Fresh from the Barn - Behind the Scenes

Oct 29, 2013
by Kevin Landry  
Objective:
Create a short film which properly highlights what cross country riding means to us in British Columbia.

Pinkbike is inundated with media, videos and photos, photos of the day, video of the year, etc. In 2013, media has become a disposable unit of our collective mountain bike culture, unfortunately to be viewed and minimized when the next new video drops. Whether this is a reflection of our ridiculously shortened attention spans, being inundated with advertisements, commercials and video… or maybe the next video really is better. You could pick any VOD, and it would easily have the same production level and riding quality of high budget projects from 5 years ago, albeit maybe with less Cineflex.

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With so much high quality media being released every day it is easy to forget the amount of time, effort and work which goes into each piece. Take a look behind the scenes of our Fresh from the Barn ‘BC-XC’ series with Fraser Newton, presented by Platypus Hydration. This will give you an inside look into the process, however I’ll leave out the creative process, and pre-production as we still need to have some secrets…

Talent:
This film needed a strong, fit rider as the protagonist, not just any rider would work, we wanted an athlete who best embodied the spirit of BC-XC. The more riders we tossed around, the more the answer became obvious, we needed our friend and trail beast, Fraser Newton. Fraser is head wrench at Corsa cycles, family man, downhill rider, ex-xc racer, ex-sled dog trainer, Iditarod competitor…the list goes on. Fraser was the first person we shot with who has a steady job and a family and that created a shoot with extremely complicated logistics. Luckily Fraser’s wife Kate was stoked to see her man immortalized on the interweb and did double parent duty for a few weeks. These time constraints are a large factor in what makes Fraser such a shredder, he rides harder in an hour after work than most people do if they have a full day. He is full pinned, anywhere, all the time. He’ll regularly pin it to whistler at 7:00 and get 4-5 runs and a sweep in the one hour he has until the park closes.

Locations:
To find the appropriate locations for this piece required almost two weeks of scouting, building and maintaining. First step, the ArtBarn team headed out into the lesser known and ridden sections of Squamish B.C., compiling enough trail and features to shoot a 10 minute piece. After which Fraser joined us for several days to choose the features he was most stoked on. To our surprise and Fraser’s credit, all of the gnarly features we selected were not ‘gnarly’ enough, requiring us to revisit some lines made famous by Anthill from Seasons and Derek Dix’s Ultramontane project.

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bigquotesI saw more hidden gems shooting for 4 days in Squamish, with the ArtBarn crew, than exploring for the previous two years. It was an eye opening experience that has motivated me to look for riding off the beaten track...way off. - Fraser Newton


The ‘Look’:
Establishing and maintaining a specific look is one of the most challenging aspects of creating a video piece. Coupled with the less than consistent weather one is exposed to on the Coast of B.C., it adds a level of variability that you can’t really plan for and can only react to. The look we wanted to achieve for this piece can be summed up as ‘classic pacific northwestern’ (well south western to be exact), requiring lots of greens, lush forest, big trees, loam, iconic granite and the odd cedar rung ladder bridge. After your first day of shooting, your look becomes set, requiring you to match every subsequent day of shooting to the same weather, sun and cloud conditions. This is where this edit really started to become complicated, as we had to match the weather and then overlay Fraser’s 50 hour work week, family and daddy duties. To complicate matters, the BC Bike race was rolling into town, and if you’re racing, Fraser is the guy you want wrenching on your bike… Every project has its unique challenges, and every challenge has its own unique solutions. To solve Fraser’s unique scheduling problem we took a page out of his book, shooting for 1 hour sections after work, just before we lost the light. It probably amounted to 4 total days of shooting, spread out over 12-14 after work chunks.

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Injury:
The two major features were Dix’s steep, hipped rock roll, which Fraser managed to air into on an old 4-inch travel Trek, and Anthill’s rock line to ladder bridge made famous by Andrew Shandro in Seasons. Trying to stay consistent with our lush look, we found ourselves at the rock to ladder in misty, damp conditions, not the most ideal for a 60-foot rock to wood feature. To increase the difficulty level, the moss on the rock has regenerated since it was filmed 4 years ago, creating a slick line from start to finish. This would have intimidated lesser riders, but Fraser was keen to send it. He was so keen he didn’t really scope the run and failed to notice a massive fallen tree. Being committed to the line, he decided to mitigate the slick rock and ladder and didn’t brake until he reached the dirt. Pulling a fistful of anchor wasn’t enough, and we heard the sickening sound of Fraser slamming into the fallen tree. Fraser is a consummate bad ass, so naturally he headed up for a second angle before the adrenalin wore off and the reality of three broken ribs set in. Broken ribs will complicate a freeride downhill edit, but the impact on a cross-country edit is more significant, with all the uphill riding, sprinting and heavy breathing taking a serious toll on the rider. Fraser toughed it out, and several of the climbing shots in the piece were shot with his broken ribs. We just tried not to make any jokes, as laughing hurt him more than heavy breathing.

Partners:
To make high quality pieces it is best to partner with a receptive company, and by receptive I mean a company that believes in your creative and does not want to change it, add over the top branding or micro manage the process. We found this partnership with Platypus Hydration, a Seattle-based company that manufactures stellar hydration bags. Knowing that they were introducing their Tokul XC packs and Duthie All Mountain packs to the mountain bike market created a perfect relationship. To see Fraser up close and personal outlining his favorite features of the Tokul pack, check out the product spotlight video below. The standout feature for me is the taste-free antimicrobial hydration bag, if you’re prone to leaving water in your bladder for a few days or even weeks, this is the bladder to run. Platypus also attracted us with their program of giving back to trails. After you purchase a Platypus pack, you can send in for a Platypus jersey and they will donate 20 dollars to your local trail club, #winning.



Post Production:
This is the most exciting element of producing videos, instead of being surrounded by Nature in the middle of nowhere, we were cooped up in the office choosing music and then cutting, compiling and finishing the piece. Although the edit process can feel monotonous, it is here that a piece really takes shape, where the story is crafted and the magic happens. We found a song we enjoyed that had the pace to carry the footage; Candyland & Clark Kent vs. Slow Skies - On the Shore (Original Mix). Sometimes it takes two California DJ crews and an Irish folk band to bring the whole piece together.

I hope this behind the scenes breakdown has given some perspective on what goes into creating these video pieces. Once you know how much hard work and effort goes into each piece, it may be harder to skip to the bangers or click on the next link before the video you were watching is even halfway done. Check out the final product below, and stay tuned for more from ArtBarn Film.

Views: 56,319    Faves: 338    Comments: 35


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34 Comments
  • 17 2
 Man that Squamish dirt is so luscious I could just lick it
  • 4 0
 I rode there this summer, and I had face planted after my front tire had slipped out on a root. With a mouthful of dirt I guess you could say I licked their luscious dirt.
  • 9 1
 Holy shit, a video on PB that has pedaling?????? I don't know what to think anymore.

For real though, amazing job, this whole thing looks fantastic. It's pretty awesome to see someone getting that gnarly on a short travel bike with broken ribs... guess I better HTFU. Good stuff! Hope Fraser gets well soon!
  • 12 5
 Those trails are gnargasmic... props to the universe for arranging itself into BC and for trailbuilders to rearranging some atoms of BC into such amazing trails - åzoM!
  • 8 4
 Nice video and riding style - really amazing looking trails - big respect to the trailbuilders for that work, but that music was just rubbish - some kind of dub-step with sickly baby-voiced vocals? Ruined it for me.
You need to watch the UltraMontagne series to appreciate pitch-perfect matching of music to biking style and landscape.
There's very few videos that comes near to the quality of the UltraMontagne (Savage films are pretty good though), the atmosphere those guys generate in their productions is just stunning, it also makes you want to go out in any weather and dig trails....
  • 6 0
 It's a sick edit but since when did a 150mm Remedy become a 4" travel bike?
  • 1 0
 That was one of my favorite edits that I've seen on here - something that embodies my every day riding for sure. It stuck in my mind from when it was posted earlier, so I was pretty stoked to see the article going over what went into shooting what I saw a couple months ago. Nice work guys. And yeah, I'm not a fan of dubstep either, but I thought the music flowed with the ride pretty well, actually.

Quick question though... curious why he, or someone, has a Banshee (Rune?) in one of the photos? Is that how he prepped for his lines - riding a more forgiving bike? Or is that from one of the aformentioned bike movies?
  • 1 0
 The Rune is from a previous shoot. We wanted to give a nod to Derek Dix, who originally built the 'mossileum' the gnarly rock line Fraser decided to air. We first shot the rock for a Banshee piece with the new rune. Good eye
  • 5 1
 Man, riding with broken ribs is no joke. You're bad-ass Fraser!
  • 4 1
 I thought this was one of the best edits of the year.
  • 4 1
 Squamish is an unreal place on earth Props to all trailbuilders
  • 1 0
 I love the behind the scenes explanation! And great video. Thanks for another amazing video to make my day behind my desk all the more dreary...lol
  • 1 0
 Frase is such a chill dude. He embodies the Squamish lifestyle. Stoked to see him in a high quality edit and proud to be part of this rad community.
  • 1 0
 Great Video, thank you very much. This is the style I prefer to ride (at the moment) ;-)
  • 3 1
 No monotremes in BC mate...
  • 2 1
 XC on a Fuel wasn't it? No wonder you Canadians are so lairy on bikes. Very Jealous!
  • 2 0
 Epic props for continuing with 3 broken ribs. NICE work guys!
  • 1 0
 Thanks for mixing things up a bit. Good to see something different round these parts. And from Squamptonards at that
  • 3 1
 what song is that?
  • 1 0
 Candyland & Clark Kent Vs Slow Skies - On the Shore
  • 1 0
 Looks like he could be Gary Fisher's kid
  • 1 0
 Cool dude and a nice sound too!,
  • 4 5
 When are people going to realise dubstep is the worst electronic music genre ever invented. Other than that, sweet video.
  • 5 1
 If you think dubstep is bad, give "trap" a listen haha
  • 2 0
 amen. dubstep sucks and its use in mountain biking videos only proves that way too many mountain bikers are skiers
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