Wednesday, March 9, 2016

Blog 20 - Fourth Interview Questions


"I think audiences get too comfortable and familiar in today's movies. They believe everything they're hearing and seeing. I like to shake that up." - Christopher Nolan 

1.  Who do you plan to interview?  What is this person's area of expertise?


A: Currently I have emailed a plethora of LA-based production groups that I believe have made great pieces of work that has affected audiences in many different ways. My highest hopes for an interview is with a cinematographer named Tommy Trinh who is in charge of his own production group called Formula Arts. He is also a key member of another production group called JK Films. With my past interviews I tried to explore the ideas of story and characters as an essential in affecting audiences emotionally. What I hope to focus on this time is the cinematography and editorial aspects of film in order to convey an emotional response.

2.  Post 20 open-ended questions you want to ask an expert in the field concerning your senior project. Your focus should be finding answers to your EQ.


A:

  • As a whole, how can the editing of a film provide a visceral connection and emotional response to any given audience?

  • How is it that a group of unlikely individuals and people of many different life experiences can come together and emotionally react at the same time when prompted to?

  • Personally, what do you feel is the most important when experiencing a film for the first time?

  • What do you feel is the most important aspect to note when determining what is visually portrayed for the audience to experience?

  • In what ways does music heighten the movie-going experience?

  • When conveying the film, which aspect is the most valuable when relaying information to the audience: cinematography, story, or editing?

  • Suspending the disbelief of the audience is one of the key aspects of the viewing experience when watching any form of film. What filmmaking techniques are most important when building this believability?

  • When laying out a shot list and/or storyboard, how do you ensure the most cinematic and informational shot possible?

  • As a filmmaker, why do you believe audiences react the way they do when watching a film, whether it be crying, laughing, etc?

  • Being that cinematography is so broad, what key elements of it are the most important when composing an emotionally empowering shot?

  • What is the most noticeable mistake that can break an audience’s focus when viewing a film?

  • Using cinematography and editing techniques, how can you hook an audience to buy and invest into the story in the first couple of shots of a film?

  • What is the relationship like between a director, cinematographer, and editor?

  • In what ways does color affect the mood of an audience member in a scene?

  • Which aspects of the filmmaking experience have the most room for emotional investment?

  • How did your past film projects better you as a filmmaker and shape your styles and techniques that you execute today?

  • What genres have you personally worked with over the course of your career and based on those, which would you say would be the most difficult and intricate to convey a specific emotion to the audience?

  • What do you feel is the most important aspect when trying to induce emotion into a general audience?

  • How were you inspired to become a cinematographer?

  • How can a filmmaker maximize the affective domain of the audience’s viewing experience?



Wednesday, March 2, 2016

Blog 19 - Answer 3


"Every film is a puzzle really, from an editorial point of view." - Walter Murch

1.  What is your EQ?


A: How can a filmmaker maximize the affective domain of the audience’s viewing experience?



2.  What is your third answer? (In complete thesis statement format)


A: A filmmaker can maximize the affective domain of the audience's viewing experience by executing certain editing styles and applying appropriate music to heighten the emotions that are planned to be conveyed.



3.  List three reasons your answer is true with a real-world application for each.


A:
Certain cuts and edits can relay proper information at the correct times in order to get a well-timed response. Pacing is everything in the story and need to be in sync with what the audience is feeling emotionally. If the pacing is off, the audience won’t buy into a film and will lose interest very quickly.


Colors and grading can elicit subtle psychological feelings regarding to warmth and coolness of a shot temperature as well as a distinguishing factor as a storytelling device. Colors play a key aspect when telling a story. One of the prime examples of this is The Wizard of Oz. When Dorthy is back in Kansas, the film is shown strictly in gray scale colors and black and white to represent the dullness of the real world. However, when she is transported to the Land of Oz through the tornado, the film turns into a colorful masterpiece in order to convey the true nature of curiosity and wonder that is the setting.


Music adds to a idea called the supra-reality, a state of psychological absorption that audience members experience when watching a film. Without music, the whole perspective is thrown off, leaving out a missing emotional aspect in a film. The opening scene to Jaws, contains one of the most iconic emotional music scores that make audiences feel on edge and linger onto the suspense that it brings.



4.  What printed source best supports your answer?


A:


Mills, Robert. "Colour and Storytelling in Films." Robert Mills. Chris Alwood, 17 Feb. 2015. Web. 3 Sept. 2015. < http://www.robertmills.me/colour-and-storytelling-in-films/>.

Fischoff, Stuart. "The Evolution of Music in Film and its Psychological Impact on Audiences." Calstatela. Cal State LA, 24 June. 2005. Web. 10 Sept. 2015. <http://web.calstatela.edu/faculty/abloom/tvf454/5filmmusic.pdf>.

Hockrow, Ross. "Pacing for Video and Cinema Editors: Timing and Types of Cuts." PeachPit. Pearson Education, 22 Jul. 2014. Web. 3 Dec. 2015. <http://www.peachpit.com/articles/article.aspx?p=2233986>.

Rocket Jump Film School. "Editing: Creating the "OH F**K" Moment. Online Video Clip. YouTube. 25 Sept. 2015. Web. 29 Oct. 2015. <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0IvhlF2wobo>.




5.  Tie this together with a concluding thought.


A: Editing is one of the most essential key aspects in a film. Editors are the ones that ultimately stitch together the random clips into the sequence of the story, letting moving images evolve into an epic.