« LFM’s Jason Apuzzo at The Huffington Post and AOL-Moviefone: With Great Power: A Conversation with Stan Lee at Slamdance 2012 »     ...     « Sundance 2012: LFM Reviews Grabbers »     ...     « Sundance 2012: LFM Reviews Bestiaire »     ...     « Slamdance 2012: LFM Reviews The First Season »     ...     « Sundance 2012: LFM Reviews The Return »     ...     « Sundance 2012: LFM Reviews V/H/S »     ...     « Sundance 2012: LFM Reviews Wuthering Heights »     ...     « Sundance 2012: LFM Reviews Wrong »     ...     « Midnight at the Grand Guignol: LFM Reviews The Theatre Bizarre »     ...     « Happy New Year: LFM Reviews All’s Well, Ends Well 2012 »     ...     « Sundance 2012: LFM Reviews Ai Weiwei – Never Sorry »     ...     « Sundance 2012: LFM Reviews The Other Dream Team »     ...     « Sundance 2012: LFM Reviews The Raid »     ...     « Sundance 2012: LFM Reviews Lay the Favorite »     ...     « Sundance 2012: LFM Reviews Red Lights »     ...     « Slamdance 2012: Ed Wood’s Final Curtain »     ...     « Sundance 2012: LFM Reviews The Pact »     ...     « Slamdance 2012: LFM Reviews Faith Love + Whiskey »     ...     « Sundance 2012: LFM Reviews The Ambassador »     ...     « Sundance 2012: LFM Reviews Wish You Were Here »     ...     « Sundance 2012: LFM Reviews Where Do We Go Now? »     ...     « Sundance 2012: LFM Reviews Searching for Sugar Man »     ...     « Sundance 2012: LFM Reviews The Conquerors »     ...     « Sundance 2012: LFM Reviews About the Pink Sky »     ...     « Slamdance 2012: LFM Reviews Buffalo Girls »     ...     « LFM’s Joe Bendel Covers The 2012 Sundance, Slamdance Film Festivals + LFM Reviews The Debutante Hunters »     ...     « Sundance 2012: LFM Reviews Madrid, 1987 »     ...     « Submitted to the Oscars by South Korea: LFM Reviews The Front Line »     ...     « LFM Reviews: The Viral Factor »     ...     « LFM’s Govindini Murty on Lars Larson’s National Radio Show »     ...     « LFM’s Jason Apuzzo at The Huffington Post and AOL-Moviefone: “Why The Cold War is Back at the Movies” »

By Jason Apuzzo. Lately we’ve been showing you some exciting new indie sci-fi films (see here, here and here), several of which were crowd-funded, that show how new advances in visual FX are drastically expanding the imaginative possibilities of independent filmmaking.  We’ve also discussed how these films can not only dazzle us visually, but engage contemporary social anxieties associated with war and invasion.

Today we want to tell you about another exciting project called The 3rd Letter (see the film’s trailer above) from acclaimed filmmaker and ILM visual FX artist Grzegorz Jonkajtys.  [Jonkajtys' recent ILM credits include Pan's Labyrinth, The Mist and Terminator: Salvation.]  Jonkajtys had an extraordinary short film called “Ark” shown at Cannes at few years ago.  The film turned a lot of heads, and now he’s hooked up with producer/co-writer Philip Bastiaan Koch on The 3rd Letter (originally titled “36 Stairs”), an extravagant-looking, 15 minute short film that’s apparently about to hit the festival circuit hard.

The 3rd Letter takes place in a dystopian future in which human beings depend on bio-mechanical alterations in order to withstand the detriorating climate.  [Shades of BP?]  Set against a polluted, megalopolis world, the tragic tale of Jeffrey Brief (Rodrigo Lopresti) unfolds.  When faced with the imminent loss of his health insurance, Brief unwittingly unravels a dark truth (involving population control – shades of Soylent Green?) that apparently pushes him to extreme measures …

Here’s some of what Jonkajtys says about his film in a recent interview:

Tell us how you designed this distinctive dystopian world. It looks like a bureaucratic nightmare – like something out of 1984 or THE TRIAL.

I wanted to bring certain aspects of what’s happening in the contemporary society and push it a bit further. The world Jeffrey, the main character, lives in is not set in any particular time or place. We will see a lot of stylistically and periodically mismatched designs, equipments and architecture. With this approach, on an extremely limited budget, it’s easier to find the props and sets rather than build everything from scratch. Plus, it serves the story, creating a kind of conglomerate of periodical and modern elements. Jeffrey’s haircut and clothing (designed by Gus Harput) is very much inspired by Winston’s character from the film 1984.

Of course, the movie is also very relevant. It deals with things like the health insurance industry. How do you avoid becoming too preachy?

The movie is all about Jeffery’s case. The most important aspect of the story is how he will react in the situation he has found himself in – what his choice will be. The insurance situation is only a setting that serves this story. I think it’s good that it is so relevant. More people can relate to it.

It’s not clear to me precisely what the nature of the film’s social critique is regarding the health industry and/or government controls.  Basically the film looks like classic sci-fi dystopia stuff.  Suffice it to say that since government and the private insurance industry are slowly merging into one, creating what is almost sure to be a ‘dystopian’ situation – with freedom and individual consumer choice evaporating into thin air – this film certainly appears grounded in what we’re going through today.

Our future health care bureaucracies?

Visually The 3rd Letter looks completely fabulous, very much in keeping with Jonkajtys’ prior work (I’m also a fan of his short “Legacy”).  The film was shot on a Canon EOS 5D Mark II, and the VFX shots really expand out the film’s world, considering that it was apparently just shot around Jonkajtys’ basement and a few practical locations.  I’d also like to note, again, that this ambitious-looking project was at least in part crowd-funded (see the film’s Kickstarter page, with a reported 47 backers providing the film’s modest $7K budget).

I’ve been up to ILM a few times to visit, but never had the pleasure of meeting Grzegorz.  From what I read about him, his family – he originally comes from Poland – seems to have had some terrible encounters with communism and fascism.  His father was apparently deported to Kazakhstan in 1940 with his family after the Nazi invasion.  His grandfather was also apparently arrested by the Soviet military police, and never heard from again.  I can only imagine that these sorts of emotional, family experiences would sharpen Jonkajtys’ perspective on the benefits of freedom.

We wish him the very best with this project.  You can follow the film’s progress on its Facebook page.

Posted on July 14th, 2010 at 11:26am.

Bookmark and Share

7 Responses to “New Film The 3rd Letter: Is this the Future of Health Care?”

  1. [...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by Mr. K. Mr. K said: RT @LibertasFilmMag: New Film "The 3rd Letter": Is this the Future of Health Care? … See: http://bit.ly/cp4uTz [...]

  2. servethepeople says:

    To me, this looks more like what will happen under government health care than what is going on now under private healthcare. I’m always able to get through to my insurance company whenever I need to make an appointment, and have never been treated like this. That said, I am fed up with how my insurance premiums keep going up, even though I’m young, healthy, only go to the doctor once a year for my yearly checkup, and have never had a major health issue. What I’m paying now is almost double what i was paying three years ago, and that’s kinda crazy. How expensive is it for people who are older than me or have even minor health issues?

    I don’t think a government takeover of the health insurance industry is the answer though. I think freeing up government regulation and allowing more free market competition is the way to lower costs.

    Of course, the present administration is not going to do any of that because they don’t really want to fix healthcare or make it cheaper and more convenient for people – they want to regulate it so much that costs skyrocket, no one can afford private insurance, the insurance companies themselves are driven out of business – and then the government can take over.

    If anyone has any doubts about this, just look at the current insane health care bill that does not solve any problems but only makes things worse.

  3. M. Riva says:

    I’ve noticed that many of this science fiction projects are being made by eastern or northern Europeans where the climate is more cold and forbidding. I wonder if this affects the dark, gray look of these films? This filmmaker is from Poland, the prior ones with the anti-Nazi project were Finns, etc. And of course, their close proximity to totalitarianism, or direct experience of totalitarianism themselves, would also color their worldviews.

  4. SilverySurfer says:

    I guess what impresses me here is what you say at the end of the article about the $7,000 budget. That’s really incredible. I guess if you work for ILM you know how to squeeze every penny out, but this really takes that to an extreme.

    Hopefully you guys will be able to show thte full thing when it gets online.

    • Jason Apuzzo says:

      It is impressive that this was done on that budget. I was really taken aback by that figure.

  5. pong says:

    yes, this looks like it could rock.

  6. Patricia says:

    Oooh, want to see it.

Terms of UsePrivacy Policy Libertas Film Magazine™ is produced by The Liberty Film Festival.® Suffusion WordPress theme by Sayontan Sinha