Saturday, December 09, 2006

Innovation Rave Flyers
Below is some artwork for flyers of my favourite drum n bass rave - Innovation. The colourful cartoons manage to capture the lively and friendly energy as well as the grimey b-boy edge that is evident at these raves. It was this artwork which first caught my attention and pursuaded me to go, and it really is the best of the best.It just goes to show that creative design can really go far when it comes to advertising.



Narratives Stage 4 Report
I would like to introduce you to my report for Narratives, the first module on this Multimedia course. The main task for this module was to work in a team with four other Multimedia students to produce an idea for a two minute narrative (story), and then present the idea using recorded sound and vision e.g. film, animation.
Throughout this report I will assess what I have learnt and achieved during working on this module over the past two months. During this time I have experimented with many new work processes, forms of multimedia and computer programs, so feel I have gained a fairly versatile range of new skills and knowledge.

When I first met the other members of my group, they had already drafted out a basic idea for a narrative. This idea was based around a music video called “Smack my Bitch Up” produced by the Prodigy. This video shows a presumably male character on a typical night on the town; he shaves, gets dressed, snorts a line of cocaine, goes to a bar, has a few drinks, goes to a club, has a dance, has a fight, goes to a strip club, and takes a girl back to his flat. This is all filmed from a first-person perspective so you only ever see his hands and how he interacts with other people in the video. However right at the end of the video, the audience discovers that the main character is not male, but a tough nailed lesbian instead.

Although the video is fairly impressive, it wasn’t really my ideal primary influence for a narrative and was fairly sceptical about it. However since I had missed the first group meeting (due to lack of internet access at home to be contacted) and everyone else seemed satisfied with the idea; there was no point in changing it, and besides I felt the idea could be fairly flexible.

So we decided we would create our narrative as a kind of surrealist documentary about a female student on a night out in Nottingham, filmed from a first-person perspective. The basic key events involved her getting dressed, consuming alcohol, snorting cocaine, going to a bar, going to a club and the film would conclude with a twist revealing her as a gay man. The film would have a self-produced music soundtrack to provide the audio.

We presented our idea as a PowerPoint presentation to our course group and module leader and received some very helpful criticisms; however the one helped most was to ensure that the film was original and stood apart from the inspiration – “Smack my Bitch Up” video. At this point the film did feel like it would be a blatant rip-off of this, so as a group we decided to research ideas which could make our film fresh and original. We were also warned that this was to be a narrative and not a music video. However we felt that the film did follow a basic film structure with a beginning, middle and end; plus a twist in the tale.

We began to research ideas and gather up inspiration that could be added to make our film different. We aimed to make use of the cocaine consumption in the film to add interesting and surreal effects to the footage. The You Tube website was a very useful source for research as we were able to view numerous video clips from different films. Two major influences in the final version of our film were taken from scenes in Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels, and Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas. From here on our film began to really take shape; as we began the actual filming, ideas started to really flow.

I think the best idea that came up was to scrap the whole gay man revelation plan. Instead we decided to work with the concept of girls who go and get too drunk and high and end up being date raped. This idea was fairly original and had a real message behind it.
Another idea which I feel worked fairly well was the use of still photographs in the film (as in Lock Stock); this added an artistic feel to the film and also made it easier to include events which could have been tricky to film.
We also wore Halloween masks for a couple of the scenes which added surrealism to the film and put an emphasis on the fact our character was hallucinating from the substances she’d consumed.

Finally we used iMovie HD on the Apple Mac to edit the film, although I think this program is probably inferior to Premiere, we had a short amount of time left and this was easier to use. We added the drum n bass/hardcore soundtrack over the top of the film using this as well.

Our final problem came an hour before the deadline when we discovered there was no DVD-writer for our Apple Mac so therefore had to go through a long process of converting the film back to video and transfer it onto a PC, luckily we had some help from Justin the technician; the lesson from this was not to leave things until the last minute!

I feel I was pretty lucky with the selection of people in my production team, everyone was fairly active and creative, and all managed to bring something to the team. I feel I’ve learnt a lot from the importance of teamwork to achieve a task. A project like this requires a lot of effort from both a design and a technical perspective, and unless you have some kind of supernatural multi-tasking ability, the quality of your work is unlikely to be great, let alone meet a deadline. As a team each individual can focus on a certain task and have more time to produce better quality work.

Communication was crucial to good teamwork and we did this via mobile phone and MSN Messenger; although we were advised to use the online group forum, I saw this as being fairly pointless since everyone in my team was logged onto MSN pretty much all the time; though looking back I can now see the advantages of using it, will have to get into the habit for next time. I think it would have helped team morale and the project if we had a team social/drink-up earlier on in the term as we only really got to know each other properly during the last couple of weeks of production. However we managed to arrange regular meetings which were all fairly productive.

I am very pleased with the technical skills that I have gained throughout the course so far. I have learnt much about the aspects of film such as different camera angles and lighting, however we didn’t really have the chance to incorporate these skills into our film since it was filmed from a first-person perspective.
I also really enjoyed learning about video editing on Adobe Premiere, and although we didn’t actually use this program for editing our film, the editing skills we had learnt from a design perspective became very useful.

I have also learnt a bit about story telling techniques and we used this to our advantage by adding certain elements and events to the film to make it a much more interesting viewing for the audience.

Since completing this project I have a much greater appreciation for the processes and methods of work that go into the production of a film. There is a lot more involved than I first thought and teamwork is the key to it all.
There are however a few things which I definitely like to improve for next time I work on a project like this, and the most important is preparation and time planning. I think it is extremely important to research a wide range of different materials before you make any definitive plans for the film; we completely changed the main events in the last week and the execution of these scenes could have been much crisper if they had been planned out and researched further in advance. If we had researched other ideas more thoroughly before hand we would have had more time for filming and editing, and overall a better produced film.
I think we would have also got a better result if we had used Adobe Premiere for editing as iMovie HD seemed to have limited capabilities in some respects, although again this comes down to lack of time planning.

Overall I have really enjoyed learning about and implementing all the different aesthetics and elements of multimedia required for film production, and also the importance teamwork. I have also enjoyed creating this film and the Narrative module as a whole and shall definitely be selecting audiovisual production as an area for specialisation for next year.

Wednesday, December 06, 2006

Video Editing - Adobe Premiere

A couple of weeks ago we had a seminar on video editing.I found this really interesting as had never used a program like this before and am quite excited by its creative potential after watchinga re-cut trailer of horror classic The Shining. Someone had re-arranged clips from the film and added a different voice over and music to make the film look like a family comedy. I am currently working on a similar project where I am rearranging clips from the Child's Play movies to make it look the story of friendship between a boy and his talking doll. Getting the hang of using Premiere but its quite hard trawling through the film looking for right clips to use...need to also record the voiceover first really before I can make much progress.

Tuesday, December 05, 2006

Film Review - Black Christmas, 1974
After seeing a trailer at the cinema for a re-make of this apparently classic horror film, I decided I should try and see the original before the re-make ruined it for me. I've been a fan of horror films like this for years, but had never heard very much about this one (presumably as its from Canada rather than the U.S.).So I watched it last night and gotta say I was immensely impressed; this is how horror films should be made - dark,creepy and intense.
The film is set in a girls' student house during the christmas holiday period, however during a party, an unknown psychopath sneaks into the house and sets up home in the attic and begins to make disturbing phonecalls to the girls downstairs and picks them off one at a time.
Most modern horror films rely too much on hot girls, over elaborate gory deaths and overall, the 'hollywood effect'.Low budget films like this and others(Halloween,Friday the 13th,Blair Witch Project) are scary because they make superb use of the main elements at their expense - camera angles and lighting.
The way the camera slowly follows a character around the dark and silent 2nd floor of the house while knowing theres a serial killer and a few bodies on the floor above is pure intense.Theres something about the camera in newer horror films which just makes everything seem too bright and predictable.Another chilling factor about this film is that you never really see the killer, you see him creepin about the house from a first-person perspective and only ever see him watching from the shadows.The killer's crazed screams and phonecalls are also very unnerving.
Overall if you wana see a horror film that is generally scary, rather than shocks and laughs, then see it.
Here is a fan made trailer I found on YouTube:

Monday, December 04, 2006

Interactive Narrative Project
Gonna get this thing done by the end of the week...progress has been slow because of the photographs I required for my original idea. Initially I was going to do a narrative where some guy on a night out and you make various decisions which effect the outcome e.g. at home: choose beer, vodka, cocaine or ketamine. fight at bar: choose to leave it, punch him or bottle him.All these decisions would change the way the story worked but unfortunately everytime i've planned to take the photos on a night out i've forgotten to. So my new plan is to do a sort of puzzle/mystery involvin ghosts in my house...jus gathering all the photos together then gona sort it.Got a fairly good understanding of dreamweaver i think so should be alright.
South Park - Fat Albert
Another classic South Park clip.