For those of you who follow Alex Pardee, you probably have seen the Zerofriends commercial: The Winter Stalker. Well, at the end of the commercial, there is an exterior shot of Santa's shack that is actually a miniature that I built. So here is a little behind the scenes of the building process. Enjoy!
A few weeks before shooting, Steven Reedy asked me if I wanted to make a miniature for the new Zerofriends commercial he was planning on directing. I said "Sure....what's a miniature?"
He then told me about his idea for a "Santa/Stalker-esque" story. And at the end it needed a shot of a creepy shack. He basically said "Imagine if Santa lived in the Evil Dead shack." I loved the idea, and after an exchange of overly excited high-fives and hand gestures, I set out to build the miniature.
First, I needed a decent workshop. Alex, being the saint that he is, offered me a room in the Zerofriends slaughterhouse to convert into a temp workshop. I spent a solid day hanging tools, building a workbench, organizing lights and basically making the room comfortable for a few weeks of work.
Before building anything, I needed to do some quick sketches to determine a style we thought would fit the Winter Stalker. After a few conversations, Steven and I decided on a small, rundown, one door, one window shack with some slightly over-exaggerated angles. Now began the construction. From this point on, I was never really sure what I was doing. I had a very clear vision of how I wanted it to look in the end, but I wasn't exactly sure how to do it. I started building the platform about 30 inches off the ground. This made it easy to work around and would make it ideal for a camera to swing in, if necessary.
I decided to build up a hill behind the shack. There was some initial talk of just doing a flat landscape, then painting a sky and background, but I felt backing the shack up against a mountain rage would add to the seclusion of creepy Santa. Knowing the mountains would have to have some architectural integrity to support small trees and some weight of the fake show, I built a frame and used chicken wire and plaster of paris to create the mountains.
For the shack, I used an old detergent box as the base. I was able to get slightly skewed angles by cutting the box up and taping it back together. The wood paneling was some kind of door slat I found at the hardware store. After a few cocktails I was able to swing my hatchet and produce tons of tiny wood strips that would cover the box.
I bought some 1/8" door skin and hand cut each shingle with a razor blade. I tried a couple of different patterns for the roof, but the one you see here is the one that looked best.
Since the untreated wood was a raw beige color, I had to go in there and "age" it. Acrylics darkened the wood just fine, and it only needed one coat.
The trees were a mixture of clippings I found from around my yard. It was pretty awesome going outside at 2am swinging a hatchet at my landlord's shrubbery. I played with perspective a little by putting the smaller ones in the back and larger ones in the front.
From here it was small details - a north pole, wooden fence, tree stumps, firewood, shovels, frost on the windows, smoking chimney, bucket full of candy canes, a snowman with the zerofriend face...ya know, all the normal things you'd find in Creepy Santa's yard.
I tried a few different methods for the snow - powdered sugar, granulated sugar, salt, asbestos, dandruff. While some tasted better than others, the most believable turned out to be powered plaster. I also learned that you can't just sprinkle fake snow with your pretty little fingers, no, I had to use a strainer so the snow would fall evenly on the model.
Now for the shooting! Director Steven Reedy and DP Chris Saul came over and set the scene. Chris has an excellent eye for lighting and was able to hook up a very convincing moon light. He also rigged the smoke machine with some dry ice for a really cool rolling fog effect.
This past week my dear friend/enemy, Alex Pardee, had a pretty awesome solo show at Gallery1988 in LA entitled: Hiding from the Normals. The show had a super rad Halloween-murder-mystery theme, where Alex encouraged everyone to dress up.
Our costume ideas came together over a few 1/3 lb burgers at our local Fuddrucker meat house.
Alex: What should I be? Me: Be the plant dude from Creepshow. Alex: Jordy Verrill?!? Fuck yea! Me: Well, what the hell should I be? Alex: How bout Oprah, cause you're lame as fuck. Me: What? Alex: Nevermind, how about Kuato? Me: NICE! That's a rad idea, I just watched that last...wait...are you eating my burger too? Alex: Huh? Oh...yea...well, Kuato doesn't eat.
Making a costume is always more fun than buying one. Here's how I made Mr. Kuato:
Upon acquiring a little plastic baby from Target, I immediately preform non-licensed surgery on the Gerber logo look-alike. After the dissection, I had to take a few photos, because, lets face it, a dismembered plastic baby doll is creepy no matter how you slice it (pun!).
My sculptor buddies introduced me to an amazing product called "Magic Sculpt", and yes, this product earns the first part of its name, as it obviously must have been made by wizards. It comes as a two-part Resin and Hardener, when you mix equal parts it dries hard as a rock overnight. Sorcery!
So, after a few sessions of just stacking on mass to the baby face, I eventually start carving detail around the eyes, lips, nose and ears. I also threw a couple of layers on the arms and hands to give them more of a deformed look. After working with the Magic Sculpt for a while, I notice it's much easier to manipulate about 30 minutes in to the setting process, and some water helps to smooth it out.
Using some more Magic Sculpt, I attach the head and arms to a lumpy pile of dried spray foam, which we will now call "the torso". Whether you're painting a nice piece of furniture or a leader of the mutant rebellion from Mars - a coat of primer is always a good idea before painting anything. I also attached some "U" bolts behind Kuato's shoulders. I know I have to strap him to my chest somehow, at this point I'm not really sure what I'm doing, but I figure these bolts will serve a purpose later.
I started off by spraying a even coat of deep red. This will get into all the nooks and crevices of the figure, which will also eventually be the darkest parts of the form.
From here, I lock myself in our hotel room and layer up middle tones and eventually the highlights. Using mostly Alizarin Crimson, Burnt Sienna, Raw Umber, and White - I try and mix the tones so nothing appears too flat.
Kuato is a mutant. A shiny, sweaty, slimy mutant. And because acrylics dry matte, I need to glisten him up! A simple coat of spray shellac does the trick.
I run some straps through the embedded "U" bolts and wear him like a backwards backpack.
Now I'm ready to get ridiculous at Alex's show!
Me, Alex (Jordy Verrell from Creepshow) and Paul (Carl from Aqua Teen) after the show.