Selected Listening N°7: Domina – You Got My Soul (1984)

https://youtu.be/24wmymrUU1I

Recently i’ve been listening to a lot of ‘club’ music from the 70’s and 80’s (disco music pretty much). This song is classified as Italo-Disco because
1. It was made in Europe (Italy)

2. It features electronic sounds, drum machines, catchy melodies, vocoders, overdubs, and heavily accented English lyrics

I found this song on the radio station ‘Beats in space’ but i didn’t know its name. Shazam didnt recognise it so i had to go though the arduous process of deep internet searching. I finally found it.

Things ive noticed:
The vinyl costs $100 USD so its a reasonably rare/wanted
The track really reminds me of the song A real Hero by College & Electric Youth.
I really love this song

Narrative structure – PB3 – Currently editing the footage

    1. What is the ‘controlling idea’ (Robert McKee) of your portrait?
      So far I’m framing the participant (Ed) in a situation which he had no control in. I can kind of shape him as a survivor as he had a 1/10 chance of dying. I can also shape him as a reformer because he has looked back and re-evaluated his life and his memories. If I unpack his story carefully I will be able to have distinct zone where these ‘controlling ideas’ are evident.


    1.  How is your portrait film structured?  (Remember there might be multiple forms of structure employed)  E.g. Discussion and depiction of an event or process? A Journey? Use of voiceover narration? Other?
      This will be both a journey narrative and a voiceover narration. I’m going to make it so that it seems like the participant is just narrating the video but at the end finally show him in motion in an interview setting. I’m going to make it so there are three (or four) zones. The introduction (before the title reveal) will have a sharp statement to attract the audience to his story. The second zone will explain how the interviewee lost his memory. The final sequence will be a reflection of what happened. It will show how he lives on.


    1. What do you want your audience to make of your interviewee? (e.g. What are you saying through them and/or human nature, human folly, or noble human inspiration?)
      Through the interviewee, I want to emphasis to the audience how fragile life can be, or show how simple problems such as a headache, can turn into a life or death situation. Most importantly I want the audience to sympathies with the interviewee and connect with him. Most people wouldn’t have been in his situation but everyone has family and memories which are precious. His family could have lost him and he could have forgotten his family.


    1. How is your portrait being narrated? Why? How does it affect the structure?
      The interviewee narrates the majority of the portrait. BUT friends and family have told most of the information to him because he was unable to remember what happened. For this reason he has multiple perspectives and conflicting views. I will have to be careful how I structure the narrative so it makes sense. Showing the interviewee talking at the end will also give the video better structure because it make it look as if it is current time, looking back on his experiences (which were narrated).


    1. What role will the ‘found footage’ play in your portrait? For example, reinforcement? Ironic counterpoint? Contrast? Comparison? Other?
      The found footage I will definitely compliment the narrative. I will use footage from ‘Dead men Walk’ and ‘The indestructible Man’, which obviously work well with the theme of the documentary. I will get footage from when they are creating the indestructible man such as the electric bolts followed by a shot of the indestructible mans head to represent the seizure and the change his brain is going through. When the indestructible man wakes up, the narration will also be talking about waking up. the footage will act to visualise the audio narration.


    1. Does your portrait have a dramatic turning point?
      I think the portrait will have at least two or three turning points (if that’s even possible in three minutes). Like I said earlier I there will be a very abrupt sentence at the start of the film which will entice the audience into the narrative. They will know there will be a dramatic turning point somewhere. I think the main drama will come from the coma sequence and the waking up sequence where the interviewee doesn’t remember who anyone is.


    1. When does this turning point happen  in your portrait and why? At the beginning? At the end? Two-thirds through?
      Id like to think that there will be various turning pints in the portrait. The centre one, which is when he falls into and out of a coma will be in the middle, or 2/5th of the way in. Obviously the Ed is still alive because he is narrative, so, being that this event happened in the middle, will make the audience want to watch right though to the end to find out how he has progressed.


    1. How does your portrait gather and maintain momentum?
      The portrait will gather momentum from the start as the audience is plunged into “I didn’t know who my Mum of dad were” or a narration a long those lines. I’ve chosen three songs with will lift the audience into each narrative zone. The songs have no words but they are constantly evolving with the narration. The pace of the narration will also be in time with the music so its not like I’ve just chucked music over narration. The momentum will also be maintained via thoughtful planning of the narrative. I don’t want to sell the candy too early so I will have to pace each zone into separate climaxes.


    1. Where will your portrait’s dramatic tension come from? The gradual exposition of an overall situation? A volcanic, climactic moment? An impending change or crisis? The contrast between what the interviewee talks about and the found footage?
      The dramatic tension will build from the first words as previously said (I don’t think its necessary to talk about them again). I will throw the audience into the situation. Each of the two or three peaks will give the portrait tension. the found footage will compliment the narration. I will select clips that demonstrate emotions of fear, curiosity or ‘awakening’.


    1. Does the portrait have a climax and/or resolution? Outline them.
      I feel like the climax and the resolution will mash over each other in the end. Every documentary needs a resolution and without a resolution, the climax will be crummy.  Climaxes usually happen just before the end but i hope to have a few throughout the 3minutes

TACA – My new media Acronym

In the search for creating more relevant posts i looked back at the Assessment 1 feedback rubric.
The project 2 brief asked for a video with

1) Awareness of editing practices (creative and meaning-making)

2) Texture (diversity of media materials)

3) Creativity (demonstrated poetic/playful/ abstract representation of self)

4) Ability to notice, reflect and learn from the creative process

While i scored pretty well in this section i feel like there could be a more systematic way of demonstrating why the project could be considered in the ‘excellent’ rating (while not sounding cocky or egotistical)

I have framed the acronym TACA,  Texture, Awareness, Creativity and Ability to notice.
In future posts i will use ‘TACA’ in the heading, place it in the category of ‘Digression’, and link it to the original brief submission.

Studio Lighting – Learning from Mistakes – Learning from the Interweb

For the past 5 weeks i’ve been working for a friends Dads who owns a wine equipment business. Every Tuesday i’ve been slowly photographing his stock which will then be put into the new online store. Ive never taken photos in a ‘studio’ environment so i did some research before the first shoot.

Youtube was the first place i looked followed by a few blogs here and there. A few days before i checked out the photography equipment that the business had bought from China. I did a mock setup and tested the lights as well as the settings on my Camera (Canon 6D). It was quite a DIY set up. I taped white flute-board to table against the wall. I then and curved another  one so it ran from the base of the flute-board to the wall, showing no corner. By doing this, the items photographed would appear to be on an infinite white plane.

For consistency i set the camera to manual and placed it on a sturdy tripod. I also followed these guidelines i made from previous tests

  • The white balance was set to fluorescent lighting mode
    • To balance the colour temperature
  • The relative aperture to was kept within f/4 to f/11
    • To hide the detail of the fluteboard
  • Exposure time was kept within 1″ and 1/5 (of a second)
    • To balance the light levels  when adjusting the f-stop for larger items
  • The focus was set to manual
    • Autofocus cant be trusted in studio setting
  • I used a remote to take the photos
    • if i pressed the button on the camera to take the photo it would have come out blurry due to the fast shutter speed
  • ISO set to 100
    • No need for high ISOIMG_0875

I would systematically tick off each product as i took a photo, changing the settings depending on how white the object was in comparison to its background.

After the photo shoot i would then go home and edit the photos on Photoshop. This was a tedious process. I would have to applying colour correction to each individual photo (i created shortcuts), then have to tinker with the levels to get the blueness out of the whites. Before exporting i had to change the name of the photo to match the products name in the system.

On reflection I feel like this project was a stepping stone and a good learning process. This would be an easy way of making money form small businesses that need semi-professional photos taken of their product.

 

The importance of Equipment

Does good equipment matter? i think it does.

This week and last week we tested the Sony MC50 and the Zoom H2N. I remember i always wanted to own a camera like the MC50 but it was until a few years ago that i realised how horrible these camcorders actually were. These were some reasons why i didnt like it.
1.  The picture quality isn’t great especially when you take into account the file size per second (24mb)
2. It saves the video in a AVCHD format which is annoying to export onto the computer.
3. The one board shotgun mic is very bad quality and has lots of noise in the background
4. Interlaced video and not progressive
5. Its REALLY hard to find things in the settings menus

Compared to a DSLR like the Canon 6D (while i use), the picture quality doesn’t compare at all. Yes the 6D is a more expensive camera (by about $700), but the quality is superior (the shallow focus and tonal depth). You can change the lens on a DSLR where as camcorders have fixed lenses. I will not be using the MC50 for future projects

I have worked with an H4n before which made working with the H2n very easy. For others it might seem like a hard piece of hardware but I found that the simplicity of its design very user friendly . Its audio quality is pretty much the same as the H4n although it does have less inputs. I will probably borrow a H2n for the approaching Brief 3.


One thing that kind of bugs me is when people say the ‘equipment doesn’t matter its the plot/narrative that does’. I understand that plot is one of the most important elements in a production, but there needs to be some level of professionalism to accompany.

There are films which are solely filmed on iPhones but the only thing they have going for them is the message that anyone can make a feature length film.I think its an inspirational gimmick. If its an experimental film, sure thats fine. With student projects it does matter because the plot/narrative ideas are usually under developed which is why we need to overcompensate with good technology and practice. I’ve been filming my previous projects and exercises on my iPhone because the quality didn’t matter. It was more about the subject matter and the meaning.

The point i’m trying to make is that for student films, we ‘need’ the quality equipment because otherwise our videos quickly fall flat.

(I do acknowledge that as first years we deserve to get the lower end equipment and work our way up slowly. I also acknowledge that the equipment RMIT loans us costs a lot)

Workshop interview exercise using MC50


What problems did you encounter?
When i was editing I found that the audio quality was subpar even when using the lapel on the SONY MC50. We also forgot to record an ambient track.

What did you try to do to get past or mitigate these?
To get past this i fine tuned the audio track using compressors and noise reductors. I also placed music into the sequence to slightly mask the chatter in the background.

What did you discover about camera technique (e.g. composition, framing?)
Its important to position the interviewee to the right of the frame, and the interviewer behind the camera to the left (or versa). This means the interviewee is less likely to stare into the lens, and also gives the composition a visual gap where they can talk through.

Suggested Listening N°3: Cake – Friend is a Four Letter Word


I can safely confirm that friend is not a four letter word

To me, coming from you,
Friend is a four letter word.
End is the only part of the word
That I heard.
Call me morbid or absurd.
But to me, coming from you,
Friend is a four letter word.
To me, coming from you,
Friend is a four letter word.
End is the only part of the word
That I heard.
Call me morbid or absurd.
But to me, coming from you,
Friend is a four letter word.