Followers

Monday, December 7, 2009

What I learned in this class..

This class has defiantly effected my ideas about being a filmmaker. I can truthfully say now after completing this course that i am actually a filmmaker because i have finished my first film project. this class has effected me ideas about a filmmaker in that fact that i will think about film in more of an artistic way. You must think more creatively and outside the normal permitters of typical filmmaking thinking about sound and image on a whole new level. I also think that the images you show and the rhythm it is edited is critical in the astatic of a film. I have learned that I like directing and feel most comfortable in that position. I directed the music video and installation project and I liked working with different people with different skills and combining all of those talents to make a uniform concept and project. I also liked the self portrait project, were as a director i can discover my own style in a subject more personal to me. I have also learned that I very much like the experimental and avant-garde style and techniques and will continue to learn more about the subject in Kruel's Avant-garde film studies class next semester.I have leaned that filmmaking in general is the greatest thing ever. I am very happy that I am a film studies major. The past week I worked my tail off in the edit lab working on these last final projects but seeing it all put together and everyone enjoying the entertainment that I created makes me feel that I am actually learning real things in school that can have an affect on the real world. I have always been a creative person and filmmaking provides the ultimate outlet for my creativity. I have very much enjoyed this class and it has been one of the best classes i have ever taken and it has focused my creative talents that will hep me be a better filmmaker as a whole.

Cucalorus films and excerpt from paper. Nov 4 and Nov 11

I planned on seeing the Poacher shorts, That Evening Sun, Gorgonzola Shorts, Storm, The Square, The anatomy of VFX Shot workshop, House of the Devil, Precious, Mississippi Damned, The Messenger...

I enjoyed all the films that I saw this year’s festival and I would have to agree that Cucalours is defiantly once of the best film festivals in the world because the variety of film styles that are screened. At Lumina I was able to see some of the festivals finest shorts on 35 mm film, including “Postalolio” and “Danse Macabre”. “Postalolio” was a film that was animated in a stop motion fashion. The director took a picture of a postcard that had a dogface with legs walk around and then surf to a music. It looked very basic but the simplicity was what made it very entertaining to watch. The art of the face dog was very detailed and very skillfully colored. What made this film even more impressing was that each postcard in the film was once mailed off and traveled through the postal service. The other 35mm film that we screened at Lumina was “Danse Mascabre” that was with the feature “House of the Devil”, set the mood for a creepy and morbid movie. The film showed a corpse of a dead woman be dressed and transferred into a coffin and then cremated. They did this with elegant camera movements and intense lighting that emphasized the slowed frame rate of the moving body. One scene that stuck out in my mind the most was a shot that the camera was locked into the top of the coffin and the back of the coffin was the background of the frame as we saw the body slide around in the box as it was being transported. It was a disturbing but beautiful shot. This film was a great choice to open the horror film “House of the Devil”. Some other shorts that I saw included some DVD, and Digibeta movies. The “Conservatory” was a foreign film, which was about a man who was arrested by the British Home Land Security and is interrogated. He divulges all the illegal secrets about his family and friends, and then the light come on the room and everyone is standing there in a room full of presents and birthday decorates shocked. His girlfriend leaves him, as do the rest of his friends. It was a hilarious Twist and another good choice to feature before the main film of the show “The Big Fan” which was a dark comedy. The one experimental show I did attend was City Stage for the Live Cinema Mash UP Smack DOWN and to see Professor Kreul VJ! I went to the screening with Chase Kilber the head of ACE Films, because we were eager to get out of the Lumina and excited to see Kreul VJ. As you know I am a DJ and am very interested in VJ'ing and I did not want to waste this opportunity to see one of my professors in action. Professor Kreul did the VJ'ing for a friend of mine named David Adussi who performs techno locally. He is a very talented DJ, and I think he and Kruel were a very good match of styles. I had a blast and was able to have fun and dance to some great techno music and relive some stress from the festival. When I was there I saw Even, Morgan, and Lauren. I was very excited to see them and I can say that I have become really good friends over this semester. We all let loose and went crazy dancing, and I even got Chase, who normally is reserved to join in too! I was dancing and having a great time like I did this summer in Italy and Spain. Kreul’s graphic style was very similar to the type of VJ’ing I witnessed in the massive discothèques in Europe and am very interested in seeing what techniques he used to create them. Some of the images that Kruel screened included a baby running, dancing shadow man, and a robot walking. I talked to him briefly and complemented him on his work. I was very glad that I was able to see the shorts at Lumina and now very motivated to see what I can create for my personal short films and Vj'ing videos.