On the rocky, big-screen road
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Paul Saitowitz
Evan Jacobs once wrote a script for his version of “Rocky VI” in a
weekend just to prove to himself that he could. He sent a copy of it
off to Sylvester Stallone’s people, who responded with a “Thank you
and good luck, but Mr. Stallone is already working on a script for
‘Rocky VI’ himself.”
He’s written, produced, directed, edited and starred in seven
feature-length films, most of which were shot in Costa Mesa. He’s
written more than 30 scripts. He’s heard the word “No” more times
than he cares to but remains undaunted.
Jacobs, 31, is a testament to persistence and the blind ambition
it takes to follow dreams.
“You have to care about this stuff more than anyone else does,
because at the end of the day, no one cares except for you,” he said.
“If you really want to make a movie, you have to find a way to do it
without killing yourself.”
Jacobs knows plenty about that. In an era where a low-end
Hollywood film is budgeted at $20 million, one of his films,
“Angela’s Home Movie,” was made for $58.
His latest project is an animated feature called “1985-1986,”
which is based on his experiences as a white, suburban kid going to a
mixed-race junior high school.
He wrote the script while traveling on the Warped Tour -- a punk
rock and extreme sports festival that traverses the United States
every summer -- in 1997 to promote a friend’s film, which he worked
on. The original script, which was handwritten and filled up five
notebooks, was more than 400 pages long.
“I was really inspired by the music that I grew up listening to
... Black Flag, the Descendents ... I was on tour with these bands,
and it reminded me of that period in my life,” Jacobs said. “I wrote
the script in five weeks, and I ended up cutting it in half to get it
to the point that it’s at now.”
With absolutely no knowledge of animation and limited drawing
skills, Jacobs ordered a computer program called Toon Boom Studio and
set out to make his first cartoon feature.
On the door of his bedroom, which doubles as his editing studio,
Jacobs put up a sign that reads “Production Office ‘1985-1986,’” with
a schedule of his editing hours pinned on the adjacent wall. He works
religiously from 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. seven days a week drawing out each
scene frame by frame.
“Making it a cartoon was the only way I could get this film made;
otherwise it would cost $15 or $20 million,” he said. “I’m not a very
technical guy ... if Walt Disney or Chuck Jones walked in here and
saw this, they would laugh, but I think I’m able to get it done in my
own way.”
He voices the main character, as well as a few others, and used
his friends and family to round out the cast -- some 70 speaking
parts.
After the film is made, he hopes to enter it into a few festivals
and secure some distribution, but at the very least, it will be
another piece to add to his growing body of work. He already has his
next two projections lined up and ready to go.
“I’ve always loved movies ... going to movies, watching movies,
being an extra on a movie set,” he said. “I don’t understand anything
else. I have no other choice of what to be doing.”
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