The West is the Best

Screen Shot 2014-10-26 at 4.28.04 pm

In my honest opinion, Film & TV 2 has been the most fulfilling course in my undergraduate studies so far. I was able to take an idea that I felt compassionate about and transform it into a piece that provides awareness on a social scale. This film has also provided me with the opportunity to take into practice the skills that would benefit me as an aspiring media producer, in terms of communication, acquirement of resources, and most importantly in the production of The West, thinking outside the box. I believe to have comprehended the idea of having no definitive roles as Paul has promised; even though each group member had their own specialties and relayed responsibilities, we were all definitely involved in every aspect of the film’s creation. I am also very happy with time management during this semester. The group was succesful in surpassing milestones over the production process, despite having been delayed in the presentation of the rough cut. The only problem with a democratic group, besides being way too polite with each other when carrying out equipment, was waiting for everyone to affirm major creative decisions during post-production. Having specified no director in the beginning, each member would make a suggestion, only to end up taking up more time than needed to wait for the others to confirm.

Nevertheless, I was very fortunate to have ended up with such a talented and loyal film group this semester.

Colour Grading Experiment

 

This is an unaltered screen grab of one of The West’s scenes in Werribee:
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As per Paul and Robin’s instructions, our film group begun to play around with the colour grading techniques on Adobe Premiere. From the Video Effects tab of the Effects window, we used Three Way Colour Corrector to achieve the following effects:

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Mansion with HDR

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Mansion with increased Blue

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Mansion with increased Green

More Premiere Shortcuts

Learning keyboard shortcuts on Adobe Premiere is an integral part to making post-production process easier. Here are some shortcuts that I have never come across before, mostly from Tutor Paul’s words of wisdom:

~ key toggles the full screen of the window that is selected.

Ctrl + ~ keys toggle the full screen of the video playback

HOME key brings progress line to start, END key to last clip (never came across these as I don’t have these keys on my personal computer)

I haven’t had to deal with large amounts of footage before that is consistent with documentary filmmaking;

the M key marks key points of an imported clip, making it easier for the editor to sort through the footage. These marked areas can then be labelled separately to the actual clip title.