During the last couple of years of being out of school and not having actually shot anything my love for film almost seemed lost. Making movies seemed hopeless. And writing seemed fruitless. And I think that’s why so many people come out of film school and become electricians. The passion is bogged down by endless limitations. As I watched Guillermo Del Toro stand at the podium and introduce his film, and just listening to the reaction of the audience, I knew this was exactly what I wanted to do with my life.
These kinds of realizations are expected. An even bigger moment for me is what happened with me and my father. There’s this thing that happens when a person dies and we put them up on a pedestal. We honor them and remember them. We immortalize them. What we forget to do is humanize them. My father isn't dead or anything, but I've always wanted to see my father as something more than just a man who taught me how to give a proper hand shake. And now I feel that I can.
During this trip my dad stopped being just a parental figure to me. He wasn’t just the leader of all small clan, he was my friend. During this small trip he became someone I could easily hang out with. We became a team. He was the driver and I was the navigator. I was the idea man and he was the planner. We were like a well oiled machine.
You should’ve seen us. A couple of nobodies walking around on red carpets, going to Hollywood parties and trying to get whatever picture we could with our phones (he looooves his Blackberry.)


He’s also a good lookout. When I wanted to get past security, cross some closed off areas and hang out behind the press he’d get my back. He just went with everything. When I wanted to say hi to Seth MacFarlane, or when I asked Jeffrey Tambor if the Arrested Development movie was happening (he said it was definitely happening by the way) or when I wanted to take a picture with, I’m guessing completely wasted, Ron Perlman.

There are moments I’ll never forget either. A list of small memories I’ll keep with me until I’m old and to take out when I need to smile. When we ended up being the only white guys at a rowdy Magic Johnson’s T.G.I. Fridays. When I was talking to Guillermo Del Toro and the only picture he took was so blurry it looks like a big foot photo. When he kicked the Japanese guy out of his seat on the plane so he could have more room to sit. Or my favorite memory is us being in the Mann Village theatre, surrounded by cheering fans and my dad is sleeping during Hellboy’s final epic battle. Gotta love that.
What Ryan's listening to: Maps by Arcade Fire (Yeah Yeah Yeahs cover)
Ryan will return with a Hellboy 2 review!










