The things that define me

This sketch was very difficult as I had no idea what defines me or who I even am. I basically filmed things that I hold close to me because of the meaning behind them and the people who gave them to me. I also filmed a collection of restaurant cards because I am a huge foodie and spend about 70% of my weeks pay every week on dining.

I preferred the family sketch because there was some sort of cohesion due to the recurring image of hands/paws. This sketch didn’t seem to flow as well.

 

 

 

 

My FAMILY Sketch

I am really close with my family and really enjoyed this sketch. They are the people I talk to first whenever something happens to me and the only people whose advice and criticisms I take to heart.

This sketch shows people in my family doing what they were doing at the exact time I read the description of the sketch this week. It pretty much describes each and every one of them perfectly. That is why this has been my favourite sketch so far. It is so cliched.

 

My Family’s Hands from Tiana Koutsis on Vimeo.

 

 

 

The unlecture this week (are we still calling them unlectures?) was summed up (for me) by Adrian’s statement that everything is entangled, we can begin anywhere and end anywhere. The world of media is messy. Especially these days the lines between things are blurred, increasingly so as time goes on. The lines between amateur and professional are now blurred. Even the line between different mediums. For example the piece by Chris Marker “Le Jetée”: a science fiction series of photographs that tells a story however feels like a film.

Another point Adrian made was that we create things to fit a definition. When we think of creating a film we jump straight to idea of what will happen in the film; the plot, the characters, the setting etc. Apparently this is a mistake. Why do we assume to make the film in a rectangle? What about a square? What about a circle? Has anybody make a circular shaped film?

We never ask ourselves ‘What can I do inside a rectangle?’ using light, shadow, movement… We jump straight into thinking what will it mean?

This ties in with the reading this week that spoke about experimental films. Before this course I’d never taken much notice of experimental films, however, in Cinema Studies last year we were thrown into a pile of them.

Otherwise known as ‘avant garde’, experimental film doesn’t necessarily convey a story or narrative. Their purpose is obviously to ‘experiment’. The filmmaker can experiment either with the views or emotion being portrayed or even the medium of film itself. There have been filmmakers who pickled and blotched the film for effect. Or filmmakers who took a well known piece and re-edited it so that it became completely different (Judy Garland Alone piece which I can not find).

 

The Cactus Chronicle

For film/tv we had to come up with short film ideas, here’s an idea I’m planning to make with Ella

Jeremy is a 23 year old male who lives with his grandmother. He used to attend University but dropped out. His grandmother urges him to take up a course again that he is more passionate about but he is unmotivated. He spends his days working in a run down video shop with not a lot of business. He doesn’t have a lot of friends and doesn’t speak to the rest of his family since his father passed away. His grandmother is all he has. One day she passes away in her sleep and Jeremy doesn’t know how to react. His days are lifeless and grey. The video shop he worked in shut down. Jeremy finds a cactus on his grandmothers bed stand and, unable to cope with her death, believes his grandmother has taken the form of a cactus. Using the small fortune she left behind, Jeremy does all the things he did with his grandmother with the cactus; knitting? Watching a comedic film? Sitting in the park near a lake? During one of these activities the cactus falls over and the soil comes out. The cactus dies. Jeremy finally lets out his emotion and deals with the death of his grandmother.

 

©  2014  Tiana Koutsis