On a patch of sand close to the Oceanside Pier, a pupil director known as “Motion” on a current Friday afternoon, sending actors into movement throughout the filming of a comedy brief named “Decide Up Chicks.”
The plot, involving a man making an attempt to catch the attention of a younger girl, was goofy and paper skinny. However the filmmakers have been flat out severe as they hustled to get a very good shot whereas the lighting was excellent.
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Hollywood has come to San Diego County by means of a tiny, nearly unknown Catholic college whose 253 college students may match into a big lecture corridor — if it had one. Which it doesn’t.
Because it nears its twentieth anniversary, John Paul the Nice Catholic College of Escondido has emerged as a vibrant commerce college for the movie and TV industries, one which’s sending alumni to leisure powerhouses, together with Netflix, Paramount and Marvel Studios.
Theology is a part of the core curriculum. So is philosophy. And everybody will get a really deep grounding in enterprise. However the emphasis is on turning college students into the whole lot from actors and administrators to screenwriters, digital camera operators and sound consultants.
“We’re non-traditional in each method,” says Derry Connolly, the varsity’s founder. “College students get their palms on the tools immediately. They’re doing shoots on a regular basis. [Sometimes] they movie at my home, and I’ve seen them actually get into it. It’s important to be passionate to be good.”
Over the previous yr, college students labored on greater than 150 productions, starting from fast hits like “Chicks” and music movies to documentaries and a brand new feature-length film known as, “O, Brawling Love!”, which makes use of Shakespeare’s “Romeo and Juliet” as supply materials. It was written by Bella Lake, a pupil, and was directed by alumna Maggie Mahrt, a revered Hollywood filmmaker.
Referred to as JP Catholic for brief, the college plans to supply one main film a yr. And the varsity will quickly have extra room to work. It’s about to spend as a lot as $5 million to renovate a bland brick constructing in downtown Escondido in order that it might home characteristic movie manufacturing amenities, a recording studio, an actor’s Black Field studio, a high-quality arts workshop, and a digital manufacturing lab.
The enlargement additionally will assist flesh out the varsity’s animation, illustration and graphic design applications, and greater than double tutorial and manufacturing area.
There are plans to greater than double enrollment to 600, in addition to to transform a part of Escondido’s former Heart Metropolis Excessive College, which the college owns, right into a chapel.
“We’ll be participating with extra college students who’re on the lookout for a spot the place they’ll combine their religion and keenness for storytelling in movie and tv,” stated Nate Scoggins, a Hollywood author and director who additionally teaches at JP Catholic.
The varsity’s sensible, get-it-done, high-energy method displays Connolly’s character, schooling {and professional} background.
He’s an Irish immigrant who earned a doctorate in utilized mechanics at Caltech in 1982 and went on to function a senior engineer at an Eastman Kodak imaging facility in San Diego, and as an advisor to IBM.
Connolly, 67, additionally was an affiliate dean at UC San Diego, the place he helped develop digital media and internet expertise.
“It was fairly clear within the early 2000s that the web was going to be large,” Connolly says in a YouTube video that remembers the varsity’s rise.
“It was additionally extraordinarily clear that media was an evil power in our tradition. More and more, Devil was utilizing media to take souls away from the Lord.”
Connolly’s dedication to push again is mirrored within the college’s motto: Affect tradition for Christ.
Whereas some college students go to work in conventional evangelist media, the college has its sights on careers within the mass market.
The varsity’s college say they’re making an attempt to supply expert storytellers who create content material that has broad attraction and explores humanity in clear, candid methods, significantly in the case of religion and household.
“I’m interested by movies like ‘A Quiet Place,’ which is a few household in a post-apocalyptic setting the place you will get destroyed [by aliens] should you make a sound,” stated George Simon, who teaches movie manufacturing at JP Catholic.
“The youngest baby will get killed within the opening of the movie. Two years later, the mom is pregnant and the household is making ready to carry one other baby into the world, regardless of the hazard it poses to their survival,” he defined. “It says that life is price combating for, price nurturing. This isn’t a Christian film. However the Gospel is current.”
Reaching the plenty is also a precedence for Connolly, whose tackle the matter is a bit harder-edged than Simon’s.
“Christian movies form of really feel good however by no means appear to wrestle with what I’d name the horror of sin,” he stated. “From a Catholic perspective, we’re a lot better at coping with depravity. We don’t sugarcoat it.”
College students are permitted to discover any problem they need, together with abortion. However there’s unease about addressing the political wars which have divided the nation.
“I used to be on Twitter taking a look at [comments about] this horrible taking pictures in Highland Park,” Connolly stated. “They have been saying, ‘Can we determine this [shooter] with the left or with the fitting?’
“I used to be like, my gosh, there are six folks useless. There are 50 folks shot, and also you’re on the lookout for a political agenda? So now we have discovered with the coed physique that it is much better to steer clear of political issues that divide.”
JP Catholic enrolled its first college students in 2006, when it was situated in an industrial park in San Diego’s Scripps Ranch group. The plan was to begin small and develop incrementally, even after the college moved to Escondido in 2013. There was no want to attain the form of dimension and cache loved by the movie applications at UCLA and New York College.
Connolly runs a lean operation. The varsity does little or no promoting, relying as a substitute on phrase of mouth and social media to generate consideration. And JP Catholic principally hires business professionals as academics, quite than creating a standard, and probably costly, tenured college.
Tenure “is a disservice to everyone,” stated Connolly, whose phrases are sacrilege in standard greater schooling. “We’re a performance-based tradition. If now we have college who carry out properly, they stick with us endlessly. For those who’re not performing, you go.”
His hires embody Scoggins, who enlisted the assistance of 20 college students and alumni final yr whereas he was directing the homicide thriller “What Stays” in Texas, and Simon, who just lately gave college students an inside take a look at how he was making ready to shoot “Don’t Get Eaten,” a zombie comedy filmed in Michigan.
It may be a problem for college kids to maintain up with all of it. JP Catholic is a year-round college that’s damaged into three quarters, every costing $9,000. The objective is to get college students via school in three years as a substitute of 4.
Nearly all college students obtain monetary assist. The varsity, which had an $8-million funds final yr, is also underwritten by comparatively small personal donations. The Roman Catholic Diocese of San Diego has not been one of many college’s monetary supporters. However JP Catholic operates with the diocese’s consent.
College students are sometimes left to determine issues out for themselves. That’s the place Faustina Ortiz discovered herself just lately when she confirmed up in Oceanside to direct “Decide Up Chicks.” The seashore was packed on a balmy afternoon, which meant she needed to be cautious about how she framed her pictures.
“This little undertaking is making ready us for real-world experiences,” Ortiz instructed the San Diego Union-Tribune between takes. “I’m working with actors, discovering out what they should give their finest efficiency.
“It’s all very useful, very helpful.”
Close by, classmate Bryson Armstrong stood by, prepared to assist, and was having fun with the expertise.
“I’ve had the chance to work on full-length options, unbiased movies, shorts and documentaries,” he stated.
“And I’ve solely been right here 9 months.”