7. Looking back at your preliminary task, what do you feel you have learnt in progression from it to the full product?
Since the preliminary task I feel that we have learnt
a lot; from the very first time we used continuity editing. Trying to match up
the motion of the man walking down the corridor and through the door was an
example of this. We had trouble trying to find the right angles to shoot from so
that the character was still in the same positioning and following the 180
degree rule. However, we tried many different camera angles and possibilities,
until eventually we managed to get it right to the best of our abilities. The
preliminary task was a real eye-opener to what camera work and editing really
was. It wasn't as easy as we believed
it what be. Seeing that it’s only about thirty seconds, we thought it would be
very quick. We soon discovered that that was not the case, and actually a bit
more thinking and trying of different angles is very
beneficial.
A pan
screen-shot from the preliminary task and the final project.
The
preliminary task was very tedious to say the least. The feedback we got from our
teachers helped us to understand new techniques of camera work/angles and how
the position the actual camera. When it came the actual project, we spent the
majority of the morning of filming deciphering where the put the camera, where
the actors should be and working with the lighting (as we shot on location). The
lighting was something quite difficult to work with, as we hadn’t had any
experiences with it. When shooting the preliminary task, we shot it in an
already lit corridor and room. We didn’t take the lighting into account.
However, when it came to the actual film, we found ourselves trying to find the
perfect spot. That was the biggest thing that we learnt throughout this because
it’s something that was vastly important. For the perfect shot, we had to get
the perfect lighting first.
Something
else that we didn’t do in the preliminary task that we did in the actual film
was working with actors/people. To put the actors in the right place and to get
them to do what we wanted to do was very tedious as well. Putting makeup on
people was also a very strange thing. It was really awkward initially as we
didn’t know what to fully do, then where to put the makeup on. But we got it how
we wanted it eventually. It looks kind of cheap, but there’s a certain charm to
it. We tried to make the makeup look as good as possible with what we have, but
seeing as neither of us had any past experiences with applying makeup. It didn’t
look that professional, but it still looks good overall.
The
preliminary task opened our eyes into what we needed to do for the project. It
was very important in that we took many different approaches in the task, rather
than rushing it and trying to get it done as quickly as possible. We took our
time, and our project looks a lot better for it. That’s the biggest thing we
took from this. Take your time. Don’t rush, have patience and your project will
look so much better for it.
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