This is wonderful:
http://aeon.co/film/scottish-folklore-and-superstitions/
Thursday, February 6, 2014
Saturday, February 1, 2014
Assignment 2: Creating atmosphere
My understanding of this assignment is to create atmosphere using mise-en-scène, camera angles, lighting, colour etc without relying on the subject matter to carry this.
The instructions are to combine a day-to-day activity with a ‘mood’ for
example: making a cup of tea in a very paranoid way.
I wanted to produce a sequence that fulfilled the
brief but which was not frivolous. And, as with the first assignment, I looked
very close to home for my inspiration and acting talent.
My husband Matt broke his back in 1986 by jumping off
a 120 foot high waterfall for kicks. Suffering a T12 spinal cord injury,
he has had to use a wheelchair ever since. Matt told me once that a
favourite part of his day is the few seconds when he first wakes up before he
remembers he is paralysed. He also insists that paraplegics have to channel a
certain level of anger to even get out of bed in the morning and this is what I
wanted to capture.
For the purpose of staying close to the brief, the
activity is ‘getting up’ in the morning and the atmosphere/mood is ‘dogged
determination’.
It was important to me that Matt would look strong and
competent throughout – the aim of the sequence is definitely not for people to
feel sorry for him.
I wanted the lighting to be flat (or harsh) if possible. With the absence of suitable strip lighting, natural gloomy daylight had to suffice. The sun snuck out a couple of times but I used the Venetian blinds to cast shadows on Matt, almost like prison bars to accentuate his confinement though his disability.
My directorial brief was to keep this as real as possible in terms of reactions – I did not want a comedic level of anger and frustration – and I can vouch for the realism in all the scenes.
I wanted the lighting to be flat (or harsh) if possible. With the absence of suitable strip lighting, natural gloomy daylight had to suffice. The sun snuck out a couple of times but I used the Venetian blinds to cast shadows on Matt, almost like prison bars to accentuate his confinement though his disability.
My directorial brief was to keep this as real as possible in terms of reactions – I did not want a comedic level of anger and frustration – and I can vouch for the realism in all the scenes.
Analysis by shot
Shot 1: View from behind his back, Matt is soundly
asleep and does not move for the first few moments of the alarm going off. It
gets louder until he slams the off button. There are a few more
moments of stillness and silence and then he suddenly turns over onto his
back. We get a sense from his face that he is mentally preparing to do
battle with the day.
I wanted this shot to look cluttered to set the scene
of a claustrophobic, frustrating process. We see wires and stuff hanging down,
annoying dots embroidered onto the pillow case and a pulsating red light in the
background. The Buddha statue was placed there partly for ironic purposes (as
our protagonist is not tranquil, in the slightest) but also to show this anger
is necessary for the person to keep going - it is not just part of his character.
Shot 3: View of the skirting board as the wheels of his chair bang into the wall and then go past with the camera still focused on the scuffs on the paintwork (to emphasise the repetitiveness). We hear him rolling down the hallway.
Shot 4: We have a soft-focus view of the shower
curtain. This is to build some anticipation and highlight our sense of voyeurism.
Shot 5: Matt then yanks back the curtain to reach for a razor. The sound of the water helps to add crackly tension here.
Shot 7: View from almost ground level behind his chair as he transfers into the chair. We then endure the frustration as he struggles to get the chair into the right position to roll out of the bathroom. I wanted this shot to be dark and clunky and slightly confusing so that we really feel every annoying jolt of the process.
Shot 10: This is the point where we start to feel that
Matt is winning. His expression is more placid as he makes the bed, covering up
the red towel with the now smooth, white duvet.
Critical analysis
Overall I am quite pleased with the finished result, although I am keen to get some critical feedback from other students and friends. I
think it succeeds in showing how hard it is for a disabled person to do some of
the simple things we take for granted and I believe I achieved that, to a
significant degree, through the mise-en-scène.
It is reasonably well-paced, with some slower moments
to convey the arduous tediousness of the process.
The whole sequence feels edgy and uncomfortable due to
framing, camera angles, lighting and choppy editing. The version I was actually just
about to submit was 4 minutes 26 seconds but luckily I re-read the assignment
briefing before posting this. “It should be no more than three minutes
long”. And the re-edit has actually
tightened it up considerably though and, I think, increased the sense of dogged determination of the activity portrayed!
So I have just learnt two very important lessons:
- Always re-read the brief several times BEFORE starting work. If I had been more aware of the very specific time restriction, I would have approached the shots and filming differently.
- It is amazing how much you can edit out when you absolutely have to without losing the sense of the sequence. This means I must go through more self-interrogation of which frames/seconds are absolutely essential. Less is more, as they say.
Matt mentioned that he thinks my directing skills have
improved considerably since the last assignment. This was helped by having
planned every shot carefully in advance so there were no moments of me
dithering.
The assignment brief specifies no music so I am hoping
I can get away with the sounds from the MP3 player counting as diegetic. I successfully altered the level of the music
(which was actually coming from a small speaker on Matt’s lap) to correspond
with when his first earbud goes in which I think works OK.
A couple of things I was not happy with:
Matt is out of focus in some of the shots (very
noticeably in shot 2) which is distracting. I need to be much more careful
where I am using a very shallow depth of field (50mm f1,4 lens).
The painted walls of our flat did not fit with the
atmosphere I was trying to create. Some of the scenes just look too warm and
cosy.
There is one small continuity issue that I will not draw
attention to, in the hope that nobody notices it.
All in all, I have learned a lot from the assignment
and feel there is much to build on. I need to practise making these kind of
sequences much more. The last few months have been very focused on theory and
watching lots of movies and now I need to spend more timing actually doing!
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