Download: DVD „Biker's Soul”
The adventurous travel of a German motorcycle club to the religious heart of Russia. A film about the universal spirit of motorcycling.
» funny, sharp, ironic and intelligent.. « - Europe's #1 Motorcyle Magazine
» Without doubt a true insider tip! « - Europe's #1 Motorcyle Travel Magazine
High speed download of the DVD image (english) incl. extras. Play it with the free VLC Player or burn a DVD. Feel free to copy, screen or remix this Free Culture Film!
Download Bikers Soul
4,20 €
or $5.90
DVD „Biker's Soul”
The adventurous travel of a German motorcycle club to the religious heart of Russia. A film about the universal spirit of motorcycling.
» funny, sharp, ironic and intelligent.. « - Europe's #1 Motorcyle Magazine
» Without doubt a true insider tip! « - Europe's #1 Motorcyle Travel Magazine
Collectors Edition in a Digipak · 63 minutes + 40 minutes extras · audio commentary of the filmmaker · in English, German and Russian
DVD Motorradfilm
11,98 €
or $17
Download: DVD „Route 66”
Gonzo-Documentary, 104 Min · English & German audiotracks · NTSC

High speed download of the DVD image. Play it with the free VLC Player or burn a DVD. This film is Free Culture: you are free to copy, screen or remix the DVD, even commercially!
Download Route 66
4,20 €
or $5.90
CD „Route 66 Soundtrack”
Parking Lot at San Diego International Airport” - the original motion picture soundtrack of one of the first Open Source movies, for which Bechholds had to quit with the traditional European performance rights organization to make this Free Culture movie happening.
CD Route 66 Soundtrack
9,98 €
or $12
CD „Leaving to Nothing”
This album continues the popular seventies psychedelic electronic rock music - with analog synthesizers. If you like Pink Floyd, Vangelis, Tangerine Dream, Tomita, David Parsons, Wendy Carlos or any of the other notables of that era - this is for you.
CD Leaving to Nothing
9,98 €
or $12
DVD-Download „Biker's Soul”
DVD „Biker's Soul”
DVD-Download „Route 66”
CD „Route 66 Soundtrack”
CD „Leaving to Nothing”

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The Last Drug Licensing Plans

I spoke about the licensing plans for our HD feature film release "The Last Drug" at the EmergeAndSee Film Festival:
    share this video: Creative Commons BY-SA VEB FILM Leipzig, Download: iPod

First Edit is Finished

I finished the first edit of The Last Drug, with which I was totally content, at new years eve! It must have been some kind of subconscious psychological thing, telling myself to get it done in 2007, and it worked. Here are a few facts: including the credits the movie will be about 80 minutes. I would love it to be a bit longer, but the story was told and we learned from our first movie to don't get to much in love with the pictures instead. The movie counts about 1.500 cuts. Spun, a drug movie from Jonas Akerlund, is famous for it's 5.000 cuts, by the way. There are a few single-shot movies as well; the first one I know was Hitchcocks Rope. The regular number of cuts is said to be around 700, whatever that means.
My editing workstation was a Core 2 Duo 2.4 GHz, 2GB RAM and 2.5TB on a few SATA, IDE, Firewire 400 und USB2-harddisks, with two 1680x1050 TFTs. Nothing unusual.

The tool was Adobe Premiere CS2. Route 66 was edited on Avid Express DV, but Avid had no 720p25 support at the time I started editing (can you believe this?), so I had to switch. Which turned out to be a good choice; all in all I was comfortable with Premiere - I would use it again. Final Cut was no choice, since I was never into Macintosh. I tested Cinelerra on Mandriva-Linux, but the gross interface turned me off all the time (don't underestimate the importance of look and feel, especially in creative fields) and Cinelerra is said to perform not too good - which would, amongst the open source development style of it, be the number two reason for me to use it. Can someone validate this rumor?
Unfortunately we had no energy left, to concentrate on the editing tool, since this is our first feature film project. I hope we can collaborate with the Cinelerra community on our next movie to maybe improve the interface a bit.

My workspace in Adobe Premiere was looking like this:

    VEB FILM Leipzig, "The Last Drug: editing system workspace", 3360x1050 Pixel

The handling was better than with Avid (which is a matter of taste and for some editors almost a religious decision). The import of footage, pictures and audio was way better: more flexible with different codecs and space saving, since Premiere can work with different codecs, whereas Avid always creates a copy in its own format. And finally, compared to Avid Express DV, the functional range is broadly bigger.
Premiere is worse in terms of performance and stability: at the end of the project I had about three to five crashes per session, mostly when it had to handle different codecs at a time. I had to split the movie project into four smaller projects to be able to handle it at all. I used up to 6 video and 9 audio tracks, usually one to two video tracks and three to four audio tracks.
All voice-, effect- und music tracks have been separated, to make sure every single sample can still be edited independently by our sound designers Tom and Philipp, when I deliver the final audio tracks. That's the timeline, by the way:

    VEB FILM Leipzig, "The Last Drug: editing timeline", 4258x400 Pixel

I'm waiting for the feedback of our crew right now, to adjust the final cut and prepare the project for the next phase: compositing and sound design.

Pickup Shot Done

"The Last Drug" sound designer Looza cleared his apartment for our pickup shooting. While Looza left the place for a DJ job on a Leipzig street art event Mathias did the camera and directing work, while I tried to stick a catheter into a vein on the back of my hand. Uuuhh. At the end of the day we did all the shooting.

Same day, at the morning: on the autobahn, at 180 km/h (about 110 miles/h), my exhaust pipe dropped down. I think I didn't realized it for a few minutes, since I had an old Chemical Brothers album playing, which sounds like towing a centner of metal junk behind you at 180, anyway. I tried to fix the pipe with an old analoge video cable at first, propably the only thing that cable could have done for me, still.
I'll be busy working on a congress the next two weeks as a video operator. After that I'm available for VEB FILM to finish the editing, fulltime again. Hallelujah.

Pick-Up Shooting #3: eyeball shot

Tom turned out to be some kind of "The Last Drug" quality manager, which is not exactly the type of job, where everybody is glad to hear what you have to say. That's why we have to give out some credits to our Senior Sound Designer, since his critics are constantly improving the film.
His latest suggestion concerns the way the drug is being taken by the protagonist in the movie: orally. It simply doesn't work the way it was supposed to. The protagonist seems to have too much control over the dosage, when it should actually be controlled by the machine. The initial plan was to let him wake up several times in some kind of hypnotized state, taking the next dosage of the drug. But it looks more like "all right, let's take the next cup" instead of "damn, this poor guy gets another shot!"

In Hollywood they would ram a shot into the eyeball of the actor. Or at least in the spinal cord. Tom, Gerald, Matze and I have been talking about this and we decided to install a battery of shots retroactively in scene number 2.

That brings us to another pick-up shot. My wife is an anesthesiologist, so she can supply catheters, tubes, shots, infusion bags, placebo fluids and a programmable infusion pump. I will have to inject the catheter myself, single-handed. Tt's making me sick already.
I also want to use the centrifuge in the shooting, but we will have to construct something. We actually would need 5 infusion pumps, so you will have to clone them in the compositing, Matze. I will draw a storyboard next week, so we can discuss it via Skype.

Happy Birthday: Robert Lange


The guy who did the incredible production management for "The Last Drug", who ripped his private account to buy the HD cam, when our cam sponsor suddenly jumped off, who left us his station wagon as a VEB company car, when he emigrated to Australia two years ago and first of all: who mentally brought me through the shooting period, turned 30 today!
Actually, I realised much later, what a great job as a production manager he did. Namely, when I had to organise the pick up shootings myself. What he got going with a few thousend Euros is unbelievable. You have to get everything for free, if you still want to impress the audience on such a low budget in production design. I can't stress enough the respect I have for Rob. Lots of credits for the quality of "The Last Drug" belong to him. He will return to Germany this winter, to organise an adequate world premiere for the first free HD feature film.

Meanwhile he is getting his dive master Down Under right now - so if you feel like you want to learn diving: www.lange-tauchen.de.

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