March 21st 2017 archive

Tutor-three-al

Guys my puns are funny.

We worked more on our haiku’s briefly this week and I think I found my calling: I give good feedback!!  I’m not sure how to make money off this discovery but I’m sure there’s a way!  However after I gave a bit of black hat feedback I was told be the creator that I wasn’t listening, which absolutely crushed my spirit, especially when I heard what they were referring to on the next listen.  I have to work on not taking negative critique personally, even though that specific critique wasn’t about my work.

We also looked at past student’s self portrait videos which further cemented that perhaps I should not be an editor.  I have past editing experience, so I expected coming into this that the editing portion would be a breeze, but I’m really struggling with finding a flow.  My editing seems to be very stagnant and cold.  This is perhaps because I can’t find a specific story within my self portrait.  I have concepts and ideas, but it has been difficult for me to form these into a coherent (or incoherent) story.  I find myself getting bored watching my work, even though the pieces by themselves are good (or, at least, I think so).
My previous editing work has been on projects that I spent months (or years) developing.  The concept for my last video (completed in October 2016) was something that I began planning as far back as 2013, even though the actual pre-/post-/production took place over two months.  I have been developing another idea since 2012, and only now am I able to find shape and story in it.  Time management is something I will also have to work on, and the fact that I am posting this blog right before week 4 begins shows that.

Many people in my class seem to be naturals.  We watched one girl’s haiku and it was honestly stunning.  The way that she found relationships between seemingly unrelated objects was so beautiful.  I’m just going to have to work super hard to get to the same level.

Lectorial 3 – Editing

This blog post will be a lesson in doing things in a timely manner because my notes for this lectorial are terrible and my memory is worse…

This lectorial looked at editing, specifically why we do it.  The Kuleshov effect stood out to me, as it is such a common phenomenon (both on a cinematic/spectacular level and a cultural level) but we never look that deeply into it.  It stands out especially in comics, which relates back to our reading for this week.  Readers (and viewers) are required to make relationships between the two panels (or shots) in order to understand what is happening, and to derive meaning from it.
(The reading this week was fantastic, by the way, and I’m not just saying that because it referenced Osamu Tezuka’s Buddha series, which I grew up reading and is possibly my favourite book series.  It offered a new way to deliver information, which helped me because I don’t do well with big chunks of text.  It was also interesting to see the difference in communication styles between Japanese and American media (with Western media using virtually only action-to-action, subject-to-subject, and scene-to-scene edits, and Eastern media adding in moment-to-moment and aspect-to-aspect edits, and using far less action-to-action edits))

The lectorial also showed how editing has an impact by comparing two scenes of train robberies, one with edits and one without.  The edited version clearly had more of an impact, with it’s new ability to build suspense, draw the audiences attention, and an overall clarity.  This also cemented my dislike of long takes.  Unless you have a great director who knows how to handle this choice, it will be boring.  Hitchcock is the only director whose use of long takes has kept my attention.  I’ll never understand why directors choose long takes for fight scenes.  Unless it’s one on one, it just looks crowded and messy and, worst of all, slow.

Finally, we underwent a task that had us trying to piece together a short story that had been cut up.  While we weren’t asked to piece it together the same way it was written, that’s what a majority of us did, or tried to do.
Reflecting back, I did not do too well.  I started trying to piece it together without reading all of the pieces, which is like trying to do a jigsaw puzzle without looking at the picture or any of the individual pieces.  My method was to put all of the images into a video editing software and put it together in sequencing.  This was actually a good idea as I was able to see the story so far and group together parts that I felt went together without having to give it a definite order.  However I didn’t finish the task.  I don’t think I’m cut out to be an editor…