Wednesday, 8 June 2011

Gestalt

Shot List
1: Mid Shot – Perry looking up tree x7 frames >> with each, Perry moves further up the tree
2: Establishing shot – Woodland Avenue
3: Long Shot – Woodland Avenue > Perry Appears from behind tree
4: Long Shot – Woodland Avenue X46 frames >> Perry takes a series of paths, winding around the trees
5: Long Shot – Woodland Avenue X23 frames >> Perry starts jumping down the middle of the Avenue, towards the camera
6: POV - Facing down a timber avenue, lined with white flowers. Gradually gets moves forward X12 frames until...
7: POV - Reaches the archway, POV then starts to double back on itself X6 frames
8: POV - Facing back down the avenue just advanced. We see brightly coloured flowers on the floor X5
9: POV > Close up - Takes a closer look at the flowers
10: POV > Extreme Close up – Takes an ever closer look at the flowers
11: POV > Mid Shot – POV starts to turn back around to face the wall besides the archway X4
12: POV > Close up – Starts to walk closely towards the wall
13: POV > Extreme Close Up – Wall X2
14: POV > Extreme Close up – Wall > Hand in View X2
15: POV > Extreme X2 Close up – View starts to crash through wall
16: Cut To Black
17: POV > Mid Shot – View of relic and hedges beyond archway X10
18: POV > Close Mid Shot – POV starts walking towards hedge X2
19: POV > Close up Shot – Frame of Hedge starts to have the mosaic effect
20: POV > Extreme Close up - Frame of Hedge has the mosaic effect X2
21:  POV > Mid Shot – Look back at the bright flowers coming through the hedge towards the camera X3
22: POV > Establishing shot – Flower bed maze
23: POV > Long Shot – Flower Bed Maze X28
24: POV > Close up Shot – Turns around to look back at the flowers X$
25: POV – Turns back around and starts heading back down the maze X21
26: POV > Close up Shot - Of hand reaching down to the floor to break POV’s fall X6
27: POV > Low Shot – Looking up towards sky from a low angle X9
28: POV > Long Shot – Continues to head down maze X24
29: POV > Mid Shot – POV turns to the right to look at the flowers approaching X2
30: POV – Turns back around and approaches bench X3
31: POV > Mid Shot - Perry steps onto the bench seat
32: POV > Close up – He then steps onto the top of the bench
33: POV > Close up – off hedge approaching
34: POV > Extreme Close up – POV breaks through hedge
35: POV > Establishing Shot – Heading towards Flower Avenue
36: POV > Long Shot - Heading towards Flower Avenue X8
37: POV – Walks through Flower Avenue X8
38: POV – Turns to the left to see flowers approaching again X 11 > X2 Close up Shots
39: POV - Turns back to original direction and continues to walk that way X13
40: POV – Hand appearing into view and extending down to reach the floor
41: Long Shot – Perry falling to the floor and the flowers attacking him X12
42: Long Shot > Clockwise Pan – Perry dying X11
43: Mid Shot - Getting Closer >Slow in zoom X4
44: Close up Shot – X3
45: Extreme Close up - Flower X3
46: Cut To Black

Treatment
We open on a young man stood to the right of a knurled tree, looking up at a strange, coloured spot between its boughs.
He now appears on the left side of the tree trying to find a way to climb up to where the coloured spot is. The spot has changed colour.
The young man in dark clothing now climbs up the twisted tree towards the strange anomaly, which continues to change colour. He begins to disappear through it and reveals the thing to be some kind of a portal when the screen fades and shows him standing in a strange area lined by trees on each side. The green of the trees leaves and the grass are a vibrant emerald colour and the dirt that is visible is a maroon colour.
He starts to slide along the ground, on his feet, between the trees in odd patterns before gliding down the centre of the tree path, making small jumps the closer he gets.
There is a dip to black and we are now looking at an archway made from pale wooden beams, an urn like structure at the end through a point of view shot. The sky is a dull grey colour.
We move forward, down the pale wooden archway, and upon reaching an arch made of reddish stone, pan around to the right and look down to see vibrantly coloured flowers on the grey ground. From the start until this point an odd song named Francium is playing but is now replaced with the Benny Hill theme.
He turns back around, still in POV, and proceeds to crash through the wall and after crashes through a dark green hedge into an area with low hedges lining flower beds in an almost maze like pattern. Upon coming through the hedge we see that the flowers are following him through before turning and starting to run through the low maze. We see more flowers on a hedge directly in front before turning left and continuing to run. After a moment he looks back and sees the flowers right behind him. He continues to run before falling to the ground and quickly getting back up. Seeing the followers coming at him from the right, he jumps up onto the bench in front of him and leaps through the bush behind it.
We are now at an area with another archway draped with vines.
In a pathway that comes into the archway from the left we once again see the demonic, homicidal flowers. He continues to run before falling again and here we switch to a long shot view of the flowers now swarming him as he falls onto his back, the music switches back to the song Francium once we switch from the POV shot. There is a clockwise pan of the young man, having now been killed by the flowers, lying on his back with the purple (lead) flower sprouting from his mouth. A slow zoom in onto the purple flower follows this and we cut to black.
Everything was shot using stop motion.


Tuesday, 7 June 2011

The Coffee Cup

Shot List >> Intro
1: Mid Shot > Side View– Church doorway
2: Mid Shot > Side View– Perry walking towards church door
3: Mid Shot > Front view – Perry Walking up church steppes
4: Mid Shot > Front View > Inside Shot – Perry walking through doors, towards camera
Treatment
The frame is filled with a side view shot of an arched church doorway. The frame is split into three panels, one large complete image of the actions in the middle, with two narrower close up shots of the motions in images on either side. These panels are separated with a thick black line.
From the left hand side a man with long black hair strides confidently into view and proceeds towards the doorway.  
We then cut to a straight front view of Perry walking up the church steps and taking hold of the door handle
From inside the church we see Perry open the door and stride through them towards the camera. All around Perry in this last shot, a flickering ghostly motion is happening on the walls, creating an eerie and surrealist effect.
A strong backing beat begins when Perry first walks into view and then continues through until the end. This sound track is the song ‘Hello’ by Martin Solveig.

Shot List >> Outro
1: Mid Shot > Side View – Church doorway and surround walls
2: Mid Shot > Side View – Church doorway and surround walls > Perry walking out of doorway
3: Tracking Shot – Following Perry as he walks towards and past camera
4: Long Shot – Front view of Perry Walking towards Camera
5: Mid Shot > Tracking – Perry walking past camera

Treatment

The Film opens with a side view of another church archway, only this time the door is completely out of shot. Again the frame is split into three and the same proportions apply.
We see Perry turn out of the doorway and walk towards the camera. A smooth tracking shot is implied as he walks past us.
The frame then switches view so that we can see Perry Striding towards us again down the rugged pathway.  Seconds before he reaches the camera he swerves off to the right and disappears out of shot.
Perry comes back into view as the camera is repositioned around the corner and another tracking shot is used until he walks out of sight and the screen is left on the view an empty bank.  
Again a strong backing beat begins when Perry first walks into view and then continues through until the end. Only this time the song has been slowed down slightly so that it has a deeper sound to it and a sharper melody. Again, this sound track is the song ‘Hello’ by Martin Solveig.

Evaluation

The ‘Coffee Cup’ project was divided into two separate briefs – A live action brief and an animation brief. As I wish to learn more and experiment properly with the ways of animation, I chose to follow the animation brief, along with Michelle and Perry.
 After a deliberation with the rest of the ‘animation team’ me, Perry and Michelle were set the task of creating the beginning and the ending of the group film.  Perry came up with the idea that we could have a character walking into a church to start it, and then back out of one to end it again. He had very good reasoning behind this idea (which tbh I can’t remember – hence the explanation not being included) so me and Michelle both agreed to base the animation on this sequence. We then decided that we would be base our animation on the ‘A Scanner Darkly’ film directed by Richard Linklater in 2006, which is a 100 min long film that has been rotoscoped from beginning to end. In order for us to rotoscope our project, we first had to plan and then film some footage for it.
We chose to film the intro at St Andrews church because of its impressive architectural design and it being within easy reach of the college. The filming at this location went well and we quickly finished the filming for the Intro animation.  However, cars started turning up and parking just outside the front door of the church, when we were just about to start filming the Outro there, which as you can imagine was really quite annoying! Because of this we had to find a different location for the ending. This was when we decided on filming at the church opposite the park up behind the college.
 It wasn’t an ideal location, the outside was littered and dirty, and all the doors were locked up so we couldn’t film Perry actually walking out of a doorway. Instead, we devised an angle to film from in which the arched doorway was visible, but the doorway itself was out of sight, this way Perry could walk out of the arch and it would seem as though he had walked through the actual door. We then filmed his walk several times, from three different angles until we obtained all our desired footage.
The rotoscoping was surprisingly easy – Rachel showed us an easy way to batch edit the images, which meant that we didn’t have to apple the ‘Poster Edges’ effect to each one individually, which managed to save us a lot of time and effort.
However, there were a few images from the Intro video – From when Perry entered the church -that the sides of were really dark, and had to be photoshoped separately. I took this task upon myself due the fact I have Ps on my laptop so I would be able to work on them at home.
I used the clone tool to fill up the dark areas with sections of wall and then used the blur tool to give the walls a kind of impression that they were melting. We wanted these effects because we thought we would look nice if the film would flicker after he went inside the church, and using these tools, every image would be slightly different, giving the required flickers!
Birdie
After we finished our CC Animation, me and Michelle decided to a make a mini animation playing with stop-motion animation. We created it by printing a black and white stained glass window design from the internet. Then using a rostrum set up we coloured in small sections advancing around the picture taking an image between each movement using Monkyjam. It took us around two hours to make it efficiently.

Saturday, 4 June 2011

Butterface

 Butterface
Butterface is a very short and pleasant film about a boys train journey. It follows Davids distraught as he tries to conjure up the courage to talk or make some kind of connection with a girl who has taken a seat next to him.
His thoughts are expressed to the audience through a very comical narration. He expresses to us that he was embarrassed about how he was rocking back forth when she first took up the seat, and then his embarrassment grew as he looked to find she was an attractive girl. The film ends with the girl leaving a lipstick kiss on the window while David is in the bathroom, and then waiting outside the window on her platform stop so she can wave and signal a goodbye.
I thought the film was really sweet. Because of the way it followed a common experience for people on public services, it would be easy to relate to for an audience and made it quite personal to watch and relate to. Also, because of the likeliness to life, the audience could feel the embarrassment for the character of David, and the frustration of his lack of courage.  
Apparently, this film only took two days to make, one for the filming and another for the editing. It was clear that the film was very low budget, probably only cost the ammount  of the train ticket and any equipment costs that may have extisted. I think that the low budget feel actually added to the whole 'realistic' feel of the film,, and i think it really worked well.
The film is a small simple clip into the special comical moments that occur during everyday experiences. It is said that David, the star and creator of this film was inspired by his multiple train journeys back and forth from Manchester to make this film based on the everyday life and little moments that we share with one another.

Friday, 3 June 2011

Coffee And Cigaretts

Coffee and Cigarettes is a film written and directed by Jim Jarmusch in 2003. It consists of “a series of vignettes that all have coffee and cigarettes in common”.
We watch Iggy Pop and Tom Waits sit down together to share coffee and cigarettes in a small café, in a scene from the film called ‘Somewhere in California’. In this scene we start by witnessing Iggy waiting anxiously in a café for the arrival of Tom. He walks around the table area and looks at the song selection on the juke box before ordering coffee and taking a seat to drink a cup. Next we see Tom enter and they uncomfortably exchange a few words. The film progresses with Tom repeatedly misunderstanding Iggy’s comments (taking them all as insults) and the ending again uncomfortably as they both part slightly annoyed with one another.
 The theme that Lim was trying to create was one discovery into ‘just how absorbing the obsessions, joys and addictions of life can be, if truly observed’.
What I liked about this scene was how awkward it seemed between Iggy and Tom. It made the scene very ordinary like. Because everyday people will have this awkward kind or meeting, it just shows you the comic side of these scenarios.
It was also funny how throughout the scene Tom seemed as if he was being quite mean to Iggy and it connected the audience to the characters, most of them feeling sympathy for Iggy. As Neil said – quote “You just want to go feed him a sugar cube don’t you, like cheer him up a bit”. This is a perfect example of the connection drawn to Iggy through Jim’s clever film making.
In connection to this, it is also said that Tom himself was in a very bad mood of the day of the shoot and was being snarly and uncooperative with the production team. However, instead of Jim trying to better his mood or postponing the shoot, he instead incorporated Tom’s behaviour into the shoot and very cleverly gave the scene this quality.  It also worked really well in the script, how Iggy and Tom disagreed on all subjects of their conservation, other than when they started excusing themselves for wanting a cigarette. I thought that was really comical how they made up this stuff about being allowed the occasional one after you’ve quit.
I enjoyed watching this scene. I found it dry, witty, entertaining, comical and very realistic. It left me wanting to watch the rest of the film, and intrigued into what other films etc.: Jim has made.
I've Included a short clip of the scene "Somewhere In California".

Thursday, 2 June 2011

Single Camera Technique

What Is Single Camera Drama?
A single camera drama is often a feature film, for which the acting is recorded on one individual camera. Gerald Millerson defines the Single-camera technique as “A production treatment in which a single camera provides all or most of the pictures during a production.” The technique is applied by the team setting up one camera in a desired position – let’s say an establishing shot – they then act out the entirety of the scene being recorded by that single camera. They then move the camera to another desired position – let’s say an overhead crane shot – they then repeat the scene from this angle, and so on, until they have all the desired shots. As stated on Wikipedia “The single-camera setup, or single-camera mode of production, is a method of shooting films and television programs. A single camera—either film or video—is employed on the set and each shot to make up a scene is taken individually.”

A Multi-camera technique, is when a soap or ‘Hollywood Movie’ is filmed using several connected cameras. Three or four cameras would be positioned around the actors or scene subjects in a way that the line of shot would not be able to incorporate any of the other cameras. The scene would only have to be played through once - without any mishaps - rather than having to be repeated several times like in a single camera drama. Wikipedia suggests that “An alternative production method is the multiple-camera setup, which uses two or more cameras running simultaneously, and the film scene is run through from start to finish, usually with minimal interruption.”

 
Filming with the single camera technique allows the director to print his own flare onto the production, instead of being forced to edit between simple shots. However, the team would most likely have to play out the scene up to 10times, making it a very long, time consuming yet rewarding process. “Of course, the big drawback to using a single camera is it won't work for scenes with significant movement. However, many subjects, such as landscapes and architectural scenes work well.”  
Using Multiple Cameras allows the production team to produce programs at a much quicker rate. There is very little editing involved, as it is mostly edited ‘live’ by the team switching between cameras. They use this technique in the production of soaps, such as Eastenders, Neighbours and Home and Away.  A single camera drama is most likely to have a better lighting set up and looks more natural on the screen. It is also more likely to contain smoother editing, which contains a wider variety of shots and therefore be more subconsciously captivating to the audience.
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Author Surname
Author Initial
Year of Publication
Title of Book
Place of Publication
Publisher
Millerson
G.M
1983
Video Camera Techniques
Oxford
Great Britain
Focal Press
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Author Surname
Author Initial
Year of Publication
Title of Website
Available From: URL
Date Accessed
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-
28 May 2011
Wikipedia The Free Encyclopedia
17/05/2011
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17 Nov 2007
WikiDot - Life & Depth:
An Introduction to Stereo Photography

15/05/2011