Tuesday, 17 May 2011

Our Final Video



Due to blogger being down last week we were unable to post but this is our final product with
readjusted titles and more footage added

Friday, 1 April 2011

DVD Cover Reasearch

When we did research in DVD covers we found this guide outlining the fundamentals of designing them.


How to design DVD cover


If you haven’t already you can download our free DVD cover template. Once you’ve downloaded the template, you’ll need to design the front, back and side of your DVD cover. This blog post will focus exclusively on the design of the front of the DVD.


1. Set the tone & know your demographic
Is your film a sexy film? Artistic film? Unusual film? Celebrity driven? Comedy? Tragedy?
Identifying what your film is about will help you narrow down your design choices. You want there to be a strong correlation between the tonal qualities of the DVD cover design the film itself.
2. Decide on a color palette
Notice that the DVD covers below consist of gradients of 2-3 colors. By simplifying your color palette you’re simplifying your message. 
3. Decide on an image
Your image needs to represent what your film is about. It is often a character (usually the protagonist), but it can also be the film’s antagonist, an event, a location, a prop or an illustration to name only a few examples.
4. Decide on a font
Your DVD cover font is one of the most important design decisions you’ll make. Its size, style and placement needs to both complement your film and the other design components of the DVD cover.
5. Pick a design element and exaggerate it
Some DVD cover designers use pattern (see Sweetie below) or color (see Taste of Cherry below) , others use line (see Fallen Idol below), others use negative space (see The Last Emperor below). The point is to pick a primary design element (ie. shape, pattern, leading lines, texture, reflection, color etc) to help make the DVD cover stand out not just due to content, but also due to style.
6. Stay focused and simple
Look at the examples below. You’ll notice the designer often only uses 1 image, no more than 2-3 colors and 1-2 fonts in a simplified, well organized and easy to navigate DVD cover design.


Below are examples of DVD covers which we have drawn ideas from for our own cover.
















Friday, 25 March 2011

Title Design

For our project we had to create titles to establish the name of the movie, i decided to take it slightly further and produce a 3d title using a CAD program. Before beginning i decided to do some research this is what i came across :






Tuesday, 15 March 2011

Posters We Made






Quick Shot Flashback Scene Part 1


Fast Shot Killing Scene Part 1 from Blue Shift on Vimeo.


We spent 3 hours in the rain after school composing these 9 seconds of footage and only got half of what we needed. This depicts some shots of the characters fighting however part 2 will consist of the actual killing scene. Editing these shots early did however have certain advantages. It is practice for editing all of the shots in this fast paced sort of sequences. We have also decided to get rid of the bright flash at the end and replace it with a black screen

Monday, 14 March 2011

Camera We Used - Pentax K-X

















The camera we used was the Pentax K-X, a 12.4 megapixel digital single-lens reflex camera. 
The built in Shake Reduction function automatically turns off in the following situations.
  • Self-Timer
  • Remote control shooting
  • Bulb shooting
  • HDR Capture

The camera is capable of recording HD Video files which made it quite popular for some independent filmmakers. The camera is using the "DV codec alike" MJPEG codec, which is a very soft compression that creates relatively huge video files but on the other hand allows editing of this video files even on older editing systems with less CPU power. The advantage of this compression method is that it saves every single frame as a progressive frame and is not only saving the changes inside the group of pictures.

Thursday, 10 March 2011

Memento




  1. Memento
  2. Production year: 2000
  3. Country: USA
  4. Directors: Christopher Nolan
  5. Cast: Carrie-Anne Moss, Guy Pearce, Joe Pantoliano
The movie, uses a favorite plot device of postwar Freudian film noir, the hero suffering from amnesia. But Leonard Shelby, the protagonist of Memento, suffers from a special form of amnesia. Due to a blow received from the man who raped and murdered his wife, Leonard suffers from short-term memory loss. He can recall his life up to the murder, but thereafter he can't remember anything for more than a few minutes at best, though he's painfully aware of his condition.
As he pursues the killer he's reduced to making notes, annotating Polaroid pictures, having essential information tattooed on his body either by a professional in a tattoo parlour or with his own needle.
This movie is significant to our coursework piece because of its frequent use of the Polaroid picture which we also plan to use significantly. The movie is also a very good film with a complex  plot and characters which even if not comparable to a coursework piece should be watched for inspiration.

Poster Ideas

We are currently in discussion about the ideas for our poster. We have been researching various posters from films we know and are using them to hopefully influence our poster.







Methods to Murder




Marion, an uninhibited secretary steals $40,000 from her employer and drives off into the night to meet her lover. During a storm she arrives at a sinister motel owned by a taxidermist, later revealed to be completely insane, whose even more demented mother lives in the adjoining mansion.
  1. Psycho
  2. Production year: 1960
  3. Countries: UK, USA
  4. Cert (UK): 15
  5. Directors: Alfred Hitchcock
  6. Cast: Anthony Perkins, Janet Leigh, Vera Miles

There follows one of the most disgusting and notorious murders in all screen history. It takes place in a bathroom and involves a great deal of swabbing of the tiles and flushing of the lavatory. 
This scene is a perfect example of how we plan to execute our killing scene. There is undoubtedly a murder taking place in Psycho, however, Hitchcock has directed it in such a way that shows no breaking of the skin through the stabbing, while also depicting the horror of the scene masterfully. We will emulate this this for various reasons such as we cannot literally stab our actress and that we have an overall budget of £0.  


We also preferred to avoid the use of gore as it became overly clichéd and tacky within the 80's - 90's horror scene with the release of low budget films such as Friday the 13th and scream.  

Software Used

During the process of our post-production we used several programs. Sony Vegas 10, was the main piece of software we used as all editing was done through it while also being the sole point where the product from other software were accumulated. An example of this would be the titles/text were put together using Photoshop, rendered as an Interlaced PNG and then imported into Sony Vegas. 
The colour correction/grading was done with a combination of After Effects and Sony Vegas giving it that subtle movie like tone. It was finally touched up using a plug-in called Magic Bullet Mojo. 
The sound was mastered and re-rendered using audacity as there was a lot of back ground noise that needed removed, there was also pitch shifts changed within the soundtrack and output as 320kb/s to make it the highest possible quality available.


Tuesday, 8 March 2011

Day Two Of Filming

Arriving
Dirty Hands
Natalie
Preparing For Dragging Scene
Finished Day Of Filming
More Dragging

Monday, 21 February 2011

Some Techniques We Researched And Used

We did some extra research into simple tricks you can do to make your video flow a little smoother by using cheap and simple techniques, some examples are below.




This helped massively during our filming, in particular with the scenic shots of the tree line. It increased the smoothness of the pan like was shown above and was a vital part in making our film what it is in the finished piece. 




This was used in some of our dragging scenes most of which did not end up being in our finished piece. This created a very subtle difference in our piece and although useful, did not have much place in our filming method. This is however worthwhile to be aware of for future project where we may go in another direction.




We did not use this at all because it projects a tone which contrasts the tone we aimed for. As the man in the video explains, this technique would be suited best within a scene portraying confusion or stress, these were aspects we did not want to include. This technique may prove useful in projects to come which is why we took notice of it.

Tuesday, 15 February 2011

Day One of Filming

Improvisation
Making our way through the location

Ryan In Costume

Darren And Luke Discussing The Shots
       Looking For Shots Of The Sky 

Luke Looking For More Scenic Shots



Helping Others With Their Video
Leaving Hours Later




Monday, 14 February 2011

Filming Day by Day


Our First Day of Filming from Blue Shift on Vimeo.


Our first Official day of filming which was somewhat restricted due to the unreliability of actresses unnamed (Natalie). Despite this we got 16 seconds filmed which due to the quality of the very short footage motivated us for our future filming.




Our Second Day Of Filming from Blue Shift on Vimeo.

We got considerably more done during our second day of filming than the first, however not all of it is shown in this video. This day proved successful because of how every little detail went to plan from costume, to actors to timing.




There are a few minor changes needed to be done to improve the fluency of the piece but this is more or less our finished project.

Tuesday, 8 February 2011

Possible Names For The Short Film

  • Repose
  • Emulsion
  • Frames
  • Negatives
  • Pictures
  • Picture Frames
  • Blessed With A Curse
  • Eyes Wide Open
  • Eyes Completely Shut
  • Ashes
  • Burning Envy
  • Finding Richard
  • Deliver My Soul
  • Retribution
  • Internment

Our Killing Scene Rehearsal


Flashback Killing Scene Rehearsal from Blue Shift on Vimeo.


A very rough rehearsal of our final killing scene. The acting will mostly be kept the same with a few minor changes. The camera shots will be changed dramatically to make the scene more detailed and contain more filming techniques.

Monday, 31 January 2011

Possible Narrative

I had known for weeks


I tried to forgive as was taught, but should I really forgive, when she feels no sorrow, no regret?
Should I forgive when she shows no willingness to confess?
The thought of them burned inside of me until it was unleashed in one thunderous rage.
Her beautiful smile, forever tainted with my memory of him. 
Its strange, how when your life shakes with a tremendous roar, the lords forest stays so still, so tranquil.
Unmoved by the atrocities of this modern age.
An age where whores like her do as they please, repelling the good word of the lord, spitting in the face of their maker, the one they owe everything to.

But no more.


As I watch the ashes of the one I loved course through the placid air, I feel no relief, No sudden sense of justice to quench my anger.
I feel this, because I know, I know the one to blame is still breathing, completely oblivious to the macabre events of which were his causing.
I can picture him, sitting with his family, laughing, oblivious to the fact that I am coming for him, oblivious to the fact that I will-not-stop until his body, is decomposing in some shallow swamp surrounded by the bones of his children. Not until he is forced to kneel before Lucifer himself, and beg for the retribution of which he will never be granted.
      'Return O lord, Deliver my soul: O Save me for thy mercies sake
       For in death there is no remembrance
       And in thy grave, who shall give thee thanks?'


We have decided to scrap the idea of a narrative because when we accumulated the video and audio together it did not match well. We will however keep this post up to show our progress to our final piece.

Thursday, 13 January 2011

Inception of Characters

Our characters took form after a long and close study of the most well known fictional characters portrayed in cinemas. 


 One character we examined was Jack Torrance, played by Jack Nicholson in the 1980 adaption of 'The Shining'.  Jack Torrance is a writer and former teacher who is trying to rebuild his family's life after his alcoholism and volatile temper costs him his teaching position at a small preparatory school. Having given up drinking, he accepts a position maintaining the isolated Overlook Hotel in Colorado for the winter, in the hope that this will salvage his family, re-establish his career, and give him the time and privacy to finish a promising play.






 Another character which perhaps influenced our character Darragh  Boyle the most is Norman Bates played by Anthony Perkins. Norman Bates suffers severe emotional abuse as a child at the hands of his mother, who preaches to him that sex is evil and that all women (except herself) are whores. The two of them live together in a state of total co-dependence after the death of Bates' father. When Bates is a teenager, his mother takes a lover which drives Bates over the edge with jealousy. Bates murders both of them with strychnine and preserves his mothers corpse. Bates develops dissociative identity disorder, assuming his mothers personality, repressing her death as a way to escape the guilt of killing her. He inherits his mothers house, where he keeps her corpse, and the family motel in fictional Fairvale, California.





As you can see the type of characters we are interested in emulating are making a pattern. The characters seem to be more mentally conflicted or insane rather than the basic slasher villains intent solely on murder. This gives our character personality and sets him apart from the majority of horror persona's. 


Darragh Boyle - Main Character, Murderer.
Raised by a strict Roman Catholic family. Darragh met and married Chloe 4 years before the events of this film, and has proved in the past to be easily agitated.
Played by Ryan Kearney.


Chloe Boyle - Secondary Character, Primary Victim.
Chloe was raised in Ireland and unlike Darragh was brought up as irreligious. Since marriage to Darragh she has felt the effects of immense stress due to his attitude/borderline obsession with religion and his frightening mood swings, because of this she spends her time searching for escape of which she finds in Richard.
Played by Natalie M?


Richard Striker - Only shown through Pictures, Implied Victim
Richard moved to Ireland from New York with his wife and two young sons. Although he has no friendship or acquaintance with Darragh he has known Chloe for several years. Darragh is unaware of this until the day of the events shown.