Friday, 21 November 2008

classwork - Mood Board


The Mood Board

The mood board you see on your right is a compilation of everything that has inspired me to create what I will be creating for the project.

Monday, 3 November 2008

classwork - Statement of intentions

Statement of intentions (draft)


My intention for the project is to create a formalist music video for the drum and bass track I made over the summer.

When in leeds with my family, I asked them to give me some idea's on what I could make my film about, here are some that i can remember.

  • The boy in the striped pyjamas (prequil)
  • Tramping (how to be a good tramp, top tramps. would of been fun but not exactly 'correct')
  • stick figure fighting / dance (i would create a track, make them dance and fight to it using a pivot program)
Those are just a few of the idea's we came up with.

The last idea was the one i decided to take through and think more about.

Yesterday, i met up with my other aunt, she has created films before and knows a lot about the animation arty side of things. I told her about my idea and we began to elaborate on it . Using a record player to project my idea on to would be fun. We then thought about a completely new idea of making a track (the drum and bass track i have already made) and then film a record player spinning around with ink and paint and any other things that would stretch with a centrifugal force. I would then record this several times with blank circles and adding different colours and objects. To then put it in time with the music i would cut it every beat(170bpm) and change between different ink spattered record players, the odd cross fade and random image should help tell a story but my idea is to create a film with as little story line as possible to create the ultimate formalist effect.


These links proved useful when thinking of an idea -
  • ROBERT BREER: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fHvYoaP5Od4
  • OSKAR FISCHINGER: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lC4Nvsceg1A and http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jz9MlZA4LxY and a film inspired by him, can't remember who it is by: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=etYgSaryuYs
  • ERIC NILS HARALD: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=70qecjGdOYs
  • ALLEN CARROLL: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=umFG1O4bRSw
  • CHUCK JONES: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OGh97__-uLA this film won an Oscar (in 1965?).
  • HARRY SMITH: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-wYJ51nSXRQ
  • LEN LYE: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T3y1offmJ4Y
  • CALIFORNIA INSTITUTS OF ART AND DESIGN:
  • http://film.calarts.edu/main/streaming/expanim20.html
I found that Oscar Fischinger came closest to the piece i wanted to achieve and his work with music was very inspiring. I am thinking about incorporating some of his work into my final product as a tribute to his work and dedication to the area. His work of making images flow in time was very inspiring and of course i don't have the talent to do what he has done but I would like to see a relation between my work and his.

Damien Hirst's spin painting also link to what i am intending to achieve. His idea of painting a picture then using a centrifugal force to let nature create its own image was very inspiring. He is possibly one of Britain's most famous artists and work like his 'shark in formaldehyde' is globally acknowledged.

To create quite an inspiring piece of work I am not only going to be cutting from image to image 3 times a second but also create a very vague story line with the use of images and short flashes of Oscar Fischinger's work. This, I hope, will make the audience think more about what they see than what the footage itself is telling them to think.

In the coming week I will be experimenting with different lighting, colours, speeds and images to see which things will work best and how I can best achieve what I would like to do.

My short film will hopefully fall under the category of extreme formalism. This is because what I intend to create is a swirl of colours, images, objects that almost directly links to both Damien Hirst's spin paintings and Oscar Fischinger's work.

After talking to my teacher and others that wish to remain anonymous, i have decided to give my piece of art some form of story line. As my piece of music has a 40 second break down in the middle i am going to tell the listener a story. My story is a about the growth of a rose and how everything that we do to the rose affects its outcome.

Monday, 20 October 2008

classwork - Analysis of Casablanca

Mise En Scene
This is used to bring about the classical genre of the time. Bar's, club's, cafes and police stations are all portrayed to look and feel very classy. The costumes are all very upper class, suits and long gowns and an over arching theme of stripes is used. The stripes seem to be used to either make the men and women seem broader than they actually are or it may just be used as motif and some kind of formalist editing (continuity editing). 

Lighting
The lighting in this film is definitely of a formalist film. As part of chiaroscuro the lighting creates a huge contrast between light and shadow

Camera Work

Sound

Editing

(UNFINISHED)!!!!!

Monday, 13 October 2008

classwork - Classical Hollywood Cinima

the 3 films that i would like to watch in class and i believe are key to the golden age of Hollywood. 








Tuesday, 7 October 2008

homework - Discuss the 5 areas of formalist film in 'Run Lola Run'

  1. lighting - The lighting is used in such a way so that you are only really identifying Lola's bright red hair and possibly the surrounding bright yellow and red objects. Most of the lighting is natural and the odd indoor scenes that do occur don't contain any obvious spot or diffused lights. The bed scene that occurs 2 times in the film uses the over running theme of red as a filter to possibly draw you away from Lola's red hair and look more and the image as a whole. Or the red filter could be used to show death easily coming and going
  2. camera work - Always centering the image on Lola's red hair is one of the key features of the film. To give any film a specific colour will always have the desired effect of sticking in the audiences memory. Another key element is the fact that when the scenes are repeated throughout the three different runs, the camera movement is identical which then builds a sense of dejavu in the viewers mind.
  3. sound - The soundtrack includes many musical patterns, like the everlasting string chords, of 'The Unanswered Question' an early 20th-century ensemble work by American writer Charles Ives. Other
  4. editing -Although most effects in this film would have been done through camera work and lighting. Making the red in Lola's hair stand out as much as it does would definitely have been done using a program such as final cut pro.
  5. mise en scene - Run Lola Rim was shot extensively in Berlin, Germany and there are 18 confirmed locations in which the film was shot.

Monday, 6 October 2008

classwork - German Expressionism

1) What are the key features of german expressionism ?

Nosferatu: the spooky musical changes from horror to romance set the scene for pretty much all german expressionism as a key genre in formalist film. Black and white was of course the only way they could film the footage but I also believe that without the black and white the key lighting would not have been as effective and scary. The shadows at the beginning of the film are surprisingly effective as you don't quite know what you are looking at but you know even without seeing the creature itself its not a good omen. The subtitles, for me, are a pointless extra as you can understand what is happening without being told over and over again that there is a ' sudden fever'.

German Expressionism also depends heavily on mise-en-scene. Shapes are distorted and exaggerated unrealistically for expressive purposes. Actors often wear heavy makeup and move in jerky or slow, sinuous patterns. Most important, all of the elements of the mise-en-scene interact graphically to create an overall composition.

2. Where and where can the influence of German expressionism be seen in film history?

Even before German expressionism became well know, you can see signs of it as far back as the 1920's with films like 'The Golem' and 'Nosferatu'. Traits of such films have been seen throughout film history with 'Dr Jekyl and Mr Hyde' and' the cabinet of Dr Caligari'


Wednesday, 24 September 2008

homework - Find an example of formalist film and identify features

White Base

After stumbling around wikipedia and other resource based sites, I found the link to the formalist film by Torrey Richards and Brad Hutchinson (white base).




Ive identified most of its key features and they are all what you would expect a formalist film to contain. Strange lighting, flashy effects and what I would call an 'imaginative' story line, all make a good formalist film.

In further detail...
  • Lighting: mostly outside, but indoor scenes have no artificial light to build an spooky atmosphere from the light coming through gaps outside.
  • Sounds/ Music: spooky out of tune violins and other string instrument build to a final climax of distorted sounds. This sound track is key to the films scariness.
  • Plot: i don't think it is possible to ever work out the plot from a formalist film. This could be anything from walking school to the path of death. It just isn't worth the hassle spending hours upon hours trying to imagine what the writer could have been doing when he wrote this film. Just let the craziness of the effects make its own 'imaginative' story.
  • Camera work: Personally, I think the choice of a wobbly camera was a bad idea and I think that if a still shot was used, the flashing transitions would have been more effective.
  • Editing: This is probably the part in which the formalist bit of the film comes together. Changing all the shots into black and white is a very nice effect and the flashy transitions work very nicely with the soundtrack

Sunday, 7 September 2008

homework - watch films and describe direct link to own work.

Watch films and describe direct link to own work

These are 5 short animations i have watched on youtube all with similar aspects I can take into consideration when making my own work.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TgJ-yOhpYIM&feature=related - Norman Mclaren

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=70qecjGdOYs - Eric Harald

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OGh97__-uLA - Norton Juster

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-wYJ51nSXRQ - Harry Smith

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T3y1offmJ4Y - Ian Iye

  • All of these directly relate to what I want to do because they are all fairly artistic pieces of work and they are all done to music.
  • Most of these have no story line at all with the exception of the line and dot which is one I thought about maybe adding a story line. But after watching a few more videos with no story line I realised if I left it to the viewer’s imagination to think what could actually be going on here?
  • The work I am going to be doing is unlike any of these and I was unable to find anything like what I wanted to do on youtube anywhere.
  • My final idea is to create a video which is just filming a vinyl player from above. The player will have a white disk on and this will spin. I will then gradually add inks and other objects and watch them move through the centrifugal force of the player. The music I have made is at the speed of 170bpm which is almost 3 bps and in each and every one of these beats I will chop and change between different shots of the ink covered paper disks.

Tuesday, 12 August 2008

ideaass

When in leeds with my faily, i asked them to give me some idea's on what i could make my film about, here are some that i can remember.

  • The boy in the striped pyjamas (prequil)
  • Tramping (how to be a good tramp, top tramps. would of been fun but not exactly correct)
  • stick figure fighting / dance (i would create a track, make them dance and fight to it using a pivot program)

Those are just a few of the idea's we came up with.

The last idea was the one i decided to take through and think more about.

Yesterday, i met up with my other aunt, she has created films before and knows a lot about the animation arty side of things. I told her about my idea and we began to elaborate on it . using a record player to project my idea on to would be fun. We then thought about a completly new idea of making a track (which i am going to a sudio to do later today) and then fliging peices of paint, chalk, pencils, crayons, ANYTHING at a spinning record player, we would play around with cross fades into blank canvases, adding random peices of image and creating something very peculiar. My only concern is that this is not what i am supposed to be doing and also that i wouldnt be able to get the flinging of the item to be in rythm with the music. In theory i am creating an arty drum and base music video. Thanks.

Some links that proved useful - ROBERT BREER: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fHvYoaP5Od4
OSKAR FISCHINGER: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lC4Nvsceg1A and http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jz9MlZA4LxY and a film inspired by him, can't remember who it is by: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=etYgSaryuYs
ERIC NILS HARALD: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=70qecjGdOYs
ALLEN CARROLL: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=umFG1O4bRSw
CHUCK JONES: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OGh97__-uLA this film won an Oscar (in 1965?).
HARRY SMITH: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-wYJ51nSXRQ
LEN LYE: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T3y1offmJ4Y
CALIFORNIA INSTITUTS OF ART AND DESIGN:
http://film.calarts.edu/main/streaming/expanim20.html

Thursday, 26 June 2008

Gantt Project

Today i have created my first gantt project. This has helped me structure what i will be doing over the next year. I gave the project lots of flexibility and also gave me lots of time to do the tasks. I do not feel i will be in a rush to do anything.

For some reason when i try to upload my Gantt as an image it is really small and blurred.

Friday, 13 June 2008

My First Ever Blog

This is my first blog, ever. I will be recording my progress throughout this course, AS Moving Image.

The video below is one we watched yesterday in lesson.



The video above is one we watched yesterday in lesson.