Archive for the ‘Video’ Category

Directing the actors

Tuesday, January 12th, 2010 by admin
Directing the Actors

Directing the Actors

Now that you’ve bought your new video camera and you are ready to venture into the vast world of movie making you will need to know how to direct the actors. Directing actors is a strange process as you expect so much from them and yet you do not know them as people, at least not in the beginning.  It is imperative to meet them one on one as soon as possible in order to feel comfortable around each other.  Start by telling each other the truth and beginning the process of explaining the subtext, and fitting the uniqueness of the actor into the character.  A lot of work is needed, even for very little dialogue, but the care of every detail is the essence of filmmaking.  By concentrating on getting the mind of the actor focused, and getting the best of every line is the start of potentially good work.

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Ideological Analysis of film-making

Saturday, January 2nd, 2010 by admin
Hollywood - Capitol of Global Ideology

Hollywood - Capitol of Global Ideology

“The economics of film determines its infrastructure and therefore it’s potential.  The politics of film determines its structure:  that is, the way it relates to the world.” (Monaco)

Film is our society’s modern equivalent of story telling:  A film’s value system will reflect in the style of the movie.  When a director makes a movie it becomes a reflection of his or her political beliefs and ideology.  “Whichever way we look at it, film is a distinctly political phenomenon.” (Monaco)

While the potential of film can change society’s dominant ideology and be revolutionary; the reality is that it is a controlled political landscape of media ownership.  Who ever controls the systems of distribution and production in essence, controls the political message and the belief systems of society.  Mainstream cinemas are movies that amplify certain aspects of culture and attenuate others.

Movies are a part of Louis Althusser ideological state apparatuses, a part of the institutions that the state (linked to media ownership) uses to literally sell its ideology.  This is done through the control of screening, distribution and its links to broadcasting systems.  An example is Ted Turner’s Time/Warner which is a huge conglomerate of mass publishing, broadcasting, production and distribution of movies.  Turner, a democrat in theory, has an American political agenda that reflects the dominant ideology of American Democratic Party to a global market.  The problem lies in that this dominant culture in film is western, written, white, male, and heterosexual negating the stories (films), of minorities, woman, different cultures, gender cultures and the marginalized.  Opposition cinema today is working, but without the clout of money and politics to back it up, the films are often not distributed.

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mycamera explores the world of film director Lars von Trier

Monday, December 28th, 2009 by admin
Punk Auteur Lars von TrierPunk Auteur Lars von Trier

In the era after the Second World war, Scandinavia was admired for having the world’s most tolerant and provident societies. But Lars von Trier’s mother, who worked for the Danish social ministry in the 1950s and 1960s trying to find locations for institutions for people with learning difficulties, still encountered prejudice in affluent areas of Copenhagen where her family lived. Lars was born in 1956 and brought up in what he recalled as a culturally radical home where only strong emotions and religious faith were forbidden. He was a disturbed boy, who had ‘a phobia about everything but spiders, and he could easily develop that’; he particularly had an obsession with control, saying that he felt he had constantly to rearrange objects in his surroundings to avert disaster. At the age of 12 he ran away from school and then briefly attended a remedial day centre. He later referred to this as a ‘mental hospital’. Since he wanted to be mad, he felt ‘very much related to the outcast’.

Von Trier’s compulsions about arranging the world around him were a strong motivation for moviemaking, at first with a Super 8 camera given by his mother (he practised tracking shots on his bike) and later on 16mm at the Danish Film School. His education there gave him limitless opportunities for what he described as his ‘fetishistic attraction to film technology – it was just fantastic to be able to touch all these appliances’. This interest in technology set his early style in three student films (all won awards), his TV commercial output (he made dozens) and his first trilogy of features. He was capable of imitating the lighting, cutting and camera techniques of any of his favourite directors. His first widely-seen film, Europa (1991), was, remarked the critic Derek Malcolm, ‘Orson Welles crossed with Ingmar Bergman with a dash of Fellini stirred in … so dark a noir that even its shadows had shadows’. Von Trier acknowledged its debts to Hitchcock’s work of the 1940s but still liked issuing wild manifestos with his films, denouncing commercial cinema.

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Ideal setup to shoot from a bakkie.

Thursday, December 24th, 2009 by admin
Mobile Camera Unit

Mobile Camera Unit

“Lights and darks have had symbolic connotations since the dawn of humanity. Darkness suggesting fear, evil and the unknown; light suggesting security, virtue, truth and joy.”

“Lighting can be used realistically or expressionistically.  The realist favor available lighting in exterior scenes with the use of lamps and reflectors to augment natural light or soften harsh contrasts.”

Some directors refuse to use any artificial light, using fast film and lenses with low f-numbers to compensate.  For interior shots realists use naturalistic lighting – which means they study the existing light and add artificial light to the light that already exists.  By watching carefully we begin to understand where to put the lights, what type of lights, or whether they should be gelled or defused.  “First establish the light source.  If you want to make like its real, you basically have to duplicate how it looks in real life.  But when you study paintings, you will see many, many times that nature is altered.  That’s when the artist decides that something can be done better.  The best lighting is when the audience feels its real.” (Zsigmond)  By imitating what already exists we enhance the quality of light.  As it becomes more directional and clean, cinematographers are then able to control the contrast, which is the essence of lighting.  “The realist doesn’t use conspicuous lighting unless it source is dictated by the context” †, and he knows when the beauty and power of ambient light is enough.

“Formulists use light less literary.  They are guided by its symbolic implications and will often stress these qualities by deliberately distorting natural light patterns.  The formula cinema is largely a director’s cinema:  Authorial intrusions are common.  There is a high degree in manipulation in the narrative materials, and the visual presentation it stylised.”   Feelings and styles are expressed through light as an extension of the filmmaker’s inner vision.

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Want to be a Cinematographer?

Thursday, December 24th, 2009 by admin
Cinematography

Cinematography

Cinematography is a physical and technical movement and understanding.  The more physical aware of your body, the better its movements, which translates to camera operation.  The technical side is in the practice so that its mechanisms become second nature, fluid, and automatic.  The more experience one has the better the result.  When operation becomes second nature and we have a deep understanding of the craft, the DOP becomes the key element to a film.  He literally expresses the vision of the director, he syncs completely with the feeling and subtext (deeper underlying connotation) of the film.

Principal motions.

  1. Primary motion and functions – whether the subject is in motion or at rest.
  2. Secondary motion and functions – The moving of the camera itself (draws attention away from the event so must be used sparingly.)  They’re able to follow and reveal actions, reveal landscapes, can imply meaning and connect between unrelated events.  Examples are zooming, dollying or tracking.
  3. Tertiary motion is the motion between sequences.  It provides the necessary link from shot to shot.  Examples are a dissolve, wipe, cut, and jump cut.  Digital electronics have provided a great variety of digital effects.

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