Learning Aim A: Understand the reasons for editing factual and fictional digital recorded sound.
Task 1
To compress and summarise a sound recording to fit a specific space.
The need to compress certain sounds and summarise certain sounds can be found in film trailers. This is due to lots of clips from the film needing to be shown in a small amount of time, so lots of editing needs to happen within trailers.
Example 1:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GLPJSmUHZvU
For the trailer of Reservoir Dogs, certain sound effects or lines of dialogue have been changed in make the trailer itself more appropriate for certain audiences, which include the exclusion of certain uses of profanity by the characters. Since the trailer itself is also only a certain length of time, this means certain parts of dialogue and music within the film with have either been cut or compressed in order to make the sure the trailer itself reaches it's allocated time slot.
Example 2: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vN-1Mup0UI0
This 40th anniversary re release trailer for Stanley Kubrick's A Clockwork Orange (1971) has had various lines of dialogue or sound effects changed in order to make sure the trailer itself is appropriate for the intended audience. This includes the compression of certain sounds within a particular scene in order to make sure the part of the scene in the trailer is trimmed down so that it meets it's allocated time slot and does not run over. The need to compress certain sounds is also important for trailers as it helps the intended flow of the trailer and makes sure no sounds or sound effects used in the trailer drag on for longer than they should.
To eliminate flawed, repetitive, superfluous, uninteresting, irrelevant material from a
recorded clip.
Example 1: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jSdxbBsShak
This clip involving Josh and Benny Safdie in the Criterion Closet has obviously been edited in order to get the most important and insightful clips from the Brothers talking about the films themselves instead of more uninteresting material. Dialogue in which the brother's themselves may have made mistakes in their speech or talked over one another for prolonged periods of time has been edited in order to make sure the clip does not lose it's sense of pace and sticks to the usual timeframe a "Criterion Closet picks" video has. This is noticeable throughout the video as the use of quick edits between the Brothers talking is extremely noticeable.
To enable recorded speech to remain legal.
Example 1:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C_trSpg99yc
This interview from CNN in 1999 involving Mike Tyson has been editing in order to make sure the station itself does not contravene any laws regarding obscene language. This clip was obviously aired before the "watershed" and therefore due to this must have certain parts of Tyson's interview edited, which is done using the bleep technique which is effective as it makes sure that all of the offending word is bleeped out and therefore totally and utterly inaudible to it's audience. The use of a time delay is also utilized here, which means the clip has had time to be edited and any obscene language removed before the clip itself is aired to the audience.
To ensure any indecent or inappropriate dialogue is edited out.
Example 1:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EJE-0SuY0go.
This clip from South Park featuring Kyle swearing at the Alien visitors has had profanity "bleeped" out in order to make the clip much more appropriate for the time it needs to be aired and that it does not contravene any broadcasting rules and is generally made more suitable for a family friendly audience. This use of editing to ensure indecent/inappropriate language is edited out is extremely useful as it makes sure the whole offending piece of dialogue is obscured with no chance of any of it becoming audible after editing has taken place.
To change the chronological or logical order of a series of sounds or speech.
Example 1:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BdJKm16Co6M
This trailer for Fight Club (1999) will have had the chronological or logical order of the sound and speech in it changed in order to make the sequences shown from the film fit better into the trailer itself and also to make sure the trailer itself has a good pace and does not go over it's allocated time allowance (the traditional length a trailer usually is). Certain violent or inappropriate elements to the trailer will have been edited out of reduced in order to make sure the trailer itself will be appropriate for audiences who will see it, and that it does not contravene any advertising rules through showing obscene or violent content.
To create impact by adding sound effects and/or music between pieces of recorded speech.
Example 1:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nOzR5Jnd6bU
This clip from American History X (1998) is a brilliant example of the effect sound effects and music can have on a scene. For example, the use of dramatic music and the build up of tension within the scene help the scene have much more of an effect by using the sound effect to build the scene up to an extremely unexpected conclusion for the audience. The soundtrack to the scene also goes completely silent when the sound effect of the "curb stomp" itself is used, which helps the audience hear the full effect of the "curb stomp" itself.
Jack's Level 3 media
Friday, 25 January 2019
Friday, 18 January 2019
Unit 24- Sound Editing
Mood and Atmosphere- Sound can be used within film to create mood and atmosphere within a film which can be used to draw the audience in. Good examples of this particular use of sound in films is in Martin Scorsese's Taxi Driver (1976), Quentin Tarantino's Reservoir Dogs (1992) and Danny Boyle's Trainspotting (1996). All of these films uses particular pieces of music in order to get the audience to feel a particular type of emotion. In Reservoir Dogs for example, the song "Stuck In The Middle With You" is used to make the audience feel contradictory emotions. What the scene itself portrays is torture, but the torture itself is committed to upbeat music which defies normal audience expectations.
In Martin Scorsese's film, Taxi Driver, mood and atmosphere is created through the use of jazz type music is used to reflect Travis Bickle's inner emotions. This helps draw the audience in for the 1st half of the film and makes them emphasize with Travis's loneliness and social anxiety. However, their is less of this music in the 2nd half of the film in which Travis's mental state collapses. This is due to the audience being totally disconnected from Travis now due to his unhinged mental state.
Music and sound is used to great effect in Trainspotting, in which both are used to symbolize the highs and lows of drug addiction. In the scenes in which Mark Renton and his junkie pals are happy, loud pop music plays such as Iggy Pop's Lust for Life, but when Mark is at an all time low, humdrum music such as Sing by Blur plays. Boyle's very clever use of music helps bring the viewer into the life of a drug addict, and this is the reason why Trainspotting remains the most iconic of films.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AbvWoruvf5c
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vt5LHP_TRog
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xerx80SWgkA
Sound Fades- A good example of a sound fade would be found in Francis Ford Coppola's The Godfather (1974). At the end of the film, a sound fade is used in order to let the poignancy and emotional power of the film sink in, and it also reacts a point of reflection for the audience after the events of the film.
Dialogue- A good example of the use of dialogue in a film to set up the mood and atmosphere would be Quentin Tarantino's Pulp Fiction. The scene in particular which in which dialogue helps set the mood would be the opening diner scene between Pumpkin and Honey Bunny. The dialogue between the two sets up the criminal environment of the film perfectly, and allows the viewer to get into the mood and mindset of the criminal characters they are following.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jomr9SAjcyw
Voice Over- A good example of voice over in a film would be in David Fincher's Fight Club (1999). Edward Norton's excellent narration helps the viewer understand his various predicaments in the film, extremely similar to Travis Bickle.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D4c6W5TWCf0
Ambient Sound- A good example of ambient sound used in a film would be in Hector Babenco's Pixote (1981), in which ambient sound is used to contrast against the much more aggressive use of sound in the earlier stages of the film.
Soundbridge- A good example of a soundbridge would be in the Wachowski's The Matrix (1999) in which club music from one scene carries over to the next, making the scene much more impact and effectual.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zJZ-gPQ0ew8
Foley Sounds- Foley artists create sounds effects through a variety of different ways such as stomping on the floor wearing boots. An example of a good use of foley in a film would be in Tony Kaye's American History X (1998), during the scene in which Derek Vinyard curb stomps a burglar attempting to break into his house. The use of foley within this scene makes this scene all the more impactful due to it's graphic nature.
Synchronous/Asynchronous sound- Synchronous sound is a sound used in film that matches up with what is happening on screen. For example, in Harmony Korine's Gummo (1997) a character plays an accordion whilst sitting on a toilet, and the sounds from the accordion are being projected. Asynchronous sound is when a sound is not matched with a visible source onscreen. An example of Asynchronous sound is in Alfred Hitchcock's Rope (1948), in which police sirens are heard offscreen at the film's conclusion.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2LlPUxI8QYs
Sound Motif- A good example of a sound motif in a film would be in Fritz Lang's M (1931) in which Peter Lorre's character Hans Beckert always whistles whenever he appears onscreen, which works to add a certain level of tension to the film and to put the audience on edge.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sNUQINczgt0
ADR- ADR (Automatic Dialogue Replacement) is a way of changing dialogue in a film to alter it in some ways. An example of when ADR is used in certain types of films would be in Anime, in which character's voices are dubbed over to make the films more palatable to western audiences.
In Martin Scorsese's film, Taxi Driver, mood and atmosphere is created through the use of jazz type music is used to reflect Travis Bickle's inner emotions. This helps draw the audience in for the 1st half of the film and makes them emphasize with Travis's loneliness and social anxiety. However, their is less of this music in the 2nd half of the film in which Travis's mental state collapses. This is due to the audience being totally disconnected from Travis now due to his unhinged mental state.
Music and sound is used to great effect in Trainspotting, in which both are used to symbolize the highs and lows of drug addiction. In the scenes in which Mark Renton and his junkie pals are happy, loud pop music plays such as Iggy Pop's Lust for Life, but when Mark is at an all time low, humdrum music such as Sing by Blur plays. Boyle's very clever use of music helps bring the viewer into the life of a drug addict, and this is the reason why Trainspotting remains the most iconic of films.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AbvWoruvf5c
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vt5LHP_TRog
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xerx80SWgkA
Sound Fades- A good example of a sound fade would be found in Francis Ford Coppola's The Godfather (1974). At the end of the film, a sound fade is used in order to let the poignancy and emotional power of the film sink in, and it also reacts a point of reflection for the audience after the events of the film.
Dialogue- A good example of the use of dialogue in a film to set up the mood and atmosphere would be Quentin Tarantino's Pulp Fiction. The scene in particular which in which dialogue helps set the mood would be the opening diner scene between Pumpkin and Honey Bunny. The dialogue between the two sets up the criminal environment of the film perfectly, and allows the viewer to get into the mood and mindset of the criminal characters they are following.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jomr9SAjcyw
Voice Over- A good example of voice over in a film would be in David Fincher's Fight Club (1999). Edward Norton's excellent narration helps the viewer understand his various predicaments in the film, extremely similar to Travis Bickle.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D4c6W5TWCf0
Ambient Sound- A good example of ambient sound used in a film would be in Hector Babenco's Pixote (1981), in which ambient sound is used to contrast against the much more aggressive use of sound in the earlier stages of the film.
Soundbridge- A good example of a soundbridge would be in the Wachowski's The Matrix (1999) in which club music from one scene carries over to the next, making the scene much more impact and effectual.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zJZ-gPQ0ew8
Foley Sounds- Foley artists create sounds effects through a variety of different ways such as stomping on the floor wearing boots. An example of a good use of foley in a film would be in Tony Kaye's American History X (1998), during the scene in which Derek Vinyard curb stomps a burglar attempting to break into his house. The use of foley within this scene makes this scene all the more impactful due to it's graphic nature.
Synchronous/Asynchronous sound- Synchronous sound is a sound used in film that matches up with what is happening on screen. For example, in Harmony Korine's Gummo (1997) a character plays an accordion whilst sitting on a toilet, and the sounds from the accordion are being projected. Asynchronous sound is when a sound is not matched with a visible source onscreen. An example of Asynchronous sound is in Alfred Hitchcock's Rope (1948), in which police sirens are heard offscreen at the film's conclusion.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2LlPUxI8QYs
Sound Motif- A good example of a sound motif in a film would be in Fritz Lang's M (1931) in which Peter Lorre's character Hans Beckert always whistles whenever he appears onscreen, which works to add a certain level of tension to the film and to put the audience on edge.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sNUQINczgt0
ADR- ADR (Automatic Dialogue Replacement) is a way of changing dialogue in a film to alter it in some ways. An example of when ADR is used in certain types of films would be in Anime, in which character's voices are dubbed over to make the films more palatable to western audiences.
Monday, 26 November 2018
Bibliography
Phenakistoscopes (1833)- The Public Domain Review
Juxtapoz Magazine- A Short History of the Phenakistoscope
Stop Motion- Wikipedia
Frame Rates: A beginner's guide- TechSmith
Auguste and Louis Lumiere- Wikipedia
Thomas Edison- Wikipedia
Edward Muybridge- Wikipedia
Willis O'Brien- Biography- YourDictionary
Ray Harryhausen- American Filmmaker- Britannica.com
Jan Svankmajer- Out of my head- The Guardian
Where to begin with the Quay Brothers- BFI
Where to begin with Tim Burton- BFI
Nick Park- Wikipedia
Meet Nick Park- WallaceandGromit.com
Charley Says- Wikipedia
King Kong (1933 film)- Wikipedia
Joe and Petunia- Wikipedia
Early Man- BFI
WallaceandGromit.com/NPower
Sledgehammer (Peter Gabriel song)- Wikipedia
Donkey Kong- Wikipedia
www.aardman.com
Creature Comforts- Wikipedia
Timelapse Photography- Wikipedia
Plasticine- Wikipedia
Clay animation- Wikipedia
Found Object- Wikipedia
Cutout animation- Wikipedia
Puppetry- Wikipedia
Stop motion- Wikipedia.
Juxtapoz Magazine- A Short History of the Phenakistoscope
Stop Motion- Wikipedia
Frame Rates: A beginner's guide- TechSmith
Auguste and Louis Lumiere- Wikipedia
Thomas Edison- Wikipedia
Edward Muybridge- Wikipedia
Willis O'Brien- Biography- YourDictionary
Ray Harryhausen- American Filmmaker- Britannica.com
Jan Svankmajer- Out of my head- The Guardian
Where to begin with the Quay Brothers- BFI
Where to begin with Tim Burton- BFI
Nick Park- Wikipedia
Meet Nick Park- WallaceandGromit.com
Charley Says- Wikipedia
King Kong (1933 film)- Wikipedia
Joe and Petunia- Wikipedia
Early Man- BFI
WallaceandGromit.com/NPower
Sledgehammer (Peter Gabriel song)- Wikipedia
Donkey Kong- Wikipedia
www.aardman.com
Creature Comforts- Wikipedia
Timelapse Photography- Wikipedia
Plasticine- Wikipedia
Clay animation- Wikipedia
Found Object- Wikipedia
Cutout animation- Wikipedia
Puppetry- Wikipedia
Stop motion- Wikipedia.
Wednesday, 17 October 2018
Techniques and Formats:
Timelapse: The benefits of using
Timelapse are that the resolution of the image looks extremely clear and picks
up extremely minute and small details of whatever it is that is being filmed.
The drawbacks of using timelapse is that because the resolution of the image
being used on timelapse is so clear, it means that more data is taken up
because of it, which means that more footage has to be deleted in order for new
footage to be filmed.
Plastescine: The benefits of using
plasticine are that it can give off an extremely vivid and unique look and since
the technology surrounding plasticine stop motion animation has developed so much,
a lot can be accomplished using it. However, the drawbacks to using plasticine are
that it does take a lot of time to get right, and if not edited correctly,
footage using plasticine could come out extremely choppy. Making plasticine
models can also be extremely time consuming as it takes a lot of time for a
model to be realistic and lifelike.
Claymation: The benefits of using
claymation are that clay models can be relatively easy to make and can be moved
to the desired position extremely easily without any major problems. The
drawbacks to using claymation however are that the models may still look
extremely unrealistic and the lighting/heat from light equipment may dry the
models out, making them much harder to work with. Some prominent examples of Claymation include Morph, as well as many Aardman productions including Wallace and Gromit and their latest offering Early Man (2018).
Found Objects: The benefits of
using found objects are that they can create a unique and striking object from
the simplest items, such as kitchen cutlery or old mechanical equipment. The drawback
to using found objects however are that they can be extremely time consuming to
produce which may be difficult when they need to be used in a small amount of
time.
Cut out: The benefits of using cut
out are that they can give off a unique and striking look using very little
material. TV shows such as South Park have achieved very striking and iconic
images with very little material. However, like found objects this approach can
be extremely time consuming and takes a lot of patience, as it can be hard to
get right. South Park is an example of a cut out animation that has achieved worldwide success, showing that cut out animation cut be an extremely popular method of animation in order to create tv shows and other forms of media.
Puppetry: The benefits of puppetry
are that the variation in which puppets can be made is extremely large, ranging
from classic (Punch and Judy) to more disturbing and surreal (Spitting Image).
The downsides to Puppetry are that they can be time consuming to make and
operate, which means there needs to be lots of time spent learning how to
operate them. A TV show like Spitting Image is an example of a TV show that has achieved moderate popularity through its use of puppetry.
Human Stop Motion: The benefits of
human stop motion are that a unique and wacky look can be made from using it,
which can make this technique stand out among other similar techniques. The
downsides to it are that it needs to be edited extremely well otherwise, it may
look messy and choppy when finished, and not have the original effect it was
originally intended to have. An example of Human Stop Motion Animation would be the music video for Peter Gabriel's "Sledgehammer" (1986), which was extremely progressive and almost unheard of for it's time.
TV: An example of a TV show that
uses stop motion animation is Creature Comforts, and this TV show in particular
really is ground-breaking for the time it was made. The
reason why Creature Comforts is considered so groundbreaking in terms of its
style and execution is because it marked a cultural shift in the way
advertising was used in UK Television. It showed a shift from the consumerism
and egotism of the 1980s to what was deemed a more sensitive and caring
approach in the early 1990s and Creature Comforts has always been considered a
prime example of this phenomena. It's use of humour is also to be noted as well, mixing surreal and bizarre events with mundane characters to create extremely amusing results, and it is here were Park's work takes a different turn and caters not only to a young audience but also an adult audience as well.
Websites: An example of a website
that uses stop motion animation is Aardman.com, and since Aardman is a company
that specialise in stop motion animation, their website explains a lot about
their company and how they operate. It also explains a lot of the processes of
stop motion that go into their films and how the creative process works. It’s
use of colourful animation shows that it is aimed at children.
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