Monday, April 8, 2013

Journal Entry Week 13


Week 11

This week was all about the boat documentary in that it is the film that I have the most left to do and also the film that requires consistant application. On Thursday I turned up in the morning to film and managed to capture some essential stages of the boats production. The main bow of the boat was attached as well as some guides for the frame. It is a very tight workspace and there is three other men in there with me but overall I am managing to squeeze into spots where I am not in the way. It helps that the builder (Jim Horgan) wants me to be there. At one stage he was working on the bench while I was filming him and one of the others walked in between him and the camera, there was a subtle glance at the other bloke which told me how aware Jim is of the camera. This tight and confined space is very different from my previous experiences, I am more liable to be in the way while the lads building the boat are more aware of my presence. Because the process can switch between moving very fast and very slow I need to be switched on at all times. Even though I knew this there were instances where I wasn’t switched on and it meant that I didn’t get the shot.

Saturday 6th April

I turned up early today, I had been promised that it was an essential part of the build and my eagerness got the better of me. In the end I was an hour early, I instead used this time to walk down to the sea and to get some extra sound for the film. I wanted to get the sound of the sea to overlay onto the film (it is after all about boats..) but since there was construction works going on nearby I had to walk pretty far along to get out of the range of the sound of building. When filming the guys (three again) I had to be aware of what they were doing and where they were in order to stay out of the way. I have an idea of what I would like to portray but at the moment I am anyway shooting everything that happens. I would like to capture the full life of the building of a boat but this means a lot of editing as I have captured and will capture so much. Today I managed to get the beginning proper of the construction of the boat, the sides are beginning to go on and it is therefore beginning to take shape.

Tuesday, April 2, 2013

Journal Entry Week 12.



Saturday the 30th March

Today I called out to see the boat builder in Furbo, he had said he was trying to contact me recently as he had began another boat. When I arrived I showed him how to save a contact in his phone as he had been phoning The Huston and Gmit looking for me (I had phoned him before so my number was on his phone). I began to roll the camera as soon as I arrived as he was moving all over the place showing me the bits they had done in the meantime. Everything he did came with an explanation which made me think that he has the impression that the film will be instructional even though I have said several times that it is not. While showing me what they had done so far (not much really) he kept saying things like “we can fake it”, in order to make it seem like I had captured the work in progress. I was too busy filming to really explain to him (again) that I don’t need to capture everything. I will however make sure that when I interview him I get a release form signed, if only for his memory. I did manage to capture some nice shot of him working and some nice work sounds that I can use to underpin other shots in the film so the trip was useful. 

Week 12 Screening 2



Searching for Sugar Man 2012. Dir Malik Bendjelloul.

Searching for Sugar Man opens by way of posing a question about the central character of the film, Rodrigez. This questionmark over the fate of the films protagonist invites the viewer both into the search and into the narrative of the documentary. This technique of inviting the viewer into the central mystery of the film is a powerful means of sustaining the viewers attention, especially when the story itself is so powerful. Not knowing the outcome of the story is shared with the interviewees of the film while they present their version of events as they happened. Using rodrigezs’ own music for the soundtrack and beautifully shot footage the film is a pleasure to view which enables receptivity. Through the interviews different ideas of the whereabouts of Rodrigez and what happened to him are put forward unopposed, this cycle of hearsay is used in such a way as to deepen the mystery surrounding the faith of Rodrigez. The film continues to follow the search for Rodrigez, revealing to the viewer only what was known at each stage of the journey that is recounted. This technique gives the story greater strength and keeps the viewer interested in each discovery and thus the film itself.

Link
http://www.1channel.ch/external.php?title=Searching+for+Sugar+Man&url=aHR0cDovL3d3dy5ub3d2aWRlby5ldS92aWRlby83NzA3Yjc2ZWM2MTU1&domain=bm93dmlkZW8uZXU=&loggedin=0

Week 12 Screening 1



Upside Down: The Creation Records Story. 2010. Danny O’Connor.

Upside Down opens with the seemingly obligatory montage that presents a snapshot what is to come. Although in this case it is accompanied by some ear splitting feedback that takes you out of the film instead of drawing you in. It then segues into individual interviews with the participants of the documentary in order to fill in the backstory of the film. This portion of the film slumps into a protracted recounting of how they all met each other. The section loses its pace and seems overly long perhaps because there are no interesting stories about how or when they met. The section should have given way sooner to the content that follows when something actually happens. Due to the subject of the film there is a wealth of interviewees but in this case the polyphony has the effect of making all the developments in the film indistinct and monotonous, there was no effort to make them distinct. The film is sound-tracked by the music that is being discussed, this might give the film fidelity but the use of early music from the bands is not conducive to easy viewing. But when this film takes off and gets interesting is when the story takes off and coincidentally the music improves. The interviews are used to give the footage that follows a specific context (the footage itself would be useless without the context from the interviews) the interviews in this case are entertaining and insightful as they are firsthand. This film illustrates the complexities of a talking heads interview.