Showing posts with label Temporaltorium. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Temporaltorium. Show all posts

Saturday, July 9, 2016

The Scoop: July 2016 - Time Capsule

Two years have passed since the Age of Banak the Brave.  Not a word has been heard, nor sign of activity seen of Stranger Things Studios since.  It was as though the company had folded, gone under, gave up, disbanded, vanished without a trace.

But now there are whispers, rumors that the lights down at the old abandoned studios have been on in the dead of the  night.  Someone has been stoking the furnace, and the black smoke of production has been seen lifting into the twilight.

Stranger Things Studios is coming back.

Sunday, September 28, 2014

The Scoop: September - The Age of Banak

It has been a big summer for Stranger Things Studios - one I can only dub as "The Age of Banak."

Filming wasn't something that was even on my radar this year per se.  But the unexpected boost in popularity of The Half Orc Encounter demanded a sequel.  Instead of our typical short videos, we churned out a 20 minute short film of comedy and fantasy combat.  Making it was an adventure of its own, but that is a tale for a different time.... 

Sunday, July 6, 2014

The Scoop: July - Training Time

Our first film date for the Half Orc II is coming up fast.  Locking down a date was a herculean task in and of itself.  Coordinating everyone’s schedules, and finding a date when everyone was available, is something we’ve never had to deal with before.  All our other movies have been stand-alones, where we could always just pull in another person to fill a gap.  Not with this film.  We need the original gang back together to do it.  

Saturday, May 24, 2014

The 2014 Scoop - Where the $%&# Have You Been?

If you're reading this, I'm almost amazed.  That means that, 1) you kept Stranger Things Studios on your Facebook news feed, 2) you saw this post on a holiday weekend, and 3) you actually took the time to click on the link.  So, wow!  And thank you.

I suppose an earnest update is in order: 

Monday, September 3, 2012

Monthly Scoop: September 2012


With August over, it is finally time to call it a wrap on the Ashes of Man web-series.  It had a good run, bringing in over 450 views since the trailer aired back in June.  A few production photos will be posted on Stranger Things’ Facebook page shortly, but then that will be the end of that. 

It is definitely time to move onto something new.  What that is exactly is anyone’s guess.  As of right now, I have one of two avenues I am considering pursuing.  I am torn as to which I will choose.  If I can do justice to both simultaneously, I will.  I doubt it though.

The big question is “Movies, or Writing?” 

Monday, November 7, 2011

Monthly Scoop: November 2011

It’s that time again boys ‘n’ girls!  Time to realize I did far too much talking, and not enough doing.  Time for the Monthly Scoop.

To begin, I apologize for the late post.  I promise I will make it up to you.  The truth of the matter is I have a large project I’m working on, and I was hoping to be able to write the blog for it last week.

Speaking of projects - what has JonnyDStrong been up to?


Extra-Life

As you may have read, the newly founded team, Fat Chance Heroes, had their first charity event.  It was called Extra-Life.  It is a 24-hour video game marathon to help raise money for children hospitals.  We had a good time, and recorded some of the event to prove we stayed up the full 24 hours.  I am currently editing the film, which is taking a lot longer than planned.  But as soon as I’m done I will post it on-line.

Sunday, October 2, 2011

Monthly Scoop: October 2011

So that’s it.  September’s over.  What an amazingly short, yet strangely productive month.  I’m finding it’s nice to have the JonnyD Weekly around so I can remember what I’ve been up to.  My memory only works for about 36 hours, tops.  I’m writing this Saturday night.  I can’t recall Thursday at all anymore.

I do know, however, that I am finally down to the backwash of my August bucket list.  Moby Dick is read, as is two-thirds of the everything my co-workers have loaned me.  I also beat Baldur’s Gate II, a PC game that I’ve been sitting on since 2001, and have been picking away at for over a year.

And let’s not forget the Gauntlet!  The question I keep getting is, “When’s the Gauntlet II?”  When, mind you, not, Will there be.  To answer that, lets say, January 2012.

In short, the slate is clear.  Its time to change gears - make a new list of goals to keep me busy until the end of the year.  If you’ve noticed, I’ve already started laying the ground work.

With the colder climate on its way, its time to return to my writing.  Temporaltorium has been patiently sitting on my desk for the better part of 2011, waiting for me to delve into round three of editing it.  I am not looking forward to it.  The trimming I need to do is like taking a Miata, and crunching it down to the size of a matchcar.

On the flip side, I’m long overdue to start writing something new.  I haven’t created new material since I finished the novel back in July 2010.  I have several novels floating around in my mind.  I’ve also thought about unloading dozens of short stories to send off to magazines.  That seems the more productive idea.

And then there’s the Fat Chance Heroes.  A co-worker of mine wanted to join a 5K run I had signed up for.  It logically followed that we come up with a team name.  Then we decided it was silly to make a good team name only to use it this one time. 

So, now the Fat Chance Heroes have their own page at

http://fatchanceheroes.blogspot.com

and are looking for events and/or charities to sign up for.

Along with a team name, we came up with alter-egos, like Mystery Longshanks, Cold Man Fusion, Blackout.  The characters have been so damn interesting that I could make up fantastical stories of their exploits.

I’m seriously considering it…

Friday, September 2, 2011

Monthly Scoop: September 2011

I have become acutely aware of the fact that even though I get up the same time every day for work, the sun now thinks it can sleep in longer than me.  It’s starting to mess with my psyche.  The little primal critter in me knows that it can mean only one thing:  its September.  Fall is only three weeks away.  No, its not time to start reigning in your nuts for the season, but its definitely time to start thinking about it. 


But first, there is another matter to attend to.  Remember my August bucket? (No? hmm… Click Here)

Now that we’re all up to speed, let’s continue.  Remember that bucket list of mine?  Yeah… that bucket’s nowhere near empty.  For one, there’s still a massive Sperm Whale in there.  I know.  I know.  I’ve been reading Moby Dick since what…March?  Yeah, that sounds right. 

Don’t judge me!  Have you ever read Moby Dick?  No?  I didn’t think so.  So shut up! 

How about you?  Yes, you have?  How long did it take you?... oh… well you can shut up, too I guess.

- Sigh -

Sorry to be so crass about the topic ;-)  I’m almost done with the book, though.  Less than 80 pages to go!

Moving on.  Don’t let the bucket fool you.  I’ve actually cleared out a good deal of it, such as:

I beat The Darkness.  Again, if you haven’t heard the story about how the PS3 game scared the crap out of me and how I could only play it during the day with someone home, you might want to read about it and get a good laugh at my expense. (Read the blog)

The war between myself at the 105” tree trunk in my backyard wages on.  The last skirmish ended with one side suffering a twisted wrist and three massive blisters; while the other side endured the dismemberment of seven of its roots, the largest being the size of my thigh.

Probably the best moment of August was Taylor Falls.  I love canoeing.  It has to be, especially in the early morning, one of the most serene things to be doing.  Two years ago, coworker of mine told me about a place in Taylor Falls where you can rent a canoe, and make your way miles down the docile waters of the St. Croix river.  They will pick you up and drive you back to your car.  How awesome is that?!  So last Saturday Tonya and I drove up there and got out on the water.  It was absolutely beautiful.  The weather was perfect.  If you’ve never done it, you should.  I want to go back so badly already.


There was something regarding a custom deck of cards that happen in August, but that is a story for later this month :-) 


The Buffalo Wild Wing’s “Blazing Hot Wing Challenge,” did not happen.  12 wings, 6 minutes, covered in their hottest sauce.  Tell him what they win Jonny!  Nothing!  Absolutely nothing.  Is the meal on the house like every other place offering a eating challenge?  No.  Do I get a souvenir?  Yes! you get a shirt;  but you have to buy it first…

No thanks.  I’ll pass. 

We had a good run last month, but with fall on its way, its time to get my nuts in a row.  For example, I have two movie ideas for Stranger Things Studios that I’m idly mulling around.  I may start in on them.  I may not. 

In all honesty, there are other aspects of my life that I feel I need to attend to.  For that reason, I may be backing off a bit from the JonnyD Weekly.  Never fear, there will still be weekly posts.  There just may not be the two or three a week that there has been. 

I have been putting a lot of thought into my writing lately.  I feel it’s time to get back into it.  I have a finished novel sitting on my desk, after all.  However, there is a lot to do before I feel I’d be in a position to get Temporaltorium out on the market again.

And then there’s the video game tournament… The Gauntlet is on its way!

Tuesday, August 2, 2011

Monthly Scoop: August 2011

Every year I have at least one month that never happened.  It goes like this:  May 1st, 2nd, 3rd, April 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th ….wait, wait, wait! What happened to the rest of May?  July was that month for me. 

That is why at least once a year, coincidentally right after the missing month, I make a bucket list.  Hence this image of the guy wandering around with a bucket on his head.  Poor sad bastard…

What was I saying?  Ah, yes.  Bucket list.  I told a friend of mine that August was my bucket list month.  He told me that I can only make a bucket list of things I’m afraid I won’t get to do before I die.  Well, I want to get them done, and I don’t think I’m going to get around to doing them after I’m dead, so I’ll just do them this August.

So, I’ve made my list of everything I keep saying to myself, “I keep meaning to do that,” or “I’ll get around to it eventually,” or even the horrid “God, I still haven’t finished that?!” 

No, I’m not going relay the entire list here.  That’s be boring.  Instead, let’s talk about the projects I normally talk about:

Temporaltorium - didn’t touch it.

Moby Dick - 9 pages….that’s right, 9.

Stranger Things Studios - Oh My God!  Did Jon actually got something done in July?  Barely.  Three days ago I finally finished work on the studio’s second short film, entitled “A Little Bit of Muscle.”  It is currently undergoing pre-screening amongst close friends and the crew, but look forward to seeing the film both on YouTube and on this blog in the next week and a half!

So watch for that, and watch out for  my bucket list blogs in the weeks to come. 

Spoiler alert:  there might be something about the aftermath of a hot wing competition, as well as a capsized canoe.  Stay tuned!

Friday, July 22, 2011

Temporaltorium: Excerpt

Prologue

            Wind… There’s always wind… cold… incessant… chilling… wind…
            Rurik pulled his knees in, his back pressed against the eroded walls of a derelict fortress.  Doing so didn’t help.  Nothing helped on a night like this, not even the thickness of his leather breastplate.  His leggings were soaked.  His face was worn.  His hair snapped in the gales like a shredded flag.  He shivered involuntarily.
            Before him came the crackling of a pitiful fire.  It provided not the slightest warmth.  The winds saw to that, flattening the flames, and threatening to tear them from the twigs that fed them. 
            A meager light was all that was spared.  It flickered sporadically, occasionally bringing Rurik out of the darkness.  He sat there, his arms wrapped about his knees, the flames glinting off the iron shackles clamped about his wrists.  The chain between them had been severed; the remnants dangled from both ends.
            The wind pulls upon the edges of my mind, draws away my fervor, my very will.  It feeds without mercy.  Its breath courses beneath my leather, its fingers raise tracks of flesh across my skin.  I’m but naked in its grasp.
            There arose a surge of wind, its arrival marked with a whoop akin to that of a massive bat’s wings.  It took the flames with it, leaving him behind as nothing more than a shadowed figure in the night. 
            Rurik watched the hearth die with a look that fought between scorn and fatigue.
            Fitting…
            For awhile he remained motionless, finding no merit in rekindling the fire.  It would die like it had countless times before, leaving him to restart anew.  Eventually, he would either succeed, or else feel the hopelessness seep in and lead him into hypothermia.  The thought of the latter kept him on the edge, but alive.
            He crawled to the ashes.
            Rurik glanced about, but the unfaltering gale distracted his vision.  All he could discern was the wide ledge he knelt upon, and the silhouette of the castle’s lone spire rising on his left, towering above his shielding wall, and blotting out all of his peripheral.  Before him, diminishing into the shadows of the land, stretched the indistinct shapes of lesser structures such as his.  Nothing else could be seen.  The night was unnaturally dark, as though the force of the winds had ripped even the stars from their fixed positions.
            An odd rattling caught his ear – the twigs.  Rurik looked down to find them scrambling towards the edge.  He saved what he could.  Taking the remains, he rebuilt the fire upon the site of his last one.  There was no lingering heat, no glowing embers, nor even smoldering ash.  The wind had taken it all. 
            He turned over several of the surrounding rocks –the debris of deteriorated walls – until he found the two that would suffice.  Huddling close to the timber, he tried in vain to put himself between the wind and his project.
            Rurik clicked the rocks together, over and over, occasionally releasing a fleeting spark.  The gusts would take his wood, forcing him to rebuild, but he didn’t give up.  Every trial was followed by a harder pounding of rock on rock, and an increasing amount of sparks.
            Somehow I do not succumb to the elements.  Somehow I do not submit.  A grim price in the trade for freedom, but one I reluctantly pay…
            How long has it been?…No,…has it been only hours?…only hours since I happened upon this harrowed place, this safe haven for thieves, for outcasts and pirates?  Yes, shelter no doubt lurks within, yet I do not trust the fortress to be entirely abandoned.  There are worse evils than an unforgiving gale…
            Despair was not what finally stopped him.  Something had caught his eye – torchlight, several torches no more than a mile beyond the battlements.  Rurik watched the drifting balls of light slowly traverse the land.  There was no chance that they were simply a party of travelers.  Not tonight.  Whoever they were, they were not out by choice.  True, they may have been returning to some shelter, but Rurik doubted it.  They were looking for someone.  They were looking for him.
            Like them…
            It didn’t take long for Rurik to realize they were approaching the fortress. 
            He looked down at his bonds, the memories playing in his mind.  Terror flashed briefly in his eyes. 
            Rurik suddenly became consciously aware as to the amount of noise he had been making.  The thought held him frozen for a moment.  Had his efforts caught their ears?  He consoled himself with the thought that the wind had most likely drowned out his endeavors.  But had they seen the fire from out there?  He had seen their torches, after all. 
            Grudgingly, he forewent the fire, and tossed the rocks aside.  Their tumult seemed deafening.  He slid back into the corner, his ears acute to every grating sound that he made.
            Damnable wind, let it feed.
            A few seconds after he was situated; just as he began to lament his luck, to suffer the unforgiving gales without cover, without fire; just as Rurik curled up in his embitterment, he realized something was wrong: the grating hadn’t stopped.
            Something was nearby.
            Something had heard him.


            Rurik went numb.  His shivering stopped.  The sound came, methodically, slowly.  Footfalls.  They were close, too close to make sense.  Rurik tried to decipher their location, but the wind distorted everything.  The sound started to fade, but that was no comfort to him.  It knew he was there.
            There came a growl, heavy, rumbling, formed from deep within the throat.  It was followed by the trailing expulsion of breath from the snout of some large beast.  With that sound, and its intensity, Rurik was warned as to its position.  It had paced along the other side of the wall he leaned against.  Whatever it was, it would be rounding the corner on his left at any moment.
            Rurik took to action, making haste down his right flank.  Not eight paces away thrust a small outcropping, what must have been a dividing wall at one time, but now stood no more than three feet high.  Rurik vaulted the barrier and used it for cover.  He flattened his back against its stones and sunk out of sight.  As a last minute precaution, he found the hilt of his sword, drew it, and held its curved blade against his chest.
            A stillness settled, with only the endless current of wind filling the void.  Even the scraping footfalls were lost to him.
             In that stillness it came, shrouded in shadow, the form of a massive animal.  It prowled slowly, the moonlight glinting a dark violet hue off its muscular back. 
            It made its way to the abandoned fire.  Rurik held his ground, gripping his hilt ever tighter in apprehension.  The beast sniffed the air.  It pawed the ground, scattered the twigs, searching.  It was only a matter of time before it found him.  The scrapping.  The breathing.  The ever-present growl that reverberated from deep within the creature’s throat.  Rurik didn’t have to look to know its size.
            He made a run for it, never looking back, never bothering to check if it pursued him.  Alongside the wall he ran, vaulting sections of the collapsed edifice as he went.  He ran out of ground in seconds, only to jump the gap between him and the neighboring rooftop.
            Onward he fled.  Over upturned stones he vaulted.  Over rifts between fortress structures he leapt.  Roof tiles gave in his wake, plummeting into the cloisters below.  His hair pulled before him as the wind surged by to outrun him.
            Behind him came the creature, bounding huge expanses, churning brick and mortar in its undertow.  Its shoulders rippled in his wake.
            Rurik reached the end of the rooftops, the end of his escape.  The next stretch of shingles continued on several levels below him.  The nearest building, a watchtower, stood at the threshold, its stained-glass windows cut off by the gapping chasm.  There was no chance of making it across.
            Rurik didn’t stop.  He didn’t hesitate.  He reached the edge and leapt.  His legs whirled on, searching for the lost ground.  His arms came swinging up over his shoulders in great arcs.  His scimitar launched out before him. 
            Blade and man shattered through the panes. 
            By luck, his hands met with the metal rim of a chandelier as a shower of colored glass rained down into the tower’s mess hall.  His sword clattered somewhere against the stone floor below him.
            Rurik’s momentum swung the chandelier forward, bringing it dangerously close to exiting out the far side of the tower.  Rurik held on for all he was worth.  Overhead the chandelier’s chain groaned, threatening to give at any moment and bring chunks of the ceiling down with it. 
            Like a pendulum, the chandelier began to swing back.

            At that moment, the creature came through the opening after its prey.  Its claws splayed.  Its muscles flexed.  Its arms swung around to wrap about its target.  It caught the chandelier’s chain instead, its whole body looming just over Rurik’s head.  The beast continued on unhindered, smashing into the window panes of the opposite wall. 
            The chain gave.  The ceiling caved.  Rurik lost hold of the chandelier as it rocketed forward, taking wood framing and stone with it in its departure.  Without ceremony, Rurik plummeted into the chamber, a long wooden table breaking his fall.  In a shower of fresh debris he came down, breaking the table in half upon impact...


~End of Prologue~

Saturday, July 16, 2011

Temporaltorium

History

Writers lie to themselves, and when I sat down to write in the bleak cold of a January night 2007, I should have known that my writing exercise from that evening would evolve into my second full-length novel.  I had a year and a half left of school, and hadn’t the time to commit to such an undertaking.  But much like I imagine having a child is, once the idea is born, it is now forever a part of your life.

Against all pragmatics, I finally approached my wife and explained my dilemma.  She didn’t seem to think there was a problem; start the book.  And so I did. 

I wrote the outline that summer, as well as the first fifteen pages.  However, it wasn’t until after I graduated in May 2008 that I fully committed to the project.  The manuscript took two years to write, and easily another six months to edit.  Although it is not my first novel, it is the first that I have completed, and the finest piece of work I have ever penned.  Sitting at 220,000 words  and 750 pages, it is a tale of raw power that demonstrates the darkness of the human soul.  It is Temporaltorium.

Latest News

Synopsis

When the prison ship transporting him to his death is destroyed against the cliffs on an unknown land, the fugitive Rurik escapes the wraith-like creatures that had captured him.  Finding safe haven in a derelict fortress, Rurik soon realizes that not only is he trapped on a distant island, but that there are dangers there worse than being recaptured; the island itself is phasing throughout time, and a monstrous shadow beast has been hunting him since he entered the fortress gates.  As the fortress cycles between four periods of its existence, Rurik comes into contact with a motley crew of survivors from the other eras.  Reluctantly, they find themselves working together to escape the island; or to find the cause of the temporal distortion and stop it before either the shadow beast kills them, or the island tears itself apart.


Excerpt: Prologue

            Wind… There’s always wind… cold… incessant… chilling… wind…

            Rurik pulled his knees in, his back pressed against the eroded walls of a derelict fortress.  Doing so didn’t help.  Nothing helped on a night like this, not even the thickness of his leather breastplate.  His leggings were soaked.  His face was worn.  His hair snapped in the gales like a shredded flag.  He shivered involuntarily.
            Before him came the crackling of a pitiful fire.  It flickered sporadically, occasionally bringing Rurik out of the darkness.  He sat there, his arms wrapped about his knees, the flames glinting off the iron shackles clamped about his wrists.  The chain between them had been severed; the remnants dangled from both ends... read more >>

Friday, June 3, 2011

Ongoing Projects

Alright, down to business.  For June’s status update, let me outline my major on-going projects.  I’m afraid I haven’t been as dedicated towards them as I normally am - something about moving and settling into my new place keeps me busy.  Pssst. Whatever, right?  Anyways, I am only going to graze the surface on these projects.  I will go into greater detail in the weeks to come.


Temporaltorium

First and foremost is Temporaltorium, the novel I have spent the last three years working on.  Two years to write it.  One year so far editing it.  It is roughly 220,000 words long (which in English means 750 pages).  Since December 1st, I have sent the manuscript out to 15 literary agents.  Two have yet to reply.  The others have sadly declined :(



Stranger Things Studios

For a combination of reasons, I took a break from writing to dabble in filmmaking. For my first attempt, I’ve been working solo on an odd short piece about a ghost that invades someone’s home in search of sustenance.  I have two shots to redo.  Otherwise, I already have the rest of the movie cut.  I only plan to screen it to a few friends at first.  Depending on its reception, I may air it online.  We’ll see.





Moby Dick

As a slow reader, I figured reading Herman Melville’s masterpiece would be a great idea! (That’s sarcasm for anyone that doesn’t know me).  Anyone who has ever read the book will warn you about how excessive the text is.  Once I’m finally done, I will probably do the same.  The behemoth is 655 pages long.  I have managed to chew my way through 262 pages.  That’s exactly 40% of the text.  Throughout May I could only bring myself to read 26 pages…yeah, its going to be awhile.