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Creative Spotlight - Local moviemaker strikes terror



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One of the most interesting things about living in Evansville is being surrounded by all sorts of creative people and not even knowing it. From artists to musicians to writers, Evansville seems to have it all. News 4U likes to pay attention to these people. This month we talked to Lewis Cheney, director of the locally-shot film VictimEYES, which premiered recently at the Henderson Fine Arts Center.

N4U: Tell me a little bit about VictimEYES.  

Lewis Cheney: It's a lovely, touching saga of a serial killer. It's a feature length suspense/thriller about a serial killer who gets caught as he is about to kill his thirteenth victim. He tries to kill her in haste and succeeds only in blinding her. He goes to jail for 13 months, and she's been in her own self-imposed prison afraid to leave her house because, as she puts it “the world is not like I left it.”  He's about to be transported to prison and has a plan to finish what he started.

1 credit Lewis Chaney.jpg

How long were you shooting?  

This has been a long project. It was shot between August and October 2005, with an intended date of release being 2006.  In May of 2006, I lost my mentor and good friend, former News25 Chief Photographer Leonard Judd. He had been such an inspiration to me for this project. He was there through almost the entire shooting schedule and took the behind the scenes photos. Once each week, we would have lunch together for him to catch up on how things were going in the editing process. Losing him just simply took my heart out of the project. It was hard to continue it without him over my shoulder. In fact, he died while on vacation and had the only copy of the trailer I had at the time with him. He had been showing it to his family. He was so proud to be a part of this and so proud of us, of me, and his approval meant the world to me.

So I put the project away for the better part of a year and a half; I finally got back into it towards the end of 2008. To simply cut the shots together is one thing, but to color correct each and every shot to make it look the best it can, that takes time: lots of time. Then there’s tweaking audio, adding sound effects, special effects and music. Trying to do that while having a life outside the project, plus a wife, two kids, a full time job and other hobbies, made it take a long time to finish. The result is great though and well worth the effort.

2 credit Lewis Chaney.jpg

What was the film’s budget?  

By the time all is said and done, I will have $1500 dollars into this movie. Bear in mind, no one was paid who worked on it. There are contracts in place so that if this movie makes money, we all make money. That money may not buy us more than a Happy Meal, but money isn’t what drove us to make it, as you will see later. Was it budgeted? No, not really. It's a nickel and dime you sort of prospect. You start off going "Hey, I think I will make a movie."

How long have you been making movies? 

I have been making movies for over 20 years, but this is my first feature length one. I have done some other short films that got aired across the state of Kentucky in the Kentucky Educational Television film and video festival and that was cool. When I got into the TV biz 24 years ago, I expressed an interest in doing these sorts of things and Leonard was very encouraging and a foundation of knowledge

Who are your major influences as a filmmaker? 

First is the big one, Steven Spielberg, but maybe not why you think. Jaws terrified me as a child. My legs were asleep at the end of that movie, sitting in a theater in 1975 at the age of 12, because I just hadn't moved. I was incredibly engrossed in it. And it made me want to know how they were made. You might say—and it's a horrible pun, but those who know me, know I would say it—I was bitten by the movies at a young age.

And to me you can't think independent and scary movie without the name John Carpenter coming to mind. Halloween was a low budget movie that became a legend and put Carpenter on the map. But go back and look at the original Assault on Precinct 13 and see his roots.

What’s next? Any other projects you’re working on? 

Next for me is working with yet another co-worker and filmmaker, named Marx Pyle, who is producing and directing a short film he wrote, called Silence of the Belle. It will be shot locally and will be a cool grouping with Neil Kellen shooting it, me lighting it and Marx directing. Marx went to film school and once again, I expect to be on something else where I can learn, so it will be fun.

If you had to drop money on one item as a beginning filmmaker, what would you invest it in?   

A good “prosumer” camera. You need the latitude afforded to you to be able to have manual focus and manual aperature control. It's like a painter, you can buy a cheap brush, but it won't look as good. And as I close my movie, I will close this interview with a quote from Leonard Judd that he said over and over again to many of us he trained. "The camera is your paintbrush and the world is your canvas."

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PHOTO CREDIT | Lewis Cheney

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