Wednesday, November 18, 2015
My Cucalorus experience
Cucalorus was beyond amazing! Being my first time going to a film festival, I was a little skeptical of the quality of movies and the overall experience I would have. As soon as I got to my first screening, it was like being with family. My favorite film screening that I went to see was Kahlil Gibran's The Prophet, which i knew was part of kidsalorus, but as an animation fanatic I wasn't going to miss it. Before the showing, Everyone in the audience participated in a half sign language, half singing song where we needed to open the window and let the dove fly in. It was out of the ordinary and I was glad to participate. The movie itself was amazing and the lessons and morals that I took away from it are going to stick with me. If you haven't seen it go see it or find it soon. I would love to tell you all about it but I don't want to spoil it and I can't summarize. After viewing and a little before, I was able to chat with some others who were going to view it as well (probably the most valuable experience of Cucalorus). Making the connections there are going to help me later on and if I had not gone I would have missed out otherwise. As for the future, I plan on attending every year. I should have been doing this from the first year at uncw, but I will have to try to make up the lost time elsewhere. It was such a fun time and I recommend it to everyone.
Tuesday, October 27, 2015
Self Portrait
Like many projects that I have completed during my time here at UNCW and in film studies, I find that my best work is accomplished when I improvise. I love the idea of this project and how open it is in its requirements, which there are very little. I think that I will try to use a lot of contrast/chiaroscuro in the final product and most likely some animation. I am prone to using stop motion animation whenever I can. I grew up watching it, I use it for my personal work and I feel that there is so much more that can be achieved by using it.
A major concern that I have with every project is that it will fail miserably or that my audience will find it simple and uninteresting. I think that is a common theme and problem that all of us face, so I will try to manage.
A challenge that I would like to give myself would be to be more present in this project. In the past, I would be reluctant to be visable in the final work, but with this project its different. It's a self portrait so why not?
A major concern that I have with every project is that it will fail miserably or that my audience will find it simple and uninteresting. I think that is a common theme and problem that all of us face, so I will try to manage.
A challenge that I would like to give myself would be to be more present in this project. In the past, I would be reluctant to be visable in the final work, but with this project its different. It's a self portrait so why not?
Wednesday, October 7, 2015
response to 1c
Project 1C in our experimental production class had our groups using film cameras and sekonics. Personally, I had never used a professional film camera nad never a sekonic. My experience with film was our consumer grade, point and shoot kodak and the disposable cameras you get for vactions and fun trips. This camera was very different from those because it had so many setting and cool options that we could use when trying to take a shot. I found that before using the camera, I was scared that I would mess it up or that the film would be a hassle to deal with, but it was super fun. I actually prefer using the film now over digital because the film has a more natural feel to it. There aren't many differences between digital and film besides the cost to develop the pictures, but the film seems gritty and more of a surprise. Digital is so fast and you get to see the picture right away. I feel like that is an under appreciated feature that we have just become accustomed to as technology has advanced. I am looking forward to using film in the upcoming projects and I hope to use it for some personal projects as well.
Tuesday, September 22, 2015
Sound Design experience from project 1B
The sound design process was amazing fun, mostly because of the pure freedom involved. Sound recording is the true free process, where you find objects nearby and experiment, but the design is where you truely have control. You can change the speed, the direction, the pitch, etc. and fine tune a normal lack-luster sound into anything, from a spine tingling shrill screech to a light hearted bop or boing. Working with the group led to some pretty interesting ideas that I myself would not have thought of, some of which I loved and some I did not, but for the most part we tried to incorporate everything in. Nothing was out of the question due to the experimental genre in which we worked. From the very beginning I knew that the project would be a real hoot. A project called "Her Ultimate Vaginal Opening" is something that is truly random and destined to be entertaining. And we couldn't do wrong in this project. While we worked, it felt like some of the sounds were so odd and didn't quite match up with the style or idea of the complete track, but when it was placed together it made sense. An example of this for me is some of the clanky, metal sounds, such as the saw-like sound of the moving flask, but in unison with the others, it worked great. In conclusion to all of this, I feel that I have learned to think more outside the box when it comes to sound design and be open to new ideas. A sound is just a set of frequencies in unison and they can shift and shape into any mold. Sound is like audible clay, and as filmmakers and sound designers, we must become the sculptor and artist and create great symphonies to accompany our visual works.
Wednesday, September 9, 2015
Cymatics
As discussed in class last week, Cymatics is the process of viewing sound. Its awesome how sound moving through an object can show frequency patterns. Just like with many other lessons this semester, this was completely new to me. The process starts by putting sand or other small grain-like substance on a metal surface, then run frequencies through the metal to reveal sound designs/ patterns.
The possibilities are endless for what this type process could be used for. One that come to mind for me could be a visualizer for the next itunes or music player. You play the the current song through the metal surface and the sand moves to the music. Another use could be showing people who cannot hear what a specific frequency looks like.
The possibilities are endless for what this type process could be used for. One that come to mind for me could be a visualizer for the next itunes or music player. You play the the current song through the metal surface and the sand moves to the music. Another use could be showing people who cannot hear what a specific frequency looks like.
Sound experience
Its very hard to explain how weird and fun sound recording is to someone who has either A) not ever tried recording sound or B) is not a raging film fanatic like most students in this major. Sound is one of the most important parts to any film project and when you need to get your own unique bits... is where the fun begins. It is amazing how much intensity can be built from a spoon hitting glass, surely a sound that Hitchcock would approve of. That goes for a lot of what my group used, such as pom poms, flasks and chip bags.
Tuesday, September 1, 2015
Bela Balazs and the Sound of Film
Oh how my eyes have deceived and betrayed me! The blessing of sight and the ability to see visuals has dampened the auditory sense of hearing. Sound is so unique and so very important to all of us as filmmakers. Bela Balazs has a very interesting description of sound, but my favorite part to read was the sections on silence. If it were me, I wouldn't think of silence as the integral part of sound, I just haven't ever thought of it in this way. "We feel the silence when we can hear the most distant
sound or the slightest rustle near us." This stuck with me through the whole article.
The other portion I found to be very interesting and important to the theory of sound is the education we can give to our ears. I myself will be doing this more often and will incorporate it into my future works. Balazs states that sound is more difficult to recognize that a visual and that our ears are actually more sensitive to sound differentiation. Pretty cool stuff in my opinion and it just makes me think that when we are working on our projects, sound should equally be as important as the visual.
West Virginian Rest Area- a study of sound
One of the positive things about a roadtrip is the great amount of stops that must be made. On the second day of the trip, we stoppeda at a rest park for breakfast. I walked over to a starbucks and sat down. Quiet conversations were drowned out by the tired footsteps of truck drivers. The flip of page after page, heard from a book a few tables down. The cappuccino maker froths and bubbles and the barista fills the paper cup. The cash drawer opens with a slam and a ding. A woman taps her shoe slowly. There is someone swiping and pulling napkins from a container. In the distance, a blender is buzzing and crushing and mixing. The sounds are only suppressed by the fresh scent of my coffee being handed to me.
Walmart at 3am- a study in sound
If you have been on the road for hours and the end of your trip couldn't come any faster, you might find yourself at a random Walmart at 3am. And while you are there, you might find it to be the perfect opportunity to gather some information for the coming week's journal entry. I walked to the front of the store and sat on a bench, closed my eyes and listened. At this time of night, there are only a few handfuls of people shopping, which made it easier to hear clean and clear sounds. The ringing of flourescent lights buzzed above. An interlude of clashing cartwheels as they are pushed to the registers. The swipe and click of plastic on the credit card reader. An old man counting his change on the faux wood counter. In the distance there is a low whirring of a floor being cleaned and polished. The sounds harmonize and create the unique sound, an ode to a mega franchise. And hopefully, if you find yourself here at 3am, half asleep and listening to the sounds of the store, you bring someone with you, so that you can escape this semi-dreadful place.
Tuesday, August 25, 2015
A response to Maya Deren
What I found to be wonderful about this reading is, and what I liked about the Fred Camper article, the emphasis on the independent or Amateur filmmaker. Deren was very concise and expressive on the "mobile body" and compared how it will beat any tripod or monster rig. As film students, hobbyists, lovers, etc. we need to apply all of Deren's points to our careers in cinema. I have never had a clear idea of this before, but many people think that gear is the most important aspect to film, with myself being guilty of this too. Everyone needs to use what they have to the fullest. Dont break your piggy bank and buy that Epic Dragon Red camera, bigger is not better, a quality film is the best thing. Thank you Maya Deren.
Like life, we should film to the fullest.
Film = Life
Like life, we should film to the fullest.
Film = Life
A response to Fred Camper
After previous film classes and the barrage of experimental films I have seen, I believe that Camper has a great set of guidelines that can define an experimental. To many, an experimental film can mean something or nothing and without being active and watching multiple times, a film can be confusing. The fourth point that Camper made was most interesting to me because the incorporation of that many experimental techniques into one career is just awesome, i.e. Brakhage. My interest in this mode of cinema has been increasing rapidly, with the current state of the film industry, I feel that the independent nature of experimental filmmakers is going to be part of the new wave of the modern cinema.
MY Manifesto
Hello everyone!
I am Bobby Hartman and a junior in the film studies major here at UNCW. For a major part of my life I thought I knew what i wanted to be when i grew up, at least that is what I thought anyway. My interests were in film started when I first watched the 1978 Superman film with Christopher Reeves. As I got older and around the time Youtube was created, I became fascinated by the lego animations and stop motions that others were making and that eventually led to me starting my own channel and making very short videos. I have been continuing this hobby for about 6 or 7 years now and I have a new page. After I graduated I enrolled at ECU as an art major, which was a great school. However, I saw the film program here and I decided to take the direct approach to what I love most and what has kept me up night after night and very sleep deprived, Film.
If you are interested, here is a link to my current youtube channel. My older shorts are in a playlist on the current channel and featured to the side.
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCzIfXqqIMuM57FguLbh7BCQ
I am Bobby Hartman and a junior in the film studies major here at UNCW. For a major part of my life I thought I knew what i wanted to be when i grew up, at least that is what I thought anyway. My interests were in film started when I first watched the 1978 Superman film with Christopher Reeves. As I got older and around the time Youtube was created, I became fascinated by the lego animations and stop motions that others were making and that eventually led to me starting my own channel and making very short videos. I have been continuing this hobby for about 6 or 7 years now and I have a new page. After I graduated I enrolled at ECU as an art major, which was a great school. However, I saw the film program here and I decided to take the direct approach to what I love most and what has kept me up night after night and very sleep deprived, Film.
If you are interested, here is a link to my current youtube channel. My older shorts are in a playlist on the current channel and featured to the side.
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCzIfXqqIMuM57FguLbh7BCQ
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