Friday, 22 March 2013

OUR FILM!!!

The Completed Article:
 


Hope you enjoy!
Pheebs, OUT! ;)

Thursday, 21 March 2013

Editing: Day 7

Hey!

THE FINAL DAY!!!!! We've worked so hard on this film and it feels so good to be almost done with it. Thinking our film was generally done, we called Sir over and asked for his opinion. He advised us that the opening 30 seconds is silent and it doesn't sound quite right, so we should add in some more diegetic sound or another soundtrack just to fill in the space.

We first attempted to restore the diegetic sound in the clips but it was a lengthy process and a lot of the background noise in the clips was white noise or us talking, fairly useless.

We'd toyed around with the idea of having a recording of me humming a song to play over the top of the music. It was a natural and diegetic sound which would seem realistic and we moved into the other Media Studies lab to record it. However, my voice sounded fairly poor over the Apple Mac software and it doesn't flow very well in time with the action on screen. With this in mind, we chose to cut it, brainstorming other options.

Sir suggested that we use the other track of music we'd had as an option for the main background music playing throughout the film. We weren't sure but Sir insisted that we needed sound to film the opening 30 seconds of silence, especially since our film was a peppy romantic-comedy. Silence in the opening sequence is generally a tactic used in thrillers or horror films. "Clear", edited and ready to be used, was inserted and we played it. Initially, I'll be honest, I wasn't keen on it, as I thought two sets of different music in two minutes seemed too crammed and wouldn't flow. However, after playing it over a couple of times, I got used to it and we kept the piece.


Sir was also eager for us to include some human diegetic sound, like a door shutting and squeaky mirrors. We didn't have any of these sounds pre-recorded and there weren't any available clips of Garage Band or YouTube so we had to create our own. Carolina and I took a whiteboard marker pen and wrote on the window, with me drawing swiggles and Carolina recording, Sam taking a couple of photos.


We also recorded the sound of the door closing. Carolina emailed the clips to our hotmail accounts and edited the sound clips and and inserted them in the different points in the film. This added another dimension to the film and made it that much more realistic.


Pheebs, OUT! ;)

Wednesday, 20 March 2013

Editing: Day 6

Hey!

Today, we got straight down to business with the logos. Having completed the Glasshouse Production logo, we just needed to blackout the background and print-screen the image. After that, we imported and inserted the image into Final Cut Pro.


We moved immediately onto Fast Pace Cinema's logo design. Ideas literally coming to me in a minute, I searched Google Images for a running-man silhouette and copied and pasted it into PowerPoint. After blacking out the background and filling the inside of the man's shape with white, I typed in seperate letters and placed them along the inside of his body. I chose the colour scheme of red, white and blue for each of the words because our film is supposed to be created by a British company. By having Fast Pace Cinema's name sporting the Union Jack colours, it represents Britain and identifies Fast Pace Cinema as a British company, adding that sense of Britain to "The Naked Truth". Printscreening and inserting the image, we moved onto designing Preach IT Distributions.


Before we began designing our final logo, Carolina made an excellent point that the prior to had been rather devoid of colour. As a result, we searched a number of psychedelic patterns and rainbow swirls, however, they all proved very bright and difficult on the eyes, so we thought back to a more subdued design for the background. I came up with the colour bars pattern used in television when the TV lost signal. Not only was the background relevant to the film companies work but also was colourful and playful, which linked back to the fun-loving name of "Preach IT". The peace sign is popular with teenagers and relates to the hippie, quirky name of the company. We copied and pasted a silhouette of a hand making peace fingers onto PowerPoint. However, we could'nt get rid of the outlining background of black. About to search for another shape, our classmate Zak offered to use Photoshop to help clear it up and sent it back to us in a couple of minutes (a great guy Zak, and I've got to learn to use Photoshop! Something about that program strikes fear into my heart and all I want to do is avoid it like the plague!).


After completing the logo and typing in the company's name, we printscreened it and inserted it into our film, completing the logos.


Pheebs, OUT!

Monday, 18 March 2013

Editing: Day 5

Hey!

So... I'm BACK! I would tell you how my trip was but it may very well tip me over the edge to type about it. Let's just say: snow, rain, outside, surveys and rude-people-from-Swanage.

Anyway, I came back very excited to see where the team had gotten to and ready to complete the logos. When I arrived for period 5, Sam and Carolina gave me a run down of what they'd been up to. Sam had completed the all the titles and edited in the space where the production company logos would go at the beginning of the opening sequence.


They also had a fade out effect at the end of the opening sequence to the music and the footage, so that the film had a natural gradual ending rather than just cutting to end.


Carolina had finished editing the music and so they had inserted that into Final Cut Pro and added to the film, just as Naomi presses play on the iPod speakers, to make the music look as though its diegetic. Although the drum beat playing just as Naomi's top slides down her arms wasn't possible to have with the new music, I was very happy with their progress.

Pheebs, OUT! ;)

Monday, 11 March 2013

Editing: Day 4

Hey Examiners!

I don't think I've mentioned this before, probably because I'm too disgusted to make the words type on the keyboard, but I am, in fact, being dragged off to Dorset for the rest of the week, Tuesday-Friday, by my geography teacher. Unfortunately, this means that I can't help the rest of the team edit in the titles on the video!

We decided to make best use of this lesson though, seeing as we were altogether. We began working on the titles which would appear on screen throughout the opening sequence. We had already initially decided on replicating something similar to the Legally Blonde titles in the film and started our search for something like that available on Final Cut Pro. We were looking for a swirly, girly, pink affair and trailed through excessive numbers of fonts to try and find one.

Our situation wasn't helped by the fact that we'd never used the title-section on Final Cut Pro and so were pretty nervous, not to mention, clueless on how to go about finding what we wanted. After scrolling through millions of fonts, and trialing a number of them, we finally happened upon what we were looking for and applied it.


However, two problems arose. We wanted to the title to appear on screen over the ongoing action rather than in a blackout seperately. We were unsure of how to do this and after fiddling about with the program excessively, we asked Sir for a hand, and he opened Options and adjusted the settings so that the title appeared next to Naomi's feet as she stepped out of the tub. We divided the title of "Phoebe Bower" into "Phoebe" and "Bower" so that they appeared one after the other, in time with my feet landing on the floor. Problem two arose when we tried to get the titles to fade out as well as in. However, the titles needed a certain length of time to fade in and out and we only wanted them there for roughly 3-4 seconds, to short to have the titles fade out again. As a result, we had the titles fade in and then disappear, which worked just as well.


While Sam continued with the titles and Carolina focused on finishing the music, I hopped onto another computer and started working on the production titles for our 3 company names: Glasshouse Productions, Fast Pace Cinema, and Preach IT Distribution.

I'd had a passion for design eversince Year 11, last year, when I'd used my free period to sign-up for yearbook committee. I designed the logo on PowerPoint, building the foundation drawing of a glasshouse from the line-tool on PowerPoint. I had a couple of mishaps and had to restart a number of times because I'd drawn the shape the wrong way etc, but after a various attempts, I finally completed it. After that, I just used the textbox-tool to type in a a simple bold, black font: "Glasshouse Productions".

 
Pheebs, OUT! ;)  

Friday, 8 March 2013

Editing: Day 3

HEY!

Today was fairly quiet. We attempted to add the music to the film however it wasn't quite as ready as we would've liked, with a couple of jumps and glitches where the music repeated but not as neatly as it should've. But there was one moment where the music made me feel something akin to chills. The track "Yearbook Long" has a heavy drum beat playing throughout and just as Naomi is putting on her shirt in the film, the drum beats at the exact same time, as though orchestrated. It was a beautiful feeling and we got tremedously over-excited over that one coinsidence. The track still needed to be fiddled with though and so Carolina hopped back onto the computer and began adjusting the music again on garage band.

 
Meanwhile, Sam and I went back to our computers and watched the footage again, making little adjustments to shots, shaving off a second or two on a couple of shots and rearranging the order of some of the panning shots. We then logged onto our blogs and did some admin catch-up with a couple of entries.
 
Pheebs, OUT! ;)

Thursday, 7 March 2013

Editing: Day 2

Heya!

We'd spent the past couple of lessons cutting down the individual clips and putting our film together, setting it to roughly 2:13.

We'd previously deleted all the background noise from our footage as we'd spoken in quite a dew of them, or picked up items falling over etc, which we didn't want heard in our final piece. We'd also planned to have music running over the top of the film throughout the majority of it, and it was easier to concentrate without the diegetic sound interferring. We'd kept the sound of the shower however, as Sam had thought to have it running throughout the titles. We agreed that this technique made the music seem more natural, and lead the audience from the titles instantly through to the opening scene of our film.

Carolina was working on the music on another computer and was finishing it towards the end of the lesson. We'll be adding the soundtrack to the film next lesson.

*Our film without the background music*
 
Pheebs OUT! ;)