Filmmaker not short on motivation
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Elia Powers
For his recent short film, “The Lost Art,” Scott Peters decided to
write and direct without dialogue.
Still, Peters’ voice -- and unmistakable sarcastic humor -- comes
through clearly over the telephone.
On hearing the news that his 10-minute film had been selected to
play at the Cannes International Film Festival: “I was very excited.
I bought a bottle of gin and went straight for the hills.”
On the small crowds at the three festival screenings last month:
“If you were in town for this incredible event, would you go to a
student showing?”
All kidding aside, Peters, a 1999 Corona del Mar High School
graduate and former Chapman University student, is high on his recent
film, calling it “his favorite.”
“The Lost Art” was one of seven short works to be shown as part of
the noncompetitive Cannes Film Market. Chapman film festival
coordinator Derek Horne entered a handful of student films into the
international festival.
Horne and three professors accompanied the students on a 10-day
trip.
Peters’ sentimental, black-and-white film is set in an
old-fashioned barbershop at no particular place or time. The story is
of a man who visits his favorite barber for a shave each morning.
One day, when the patron is a no-show, the barber is concerned. He
visits the man’s home, where the barber finds his friend using an
electric razor.
The barber has lost his last customer.
“I cried the first time I saw it,” said Ann Peters, Scott’s
mother. “It’s a fact of life. There are people losing their
livelihood because of technology.”
Peters, 24, said he wasn’t attempting to make a social statement.
He calls the movie a “cartoon-like comedy,” though he is quick to
articulate his dislike for labels.
The concept came to Peters after one of his friends visited a
local barber a few years back.
He made the film as a class project while a student at Chapman
University’s Dodge College of Film and Media Arts.
Tony Alosi, an assistant professor at Chapman who teaches
screenwriting and film production, said Peters’ strengths as a
filmmaker are displayed in “The Lost Art.”
“He is a natural storyteller,” said Alosi, who had Peters as a
student in numerous screenwriting classes. “He understands something
that is very hard to teach -- the idea of visual storytelling.”
Peters sharpened his filmmaking skills while in high school, when
he took classes at UC Irvine and USC. While at Chapman, he won his
share of awards, including best new filmmaker and best director.
Peters took “The Lost Art” to the Los Angeles Film Festival, the
Austin Film Festival and to various cinema showcases in Europe. The
piece was named Best Short Film at the UCLA Short Takes Festival last
spring.
Peters said he shot the film on a budget of about $1,300. He
enlisted three of his relatives, including his uncle, to fill roles.
The fourth actor was a professional but did the film pro bono.
Peters said the man commuted from the San Fernando Valley each
morning for the filming, which took three days over several weekends
at three locations -- old town Orange, a Costa Mesa barber shop and
his childhood home in Newport Beach.
Peters lives in Los Angeles, where he is an assistant to
screenwriter Sacha Gervasi, whose credits include “The Terminal.”
Last spring, Peters stopped attending classes at Chapman, where he
is only a few credits shy of graduating. Peters, who has aspirations
of being a Hollywood director, said he isn’t sure if he will return
to school.
“I like what I’m doing now,” he said. “I’m concentrating on my
writing.”
* ELIA POWERS is the enterprise and general assignment reporter.
He may be reached at (714) 966-4623 or by e-mail at
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