I was lucky in creating this assignment as I stumbled upon the BBC show ‘World’s Smartest Animals’ in the search for royalty-free footage. I was originally just planning to use some scenes from it to show animals, but then the pieces of the puzzle begun to come together. I started splicing and chopping the footage and attempted to tailor both the audio and video to my dog, Harry, in order to demonstrate him as the world’s smartest animal.
Stumbling upon such footage was extremely lucky, a fluke, and I treat it as such. But it did not come without its problems.
For one, the footage is filmed on much higher quality cameras than the Sony camcorder provided by the media department, hence when the two are compared, mine looks much much worse than it really is. Also, the colour correction and white balance within the BBC footage is completely different. It is much brighter, the colours much more vivid and saturated. This, in my opinion, makes some cuts, between my own and sourced footage, seem very jarring and can halt the whole flow of the video.
The audio, at points, was also difficult to deal with as the ambient noise used in the clip can be very distracting. For example: the audio used in the main focus of Harry is originally of a dog skateboarding, hence you can hear the skateboard wheels across concrete. If I’d had more time, I may have been able to seperate the channels and isolate just the narrators voice, but unfortunately that would’ve taken a lot of time, time I didn’t have. But whilst the sound is there, I don’t believe it fully detaches the footage from the audio.
I believe that I made the right choice in choosing my dog as the subject of this assignment. He added a unique spin on the brief, whilst also fulfilling it.