The Quantum Terror Wins Best Indie Horror Movie from Film Threat's Award This
But what's next for the movie and Christopher Moonlight Productions?
This post will tell you what being a member, here at SubscribeStar, has to offer in 2024.
I’ve told the story before of how I took a few thousand dollars and every resource at my disposal to make an independent horror movie called
The Quantum Terror. I knew that I could make it shine brighter than it had any right to but I never dreamed that it would go beyond maybe playing for a bit on
Amazon Prime Video, having a very limited DVD release, and then fading into obscurity before I would get a chance to make my next indie film.
Fate had a different plan for this movie, though, and soon I saw it not only taking off on
video-on-demand but also getting a smattering of good reviews, including a great one from
Film Threat, a long-time and well-respected film review site that has seen a strong resurgence in popularity among true movie fans over the last few years. With any review comes an automatic entry into their annual award show,
Award This!
I believe that this show is already on its way to becoming as impactful and popular as events like
Sundance or
Comic-Con in the late ‘90s in its own underground way, so when I found out that after being considered by them, along with over two thousand other films that year, I knew I had to buy a plane ticket and make sure I was there, even if it felt like the odds were against me winning.
Well, win my little movie did.
I was so nervous that I forgot to thank a lot of people who truly deserved to be recognized so I’ll post a full list at the bottom of this article.
It was a whirlwind weekend trip, with friends, family, red carpet, and then back on the plane and back to work.
Okay so, we won Film Threat's 'Award This' for Best Indie Horror Movie. Now what? Believe me, I'm just as shocked as anyone else, and after the mixed bag of emotions from elation to extreme self-consciousness the inevitable question arises. How do I take this upward momentum and move forward in a meaningful way?
The first thing that comes to mind is to take inventory of what resources I have right now. I had a lot in the works when my new full-time job as a contract graphic designer put the breaks on almost all of it and I haven't had the bandwidth to get those projects back on track. Don't get me wrong. I'm grateful for that work. It’s quickly turning into a career and that’s a great thing. However, I don't feel like resting on any perceived laurels is the right thing to do so now it's time to figure out how to bring everything back online. An award from Film Threat is just big enough that it makes the iron hot enough to strike but small enough that if I don't, nothing will happen.
So, taking stock, what do I have to work with?
My big project is the animated series I'm doing with my co-producer
Doug Mayfield,
Escape From Planet Omega-12. This one has been prioritized simply because I can do it from home whenever I have downtime. I don't have to schedule talent unless it's for voice recordings which can be done online and almost everything can be built in my garage, shot on a green screen, and then migrated onto my office computer. I'm working with groundbreaking AI technology in ways that I don't believe anyone else has thought of so when things get off the ground (soon, I hope. It's a lot of work and pressure with everything else.) it's going to be spectacular. If it takes off, and I think it can, then it’s the kind of thing I’d like to expand into comic books and video games.
There are two short films that I shot, one with artist and actor
Val Mayerik and one called
Alien Artifact, which both need editing and VFX work.
Alien Artifact needs additional second-unit footage shot, too, now that I think about it. That one is a proof of concept for a feature and if I finish one or both they could be entered into next year's
Award This short film category, for consideration. However, I'd be doing those works a disservice if I didn't have a plan to realize them to their full potential.
It’s true that in this day and age of social media, there has to be a story tying all of these things together into a bigger narrative that people will truly care about and want to follow. For more established people it's not as needed but for me, this is the only push that seems to be an option. It’s a good thing because it will help to refocus my discipline for what needs to happen, next. Maybe, I can turn it into something that can benefit more than just me but also the other talents I work with. It's an ambitious plan but one that is born out of necessity.
So, here’s what I’m thinking.
In the new year,
I'm going to start documenting everything for a book and docuseries about how to make low-budget monster movies the Christopher Moonlight Productions way. The book will be much like the one I did about
the making of Harbinger Down with lots of pictures but with much more in-depth talk about how to do it, from pre-production to self-distribution, and then talk about winning Best Indie Horror Movie because that's what now ties it all together and gives it credibility. I’ll take some of the bandwidth I use on social media and dedicate it to making notes and journalling behind the wall of my
SubscribeStar account, where I’m already doing that for Escape From Planet Omega-12. Both projects can be part of the narrative that subscribers can watch unfold in real-time before it’s all edited together, ask questions about, and give their thoughts on, while I work on it.
The docuseries will be a slower process, secondary to the actual work that needs to be done to make these movies, but I intend to show the process from different points of view by also including interviews with the people who I’ve either worked with or have indie films of their own that have inspired me. For example, I talked to
Alec Gillis who after years of working on some of
Hollywood’s biggest blockbusters would love to talk more in-depth about how he created his own film
Harbinger Down, which I’ve already mentioned above. I’d love to bring his story and others into this, too.
It’s a lot but I’ve come to realize, I’m no longer just trying to make movies, I’m trying to build a storytelling empire from nothing and we only have so much time, so why not just do it?
I hope it’s a ride you’ll be along for. See you in 2024.
…and now for the ‘thank yous’ that I didn’t get to say on stage.
First and foremost all of my Indiegogo supporters who made this possible.
The Cast
Kristin Cochell
Paula Marcenaro
Matt Blackwell
Jordan Michael Brinkman
Dimitrius Pulido
and Val Mayerik
The FX Team
Jenna Green
Heather Lowe
with additional tentacle effects from..
Alec Gillis & Tom Woodruff, Jr. (of studioADI)
Director of Photography
Anthony Gutierrez
1st AD
Paul Dubal
Frankenstein frontman Dave Grave for the end credits song She Casts No Shadow.
Derek Hunt for contributing to the film score and his patronage.
Producer
Douglas Mayfield
Crew
Brent Dickerson and Curry Parker
Movie Logo
David Paul
Poster Art
Oskar Ankarudd
And my wife Faith for her love, support, and playing an eyeball in the movie, along with my beautiful daughters.