Having completed my previous short film, 'Nobody's Perfect'
at the end of 2006, I was screening the final graded
master to my DoP Tim Sidell, when we started talking
about what the next project would be?
I wanted to make a drama, something dark and disturbing.
I had proved that I could make people laugh, but could
I unsettle them?
I had thought about making a film about a child criminal
for some time, based on a friend's short story. But I
could never get the screenplay to work.
I then came up with the idea of putting a feral child,
a boy with no morals, who is capable of robbing an elderly
woman, in a situation where he discovers something that
is so extreme that even he feels a line has been crossed.
The idea of Stolen Youth then started to fall into place.
I decided that setting the story in a small community
in the countryside, would make for a more interesting
story. So it was decided that we would shoot the film
in the area where I live. Tim and I had decided that
it would also add to the story to shoot it during winter.
The idea of an overcast day, with all the leaves off
the trees, would help heighten the dark nature of the
film. I also wanted to shoot on film, as all my previous
films were shot on video. As it happened Tim had access
to a complete Super 16mm camera kit, so it started to
look possible. With Christmas approaching, we set a shoot
date of early March, hoping that spring would not be
too early!
I wanted to tell this story from the boy's point of
view, so the audience joined him on his destructive tour
of the village and the house. Tim came through again,
not only by finding a Steadicam system for nothing, but
by convincing a Steadicam operator to join us.
Tim and I spent the Christmas break shooting tests,
to see what was possible. I had already decided that
I wanted the story to be told as much as possible through
pictures and that any dialogue would be incidental. Having
planned the previous film so heavily, it left little
space for inspiration on the day of the shoot. With Stolen
Youth we took a different approach. I knew what the action
of each scene was going to be, but that was about all.
On the shoot days I worked with the actors establishing
the action and finding any dialogue we needed, as we
rehearsed. Then Tim and I discussed the best way to cover
it. A lot of scenes were covered with just one long Steadicam
shot.
The process was very enjoyable and resulted in shots
I wouldn't have considered had we planned the shots.
Editing was in some ways quite straight forward, as a
lot of decisions were made on the shoot and it was a
matter of cutting the shots together. On the flip side,
I did find this restrictive, as I wanted to speed up
some scenes and on others I wanted to use more than one
take. Without other shots to cut away to, jump cuts were
the only option. Once I had accepted this and proved
it worked, I embraced the style.
Leon Chambers
Writer/Director.