jaunts to Tijuana and
the Sundance Film Festival in Park City, Utah, the bus was ready for
its current mission, which began at this year's Burning Man festival
in Nevada and ends there next year.
LAFCO describes this trip as a "Cine Circus." The team rolls
into town like traveling troubadours and seeks out local artists--or
is sought out by them. "We want to give artists the chance to
see how their art translates to the medium of film," Gordillo
said. "We end up learning something from everybody we work with."
Artists make most of the creative decisions behind their films, with
guidance and technical assistance from Ruspoli and Gordillo. When
a movie is finished, it's screened--in the bus, in a barn or, in one
case, in a small town's movie theater.
LAFCO's editing workstations are a Power Mac G4 and a Cube. An older
G3 system handles scanning and image-editing duties, and all three
systems are networked to one another and an iBook via Ethernet. Several
high-end video decks and four FireWire hard drives round out the mobile
studio. LAFCO shoots footage using mini-DV-format camcorders and edits
using Apple's Final Cut Pro software, which has become the high-end
editing program of choice in the Macintosh world.
Despite the technical and mechanical challenges of making movies out
of a converted school bus, the LAFCO team feels a certain liberation
in being away from film-crazy Los Angeles. "In L.A., everybody
pulls out a script when the bus pulls up," Gordillo said.
You can monitor their progress and tour the bus at http://www.lafilmmakers.org.
The LAFCO bus bears a spray-painted quote from Jean Cocteau: "Film
will only become art when its materials are as inexpensive as pencil
and paper." Said Ruspoli: "We aren't there yet--but it's
within reach."
*
Jim Heid is a contributing editor of Macworld magazine. He can be
reached at jim@jimheid.com.
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Check out our appearance in RES magazine
Screening announcement in the The
Mendocino Beacon
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