Do not steal my idea, please. I came to me after watching the very entertaining Shoot 'Em Up, with Clive Owen and Monica Bellucci.
The short film will be named Park Chan Wook, in honor of a very bad-ass South Korean filmmaker. I might use Quentin Tarantino as the tagline.
Some bad-ass-looking dude who is also a good person at heart (like Johnny Cash or Nick Cave... alright, let's call him Johnny Cave or Nick Cash) wakes up one day to face the zombies that plague the world, and who have left him and a few others as sole survivors on Earth. This will be juxtaposed with people arguing, afterwards about the rampaging, murdersome slaughter that madman Johnny Cave has done believing that the world was full of zombies, when everything was in his head. I plan to make a cross between the typical zombie flick with the sadly commonplace school shootings in the USA. You see? I am controversial!
The original in this short film smothered in clichés is that my intention is never to show a firearm in it. Each time that Johnny lifts up his gun to blow a zombie's brains out a lightpost, a bush, a car, any thing will be covering up the gun. During the short Johnny and his colleagues will use all kinds of weaponry... that will never be seen on screen.
This is not only an effort to be original and absurdist, but also it is a measure of economy, because it is really expensive to buy prop guns. I have tried on ebay and I have failed. Well, my wallet has failed.
Anyhow, in this post I want to document the soundtrack of this short. I will leave here videos or mp3 links in case you ladies want to listen to something cool, but I am sorry to tell you that this entry is mainly a mnemonic resource for myself. If you do like awesome tunes you're more than invited to listen, and if you feel like it you can even share your opinion about this foul idea.
Have a great day.
Intro music:
Klaus Nomi - The Cold Song, from the Opera King Arthur by Henry Purcell.
Cool scenes with swords and guns:
Mado Robin - Sopra il sen la man mi possa from La sonnambula by Bellini.
Jussi Bjorlin & Robert Merrill - Au fond du temple saint, from Les pêcheurs de perles by Bizet.
Maria Callas - O mio babino caro from the Opera Gianni Schicchi, by Puccini.
And that is all.
The short film will be named Park Chan Wook, in honor of a very bad-ass South Korean filmmaker. I might use Quentin Tarantino as the tagline.
Some bad-ass-looking dude who is also a good person at heart (like Johnny Cash or Nick Cave... alright, let's call him Johnny Cave or Nick Cash) wakes up one day to face the zombies that plague the world, and who have left him and a few others as sole survivors on Earth. This will be juxtaposed with people arguing, afterwards about the rampaging, murdersome slaughter that madman Johnny Cave has done believing that the world was full of zombies, when everything was in his head. I plan to make a cross between the typical zombie flick with the sadly commonplace school shootings in the USA. You see? I am controversial!
The original in this short film smothered in clichés is that my intention is never to show a firearm in it. Each time that Johnny lifts up his gun to blow a zombie's brains out a lightpost, a bush, a car, any thing will be covering up the gun. During the short Johnny and his colleagues will use all kinds of weaponry... that will never be seen on screen.
This is not only an effort to be original and absurdist, but also it is a measure of economy, because it is really expensive to buy prop guns. I have tried on ebay and I have failed. Well, my wallet has failed.
Anyhow, in this post I want to document the soundtrack of this short. I will leave here videos or mp3 links in case you ladies want to listen to something cool, but I am sorry to tell you that this entry is mainly a mnemonic resource for myself. If you do like awesome tunes you're more than invited to listen, and if you feel like it you can even share your opinion about this foul idea.
Have a great day.
Intro music:
Klaus Nomi - The Cold Song, from the Opera King Arthur by Henry Purcell.
Cool scenes with swords and guns:
Mado Robin - Sopra il sen la man mi possa from La sonnambula by Bellini.
Jussi Bjorlin & Robert Merrill - Au fond du temple saint, from Les pêcheurs de perles by Bizet.
Maria Callas - O mio babino caro from the Opera Gianni Schicchi, by Puccini.
And that is all.
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