Showing posts with label Alex Yi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alex Yi. Show all posts

Monday, November 5, 2018

SPECTRE ZERO DELIVERS A POWERHOUSE OF EERINESS

Unlike a large majority of Independent films based in south-eastern Texas, the first episode of the Quantum Storm Pictures new flagship series was actually released for preview on Facebook to a surprisingly large number of online fans who had recently joined the fan page to have access to watching the twenty-two minute thriller that didn’t hold back in its presentation. Filled with dramatic performances, some hinted comedy and a plethora of visual effects that will keep viewers on edge and in suspense up until the final minutes of the show; the episodes message and plotline struck viewers directly on target making the first show a hit with fans.

Spectre Zero is another project developed by D. R. Quintana after he was considering filming a humorous and fake ghost hunting documentary which provided details on how teams try to create special effects to fool clients with misleading evidence uncovered by local ghost hunting experts.  During the development of several of those effects, the idea of creating a new series began to surface. Basing the remaining ideas of the show on a “sensitive” and a “psychic” that the director/producer was actually introduced to in New England, the rest of the first episodes were finished and then he was off to trying to cast the two leading roles.

I wanted the two leading characters to be in their early twenties,” recalls Quintana. “It’s very rare to see two twenty-something’s running a prominent paranormal research team and also trying to be professionals in the field. Most of the time on the news and in documentaries, psychics and sensitive’s are much older people who have had years of experience in their backgrounds.”


Quintana wanted fresh faces to work with, both to mold the actors to what the series requires and to have a little more fun behind the camera, so he hired Daniel Erik and Sara Mao, two relatively new actors who only worked as extras in other film projects, to take the leading roles; a decision which proved to harbor success with the presentation of the first episode. Taking casting to the next level, Quintana also accepted to use the skills of local Houston Indie actors [as extras] who would be willing to return to the series to build up their characters.

I was casting the first season of this show with sheer honesty and no delusions of grandeur that we would have million dollar offers or instant success if we completed the first season,” adds Quintana. “I was concise with all of the details, as I wasn’t sure how long it would take to put the whole first season together, especially as everyone in the cast and crew was going to have to work for free and the studio had to work around so many schedules that were based on volunteer ethics.”

Principle production started in February of 2018 and crossed over the course of eight months with the casting of over nine actors/actresses to help complete shooting enough material for season one. Some of the local Houston actors who stepped up to help in the production are: Alexi Yi, David Kufner, Shruthi Bekal, Gwendolyn Chang, Saira Ramos, and Joseph Marshall, who all played large parts in their perspective episodes and are expected to return to the series in season two. The studio is planning to expand the cast for season two as required, plus travel to vast area in Texas to complete more eerie episodes in the near future. Even now, the studio has recorded over eight episodes of material, but only four full episodes have been edited to completion, but not in chronological order.

Quintana said that the studio decided to begin production on all of the scarier scenes that required special and visual effects first before starting work on the actual scenes that required dialog through acting. Even though scheduling was grueling to complete each episode, the change in formula seemed to speed up the completion of each episode with limited production time of four hours per day; which helped many of the cast and crew who were parents that had family waiting for them back at home.

But the real treat of the first episode is the tremendous soundtrack and audio effects which were produced and written by Lora Mao. Each new track delivered to each art of the show with a unique eeriness that defies explanation on how the tension and drama was delivered in each scene. Quintana says that Lora Mao didn’t hold back, she was committed to the project from the start and her ability to adjust to his musical demands proved that she was more than qualified and mature to handle each track as required by the director/producer. Even now, Lora Mao is reaping in the success of her music as she is selling tracks for the show on the Internet.

Lora has a style of producing original tracks of music that is second to none in Houston,” says Quintana. “She’s efficient, professional, and loves what she does. There is no doubt in my mind that without Lora, this project would not have delivered such a strong first episode to preview to the fans out there. I am very proud to have her on our team.”

Unlike most Indie films that only ever post a 7 minute trailer of their film projects, Spectre Zero’s first 22 minute episode is posted on Facebook as a preview and will be removed in twenty days. The rest of the series episodes will eventually be made available through Amazon.com in 2019. So if you’re interested in watching the newest production from Quantum Storm Pictures, this will be your only chance to see it for free until the series is released on Amazon.com. You can see the full first episode HERE.