Free Screening – First Friday October 2nd!

September 21st, 2009

There will be a free screening of “The Scrapper” along with some of my shorter work along with painter Shanna Waddell. The great Bruce James (premiere photographer) will show his documentary “God’s Critters,” which was shot in Fishtown.

Friday October 2, 2009

Circle of Hope

2007 Frankford Ave.

Philadelphia PA 19125

Schedule:

Just to give you an idea about when things are happening.

Screening 1 (6pm-7pm)
- God’s Critters, 9min  (by Bruce James, shot in Fishtown)
- Charles and Guy, 9 min (Jon O)
- Quest, 10 min (Jon O http://questfilm.org)
- The Scrapper, 32 min (Jon O http://thescrapper.org)
- Q&A 5 minutes

Live Music (730pm-750pm)
Artists from Everquest Studios featured in Quest (The Price and Chizz)

Screening 2 (8pm-9pm)
-same as screening 1

I hope you can make it. I spoke to Joe today and he thinks he will be able to make it as well.

By the way Joe is now scrapping with a partner…so there may be a new project in the works: “Scrapper and Scrapette” I’ll keep you posted.

Philly Premiere Photos

May 20th, 2009

These were some Holga and 35mm images taken by the amazing Bruce James on the day of the premiere…these were intentionally cheese ball…I take this work seriously, but you also have to have fun while doing it.

jon_joe0009

Amazing Day + Mail Order Fun

May 18th, 2009

Thanks to everyone who attended the Scrapper Philly premiere! It was so cool. Joe had a great time and really felt respected by everyone that he met. So, thanks for being so awesome. I wish there had been more time to talk and hang out afterwards…the room was packed and I wish I could have met everyone…if you are out there please contact me or post a comment on the site. I ‘d love to hear what you think. It was crazy to go from hanging out with one dude for a few months to having a packed out theater full of viewers…Unless I really start to practice shredding on my guitar this is as close as I’m going to get to the packs of raving lunatic fans the Beatles had in the movie HELP! I can live with that…I’d rather have friends than fans.

Also, I had a bunch of little 24 page zine-style photo books that I made for the event, but I didn’t do a great job of distributing with all of the madness that comes with having a triple premiere…

If you would like one please send me a SASE (self addressed stamped envelope) and I will send one to you. The enveloped can be regular sized because the book is 5 x 4…Remember the days of mail order? Here’s your chance to reminisce the old days of snail mail…

Send it to: Jonathan Olshefski 2980 Weikel St. Phila PA 19134

I will post more about the premiere later…

City Paper Article

May 16th, 2009

There was a little blurb about the Scrapper in this week’s Philly City Paper: http://www.citypaper.net/articles/2009/05/14/941-theater-philadelphia-filmmakers

Philadelphia Premiere – May 17 @ 941 Theater

April 19th, 2009

thescrapper-flier-small

The Scrapper is having its Philly premiere along with two world premieres of locally created films…

It will happen @ 941 Theater
941 N. Front St.
Philadelphia PA 19123
(on Front just as you hit the cobblestone)

SCHEDULE / PRICES
Sun May 17
6pm – 20th Century Boy – $6
7:30pm – The Scrapper – $3
8pm – The Mind – $6
All day pass – $10

20th Century Boy is a romantic comedy of sorts about a guy who thinks he was in World War 1
http://www.myspace.com/20thcenturyboyfilm

The Mind is a wild horror movie…
www.myspace.com/themindmovie

There will be free beer!
I am also trying to get Joe (the scrapper) to come on out as well…

Get advance tickets here:
http://www.brownpapertickets.com/producer/7724

Interview with Joe – uncut

April 15th, 2009

This is the uncut interview I did with Joe on his stoop…I chopped it up a good amount for the theatrical release, but I think the raw footage is really interesting too. The cuts you see here are moments where I turned the camera off except for one moment I cut out because it contained some personal details about my wife.

So you can see documentary is a bit of a lie…I changed the chronology of events, but I was trying to tell the story in the most cohesive way possible. In conversation we tend to repeat things and drift from subject to subject. My edits were an attempt to structure the conversation a bit more. So there ya have it…I think transparency is really important for this type of filmmaking.

Also, you might ask why I cut my dialogue completely out of the theatrical release. Well, I really wanted to create a space for the viewer to hang out with Joe. I felt like my voice was a distraction from that relationship. I wanted to mediate this relationship as little as possible. Sure, I mediated through shot choice and camera angle, but I didn’t think it was necessary for me to become a character in the piece. Though the creation of the piece was only possible through the interaction I had with Joe as we were shooting. The clip below shows the story of Joe and Jonathan. “The Scrapper” is the story of Joe and the viewer.

New Skates for Joe

March 30th, 2009

joesskates

Joe just recently broke his only pair of skates. He wore the wheels down until they broke off. So, he is now looking for a new pair. If anyone would like to donate a pair of skates size 11, 12, or 13, let me know and I will get them to him. Email me here: contact[at]thescrapper.org

Photo Book Collaboration

March 27th, 2009

Last Fall I spent a lot of time in the darkroom printing the 35mm photos I took while shooting The Scrapper. I asked Joe to look at the prints and to write whatever the images made him think about. He lost his glasses, so he had a hard time seeing what he was writing.

"There are times I'm so tired at the end of my night pushing the cart I close m eyes while I'm pushing a heavy load. From time to time.""It's a hard life. It can take a toll on you. I think things have to get better. Some days are better then others.""Hurry up and wait. That's what I seem to do often when I go to cash out the metal that I scrap.""I found a Rolex one time. I got $2000.00 for it. I can't understand why people throw away such things. I can't see what I'm writing, I have no glasses""Sometimes I'm not able to stop the cart as quick as I'd like. Im lucky I haven't run in a car or something.""I'm getting too old for this. I find myself having to rest more often than not. I can reflect on the day/night.""I brought in 562 lbs. of iron one time. It was the heaviest load I ever pushed in a cart. The cart broke a wheel on that trip. ""I pray often when I'm out scrapping. I ask the Lord for help and he's there all the time."

DVD Commentary Track

March 26th, 2009

Today Joe and I recorded a commentary track for The Scrapper DVD. I haven’t seen Joe in awhile. Along with this recession the price for scrap metal has gone down considerably. Today it is worth half as much as it was a year ago.

Interview

March 25th, 2009

I just did this interview for Viva Doc in Chicago…Pretty fun.

Here it is…

7 questions with Jonathan Olshefski

Jonathan Olshefski, an up-and-coming Philadelphian filmmaker, hit the streets during the midnight hours to follow and film the nightly routine of a “scrapper” ― you may know them as those drifting individuals who push shopping carts filled with metal scraps ― these vagabonds forage around searching for discarded waste, collecting junk with little to no value, in hopes to sell it and turn a profit. The result of Jonathan’s followings is The Scrapper, a 32 minute documentary short, which recently played at the Chicago Underground Film Festival and will also be screening at Viva Doc on Tuesday, March 17.

1. What initially sparked your interest and/or influenced you to pursue filmmaking?

My journey towards documentary film was a long and winding one. I’ll give it to you in chapter form:

I. Loathley Lady Skate Company

It started out in the mid-’90s making skate videos and ridiculousness vignettes containing some mixture of blood, poop and insanity (http://llscfilm.com). Back then it was purely social, purely fun, an excuse to hang out with friends and actually do something.

II. Boring Art Fart

I graduated from high school in 2000, intent on being a garbage man, but somehow found myself studying film at Temple University. My focus shifted from energetic, social spontaneity to weird, serious, personal projects as self-therapy. EXPERMENTAL! I got bored and added English literature as a second major and found my way into still photography and new media design. I graduated with no desire to pursue filmmaking. I continued to shoot stills of abandoned buildings and work low-wage construction.

III. Wendy Stabs Peter Pan

I always struggled with the desire to create and the desire to do something noble and worthwhile. I thought I would end up being a nurse, social worker, or teacher. I met a southern photojournalist (http://www.flickr.com/photos/alymae/) and after a short, tumultuous romance I was left feeling incredibly rotten, but also inspired to pursue photography as a means of storytelling/connecting. Rather than exploring empty spaces I would explore the humanity in Philadelphia.

IV. CommuniTEA – Pass the Tea around

Two friends living from an intentional community called the Bruderhof introduced me to Sister Margaret and the good people of New Jerusalem Now (http://newjerusalemnow.org), a community of recovering addicts, and found my first story. Portions of this interaction can be found at Whispers in the Storm (http://whispersinthestorm.com). Magically, photography became of means to connect and to build relationships with people I previously wouldn’t relate to. From there I began teaching photo classes to recovering addicts and feeling like my two passions (aesthetics & social justice) were finally coming together.

V. Sell Out Versus Drop Out

So, while I was doing all of this fun stuff I was also balancing being employed and being unemployed. I’d make a chunk of money then quit and try to live as long as possible on what I had made while pursuing projects that I was excited about. Then I started to make good money at a job I actually liked and I felt like I was beginning to lose my passion for documentary storytelling, so I had to decide whether to try and keep the job and balance it with everything else or just quit. I decided to quit. Then I had to decide should I just be unemployed and do projects, or go back to school and do the same kind of work in an atmosphere where I will be challenged and exposed to things I wouldn’t be exposed to on my own. So, I went back to Temple’s film school for my MFA and started shooting video and film to coincide with my stills. That’s where I am at today. The Scrapper was a product of my first year of grad school.

2. There’s the film school route and countless other routes. Which have you pursued and how would you describe the experience?

See above. School is fun. I like my classmates. I like getting access to equipment that I don’t have to buy myself. I like teaching undergrads…but it’s a tool and it is working for me right now. By no means is it a prerequisite for good work.

3. What most immediately struck you about making a film about a scrapper subject and how does your film about a scrapper differ from the countless other documentary shorts that have been made about homeless individuals?

I’ve always been interested in scrapping and the guys with the carts. My Grandpap scrapped all of kinds of things for me when I was a kid in Pittsburgh. That’s how I got my first Night Rider big wheel. Me and my friends used to scrap every Tuesday night to get things to break and set on fire for the movies we made in high school.

For me, it’s all about exploring. The Scrapper actually came about as I was doing an observation assignment for a screenwriting class. I was sitting in this wild beer store in my neighborhood taking notes on everything that I was observing. Joe (the scrapper) came in and sat next to me and we talked about hockey for the next hour and he bought me a $1.25 24oz Bud Ice. It wasn’t until later that I found out the he scrapped. Later I saw him with his cart and told him I always wanted to do a project on a scrapper. I asked him if I could do a project on him and he was happy to have the company.

How does my project differ? It is my project. My experience. Joe is a quirky, unique guy, but there are tons of documentaries about quirky individuals and their daily activities. He isn’t homeless actually. I guess that question shouldn’t be: why is it different?, but why does it matter? I think portraits of the lives of unseen populations are incredibly important as long as they are done collaboratively with the subject and with sensitivity. I believe that greater understanding leads to greater empathy. I would hope that this would develop into some sort of practical, beneficial change for these populations, but I am struggling with this concept right now. After passively consuming a story about someone different from you, do you treat people in similar social conditions any differently? Or, is it just another form of reality TV entertainment? …but ethics gets boring. These days I go with my gut, not my head.

4. How would you describe your guiding set of film making principles?

Explore, listen, have fun, participate, respect, collaborate, learn, share.

5. The Scrapper screened at the 2008 Chicago Underground Film Festival. Did you attend the the festival? What’s your short-list of favorite films you watched?

My wife gave birth to our baby boy, Caleb Lee, just three weeks before the Chicago Underground Festival, so I didn’t make it out.

6. Reconsidering your previous festival experiences and submission processes, what have you learned not to do, what to do, and how do you intend to improve your future submission processes? Name three festivals you have particular regard for.

I’m new to the festival thing…I think it’s a little bit weird. I’d say start your own festival. Screen your own stuff. Create community actively. Don’t just pay $35 a pop through withoutabox and hope someone likes your work. If you feel good about your work, promote it yourself. I get rejected mostly, so I have a biased opinion.

7. Your top five documentaries are:

Top five docs:
· Julien Donkey-Boy ;)

· Panola

· Radek

· Dark Days

· Children Underground.

The Scrapper(2008) will screen with Heavy Metal Jr. (2005) on Tuesday, March 15th at 5:15pm. The event is free and will be held in 1104 S. Wabash Ave. in the Michael Rabiger Center for Documentary Film. For more visit Jon’s website http://thescrapper.org