Just before the launch of the Prologue, in October 2005, we had a three day meeting in Venice for those of us that saw this project as something more than a mere hobby. The wrapping up of the Prologue wiped the slate clean for us and we were free to take the next step.
A new plot, albeit stripped to its essential guide lines, had been ready for months: it evolved across a trilogy of three full-length features lasting 60-70 minutes each. The new team, now called
Hive Division, was immediately put to work, with storyboards, computer graphics tests, the search for locations and everything else needed to achieve a complete pre-production. In October 2006 the actual shooting started, and kept going on until all of 2007. Coinciding with another Hive Division meeting, on the 7th of April 2007 we released a
new Trailer. The hype was encouraging: the attention from the media, the popularity amongst fan communities, and the number of views on YouTube rising above the million mark. Even better, work opportunities and partnership invites from other talented filmmakers started coming the way of Hive Division.
We were in the shooting phase until the first months of 2008, when we faced a sudden stop due to an unforeseen event: the location where we had planned our last set of shootings has been demolished in advance. The missing scene, an action sequence of about seven minutes, was fundamental to the integrity and success of the whole movie and we decided not to release MGS Philanthropy until its completion. The search for a new location has been long and has put the whole team to a really hard test, but in the end we could find a very good solution that gave Hive Division the permission to use an old abandoned factory, perfect for the scene. The shooting needed a total of six days to be completed and were finished in March, 2009. The post-production was then completed in August, 2009 while the final mixing of the movie by
Hybrid Two was completed at the beginning of September. MGS Philanthropy Part 1, AKA “The Overnight Nation”, was finally released on the Internet on September 27th, 2009. It was simply too long for YouTube (which then a 12 minutes limit), so we used a combination of P2P, eMule, Vimeo and Dailymotion (
here's a recent HD re-upload)