For A2 Media Studies I'm in a group with the following people: (opens in new tab)
Note to self:
Posts to be completed/finalized during free time.
(click to visit post via URL hyperlink):

Music Video Analysis: Sinéad O'Connor's - "Nothing Compares 2U".

Monday, 22 October 2012

Footage: 003 (17th October 2012)

Footage: 003 (17th October 2012)

Cast and Crew of the Following Footage:

Cameraman: Austen Nuttall
Actor(s): None


The above shot which I took was for me, originally going to be at the beginning of our music video, but after much thought I think it'll fit more with the ending. The title "On Sale Here", seems to feel appropriate to end our edit on. We're planning to include many news-paper related objects within the video, and for me, planning ahead would feel stratified if this was our ending clip. However, I could imagine this in black and white, with a very high contrast. It would bring out the mise-en-scene to be very gloomy and dark, as it looks fairly "lifeless" in color due to barely any hue within the mise-en-scene.






Cast and Crew of the Following Footage:

Cameraman: Sam Wright
Actor(s): Austen Nuttall













"Chopping wood never felt like such a waste" - chopping down paper from a notice-board, relates to song lyrics, amplifies the meaning, Goodwin's theory.

"Fill your pockets", again, relates to theory and amplifies the lyrics:








Footage for a Time-Lapse Idea

Cast and Crew of the Following Footage:

Cameraman: Austen Nuttall (filmed on mini tri-pod)
Actor(s): Members of the public... and a pigeon.

The following footage will be increased in speed during post-production editing to create a time-lapse effect and appearance.









1 comment:

  1. i suggest you use the zoom feature on the camera so that when filming Evening News Boards you actually shoot the headline - you have the Evening News Board but no headline! This is quite important and places your music video in political and social context. So zooming into car park notices, i.e. how many spaces vacant etc will add to variety of camera angles and movement.

    ReplyDelete