Archive for the ‘The World’ Category

All he stuff going on around us. You know, the important things.

Iron Sky Signal #12 – Iron Sky Goes Australia Part I

July 26th, 2010 by Janos Honkonen

If you are an active follower of our blog, you’ve probably already read about our June escapades in Australia, where we went to meet our local production team and to handle a whole lot of practical stuff about our shootings Down Under. If not, you can start from here. If the moving picture is more of your thing, here’s something for you – a brand new Iron Sky Signal about the first half of our trip to Australia! This time you’ll see us explore what will probably be our studio, find some shooting locations, and spend a day out encountering Australian wildlife up close and personal.

Iron Sky & Wreckamovie at Finncon

July 12th, 2010 by Jarmo Puskala

A rare picture of Emperor Pirk on holiday at the 2007 Finncon in Jyväskylä.

Finncon 2010 starts next Friday in Jyväskylä. Finncon is the Finnish national science fiction convention. For a long time it has been arranged together with Animecon, but this year it’s all about science fiction – the reason being, that the combined event had grown to over 10,000 visitors and grown out of almost all viable venues in Finland! This had become quite a challenge for a free convention organized by fan for fans.

Wreckamovie Festival

A far smaller but quite interesting companion for the convention is that one of the venues at University of Jyväskylä’s campus, Ilokivi, is reserved for Wreckamovie festival. It showcases Wreckamovie productions from all over the world, with film screenings running daily.

There are some interesting films you should check out, like the (still) excellent What Became of Us and Snowblind, a feature length post-apocalyptic western produced on Wreckamovie. There’s also a chance to see a little known short film called Tokyo Baby, in which the plot involves the main character running away from home to attend Animecon. It’s produced by Blind Spot, but while you might guess otherwise Blind Spot’s geek squad had nothing to do with the film, it’s just that anime as a hobby has exploded in Finland as well and become very much a part of mainstream.

Iron Sky

I’ll be talking about Iron Sky’s use of social media on Saturday. Including the latest news about where we’re at with the production. I’ll be also hanging around at the Wreckamovie festival along with the makers of the Star Wreck 2pi fan film and other interesting people.

As always Finncon is free and very much worth booking a flight to Finland. I’m planning on checking out the lecture about fantasy in Don Rosa’s Donald Duck stories – if I can fit into the auditorium. The Donald Duck panels tend to be epic.

p.s. Samuli will also try and make it to Jyväskylä to talk about the next Star Wreck. Okay so Samuli probably won’t make it, since he has to work on Iron Sky. But he’ll try.

Need some pics? Most of our photos are under a by-nc-sa license

July 9th, 2010 by Jarmo Puskala

Koala

Most of the pictures on our Flickr account are now under a Creative Commons NonCommercial-Attribution-ShareAlike license. That means that from copyright viewpoint you can copy, remix & re-distribute the photos as long as it’s not for commercial purposes. They can for example used to illustrate blog posts or Wikipedia articles. Just remember that if pictures have recognisable people you should respect their privacy.

The few pics that have all rights reserved are usually pics where the photographer has given us the right to use the images, but we haven’t yet asked them if it’s okay to let people remix the images.

Why? Why not. If Peter from Northampton needs a picture of a Koala for his school presentation of animals that fail in natural selection then why not let him use the one Janos took? It’s not like we’re loosing anything. But maybe koalas win if Peter’s presentation is a bit more convincing and gets Mary to study to be a vet whose research saves those cute, fuzzy bears from extiction. Probably not though.

Have fun.

Iron Sky Goes Australia – Sydney, Supanova & Back Home

June 28th, 2010 by Janos Honkonen

Here it is finally, the last part of our Australian odyssey! The last days of the trip were too busy for blogging and on our way back we were too beat to do anything but wind down and relax throughout the 34 hour trip back to Finland. Then, there was the Finnish midsummer festival Juhannus

In any case, we spent the second half of our Australian trip in Sydney doing some casting, having more meetings and attending the Supanova Pop Culture Expo. This time we were staying right in middle of Sydney downtown, in Meriton Serviced Apartments, where Timo and I got a nice two bedroom apartment in the 45th floor. The view was great and it was a definite luxury to be able to start the day with a sauna and a dip in a pool before heading off to work.

The first major thing we did was to do some casting for one of the main roles of the movie. We had a nice and productive casting session which we topped off with a nice sushi lunch. We have some really strong candidates for several roles now, which is a damn good thing – we are again that much closer to the shootings.

Supanova Expo

Timo, Tarja, Tero and others had again plenty of meetings about the budget and logistics, but most of my time went to getting ready for the Supanova weekend. We were a relatively late addition to the lineup, so getting our booth and stuff together wasn’t trivial. Luckily I didn’t have to do it alone, since my local contacts in Australia or left lane driving skills aren’t anything to write home about.

(Check out more photos in our Flickr-photoset!)

Sydney Downtown

Getting Supanova going was a job for me and Jessica, a super effective production assistant from our Australian partner New Holland Pictures. We ended up driving around Sydney, picking up bits and pieces, such as our large Iron Sky banner that was sent via air mail, and a TV which one of our Wreckers was kind enough to lend us (thanks again Jeremy, you are a lifesaver!). We had a couple of interesting detours, thanks to the crappiest Garmin GPS I’ve encountered so far, but managed to make it on time to Sydney Olympic Park, the venue for Supanova. Setting up the booth was a breeze, although someone had forgotten to provide us with electricity, but that got corrected in time for the morning.

Setting Up The Booth

Timo and Jessica setting up the booth.

The two days in Supanova was a blast. Our booth was in a prime location, right next to the celebrity signing area. We had our Iron Sky teasers and Star Wreck trailer on repeat on the TV, which drew in satisfying crowds of people. We managed to sell most of my merchandise, which was a blessing. Because of a technicality, we were able to fly it in rather cheap, but flying it back to Finland would have been insanely expensive: we were literally in a situation where we had to sell everything we have in order to make it back home. We more or less managed to do that, but even flying the practically empty case home would have cost us 750 euros…

Iron Sky Booth

The Iron Sky booth before the event began. Just add customers.

The booth was manned by mainly me, Timo and Jessica, but we took short pauses to go and enjoy the expo atmosphere and get our geek in. I did some geeky T-shirt shopping, went to listen to Dichen Lachman tell how to blow soap bubbles from under your arm, and steal a glimpse of Eliza Dushku and Summer Glau on the signature booths. Later Timo and I almost barged into Eliza and Michael Winslow of Police Academy fame when we were hurrying out of the backstage. Timo bought a huge amount of Star Trek stuff, so I guess that Trekathon-stuff is working. Timo also had two presentations about Iron Sky and collaborative movie making, both on Saturday and Sunday.

On Saturday evening we had a fan/investor meeting, where people who are interested in Iron Sky and investing in the movie got to meet us face to face. The meeting took place in Steel Bar & Grill, that really isn’t what you’d expect by just the name alone. It’s a stylish brasserie in downtown Sydney, definitely an upscale place. A big part of the crew and some of the fans ended up being out in the city ’till the morning hours, having fun.

Stormtroopers

Stormtroopers came to pay homage to their Moon Nazi counterparts.

Dr. Kroenen

Dr. Kroenen dropped by to say 'hi'.

Lordi

Suddenly: Lordi and Amen.

The Conclusion

All in all the whole trip was extremely productive for us. This is a good thing, since the next time we’ll come to Australia en masse will probably be in November when we start shooting in there.

In the end we had a huge amount of people drop by our Supanova booth to check out the teasers, buy some stuff or just to exchange a few words about Iron Sky. Thanks to each one of you, and thank you for the massive amount of Twitter love, blog posts and other attention you’ve given us after the expo!

See you this November – or maybe a bit earlier, if certain things work out!

Facebook poisti Kaivuri-Mutasen fanisivun

June 28th, 2010 by Jarmo Puskala

English summary: Facebook has removed one of the biggest Finnish pages without any good reason. This post is mostly about how bad an example this is for Finnish companies planning on adopting social media in their business. This is now the third large Finnish page removed without good reason in the last 6 months.

Facebook kaivaa jälleen kerran omaa kuoppaansa. Ilmeisesti suomalaiset sivut hassuine suomenkielisine sanoineen ovat punainen vaate Facebookin sensuuritiimille. MoonTV:n sivun poistosta on ehtinyt kulua vasta pari viikkoa, kun Facebook on iskenyt kauhansa entistä syvemmälle lietteeseen. Tällä kertaa vasaran alle joutui Suomen suurin kesäilmiö, eli Jukka Mutanen joka Facebookista lähteneen vedon johdosta ajaa parhaillaan minikaivurilla Hangosta Kuusamoon. Iltapäivälehdet huutavat Facebookin sulkeneen Mutasen sivut.

Tämä on Facebookin poistoista ehkä käsittämättömin. Minikaivurit eivät tietääkseni ole laittomia, loukkaa uskonnollisia ryhmiä tai uhkaa sukupuolisiveyttä millään lailla. Sen sijaan kyseessä oli Suomen suurin Facebook-ilmiö, suorastaan palvelun kultapoika – siellä aloitettu vitsi voi paisua näin valtavaksi mediatapahtumaksi.

Facebookin yrityskäytön kannalta Mutasen sivun poisto lienee tähänastisista vahingollisin. Paitsi, että tästä kuulevat muutkin kuin netin aktiivikäyttäjät, kertoo tämä hyvin vahvaa kieltään siitä kuinka mielivaltaisia Facebookin päätökset ovat. Tämä tuskin kannustaaa yhtäkään pienyritystä käyttämään vähiä rahojaan Facebook-markkinointiin. “Jos Mutasen sivut poistettiin, niin eikö ne voi poistaa meidänkin sivut?”, tulee varmasti olemaan yleinen kysymys sosiaalisen median markkinoijille.

Oma arvaukseni on, että sivusta on tehty piloillaan valituksia ja nämä valitukset on käsitellyt suomea ymmärtämätön työntekijä. Tämä ei ole voinut millään tietää palvataanko sivulla saatanaa, vai jutellaanko minikaivurilla köröttelystä. Koska valitukset on tehty niin vaikeiksi, Mutasen fanien ainoa toivo lienee se, että uutinen sivun poistosta leviää mediassa niin laajalle, että sana siitä kiirii myös Facebookin markkinointiosastolle. Jos näin ei käy, sivut jäänevät palauttamatta ja suomalaiset sosiaalisen median palvelut saavat yllättävän kilpailuedun taisteluun kotimaisista mainosmarkoista.