"Sliding Door" - green screen filming of actors with a meccano miniature set.
From "Brave Love", our indie co-op green screen climate change mock epic now entering film festivals.
We were part of the previous movie revolution = Super-8/1980s. Now the digital revolution is here we're into it again.
About greenscreen scenes with water. At the time of filming I was into watering actors with a spray bottle and we imagined the rain etc. Whatever James Cameron is doing is not "trickling down" to indie land that I can see. So I reach for the garden hose.
From "Brave Love", our indie co-op green screen climate change mock epic now entering film festivals.
"The House of Seville" has won Best Animation Spring 2022 in the "Golden Nugget International Film Festival". Awards page:
https://gniff.com/winners_season_11.html
Golden Nugget had a subtitles requirement. View that version on Vimeo:
https://vimeo.com/666695009
Golden Nugget nominations page Spring 2022:
https://gniff.com/selection.html
I remastered and entered "..Seville" into "Golden Nugget" after I was impressed by their NZ screening. My review of that:
https://iafilm.blogspot.com/2020/11/indie-screenings-finding-audience.html
"The House of Seville" (18 min) is our animated mock horror ghost story based partly on "Carmen".
Watch "The House of Seville" on Youtube
CHANGE USER RATING to "Not made for kids" 29 May 2024
Keeping a watch on Youtube videos, it has become clear that "age restricted" to 18 and over is much too restricted for what this is. The "Deadpool and Wolverine" trailer was the decider!
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BACK IN THE PAST ....
Posting "The House of Seville" on Youtube for public viewing raised the question of audience rating. Our movie has animated violence with a murder scene based on the "Carmen" story. In our discussions we thought it was a low level issue and we should use the Youtube upload option "not made for kids". However when I did the upload and carefully read the Youtube guide notes I made the call to "play it safe" and go "age restricted".
We work with a storytelling trope that ghosts are obsessed with causing the living to reenact their deaths. Here, the ghost of Carmen takes control of Ray and causes him to kill Daria with a sword. The critical items from the Youtube checklist are (1) the audience can see blood and (2) the editing and animated camera point of view highlight the blood beyond incidental detail. This is balanced by a non-realistic animated depiction.
Blood is a major rating element. I went through an exercise of reviewing Youtube scenes of violence and other content that could be challenging for sensitive viewers. These were mostly trailers for horror movies as well as examples like "1917", "Dunkirk" and "Gladiator". Challenging yes, with many life-at-risk tension moments, but mostly contrived to be bloodless. It was very difficult to find any example clip that showed blood. It appears that a convention has developed that bloodless violence is OK. Reflecting on that I agree that blood is an issue and I should restrict a film that depicts it. However, how OK is it to have wide audiences for otherwise realistic violence without blood? Advances in movie tech are making bloodless violence more intense. We are seeing entertainment violence that is missing violence realities like long term pain and suffering: including a lifetime of guilt and remorse for the perpetrators after a moment of impulse. Blood is a truth of violence. And film-makers should tell the truth. To age-restricted audiences rather than using the bloodless excuse to market violence to a wider audience.
The Challenge
I am re-editing our animated short "The House of
Seville" using Adobe Premiere. It needs an extensive audio re-edit.
It was originally edited in Ulead MediaStudio 8 which is no
longer available.
I can use the output video as a guide track for re-editing
in Premiere. Reconstructing multitrack audio sequences is the biggest
challenge.
The Solution
Open the MediaStudio Project file in a simple text editor. I
use "WordPad".
The "project file" has an extension "dvp" eg
"vedScene06_v12_QS.dvp"
A lot of the data appears as non-printing characters, but names of source files
appear in uppercase plain text - like this:
And that gives us answers to IMO the most important recovery questions: which was the selected clip for a particular moment? and where do we find it? The old video then guides us as to where to position and how to cut.
A little side adventure happening here, from the Democratisation of Film-making to the Democratisation of Book Publishing. 21st Century enabling tech means that books are becoming a natural extension of our media creativity.
IAFilm is publishing "The Master Weaver: Tales of the fantastic for grownups" by Bronwyn Calder. The promo experiment is to make the e-book version free for 3 days: 18, 19, 20 Aug 2021. Will this giveaway work as promo? Will it result in any positives? We are doing our indie thing which is to run the experiment to find out.
"The Master Weaver" as an Amazon Kindle e-book - free for three days
The Amazon Kindle has developed into a reader that can run on many devices including most phones or tablets. It can also deliver through its web page.
As an alternative for anyone without an Amazon login, we have a sample story free to read on the IAFilm website:
"Gift of the Sea" - read on IAFilm
On 17th April 2020, the BBC website published this article:
"Why does cinema ignore climate change?"
https://www.bbc.com/culture/article/20200416-why-does-cinema-ignore-climate-change
Climate change drama makes a welcome brief appearance in
"Loki", a big budget fantasy+scifi TV-web series. The protagonists do
time travel visiting apocalypses. One of these is a near future climate-change-induced catastrophic hurricane destroying an entire corporate town owned by the
"Roxxcart" superstore, which looks
like a parody of "Walmart". Message: hey corporate America, take responsibility
for dealing with Climate Change else this is what will happen to you.
Link to the "Loki"
trailer which includes a very brief clip of the Roxxcart scene:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nW948Va-l10
"Loki" is good enough to rate as alternative indie. Is this because the creative principals are women? It has
remarkable layers of allegory and satire with the villains being a satirical
take on authoritarian regimes. A big influence is "The Trial" by Franz
Kafka. We can see that in the beginning of the trailer. The "Time Variance
Authority" is a high tech setup with a 1970s retro design look to its
layout, equipment and gadgets. And a lot of clumsy bureaucratic paperwork that
moves inexorably to doom for its victims as in "The Trial". My
following description may or may not be a spoiler - this is my guess as to
where this is going after seeing the first 3 episodes. The Authority's mission
to bring order to the "Sacred Timeline" threatens to remove free will
from the universe. An unlikely flawed antihero, Loki the Norse God of Mischief, Marvel
comics version, must step up and save us all.
Congratulations to director Kate Herron, writer Elissa
Karasik and their team for going above and beyond the expectations and formulas
of this genre. It appears that Marvel Studios is giving its creatives freedom
to play variations on their fictional universe in a way that the "Star
Wars" franchise is failing to do. "Loki" succeeds where
"Rogue One" disappoints.