My name is Ella Frost and I'm in my final year of my degree studying Audio and Music Technology. For my final year project I am making a documentary on a suburb of Bristol called Filton. I am shooting it all on super 8 film and the narrative is composed of interviews with foreign temporary students living in Bristol and active members of the community.
Saturday, 21 May 2011
Sunday, 8 May 2011
Wednesday, 4 May 2011
The film is finished but the blog will continue
I've decided to continue with the blog, even though the film is complete. It would be a good resource for anyone interested in documentaries and I will be submitting the film to film festivals so I can keep track of them using the blog. I'll post the mark I get (if it's any good). I hope i do well. I'm pleased with the film which is the main point but it is still quite critical and I wish I didn't care as much as I do.
Anyways the king of kong is pretty entertaining, the crucial moment of the entire film (where Billy is circling Steve with his supremely hot wife) I almost did not recognise. But this is the moment you realise Billy is full of shit and a coward.
Anyways the king of kong is pretty entertaining, the crucial moment of the entire film (where Billy is circling Steve with his supremely hot wife) I almost did not recognise. But this is the moment you realise Billy is full of shit and a coward.
Wednesday, 27 April 2011
Sunday, 3 April 2011
Friday, 1 April 2011
Touching The Void
This ones pretty blatant but needs to go on here. Unreal, incredible, very well told.
Thursday, 31 March 2011
one quarter of audio left to go, end is in sight, uni is quiet and still, think im going a bit mad
The Filton Suburb Project Is Complete
well to a certain degree anyway, enough to hand in. It is dedicated to Ivar Lewis Veux seeing as they were created in around the same time and I could not have done it without his mother, Emilie Lewis, lending me her camera, which I am very grateful for. Also I forgot to get her flowers so this is a more permanent sentiment. I have also thanked Marcus Lynch and Bill Cargill, for guiding the project. Bill also transcribed several interviews which is about the dullest most helpful thing you can do.
well to a certain degree anyway, enough to hand in. It is dedicated to Ivar Lewis Veux seeing as they were created in around the same time and I could not have done it without his mother, Emilie Lewis, lending me her camera, which I am very grateful for. Also I forgot to get her flowers so this is a more permanent sentiment. I have also thanked Marcus Lynch and Bill Cargill, for guiding the project. Bill also transcribed several interviews which is about the dullest most helpful thing you can do.
Hello World
I am currently at university pulling a late one due to an over indulged nap which means I will not be sleeping for a good few hours, so I might as well get some work done. I've just done the first 40secs of audio for the film, which I believe is the most important. I'm using snippets of conversation and gradually fading them in and out. 2 tracks of audio ambience (mostly birds, occasionally traffic) will be running continuously panned hard left and right. I think a smattering of chatter will also be in the background pretty much constantly and dip in out according to if the main narrative is present.
Wednesday, 30 March 2011
First Edit of Film Complete
The first edit of the film has been done. Tonight I will add atmosphere and wild tracks to the film and render a copy safe. If there is time I will re mix the audio of the interviews. But I honestly think they sound okay, possibly a bit of level tweaking but I can do that in Final Cut Pro, and that means I have them exactly placed where I want them. I will be doing the atmos etc in Logic, bouncing it as a single audio file then putting that into Final Cut.
Tuesday, 29 March 2011
Jonestown: The Life and Death of Peoples Temple
This documentary was a bit more difficult to understand, possibly because the kind of manipulation these people were under seems so obvious yet clearly was very devious. Use of a lot of speech recordings. I appreciated the end credits where it showed the people being interviewed surrounded by the lights and the microphones, made you aware of the conditions the people were talking in. It's strange the transition of this documentary because you mentally change your mind as the people in his church did. At the beginning I thought 'wow great, what a great idea, a racially equal society that looked after the elderly, and who's kids seem healthy and happy, what could go wrong'. Then slowly throughout the film the accounts begin to be tainted by Jim Jones offering to have sex with them etc. I think because of the amount of death this documentary affected me less then cat dancers. Call me cold hearted I dare ya.
Cat Dancers (HBO)
This is bloody awful, I didn't know what I was getting into, I thought it was going to be fur and giggles. It was just so tragic, the three Ron and Joy Holiday and Chuck Lizza, train wild cats to do tricks etc. And are also in a unorthodox sexual but apparently very happy relationship with one another. One dies when one of the white siberian tigers gets frightened, accidentally ripping his throat leaving the other two grief stricken. Joy, the lady, becomes depressed and through a strange incident also gets killed by the same tiger. I'm pretty sure she wanted to die. The tiger ends up being inbred which explains its violent tendencies after so much training. But tragically leaving Roy, who later has his land taken away from him which means he's forced to put down his remaining cats. And these animals are gorgeous, it is quite impressive how relaxed they are when they handle them, I felt quite envious, only a few remarkable people are given that opportunity and in this case they made it for themselves.
fucking hell, I was in tears, it was quite difficult not to like the guy, he was pretty camp, candid, thoughtful and clearly in a lot of pain, and can you believe he was 70.
Friday, 25 March 2011
Wild Tracks
Today I recorded several tracks in addition to the ambience recordings of the shops. This is because the raw audio of the interviews are quite bare and the transitions between them need to be masked to create fluidity. A problem I am having is that the audio doesn't match the visuals and if the shot is showing the interior of a shop and the backing track for the film has birds it will make this more obvious. This cannot be helped but I am not sure how this will appear in the film, particularly as I am a music technology degree so the main audience for the film will be more conscious of this than most people.
Wednesday, 23 March 2011
Audio for Film
I have now finished transcribing the interviews. Now I have begun to highlight sections of the transcripts which connect to one another. I begun with the interviewers describing Filton and then explaining why each of them are there, the subject then moves onto who lives there and the students population and the effect on the community. I am working by creating two logic projects, one with the full interviews in, which I cut up and paste into a separate project, going between the 4 different people and their perspectives. The background audio is the ambience of the charity shop. The ambience introduces the film with some light chatter between the customers and the sound of the till and such. Cutting the audio is a little fiddly at times because sometimes I intervene and I have to try and carefully mute these parts out without disrupting the natural flow of their speech. I am hoping that the characteristics of each voice will be enough to show that different people are speaking, all the interviewees have quite distinct voices so I think this will work well. This afternoon I will try to begin to put visuals to the beginning 3-4 mins of the film in the Multimedia Rooms in Q block. This is where the film will begin to come to life.
I will do two versions of the film, one with the social commentary of the interviews the other with the film of Filton with the intimate conversation between the Barber and his customer.
I will do two versions of the film, one with the social commentary of the interviews the other with the film of Filton with the intimate conversation between the Barber and his customer.
Tuesday, 22 March 2011
Saturday, 19 March 2011
Comparison
I've used photographs I have found of Filton in the past as a framework for the shots from my film. Here is the same chemist.
Wednesday, 16 March 2011
Reflexive Documentaries
This is a reflexive documentary. This is the most difficult type to define yet. It incorporates a lot of the characteristics of the other genres but also uses film forms and conventions. Humour occurs more frequently and is mostly provided by the soundtrack.
An example of this in the documentary below is when the voiceover talks about the poison the cane toad excretes when threatened, it then cuts to a compelling young child innocently picking up a cane toad, (accompanied by jaws type music), only to be saved by his mother just in the nick of time. There is also a short pyscho esque scene with the toads etc. The facts are definitely in the film yet it is interjected with humour and small skit like scenes.
An example of this in the documentary below is when the voiceover talks about the poison the cane toad excretes when threatened, it then cuts to a compelling young child innocently picking up a cane toad, (accompanied by jaws type music), only to be saved by his mother just in the nick of time. There is also a short pyscho esque scene with the toads etc. The facts are definitely in the film yet it is interjected with humour and small skit like scenes.
Tuesday, 15 March 2011
Interactive Documentaries
Interactive documentaries are separate from the other forms by explicitly acknowledging the presence of the camera and the crew behind it, making the type not interactive in itself but documenting the interaction which took place between the subjects and the interviewer. This shifts the weighting on the factual elements, which is crucial to the expository documentary mode, to personal accounts and opinions in an exchange which took place as a question and answer.
Sad Song of Yellow Skin
This is a great documentary, it allows all the insecurities of the makers to be made transparent to the viewer. Though it is a really difficult situation, It is about a group of 3 Americans in Vietnam, they aren't soldiers but aren't really distinguishable from them in the Vietnamese eyes which is understandable, they look the same and speak with the same accents and appear to have the same amount of money. The film explores these men trying to get under the surface of the Vietnamese people but are finding it extremely difficult because the amount of resentment and anger which is felt.
Chronicle of a Summer
The film below is an interactive documentary. An interactive documentary is where the camera crew and co are involved within the film, you can often see them physically in the film interacting with the subjects. The clips below follows a conversation of real 'normal' people living in Paris in 1961. The man interjecting with questions is part of the documentary makers crew. The focus not on the performance if the camera WASN'T there but the performance of the subjects when the camera IS there.
Friday, 11 March 2011
And the second batch
Some stills from the second batch which came out exceedingly well also. Some parts are a little out of focus but on the whole most of it is in focus, it's is similar to the polaroid SX-70 so my eyes was a bit trained. I begin to edit it next week!!!! This is from the minolta camera. You can see the part of the next frame at the bottom which is the fault of the projector and I could make a fuss and try and get it re digitised. Not sure I can given the time I've got left which is less than 4 weeks and I am going to London this weekend to see Emilies brand spanky new BABY. I'm going to need to do a crash course in FinalCut Pro.
Tuesday, 1 March 2011
Stills from first batch of film
Here are some stills from the first batch of Super 8 Film. There are a few dud shots and sometimes it moves too quickly but the overall effect I am extremely happy with. It makes Filton look very nostalgic and softens its appearance some what. Though check out the permanent dot and hair at the bottom.
Monday, 28 February 2011
And the Back Alleys too
These photographs were taken from my friend Roses' back window. I didn't catch the guy putting stuff into the van, but know there was one.
Second Batch to 21 Portland Sq, Bristol
I took the second lot of film to a film to digital studio in Bristol. I will be transferring it onto DV Cam tape and from there into final cut pro. I will get it back on Friday so hopefully I can put some fragments of the film up this weekend. Currently typing up Luis's interview, boy that guy talk a lot of balls and somehow gets away with it cos he's cool and spanish. I wanna be cool and spanish, instead I think I've got conjunctivitis and it has taken me half an hour to type up 7 minutes of audio.
Friday, 25 February 2011
One Born Every Minute
Absolutely brilliant, I love this programme, though it does conjure up those maternal feelings you never thought you'd have. Often humorous and very honest, this documentary puts 40 cameras into a maternity hospital and watches the marvel of new born life unfold. My friends about to drop so she watched it and recommended it, then I got hooked, started watching about 15 births a day. It really is incredible though, I don't know if I feel like that because I'm female and may go through the same process one day. I now feel that if I go through that I want my mum/everyone else's mum there just to know it won't kill me.
The camera often focusses on the mother and birthing partners while they are alone in the room, so the viewer not only gains a perspective of the physical space but the relationship between all the people. The minimal interviews often talk about how the couple met and personal anecdotes. It is strange that whatever age they are they usually want their mum. The programme also follows the staffs movements and their interaction with the women in labour. Difficult job.
I have to say that it is probably the fact that the event is such a universal and personal experience that this documentary seems to hit home.
It's all groovy baby
Hello dedicated filton followers, I have news of beautiful things for this project. The footage from the first batch of super 8 came out marvelously, there was a hair on the lens which couldn't be helped because on that camera the lens you look through isn't the same as the one your filming on. But that is it. I can't really fix it as it will mean importing all the frames into photoshop and editing it from there. I a) can't be bothered and b) that's the joy and misery of analogue film. More importantly the quality in terms of light is great, and the shots despite me not using a tripod are not that shaky. Filton has been transformed to the 60's. I AM ON CLOUD NINE, SO HAPPY AND RELIEVED. Next is the second batch. But at least now I have 6 minutes of usable film. More black and white photographs will be going up shortly and I WILL start on the narratives this weekend. This has spurred me on a bit, I was losing the will.
Thursday, 24 February 2011
FIRST BATCH HAS ARRIVED
But I'll have to wait until tomorrow to see it because I missed the post, Jesus I've got a lot of work to do.
Monday, 21 February 2011
Made this for fun
I made this out of three picture, including one of Filton, a version of this picture is likely to become the artwork for band ManCub (featuring Louis Tompkins and Chris Hodges) here's a link to their music.
Louis gets a bit excited whenever there's a saturation button around, I prefer more subtle effects, so I'll probably have to make a version for them then a version for me. The photographs of Filton could be used to great effect as they sum up mundane England. I'm still learning Photoshop though.
And ...
Friday, 18 February 2011
I GET MY FILM BACK FROM SOHO FILM LAB NEXT TUEDAY
AND SHE SAID THERE WAS NOTHING ON THE NOTES THAT SAID IT CAME OUT BAD
RESULT????
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