Vengeance is Mine

While it’s been two months since I’ve blogged about our weekly episodes of the Family Pictures Podcast, don’t you think we haven’t been continually putting out the hits. In fact, just yesterday we wrapped up episode number 22 and it continues to be a total blast. So now it’s time to catch up on my posts, otherwise it never happened …

Episode 14 was all about Michael Roemer’s 1984 Vengeance is Mine (alternatively titled Haunted) which was made for public television and came and went without much fanfare. In fact, that’s a theme for the select films that Roemer made. His 1964 film Nothing but a Man, focused on the struggles of a working class black man, gets rediscovered 30 years later after being designated by the Library of Congress as “culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant.” Interestingly enough, this coincides and is very much embedded within the 1990s independent film renaissance. I first discovered Nothing But a Man in my local VHS store, and at first was thinking it was a new release from a black indy voice from the 90s such as Carl Franklin, John Singleton, or Ernest Dickerson, but turns out it was made by two Jewish guys during the early 60s.

The same thing happens with his next film The Plot Against Harry (1971), a mob comedy that Roemer describes as not getting a single laugh. As a result it was never theatrically released, but found a cult following and critical acclaim. As a result it finally received a theatrical release in 1989. This guys’ films are late bloomers for sure!

In the 1970s he made the documentary Dying for PBS.* The film follows three terminally ill people during the last months of their lives, highlighting his connections with the cutting-edge documentary filmmakers of the 60s, namely Frederick Wisemen and the Maysles Brothers. What’s clear is that Roemer (who died a few weeks ago just 3 years shy of a centenarian) was a maverick of independent filmmaking who continually refused the idea of telling the kinds of stories Hollywood wanted. While his topics were eclectic, his films remained grounded in a cinema vérité that makes them both refreshing and compelling decades later.

So all that is a round about way to bring us back to Vengeance is Mine, which was one of two features he made for PBS’s American Playhouse in the early 80s. Originally titled Haunted when aired on TV, Vengeance is Mine is the title it was theatrically released with in 2022 at the Film Forum in New York City. Are there any other filmmakers that have had almost every one of their films re-released decades later to new found critical acclaim?

Criterion Channel page for Vengeance is Mine

I discovered this film while browsing the Criterion Channel after a long day of work. I saw the title Vengeance is Mine starring Brooke Adams from 1984, which was the same year Brooke Adams was in David Cronenberg’s Dead Zone. I was immediately intrigued because seeing Brooke Adams in what that title promised to be a Charles Bronson-esque vigilante flick was what the doctor ordered. What I got was something all together different, but turns out an equally intense drama that Roemer was dishing out. I was re-listening to this episode while writing this post, and I have to say it’s probably my favorite to date. Not only because it was a new discovery for both of us, but also because so little has been written about the film. My co-host Michael Branson Smith (MBS) has a brilliant reading of the film which is fleshed out in the episode. In short, MBS argues that one of the main characters of the film, Donna, is actually a ghost haunting her family. And we go through several moments that reinforce this reading. I joked that we had a “Roemer Reveal” while preparing this episode and that the sense of uncovering a potentially novel reading of the film made the discussion that much more exciting.

Is Donna a ghost haunting her family from beyond as MBS argues?

What took me so long to post about it was the feeling I needed to do more to capture some of that magic. For example, I wanted to get started on the non-existent Wikipedia page for this movie, as well as write a more coherent article with MBS that we could try and pitch to the Criterion Collection—an organization instrumental in getting Roemer’s films back on the map. I let my excitement and aspirations get in the way of just pushing this post out, but thankfully I woke up this morning remembering it’s just a blog and I can do whatever I want. Plus, the other episodes were piling up and the sooner I blog about the discussions the better.

But the other part of why it’s taken a bit is because there’s a moment in this film that touches on some of my own psychic baggage when it comes to family. There was a particular scene wherein the character Donna (who might be a ghost, but is definitely struggling with mental illness) has a moment of disassociation from reality, and her daughter is calling out to her while she sits staring blankly in the driver’s seat of her car. Disassociation is a mental condition in which a person literally breaks from reality, the Mayo Clinic describes it as “conditions that involve experiencing a loss of connection between thoughts, memories, feelings, surroundings, behavior and identity.” My mom suffered from this and witnessing her have an “attack” (as we called it) at random moments when we were shopping in a super market or browsing a department store was no joke. She would literally become unmoored from any sense of self, language, or identity, and as a result stare blankly into space and often articulate words like “wanna saya” that had no meaning. It’s as if the person I knew had regressed instantly to that of a toddler, the adult consciousness had instantaneously left her body without warning. What was left was a confused soul that found themselves abruptly thrown into an alien world. It was pretty nuts.

Scene of Donna’s Disassociation in the car from Vengeance is Mine

I had a big family so often one of my other siblings was with me when this happened. We figured out pretty early on that the best way to manage this was to joke to deflect any attention and then immediately get her out of the public’s eye (where it often happened) because explaining what was happening was almost impossible. The easiest and best solution was waiting it out. Every so often some do-gooder got involved which often meant calling the cops and/or an ambulance, something to be avoided at all costs. Once the authorities arrived it would not only make her condition worse, but there was a good chance she would land in 3K (our family metonym for the psychiatric ward at our local hospital). The easiest way to deal with it was to retreat to our car and wait it out. The attack could last anywhere from 20 minutes to an hour, and inevitably it passed. She would slowly come to, and the nagging fear she might not come out of it would finally retreat.

Roemer’s depiction of Donna’s dissociative attack transported me to the back seat of our big blue Suburban stranded in a strip mall parking lot somewhere on the south shore of Long Island. I would be sitting anxiously alongside my mom, and probably a sister or two, hunkering down and waiting it out. I like how Roemer never exploits Donna’s condition, as it would be most filmmakers wont to do, but compassionately draws her as a troubled mother who is trying to cope with a debilitating mental illness. I also like how Jackie, her daughter, is not sheltered from this reality given that’s a part of who she is and what she’ll have to make sense of in terms of the family baggage this film is all about. Who we are and what we have to deal with is what makes us special.

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Like Vengeance is Mine, Dying was restored and re-released in January of this year at the Film Forum. Crazy how everyone of his works seem to get a second life.

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The Ice is Gonna Break!

I mentioned already that after The Shining diorama I was planning on re-creating a scene from yet another Stephen King film adaptation, this time David Cronenberg’s Dead Zone (1984). I was wavering between Johnny’s vision of the young hockey players breaking through the ice and aspiring politician Greg Stillson using a baby as a human shield. One of the struggles with the pond vision for a diorama (my preference) is how to frame it to provide context (a similar struggle to the Creepshow diorama).

The ice is gonna break!

Tommy’s sketch for The Dead Zone diorama ideas

But after watching the scene Tommy suggested we cut the frame in half horizontally: on top we have Johnny (Christopher Walken) exclaiming “the ice is gonna break” and  below the vision of the hockey players sinking to the bottom of the pond.

The ice is gonna break!

Close up on kids floating to bottom of pond

I think it’s pretty brilliant, and it takes the bav-o-rama in new directions, this will be akin to a larger-scale Richard Scarry cross-section of moments from the scene. I also love how Tommy has the floor between the figures melting into the pond, essentially having the boys break through and drown right in the living room—inline with how Cronenberg places Johnny within the physical spaces where his visions happen.*

The ice is gonna break!

Close-up of Johnny breaking the vase and yelling “The ice is gonna break!” to be more emphatic about his premonition

Gotta say Tommy’s working through various perspectives to get to this one was impressive. Viewing the conversation and Johnny breaking the vase more or less straight-on didn’t work for the diorama, even though that’s how we see it in the film. Tommy’s re-positioning the viewer for a side-view of the conversation (a shot not in the movie) adds another element to the diorama, offering a fresh look that builds upon Cronenberg’s brilliance for a medium that is not film, but a brick and mortar diorama. Next step is making a small scale version of this and see how it goes, in the interim all hail Tommy!

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*I’m thinking of the one where he is lying in the child’s room when the room goes on fire.

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Kate Bowles “On Writing”

Yesterday we broadcast the ninth episode of the nascent “On Writing” series featuring the great Kate Bowles. When I reached out to Kate about discussing writing, she immediately suggested she’d be even more interested in talking about not writing, and thinking through what took our voices away over the last several years. The wish to “tell all the truth but to tell it slant —“ beautifully illustrates the poetic way Kate approaches the world. Any assumptions brought to topic are sure to be subverted with generous and generative language that can’t help but leave one inspired. During this conversation I found myself being taken on a journey both through and  beyond topics like writing, edtech, or AI and right into the plane of existential wonder.

To steal from Kate’s description of her Federated Wiki experience, the conversation was the closest I’ve come to feeling ecstatic while talking about the power of writing (or not writing, as it were). The way in which Kate finds a deep sense of camaraderie in our shared moment on this mortal coil struck me deeply. After re-listening to the final 5 or 10 minutes of this episode as I was cleaning-up some substandard audio, I was reminded of a similar spirit of hope and togetherness in the opening pages of Melville’s Moby Dick: “the universal thump is passed round, and all hands should rub each other’s shoulder-blades, and be content.” While I’m not always the most reliable narrator, this conversation is not to be missed if you’re looking to be filled with a sense of wonder about the act of writing that’s beautifully anchored in a searching sense of compassionate criticism.

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The Call of the Blog

I’ve heard Alan Levine mention the feeling of having to blog something. The idea that until you get that post out you can’t focus on anything else, and that’s certainly been the case for me as of late. When this happens to me there’s a concomitant feeling of elation, the sense I’ve gotten an idea (however half-baked) out of my head and onto the blog.

An interesting and welcome development with the cross-over to a shared, physical object of desire—namely bav-o-rama—is that I’m getting my family more directly involved in these projects (The Shining diorama sold them!). Just this morning we were imagining possibilities for the next diorama that’ll feature a scene from Cronenberg’s Dead Zone (the third of four dioramas dedicated to the King!), and Tommy had a brilliant idea for its presentation that made the whole thing click. That’s definitely a moment because I’ve been spending a fair amount of the Family Pictures Podcast reflecting on what a selfish, bad-tempered, and absent parent I’ve been (somewhat tongue in cheek). Then it hit me, what if the call of the blog (the root of many of my attention-related problems) ultimately was a source of redemption? We could all use a little redemption once in a while, am I right? REDEMPTION!

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Come and Play with Us Diorama Trailers

I’ve said it already on this blog, but the “Come and Play with Us” diorama was inspired by something I saw 15 years ago in a pizza parlor in Springfield, Virginia. Namely a print out of the Grady sisters stuck on a wall that caught you by surprise as you took the corner for the bathroom. I took a little video of a six or seven year old Miles encountering the sisters and then mashed it up with the soundtrack from the film, it was fun.

Fifteen years later, i.e. today, I’ve taken the soundtrack from that video and laid it on top of some footage I took of the diorama, and I remain entertained. The first one was a vertical video, which I imagine is all the rage for Instagram and TikTok, but that’s not where I live. Nonetheless, the effect was kind of cool and the cuts are a bit more seamless, but I may be wrong there.

The second version uses horizontal orientation, and I added a few more shots of  the diorama window zoomed out to give a sense of its scale, which can be hard to gauge from photos.

Maybe the funnest bits are the titles at the end of the 30 second clip, but my self-indulgence knows no bounds on this one so don’t trust me. Also, I’ve really been  getting my money’s worth in terms of blog posts out of this diorama, reason enough to build your own.

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Bava Vitals

I’ve been running this blog on WordPress for near on twenty years, and it’s always been a bit of a laboratory. When we were exploring Digital Ocean or Reclaim Cloud for hosting this site often served as the avant garde to get a sense of how things worked. When we started to get deep into the weeds of hosting WordPress Multiregion (WPMR) setups, bavatuesdays took the plunge. This site currently runs from a west coast data center in the US as well as a “hot copy” of the site in a Canadian data center in Montreal. If the west coast data center goes down for any reason, the site seamlessly fails over to a live sync of a writable and readable version in Canada, and no one’s any the wiser. Very slick, if I must say so myself. What’s more, it’s lightning fast! I have become a bit obsessed with checking the load times on GTmetrix just to see if it ever falls under an A grade at 100% performance: it’s a fairly rare occurrence.

Bava Vitals: GTmetrix Grade of A with a performance percentage of 100%. bavalightning!

This setup entails a few things beyond two WordPress instances across two data centers instantaneously syncing files and databases back and forth; there’s a DNS-driven load balancer running through Cloudflare that checks the health of each server and immediately fails over at the first sign of concern. Beyond that, Cloudflare has a robust global CDN that caches files making delivery of content much more efficient. If that wasn’t enough, all files in the wp-content/uploads directory are offloaded to an S3 bucket that provides further separation between the app and uploaded media making content delivery of any non-cached objects that much quicker. The other piece that is key for media heavy sites is that any potential migration becomes that much easier given media never needs to be moved (often the timeliest part of any migration).

The final result is what was traditionally a dog of a WordPress site, namely this old bava blog, has become as fast as any static site I’ve encountered. And this is a PHP driven database with 4,000 posts, 4x as many comments, un-optimized images, embeds galore, and all kinds of other debilitating issues that come with time. I won’t lie, I love having bavatuesdays running on a souped-up setup that’s more appropriate for much larger, traffic heavy sites, but that’s one of the advantages of having an awesome hosting company and being part of the WPMR avant garde!

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Shining a Light on Diorama Costs

Did you like my cheap pun in the title? Good, because being cheap is what this post is all about. I mentioned trying to keep costs down in my “Making of The Shining Diorama” post, and I wanted to spell out the costs of creating a gorgeous, otherworldly beautiful diorama like this one!

The Shining Diorama: the Finished Product

The biggest reason I’m doing this is to hold myself accountable so the diorama costs don’t get out of control. I made an initial investment in building out the window space, and I need to be conscious of ongoing costs given I’m pretty certain this space will never generate income, and that’s probably for the best.

Also, I did spend a fair bit on the Creepshow diorama, and while I was happy to do it cause it meant bringing in and paying good people, it also meant I was potentially creating an unsustainable hobby monster. All-in the Creepshow diorama cost me about 1350€ ($1,500 US), and most of that was dedicated to custom art, high-end prints, and modifications to the actual diorama stage. On the up-side, it went to good people doing awesome stuff very affordably, so it is also worth noting art ain’t cheap 🙂

Spreedsheet of costs for Creepshow diorama (items highlighted in pink were not used)

Until bavastudio gets a rich patron an average price tag of 1,350€ ($1,500) per diorama is a bit rich for bava’s blood, especially if I hit my goal of doing as many as four per year. It could be argued any amount spent on this vanity project is too much and I hear that. So, for The Shining diorama I wanted to get closer to a 500€ all-in budget. Such a limitation forces me to take on more of the work, which is nice for my creative muscles. At the same time, I greatly enjoy bringing people’s ideas and skills into the process and being able to pay them for their contributions (they always make it better!). So, in the end, it’s a mixed bag at best.

Spreadsheet of costs for The Shining diorama (items highlighted in pink were not used)

The Shining diorama cost almost half as much as the Creepshow installation, even though I still exceeded my 500€ goal. Entries highlighted in pink are things I didn’t need to buy, or were excess and can be re-purposed.* That means the costs could’ve been closer to 630€, and when the exchange rate is good that’s a tad closer to 500€. Part of what helped me save on this one were printing costs were cheaper (even if I made some mistakes) and I was able to include a bunch of people who donated their time (thanks Wren, Kamille, Tommy, and Anto). Exploiting friends, family, and family of friends in this context is new for me and I love it. Maybe I can turn this whole diorama making thing into an Italian family business if you know what I mean. Next diorama is Sonny at the toll booth 🙂

Anyway, not sure this will be of interest to anyone but me, but trying to keep these projects affordable pretty much means I can keep doing them at will, and that’s the goal.

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*Part of what I spent money on for The Shining diorama were straight edges, t-squares, and other tools and supplies that can be used for future dioramas, so there are some one-time costs that might save me money on future projects

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The Shining Diorama Flickr Album

The previous, extremely long post on this blog was taken entirely from a Flickr album created to document the process of building out The Shining diorama. The project features an iconic scene wherein Danny encounters the Grady sisters in a hallway of the Overlook Hotel. This post is simply to embed that album for anyone who might want to take a pictorial jaunt through the process.
The Shining Diorama

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The Making of The Shining Diorama

I had the concept for featuring the “Come and Play with Us” scene from The Shining in the Bav-O-Rama before it was even built out. Originally I wanted to include Danny on the “big wheel” (it’s not actually a big wheel) as well as rig a camera so that folks could have their picture taken with the Grady sisters, something that made absolutely no sense. As it happens, part of learning how to create a decent diorama is figuring out what to abandon and/or leave out. For this scene that meant cutting out Danny all together and just having his POV assumed. The other piece was to eliminate any photo/video technology, but more on that later.

Original sketch for The Shining diorama

Original sketch for The Shining diorama

MBS gave me the inspiration for trying to dial-in a sense of perspective for this diorama, something the Creepshow installation lacked a bit of. He also floated the idea of having the Grady sisters projected on plexiglass, but that meant more serious overhead, i.e. buying a projector that can deal with the intense light the space gets throughout the day, I wasn’t convinced a more affordable projector would be bright enough.

Sketch idea for video projecting the Grady sisters

I wanted to do this one on a stricter budget, so I ultimately kyboshed the projector and focused on the lofi fundamentals, and I’m glad I did.* These sketches came before Miles and I dismantled the Creepshow diorama in mid-January with the expectation The Shining diorama would be up within a few weeks at most (wishful thinking). I thought we needed to take apart the the previous diorama to begin calculating angles and measurements for the hallway perspective, but if I knew how long it would take I would have let “Something to Tide You Over” run longer.

Miles Making Way in the Bav-O-Rama

Early on I bought a Big Wheel from the US along with a cheap carpet with the classic pattern everyone connects with The Shining, but as I started studying this particular scene I realized neither of these elements would work. There was not enough room in the diorama for the Big Wheel (not to mention Danny rides a Hedstrom Trail Cycle) and this carpet pattern was not in the hallway scene when the sisters ask Danny to come and play with them forever and ever. So if either were to be included it would be deviating from the film. That was something I toyed with for effect, but opted to remain true to the original. What’s more, it made accounting for perspective with that rug pattern much, much easier.

Big Wheel and carpet left on cutting room floor

After dismantling the Creepshow diorama I hung the geometrically patterned carpet as a not-so-subtle “coming soon” sign. But what I was hoping would hang for a few short weeks became months.

The Shining Diorama: Coming Soon

When trying to start The Shining diorama I got hung up on a number of things, in particular what would be the correct angles for the ceiling and floor to capture the illusion of space. On top of that my dad got sick and passed away, so the end of January and all of February was lost.

Tommaso and I came up with 1:4 scale model

In March Tommaso and I created a scaled version of the hallway, and when I turned it on its side it was pretty damn accurate, but the project still lingered because I was not entirely confident. On top of that my day job was taking over my time, not to mention a malfunctioning Cheyenne video game that will not be spoken of lest I lose my mind.

The Shining Diorama: a Visit from the Professionals

As I wrote about already, it was not until mid-May when bavastudio hosted two theatre production students from Canada, Wren and Kamille, that real progress was made.

No Ceiling on Inspiration

Wren and Kamille built out the ceiling of the diorama using foamcore and that was just the spark I needed to get back in the game and knock the diorama out. They figured out the ceiling works best at an angle of 20° incline, and having a specific angle made everything easier (an important lesson).

The Shining Diorama: The Hallway Floor

Using foamcore to cobble together the hallway floor

Soon after Wren and Kamille left, I had renewed inspiration and confidence to try creating the floor of the hallway. The floor was at a roughly 18 degree angle, and given it was going to be painted blue and gray, I used a red Sharpee to designate the locations of the panels I cut out, but admittedly I should’ve used pencil.

The Shining Diorama: Hallway Floor Installed

With both the ceiling and floor installed and the side-walls angled accordingly you get a pretty good sense of  how the hallway perspective might actually work, and that was a very exciting moment. I started to glimpse the project as a achievable reality.

The hallway perspective becomes visible

Putting the hallway at 1:4 scale inside the actual hallway was probably not as impressive as I thought it waswhen I took the picture, but it does highlight that Tommaso and I winged it pretty well that first time.

The Diorama within the Diorama

To get the floor to sit at an 18° angle (a bit less than the ceiling) we used stacks of VHS tapes, one of which is [Stephen] King on Screen—a VHS phantom thread.

The Shining Diorama: VHS Floor Reinforcements

I took a photo of the hallway with the iconic carpet for fun, but I had already decided it was not going to be on the floor. That said, I have alternative plans for that rug pattern that I’m still working on.

The Shining Diorama: The Wrong Carpet

Once the floor and ceiling were installed, the next piece I turned to was the baseboard. For the floor trim I used the 18° angle to make the strips out of foamcore, and that worked fairly well. Also, turns out that glueing two pieces of foamcore cut at different heights provides a more convincing base board effect, although not as ornate as the original. I painted the baseboard with the peach-ish color left over from the Elevator Action stencil job from a couple of years ago. That color worked out really well in the end. In the image below you can also see the masking tape in preparation for painting the floor to resemble the blue and gray carpet.

The Shining Diorama: Baseboard

One of the crazy things about this diorama is the Grady sisters print-out was done on my cheap Epson 220 printer using a screenshot I took from a Youtube video clip. I could have (and probably should have) gotten a higher quality image to work from, but I wanted to get this thing done, and trying to to figure out how to rip a 4K disc would have killed my TCB vibe. Pro tip: I used the Rasterbator site to break the image up into 8 different 8″ x 11″ pages for printing.

The Shining Diorama: Grady Sisters print-out

As demonstrated in the image below, once the 8 separate sheets were printed you could cut and glue them together on a 5 mm foamcore board. The Rasterbator site leaves a couple of centimaters of white at the bottom and the right side to makes attaching the sheets easier.

Grady Sisters print-Out assembled

One assembled, the effect is pretty good from a certain distance. I could’ve gotten more hifi, as I already said, but perfection is the enemy of good enough and done.

The Shining Diorama: Positioning the Grady Sisters

Tommaso helped me position the Grady sisters in the hallway to get a sense of where they should be placed to make the overall effect work. We finally ended on about 57.5 cm from the back of the hallway as the ideal spot. We then cut the Grady sisters out of the foamcore to get the desired effect.

The Grady sisters appear

Tommaso also helped me carve out the frame for the H.W, Bartlett painting that hangs in the hallway. This came in handy to further lock-in where to place the twins for a sense of their height and, again, to capture the ideal sense of depth in the hallway.

The Shining Diorama; Sisters and Painting

Would I paint the foamcore floor with water-based paint again? Not sure, it definitely warped the floor, but interestingly enough that helped with the effect. That said, I think I would probably do spray paint to see the difference, I just think water-based acrylic paint provides a bit more texture and is not as smooth. If given the choice and I had the time I would just source the blue and gray carpets and cut them in. It would not have been hard at all.

The Shining Diorama: Painting the Floor

The Shining Diorama: Gray Carpet

One of the hacks Antonella and I figured out to make the sisters stand-up straight without a perceivable trace was to use two long screws (6-8″) encased in hose-like tubing. The tubing worked well to support long, lightweight aluminum piping that held up the Grady sisters quite inconspicuously.

The Shining Diorama: Long Screws with Tubing

These two pipes were placed over the screws with the see-through tubing, and they fit quite snuggly.

The Shining Diorama: Aluminum Piping

Once the two aluminum pipes were inserted over the screws they ran through holes in the foamcore floor. After that, makeshift duct tape holders on the back of the cut-out held the sisters up cleanly with no trace of the support system—allowing them to freely haunt the hallway.

The Shining Diorama: Supporting the Grady Sisters

I was really happy with how well the screw/tubing hack worked to keep the Grady sisters standing on their own four feet.

The Shining Diorama: The Grady Sisters in the Hallway

Initially I was using the cord hiding strips along the ceiling line of the diorama to ensure the incline of the ceiling is consistent given its removed constantly while working. But once it was added and the work continued I realized how well the strips could double as the top part of the hallway’s crown molding.

The Shining Diorama: Cord Hiders/Holders

I struggled a bit with the blue patch of carpet because the crappy Italian DIY home repair box store Obi would only mix satinato (or semi-gloss) blue, which didn’t work given how reflective it was. So I needed to go to a good paint store, in this case Frisanco, to get a matte dark blue mix that actually worked. The issue this created was I must have put on four coats of blue to hide the satinato that started to warp the foamcore considerably.

The Shining Diorama: True Blue?

With the gray and blue carpet painted, it was now time to think through how to build out the columns on either side of the diorama. They’ll be placed (roughly) where the white trapezoids are on each side wall.

The Shining Diorama: A finished floor

I also started figuring out the back wall using a piece of 5mm foamcore and by lightly tracing the window.

The Shining Diorama: Testing the Back Wall

For the back wall, I was surprised how easy it was to find a good sample of the wallpaper pattern and just tile that in Gimp to create the desired effect for the back wall. I tried printing the the wall paper pattern for the back wall using the Rasterbator site again, but this pattern was much trickier to glue together.

The Shining Diorama: Wall paper for back wall

Rather than trying to glue things I decided to simply tape together the various sheets of paper with masking tape. Despite the tape lines, this helped me get a sense of how big the window and trim should be.

The Shining Diorama: Back wall paper, trim and window

It was at the point I got the floor painted, wallpaper on the back wall, and the baseboard working that I got a glimpse of what could be. And from here on out it just keeps getting better and better.

The Shining Diorama: Starting to Come Together

Tommy used some of his new Oahu alcohol markers to color a brown, wood-like frame on the W.H. Bartlett painting.

The Shining Diorama: Coloring the Frame

The columns behind the Grady sisters further dialed-in the sense of depth and perspective. And seeing the first of two columns in place was yet another satisfying moment.

The Shining Diorama: Framed Picture and Column

At this point I also started working on another element that was crucial for a sense of depth, the hanging ceiling light. Placed just a few centimeters in front of the sisters, it provides a crucial elements that really makes the window come out in three dimensions. In the movie the light has a brass fixture with an articulated glass shade. I didn’t want to buy a full blown fixture given scale issues, so I found a cheap $2 white plastic fixture and spray painted it metallic gold.

The Shining Diorama: Hanging Light

Turns out the actual fixture was not working with the glass shade I bought, so I needed to swap. But the gold painted canopy that comes out of the ceiling worked well.

The Shining Diorama: Light Canopy

Probably the trickiest part of the whole diorama was getting the baseboard and crown moulding around the columns right. I don’t think I did a great job, but I did enough with the foamcore pieces to fool the casual observer.

The Shining Diorama: Baseboard

Preparing the side walls with the wallpaper was something I was putting off because I was afraid my Gimp skills were not up to the task. But in the end the perspective and measure tools in Gimp take most of the pain out of the process. Here’s the trapezoid representation of the side walls with all the measurements (which are more or less the same for both walls).

The Shining Diorama: Measuring the Side Walls

Possibly the most important piece of the entire diorama was the wallpaper on the side walls. I was hesitant to jump into this, but I finally mustered up the will and used the wall angles and respective measurements to get a test print for the left wall (left and right are always relative to the back of the diorama, never looking in from the window). My test was pretty decent, and seeing the paper on the sidewall was yet another moment (there were a lot of moments).

The Shining Diorama: Wallpaper on sidewalls

You also get a good shot of the light fixture in this shot. I bought a glass frosted shade for $14 online and spent about as much on the power cable, light socket, and 60W lightbulb. There’s also a little gold chain along the insulated wire for effect. Once the wallpaper test made sense, it was time to commit and print both walls.

The Shining Diorama: Mounting the side-wall wallpaper on foamcore

The local printer could only print 90 cm x 70 cm, and given the side-walls are 120 cm x 167 cm (at its widest and tallest) we had to break the print up across two sheets. The print included overlapping pieces that could then be cut and used to paper the columns. The columns come at about 90 cm from the street window, so the measurements were just about perfect. If I’d known better,  I might have placed the columns at 85 cm from the window to hide any possible wallpaper seams behind the columns.

The Shining Diorama: 3M Mounting Glue

The more forgiving, repositionable mounting glue was crucial for getting the wallpaper right. It allows you to gently nudge the paper to make sure you can salvage any mistakes—and there are always mistakes.

The Shining Diorama: Wallpaper Mounted

Above you can see the wallpaper for one of the side-walls mounted on a piece of 3 mm foamcore. After that it’s just a matter of cutting it out and applying it to the wall.

The Shining Diorama: Papering the Columns

With the wallpaper applied to both walls, it was time to paper and install the columns.

The Shining Diorama: Applying Wallpaper to the Columns

Taping the wallpaper to the backside of the column and then pulling it around the visible side was crucial to making it seamless. I learned this after the second try 🙁

The Shining Diorama: Taped Column

Above is a good look at taping one part of the wallpaper to the inside of the column. The second part gets taped down after the paper is affixed to the outside of the column with glue.

The Shining Diorama: Crown Moulding

The crown molding was a combination of the cord covering strip on top and 5mm foamcore cut to perspective underneath. As mentioned before, the cord covering strip was initially used to preserve the angle of the ceiling, turns out it doubles beautifully as the upper part of the trim, despite its size remains consistent throughout.

The Shining Diorama: Wallpaper and Columns Installed

It’s really pretty awesome how much everything came together once the wallpaper and columns were finished.

The Shining Diorama: Back Wall Window Frame

Now it was time to finish off the back wall window. The gray construction paper serves as the base of the window on the back wall. I used the window cut out to make sure you can’t see any of the gray, essentially hiding the wallpaper and offering a neutral color so no undue attention is drawn to the window.

The Shining Diorama: Securing the Back Wall Window

Another cool hack was getting some light gray construction paper and laying that down as the base of the window. Once positioned correctly, I cut four elongated pieces of 3 mm foamcore and attached them directly to the foamcore with super glue (Super Attak in Italy), which means cutting away the construction paper and wall paper and gluing directly to foamcore. There was no need to super glue the construction paper to the wallpaper, I simply used regular strength glue. I did, however, use super glue on the strips of foamcore board because they will be the basis of  a loose frame that secures the plexiglass.

The Shining Diorama: Window Installed

You can’t see it here, but the plexiglass is now underneath the window frame. After gluing the frame to the foamcore strips and you have a solid window with plexiglass doubling as a glass window.

The Shining Diorama: Plexiglass reflection

The cool thing here is that the window will now reflect light from the fixture in the hallway, which adds a nice effect.

The Shining Diorama: Window Curtains

One of the last pieces was dressing the window with curtains and a curtain rod. I had a cheap small curtain rod hanging around I could cut down and Antonella picked up some fabric at the local market and made custom curtains, and they look amazing.

The Shining Diorama: Curtains in action

While the above picture is not great, it does give you a sense of the back wall installed and the curtains in action.

The Shining Diorama: Behind the Scenes of the Bav-O-Rama

Here is a rare look behind the scenes at the back wall of the diorama, as you can see it is presently held together with duct tape, a Dewalt screw gun box, and a dream.

The Shining Diorama: Up Close and personal

If you get too close you can see the cracks in the system, like the low-res print of the Grady sisters, but sometimes lofi can be just as good.

The Shining Diorama: the Finished Product

The final product is quite a thrill. It’s really cool to have something in your head become a reality like this, even if it’s a copy of an amalgam of other peoples’ visions—thank you Stephen King, Stanley Kubrick, and untold folks on the set of the 1980 film!

There are still a couple of things I need to do, like finish the fire extinguisher alcove and create the hallway in the rear that disappears into the left side of the scene, but for now I will just enjoy good enough.

Update: Taylor Jadin let me know it is hard to get a sense of the size of this diorama, so I found an image someone took of it the other day to give a better sense of the scale of the diorama in relationship to the sidewalk. The size of the window is about 167 cm (or ~5 feet high) by about 100 cm wide (or ~3 feet). It’s fairly big as dioramas go.

A sense of scale

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*That said, I do want to re-visit a video projector enriched diorama for the space in the winter. I think the less intense light and a scene that can encompass video seamlessly would be a lot of fun.

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Come and Play with Us

“Come and Play with Us” Diorama all but done

In the two weeks since being visited by Canadian angels I was able to finish up the “Come and Play with Us” Bav-O-Rama featuring the scene where Danny encournters the Grady sisters in the hallway. It was a tour de force to put it together so quickly and I’m glad it’s done because I can now get back to my regular life. I could feel part of me transforming into a timeless, psychotic resort caretaker. That said, besides obsessing over every detail, it was a blast to create it and I learned a ton along the way. I’ve got a lot to share from the process, but right now I’m exhausted so I’m just going to put this post on my blog as proof I met a self-imposed end of May deadline. YEAH!

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