Parking

More editing last week. On Monday, I sat and watched the second rough cut all the way through on the TV. I wanted to see what needed work. The rest of the week was spent tightening cuts and cleaning up audio, and by Friday, I was about 35% through the third draft. By the end of this, I am hoping the film will be technically sound. After that, I’ll need to turn my attention more fully to the narrative flow, which may mean cutting or moving scenes, or possibly shooting something new to bridge any gaps.

I’ve also been speaking with an intern about social media promotion, and we’re beginning to sketch out how that might look. I’m meeting a musician next week to talk about the score.

Automatic is about bureaucracy, and I find myself increasingly sensitive to episodes of dehumanisation. One occurred on Friday in the form of an automatically generated letter from a parking company demanding £100 for overstaying by two minutes in a car park in Chichester during the recent film event.

It’s worth noting that the parking company has access to my GDPR-protected personal information at DVLA – a privilege granted by the British government so that they can pursue people who break their rules. Fair enough, perhaps, in an age where efficiency is worshipped as some kind of God. But in return for that privilege, we might expect a measure of proportionality and respect. The parking fee was paid via an app; it would have been to charge me for the extra two minutes rather than demand a bullying, automated demand for £100.

In any case, I drafted a letter outlining their failings: poor signage, no mobile signal, limited payment options, a lack of meaningful support. Out of curiosity, I uploaded my letter to Google’s Gemini AI. It informed me that this particular car park is apparently notorious, then rewrote my letter removing the waffle and inserting reference to the relevant regulations where the operators appear to have fallen short.

This is interesting. One of my long-standing grievances about modern life is the way that a machine can, out of the blue, become judge, jury and executioner. Many people are not in a position to argue back coherently, and even if they are, busy lives make it tempting simply to pay up and move on.

Now, freely available AI puts the boot on the other foot. We can answer their computer-generated bullshit with computer-generated letters of our own that include all relevant regulations. A weird world where two computer systems fight over the fate of humanity.

Location Scouting

Thanks a million to Mark Tournoff for doing a fantastic job of getting the main office for the film Automatic. The bulk of the film will be shot here. However there are other locations we’re still looking for. None of them should be too difficult. Mainly flats & houses but the closer we can come to the original “vision” (ooh Get me!) the better.

In short, I need a house with an old kitchen, an untidy living room, a garden and a conservatory. I need an ordinary flat, the duller the better, ideally in a block. I need a fancy board room and a corporate office. Oh yes, and an artist’s studio…..in Brighton this should not be a problem! Ah but here’s the rub, I want a petrol station shop or somewhere that will pass for one and I need a corporate style cafe.

I’m mainly looking in Brighton but anywhere close would be of interest. If you would like to see your home or office on the silver screen then please get in touch. A full list of the locations we’re scouting for is listed below.

Grandparents House

A suburban house / bungalow

An artist`s studio / work room

A room used as an artist studio / work room. Ideally it would have paint and art everywhere and an old arm chair but we can organise that. A table with art stuff would be good.

A conservatory

A tatty conservatory with plants and gardening equipment. Nice to have trays of apples, watering cans etc.

A garden

A large or long garden with a flower border. Nice to have an old child’s swing and/or a shed. Anything that suggests this has been a family home for a long time but the kids have grown and gone.

An old fashioned kitchen

An old fashioned kitchen. Doesn’t have to be traditional, just the sort of kitchen that your grandparents have. It would be nice to have lots of clutter.

The Office

A board room / meeting room

A corporate looking meeting room with leather swivel chairs. The more expensive looking the better.

A corporate looking office

A cafe

A cafe which looks like it might be in a large corporate office. A counter holding biscuits and cake and staff selling coffee.

The Streets

A petrol station

Forecourt with pumps AND inside the shop. Or maybe a small shop which could pass as the inside of a petrol station shop.

Flats

An ordinary flat / apartment.

It would be great if it were in a block. Nice to have a big TV.