Category Archives: Integrated Media
Bordwell & Thompson… Again
Being a Cinema student, I did do this reading last year, so a lot of this stuff had already been discussed, but here are a few interesting points I wanted to note down again:
One of the main ways cause and effect can occur on film is through characters. their decisions are influenced by various factors and we see how everything they do and every way they react is motivated by something. We also get a sense of time in films, and can estimate how much time we are watching, and when. We can even recognise when we have moved back or forward in time, and returned, just by visual elements and the timing within the story. Do not simply ‘start’ a story, begin it. Also, i really want to try an experimental, abstract film, I think it would be a lot of fun. Instead of focusing on conventions and story, you can focus more on tone and concept. Concept stuff is fun, I love it. I should do more conceptual stuff, actually…
Genre: good or bad?
In the Integrated media lecture this week, I learned that I shouldn’t think about what my creation should be and just focus on what I’m making. Labels can wait for afterwards. There are far more possibilities open to you when you focus on all of the things something can do, rather than what it means…. This was interesting as it was directly after the Film/ TV-1 lecture, where Jasmine taught us that the best way to write something is to begin with genre, then in integrated media, Adrian said explicitly ‘don’t begin with genre.’ Meanwhile, Jasmine laughed and put her head in her hands, knowing the two lectures had just completely contradicted each other. But let me try to make sense of this:
In screenwriting, a practice that has clear boundaries of what makes something interesting and ‘good,’ deciding genre early is important. While you are being creative in the way you are telling the story, it makes the process easier to give yourself some constraints, such as sticking to a particular genre. This ensures your story is consistent.
Alternatively, I would say integrated media is a more experimental subject. The media we are creating is not limited to one particular discipline. In this aspect, setting these boundaries can be a hindrance. Deciding on platforms, meanings and categories too early can inhibit your ability to think outside the box and create something innovative freely. While there is still creativity involved in screenwriting, there is always a box that you are in; the box of ‘screenwriting.’ So in this way, I see it is possible for both statements to be correct. In screenwriting, deciding genre first is helpful and creates a better end product, in integrated media, deciding genre early can inhibit creativity and be a hindrance.
Fan-cam Documentary
So i was reading other peoples blog posts, as any normal teenager would do in their spare time, and i was reading Shannen’s post about the week 2 reading. She mentioned various types of film that YouTube is populated with, including the “dodgy recording of a concert you went to the other night.”
I had already talked about the cat video side, and the professional side, but yes! i forgot about this side! The fan-cam side! And, this is important, because apart from actual intended documentaries which are published on the site, this is the interactive documentary side of YouTube. Okay, so every film can be considered documentary because it is a product of the society it was created in, i know, but, this is the closest to ‘traditional’ documentary in an interactive way that i can think of right now. People taking direct footage of an event and uploading it. Although in most cases they and other people never watch it again, so they just wasted a large chunk of the concert experience trying to film it- ANYWAY, i have already talked about this in the past. Actually, if nobody else watches it, what is it? what does that mean? …I really don’t have the energy to think about these questions right now.