Today’s post was written by cinematographer Andy Bowley.
i can’t remember if we drank a lot of beer that night.
but i do remember parting ways with david, after a nice meal on the upper west side of new york, saying yes! drone! arcosanti!
or something like that.
a few days later, he wrote to let me know he really wanted to do it.
really?
i had a few weeks to prepare, so i bought a syma x1 quadcopter (about $35) and flew it all around my apartment. my tweedy green chair became landing pad #1, my other tweedy green chair became landing pad #2, and a pillow on the leather couch became landing pad #3.
i practiced everyday i could and crashed and crashed and crashed. and after a couple of weeks, found i could wing the little thing around — landing and taking off from pads 1-3 in nimble succession. i knew i was ready for arcosanti when i could actually fly without sticking my tongue out of my mouth.
days later, i found myself standing in front of a whirring DJI phantom in the arizona desert. and now, the playground was vast.
instead of gliding from pillow to pillow, i was doing 1500′ runs thru canyons, over cliffs, and over top of paolo soleri’s glorious creation.
i couldn’t wipe the smile off my face. which meant i pretty much kept my tongue in my mouth too.
E-mail Andy: a b o w l e y at e a r t h l i n k d o t n e t
[color-box color=”gray”]What’s A Life’s Work about? It’s a documentary about people engaged in projects they won’t see completed in their lifetimes. You can find out more on this page.
We recently ran a crowdfunding campaign and raised enough to pay an animator and license half of the archival footage the film requires. We need just a bit more to pay for licensing the other half of the archival footage, sound mixing, color correction, E&O insurance and a bunch of smaller things. When that’s done, the film is done! It’s really very VERY close!
So here’s how you can help get this film out to the world. It’s very simple: click the button…
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… and enter the amount you want to contribute (as little as $5, as much as $50,000) and the other specifics. That’s it. No login or registration required. Your contribution does not line my pocket; because the film is fiscally sponsored by the New York Foundation for the Arts, all money given this way is overseen by them and is guaranteed to go toward the completion of this film. Being fiscally sponsored also means that your contribution is tax-deductible. So why not do it? The amount doesn’t matter as much as the fact that you’re helping to bring a work of art into the world. And that, I think, is really exciting!
Questions? Email me at d a v i d ( aT } b l o o d o r a n g e f i l m s {d o t] c o m[/color-box]