I had a lot of fun with this project, although it was kind of difficult messing with the film and not knowing what it was going to look like until it actually got projected. I can only imagine how meticulous of a planner you would have to be to get it to go along to music or anything like that. Loading the projector was very similar to how we put the film in the Bolex in our 302 Doc class and turned out to be a lot simpler than I originally imagined.
Probably my favorite portion was scratching in the animation. I made a little flower growing; however, when it projected it played backwards so it looked like it was just sort of sinking into the earth but it was still pretty sweet. The one thing I couldn't really predict how it was going to look was the bleach. I wish we had gotten a spray bottle because I'd be curious to know how that would look but we just kind of dropped some onto the strip to see what would happen and it looked a lot more interesting projected than it did just looking at the strip. The magazine transfer was a bit more tedious but I really liked the texture it gave the film once it was projected.
Monday, February 13, 2017
Thursday, February 9, 2017
Thursday, February 2, 2017
R3 Reading Response
Sound can often be overlooked in films.
I myself do not really have much experience with it and have mostly gone by the
idea that if you do not notice the sound, then it’s good sound. The article “The
Father of Acoustic Ecology” was extremely interesting to me because it was
something that I have noticed in my daily life but have not thought about as
in-depth as this article did. My friend is taking a city planning class and a
lot of the terms she brings up are over my head but she has mentioned the way
sound plays a huge role in their discussions. Audiences’ only notice bad sound
in films, otherwise it fades into the background. Similarly with city planning,
being close to a huge highway or train track is extremely noticeable, while
other sounds are less intrusive.
More
often than not, the absence of sound is a lot more noticeable than movies with
heavy sound effects. I recently saw “Moonlight” and it’s generally a very quiet
movie and I could tell it was making the people in the theatre a little uncomfortable
because they were trying to eat quieter and not move around as much. I
personally prefer movies more on the quiet side because they feel more serene. On
the complete opposite side, when I was younger I used to be obsessed with this
gymnastics movie called “Stick It” and there was one scene in particular that
had this loud music that was abruptly cut off when the coach unzipped his jacket
and I thought it was the coolest use of sound even though I did not really
understand films at the time.
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