Hey folks, we here at The Last Stand got interviewed by The Local Zombie. We have the link to the site here as well as the interview posted below!
Also, we still have shirts, so please get one to help support the production and advertise the hell out of us when you are out at the great social places you frequent. Shirts are only $15 delivered to your door. Get them and help The Last Stand.
New episode coming April 1st, 2010.
Enjoy!
TLZ: Thanks for taking the time out of your day for this interview
TLS: Yeah, my pleasure
TLZ: So you’re with TheLastStandOnline.com. can you tell us a little about the site?
TLS: Well, it’s not the prettiest site on the web. It is pretty simple and straight forward. I wanted a home for the series, and something that had a blog that I could update. My buddy Josh, who has done some of the composite work as well, works that magic of the site. I noticed a lot of web series that had awesome sites, amazing animated buttons and menus, but the show left me flat. I figure people are there to see the show, not see how awesome our web guru is. I think as the show evolves and grows, the site will grow and evolve and become more “showy” without being too much. It’s really about the show.
TLZ: And the show is great! I’m really looking forward to Episode 5. Can you tell us about the series?
TLS: Well, it was never meant to be a series. There was a building I was scoping out for a different shoot, and I found out it was to be demolished in 24 to 48 hours. So I called all my friends with one hand, and wrote a script with the other. An hour later, I had written the piece and had people showing up the next day. About half of them showed, with half the gear I needed. I killed a lot of time waiting for folks to show. In the end, we filmed what is now Ep1 in three hours. I shelved it for about 3 months because I thought it was crap. When I revisited it, I thought it was pretty good, so I slapped sound on it and dumped it at a site call The Lost Zombies.
Next thing I knew, my inbox was full, with people asking “When is the next one?” After a week of this, I got everyone together and asked if they wanted to keep going, and they said yes. So I put pen to paper, and wrote four more episodes. I got a crew together, started finding locations, and in October of 09 we started filming again. We filmed most everything in October and November of 09 with episode 5 being filmed in one day in January ’10. At this point I have 10 episodes written.
TLZ: That’s great! It’s amazing how a three hour shoot came to be such a fun series. What are your plans after the 10th episode? Are you just playing it by ear?
TLS: Yeah I am. To be honest, this is what I want to do. While the episode may have been an accident, the attempt wasn’t. I have given up most everything to be a director, and my intention is to keep going with making films. If it means keeping the series alive while I believe in the story I am making, then I will. I am planning to shoot a film this summer and keep shooting The Last Stand. I would love the chance to make a film of The Last Stand, or another zombie story I have written. But I will keep doing this work until I make it or it kills me. I am 39, have had two careers prior to this one. I am not turning back now.
TLZ: The Last Stand has a great storyline from what I’ve seen. You said you wrote other zombie stories, where do you get your inspiration from?
TLS: Well, I became of fan of zombie movies with the runners and the infection stories. I was never a huge fan of the shufflers. So when things like Dawn of the Dead remake, Shawn of the Dead, 28 Days Later started coming out, I was hooked. I am a sucker for a story as well. All the special effects and gore mean nothing without the story. But I don’t have a vast knowledge of zombie movies, so I am at a disadvantage. My fear has been that, in the end, this story has been done but I don’t know it because I haven’t seen it. I just started writing in a direction that seemed interesting to me without being something that I had seen. Almost everything has been done, so now we have to find interesting ways of exploring the same ground. I took a huge cue from my Assistant Director, Rachel Bennett, who is a screen writer. She read my first drafts and said “Yeah, they’re good, but there is no depth.” She helped me to realize I wanted to explore the characters and the story more. So I started looking at ways to add texture to the stories. But I wanted to get to the point, in some way, with each episode. I watch a lot of web series (A LOT!) and so many have left me flat. There is one that I watched 8 episodes, and still didn’t know what it was about. If that had been a film, and I was an hour or so into it and didn’t have a clue what it was about, I would demand my money back. So I watch these and I strive for better, from me, because these are competition for places like Koldcast or other web series sites to play our series. If I make it better, knowing I have no money, I want someone to imagine what we could do with a budget.
TLZ: I was impressed by the effects and filming with such a low budget. The Last Stand managed to keep me interested with still having a sort of close at the end of each episode. Out the the episodes written do you have a favorite?
TLS: I had the most fun with Episode 3. Ep 2 was nothing but disasters, and I thought it would kill me and the series never happen. When it was out I had a sigh of relief, but Ep 3 was so much fun. It hinted to more to come with the end of the running dude, it had the story development of St Teresa’s being a crap place and the possible origins of the virus mutation. Then there was the action. I really wanted to do action, and that was so much fun. he building we shot in is called The Lotus; a 1929 Hotel in downtown Portland, Oregon. The hotel area has been shut since the ’60s and has only ever been used since then one other time: the open sequences of Gus Van Sant’s My Own Private Idaho. Nothing else has happened to that place until we came along and shot out zombies there. And nothing probably will ever again. The management and the owners hate the idea of anyone or anything happening in there. We got snuck in by a manager who was later fired for unrelated events. It was the perfect place to shoot. We didn’t set dress anything. We ran electricity for lights, got crash pads for the stunts. We put a craigs list ad out for zombies. Next thing I know, we are in this dirty, dusty, dead pigeon of a building that was totally creepy, filming where Gus once did, making zombie history for me! It was awesome. And the execution was just the way I wanted it, for the most part. I wanted my zombies to run more, but no matter how much I yelled at them to run, they all shuffled for the most part.
TLZ: It must have been a great experience! And at The Local Zombie I’ve got to ask you, how would you survive a zombie apocalypse?
TLS: Any time I think or hear that, I flash to Red Versus Blue and the zombie plan that Searg had. I don’t know if you watch Red Versus Blue, but it is HALO hilarity. He had 26 zombie plans that all involved using one of his grunts as bait. The last one was to get infected so as to hunt the grunt down and eat him. I don’t know what I would do. Avoid the cliches as best I could. Go for ammo, look for canned food. Avoid the major highways. I grew up in rural Oregon, so I would like to think I could rough it in the wild, so I think I would head to the middle of nowhere. Get as far away from people as possible. I am not resourceful enough to turn my Manhattan apartment into a fort. I certainly believe that I would have a very tough time with moral issues that arise. It is one thing to say you are going to do something, but it is another to be face with such realities.
TLZ: Very true. Again, I’d like to thank you for giving me the opportunity to interview you. I’m looking forward to what happens next at TheLastStandOnline.com. Good luck and keep up the great work!
TLS: Thanks so much. I love the support. I really appreciate every time one more person watches. Especially when they like it!
Eric Sadik
Webmaster
TheLocalZombie.com
[...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by MYMHM, MYMHM, Zombie Command, Galaxy_Sailor, topsy_top20k and others. topsy_top20k said: The Last Stand had an interview yesterday. You can read it at our blog and buy a shirt! http://bit.ly/bp9oqu [...]
I have been searching for this, was not on the samepage in search as it was last week when I first saw it. Anyway, thank God for search story!
Great interview, and very interesting how this series got started! Sometimes the best things in life happen by accident or chance. I for one am very impressed with it so far, and would love to see you do a full-length zombie movie with an actual “movie budget.”