Thursday, October 29, 2009

The Choice


Creating my short "The Choice" was a great experience and my first time using Final Cut Express in depth. Shooting the piece was a rather stressful experience since my partner and I were pressed for time and were unable to get the maximum quality out of our story. Even though we ran into that bump in the road the planning process helped a lot with everything. We knew what we had to shoot and even knew how we wanted things to be edited so the entire process overall was very smooth.
If i had the chance to do anything differently I would have mapped some of the scenes out better because some of the shots were a bit lengthy and it made for a lot of scenes to get cut in order to preserve time. The way to better prepare next time is to bring along the story board so that we can call out the shots instead of having to shoot in order as if we were doing an in camera edit. The parts that I liked was the entire editing process and adding special effects and using all the weird props we used. If I could change anything about it all is that I feel that I could've put more effort into the filming process and a little less time on the special effects. If there is anything new I have learned about making films thus far it has been that you need time, time, patience, and more time.

Wednesday, September 23, 2009

Editing Analysis



"You talkin' to me?" In Matrin Scorsese's "Taxi Driver" there is a scene in which the main character Travis Bickle is showing off in front of a mirror yielding his weapons. Throughout the scene Travis Bickle is starting to realize all the horrors in society and begins to alter his personality. To convey this emotional transition the cuts become more obvious. The camera remains on the 180 degree line the entire time and it shows Travis from multiple angles pulling out his gun and him talking into the mirror, and the continuity remains the same as Travis (Robert De Niro) never moves from the same general area and eyeline always matches so that you can tell he is looking at the same part. When Travis begins his inner monologue they use a jump cut to illustrate this change or new life Travis begins to live. It gives the entire a scene a frantic feeling. The shots are all organized in allowing the viewer to see this new Travis Bickle character as he has never been, very uncomfortable and distraught. The cuts are to help convey the characters feelings and gives off this experimental feeling the the scenes are put together. The camera angles go with the letter he is writing, in the the part that repeats itself twice jumpcut is used to show that Travis had made a mistake in his letter which you see later on in the film.

Wednesday, September 9, 2009

Relationship with Media


Media is everywhere, and is a large part of my everyday life. Everything from my Blog, Facebook, E-mail, television, and music tabs websites. Most of these sites are interactive as you are able to click on options and select activities, or actions you want to have done or do on the specific site. Blogs and social networking sites have user-generated content, they post small pieces of writing, video blogs, photos, and status updates, like a live journal. User-generated content gives the user the option of producing their own forms of media. I often use these sites to voice opinions on current events, things that happen in my life, or share stories with my friends and family. The reason why I visit these websites so often is because it is easier to keep in touch with friends and it's all free. I usually view a lot of videos on sites like Youtube, watch old videos of shows that i miss from when i was younger, check weather, find music, and read about my friends. So I view many different types of media daily. Showing how easily I can navigate these different sites shows how much i know the media I am viewing and producing. I have been using these sites probably early in their inception when they were still coming up sites and have been around to see many of them become more and more user friendly and easier to access to the point a small child can navigate the site. Sites have become simpler. My relationship with media is a ongoing relationship of love.

Thursday, May 7, 2009

What I Hear


Walking in my neighborhood of Washington Heights located on the upper west side of Manhattan the term noise pollution comes to mind as you are constantly bombarded with the most dissonant of sounds. Everything from cabs honking their horns to get people or other cars out of their way--which you never hear in any other parts of the city. Somebody blasting god awful music inside of their apartment or car with the bass cranked up to such levels that you can barely decipher whether they re listening to a song or a live recording of a jet engine being crushed. And to accompany all of that you have the beautiful sound of passing traffic through the countless highways and bridges that sandwich the area on each side. One bridge leading to the Bronx, the other to New Jersey. Street merchants hustling their products, everything from bootleg shoes to blenders. On special occasions you can hear the bums arguing over nothingness around the corner or in between the buildings. Oh how I love it! Once a year . . . probably on your birthday or something like that you can actually hear birds chirping, trees aplenty, don't get me wrong its a beautiful area to live in visually, but if you are someone looking for piece and quite, run, run as fast as you can! Layer upon layer of noise to the point that when you get a chance at some silence you are unable to enjoy it because your ears are ringing as if you were front row at a the worlds longest death metal concert. It has gone to the point that it is impossible for any certain sound to phase you as you slowly learn to tune the world out via mp3 player or cell phone chatter.

Thursday, April 30, 2009

Simplicity is key! The easily navigable buttons, smooth layout, light weight media storage device has grown to such popularity it has become a part of people's everyday "life equipment". Remember when leaving your house without your watch made you feel naked? Well move over Casio and in comes Apple's iPod. It doesn't have nearly as many buttons as an old CD player once had, yet does twice as many tasks. The flawless design allows for any user to easily go from listening to every song they ever owned to watching last nights episode of their favorite television program, to reading a book. both my parents who are in their 50's both own iPods and can navigate them easily from the day they brought them out of the packages. The screen is bright enough to see, the text is not too small, perfect for anyone to plug in and play. You don't need to be technologically savvy to work this device. A good design is simple, not too much going on, but just enough to let you know that this means something and its not just laying somewhere in the deepest darkest parts of your pocket along with pennies and gum wrappers. The iPod is something for everyone, no age discrimination on this end!

Thursday, March 26, 2009

Frank the Bunny

By far one of the darkest movies in recent times Donnie Darko. The cinematographer of this movie is Steven B. Poster, he does a fine job in keeping the main theme of a really dark and twisted film. He does this by making scenes with low light and for the most part the main parts of the movie take place either at dusk or night time, with very intimate settings with minimal action. Often going between very wide angle shots in order for the viewer to get a grasp of the seemingly dismal and bleak settings that the main character was in, then into a closeup shot of the subject, in this is where most dialog is made and with low key lights even the most angelic of expressions (smiles) come of as sadistic and dark. By using the low key light it gives a very deep expression by creating very deep shadows on the actor's faces.
In one specific scene Donnie is in the movie theater and he gets into a conversation with Frank the Bunny, a character from Donnie's imagination/alternate universe, it is in this scene they constantly shift between a wide shot of the entire theater in which you realize that it is only Donnie, a female companion, and Frank. This helps show how very lonely and dramatic the setting is, being all alone. They then go into close ups of Donnie's and Frank's face, by doing so this creates a very scary and awkward feeling to the point you kind of want to look away as the expressions on both actors faces seem extremely defined, this is done with the low key light creating one of the darkest scenes in the movie in my opinion.

Monday, March 2, 2009

Museum of the Moving Image

Stop motion film is one of the most creative things in the realm of media I think I ever participated in. At the Museum of the Moving Image I participated in a demo in which I sat beneath a camera which shot one frame at a time, and by using a few simple buttons, a back ground and a cut out frog I was able to create a Monty Python-like six second short. Another cool activity at the museum was the virtual flipbook. You stood in front of a digital still camera that took consecutive photos one after another creating a life-like flipbook.

This is probably the easiest and most fun I have had thus far in creating media. I never could’ve thought something as simple as moving pictures and capturing them in consecutive still pictures would amount to something so artistic ad creative. Whether it was the live flipbook or the stop-motion short. This form of media is something any person can do and I encourage those to try. The frame-by-frame demo showed a very fun way to create movement and give life to everyday objects

The whole process was done by sitting at a desk with a suspended camera above the desk that was focused on the background or backdrop of the short we made. We then placed our paper cut outs onto the desk and moved them in whichever way we wanted but moved it in small increments to help create life like motion, but you could take less frame with bigger motions to depict a more animated approach or as if segments were missing. Fun and simple with a very intricate aspect.

Tuesday, February 10, 2009

Welcome

Aboard an old pirate ship made of wet souls,
we plundered and pillaged from North to South Poles.
We only steal metals like guns, tanks, and toasters.
We melt it all down and we make roller coasters.