Avatar for Klunkerbill

Klunkerbill

Member since Jan 2010 • Last active Jan 2010
  • 0 conversations
  • 3 comments

Most recent activity

  • in General
    Avatar for Klunkerbill

    If you hit me with an email, I can provide a word document of the transcription:).

  • in General
    Avatar for Klunkerbill

    It was definitely the most fun I've ever had in a work-related venture, though there was some tragedy associated with the film, too. There was the usual Black Widow bites, car crashes and the occasional endo. Both my parents died during the production and one of the cast members (J.F. Scott) was murdered. I dedicated the film to his memory. You can see some of the short film for Prof. Scott's induction into the Mountain Bike Hall of Fame in '08 here...
    Part 1
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gHWo_h1nBx4

    Part 2
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jas0ZgyyKGQ&feature=related

    Part 4
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hjMUDjS_c9A&feature=related

    The folks in the film are all wonderful people with fascinating lives, even outside of cycling. I not only made a film, but I managed to make a few friends along the way.
    M.F., I had already developed that idea and started to budget a project about the birth of the bike messenger in the U.S., but I simply can't afford to do something like this again. For the film I was going to concentrate on the San Francisco scene not N.Y, since I'm from there, and that's where the 20th century fixie scene really started. I was going to do a bit about the 1800s, but the messenger scene really started after WWII in San Francisco. Some of the those guys from the 1940s and 1950s are still around and I had a few leads on some of the guys. It's a wonderful story and someone should do it. I simply don't have an extra $200,000.00 and 3 years to do it. I do hope someone does it...I'll buy a copy of that one, for sure. I did enjoy Pedal, but I'd love to see something with a historical perspective.

  • in General
    Avatar for Klunkerbill

    Hey All,

    Thanks for the kind words. I'm so glad some of you enjoyed the film. It's an incomplete history, but it's got some major bits. The story is too huge, so I had to concentrate on one geographic area and time period, northern California in the 1960s and 1970s. I grew up there, so that's really the reason I made the film. That, and it was about time somebody tried to do it. When I finally got to Gary he told me that 5 other companies had interviewed him and were making similar films. I read about some of these other projects. They were months and years ahead of me, but I don't believe any one of them completed their projects.

    It was a total blast to make the film, and a really fun way to blow through a lot of cash. If you rip off the film, you're ripping me off, not some bike company. It's an INDEPENDENT film:). That's the only way any of the truth could be told. Every company that would sponsor such a film would want to rewrite history. Shimano helped me build the website so they get to have a little spot on the back of the box...and I had a bunch of beer sponsors.

    I'll never live to pay it off, but at least I made some contribution to the preservation of the story by encouraging some of these people to scour their archives, before it was too late and the images fell victim to the dust of time. I licensed (paid$$$) for the photos and footage, and when I returned the camera originals, I gave them all masters of their color-corrected materials in various digital formats. It cost me, but I sleep well knowing that these materials will be around for many years to come.

    I know there were many contributions to the discipline by all kinds of people from the U.K. and beyond, but that's a BIG story. I do recommend looking into the VCCP in France, the Italian infantry of WW1, The Buffalo Soldiers of 1896, and, of course, the Rough Stuff Fellowship. There's tons of info out there, but fitting it in a single film would be giving all these legendary figures short shrift.

    Ride on,
    Billy Savage
    writer/producer/director
    KLUNKERZ
    www.klunkerz.com
    www.facebook.com/klunkerz
    www.myspace.com/klunkerz

    P.S. Oh yeah...Andy, I don't believe the film was released in the U.K. until 2008. Also, I never released the film on VHS. Guess you got a bootleg:).

    Torrent sites, ripping and burning, and all the rest of that crap isn't just against the law...it's bad Karma. Don't do it.

Actions