Day 1
Victor von Schirach, Johannes Wanselow, Henrik Sjöstedt & Andrej Lunuskjin
Victor von Schirach, Johannes Wanselow
Taiga TV.
The director David Henriksson and assistant director - me.
It was freezing cold.
David Henriksson, David Odell and lady.
Fika.
Andrej Lunuskjin
I love this sign.
And this 70's bus driver and his all-man mustache and pipe.
I'm a woman of many and diverse passions.
Feeding time: Johannes Wanselow, Eric Krogh, Emile Blomberg, Eddie Boschek, Bratislav Stankovic, Emma Dimitriglou, Victor von Schirach, David Henriksson
Feeding time: Andrej Lunuskjin, Eric Krogh, Johannes Wanselow, Emile Blomberg, Eddie Boschek, Bratislav Stankovic, Emma Dimitroglou, Victor von Schirach, David Henriksson
Feeding time: Eddie Boschek, Linda Ivarsson, Bratislav Stankovic, Emma Dimitriglou, Victor von Schirach, Henrik Sjöstedt, David Henriksson
The director.
A profile fit to carry the demonic legacy of herr Bergman.
Day 2
The flowers had a rough time.
In the midst of shooting a very merry little group of Japanese tourists showed up.
They gathered round the cross, praying and making body letter formations. I was much too far away to read what they said, but I was told of a U, L and C. The director eventually chased them away.
Andrej Lunuskjin, Eric Krogh, Johannes Wanselow
Eddie Boschek
Bratislav Stankovic, David Henriksson
The all-seeing director David Henriksson
Shadow robot Johannes Wanselow
This is a small selection of photos I'll put together for crew and actors as a forget-this-not. It's also the last post about the shooting of the short film Angående Tims död.
(Previous posts: Lighting the Maze and The heart of the maze.)
Wednesday, January 28, 2009
Tuesday, January 27, 2009
Lighting the maze
More photos from the filming of Angående Tims död, by David Henriksson. (For more, see previous post, The heart of the maze.)
These photos are all but one from the 18th January, when I had plenty of time to roam the premises, disturbing the dead.
Wednesday, January 21, 2009
Youth and commuting
I grew up in one of the suburbs furthest away from Stockholm.
This is the 40 minute long view that has plagued and taunted me for a huge part of my life.
I've got a bad case of the commuting blues.
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