Skip to main content

Home/ Groups/ Basic Audio Lighting and Editing Spring 2009
ksa45 Kyle Anderson

Audacity: Free Audio Editor and Recorder - 0 views

  •  
    If you want more detailed audio editing than is provided in Final Cut, check out Audacity. It's free, and provides a lot of essential audio editing tools.
Kurt Lancaster

Hard Times | washingtonpost.com - 0 views

  •  
    Documentary Journalist Travis Fox traveled across the country in order to capture a portrait of Americans facing hard economic times.
Kurt Lancaster

The Concentra Award - Travis Fox - Nominees 2009 - Nominees - 0 views

  •  
    Nominees for video journalism
Kurt Lancaster

Multimedia/Video - 0 views

  •  
    Dai Sugano is one of the best documentary journalists working in the industry.
ksa45 Kyle Anderson

Holophone Surround Sound Microphone - 0 views

  •  
    The Holophone is a special microphone that records in surround sound. It's a small orb-shaped unit that has 5-7 XLR outputs for true surround sound recording with one microphone.
Kurt Lancaster

Taliban who? Afghan filmmakers brave off-screen dramas | csmonitor.com - 0 views

  • In the war-torn countryside, a maiden finds her path blocked by a group of threatening men. But a woman from a nearby village suddenly jumps between the men and their victim. The men laugh at this ordinary peasant's attempt at a rescue. Alas for them, this is no common peasant: It's Feroza! The undercover cop saves the day with some back flips and well-placed karate moves – all without smudging her eyeliner. It's a scene from the movie "Najat," a recent title in the growing catalog of Afghan films that questions everything from gender roles to political corruption. Some filmmakers are braving death threats to bring such issues to the big screen, and they hope to change the way Afghans think.   "I want to show that I am powerful," says Saba Sahar, who directed the film and starred as Feroza. "I want to convince all Afghan women that they are powerful."
  • "We are trying to teach Afghans about their rights," he says. "There is no democracy here. The government and police take advantage of the people all the time." 
  •  
    Art should not only challenge your own personal growth, but unjust social conditions. As one filmmaker says, "We are trying to teach Afghans about their rights," he says. "There is no democracy here. The government and police take advantage of the people all the time."
Kurt Lancaster

Oscar-Nominated Films Deliver Triumphant Tales for Dark Days - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • Consumers who are motivated by the laurels heaped on these films to plunk down increasingly scarce disposable income will leave the movie house with the message that circumstance is just that, and no match for the indomitability of human will. The films are built on individual successes — kids from the slums who better themselves, a television celebrity who finds his inner newsman, a newborn who overcomes old age and the midlife closeted man who steps into the light — that accrue to the greater good. That message, that darkness can be overcome by individuals working for the common good, is not so distant from the current collective impulse. As President Obama said in his Inaugural Address, “The time has come to reaffirm our enduring spirit, to choose our better history, to carry forward that precious gift, that noble idea passed on from generation to generation: the God-given promise that all are equal, all are free, and all deserve a chance to pursue their full measure of happiness.”
  •  
    Good article on the Oscar nominees.
Kurt Lancaster

Living the Romantic Comedy: Light and Shadow - 0 views

  •  
    Good page with a variety of lighting examples.
Kurt Lancaster

Leah's blog - 0 views

shared by Kurt Lancaster on 28 Jan 09 - Cached
  •  
    Leah Nobel's blog.
ksa45 Kyle Anderson

All about the different types of camera movement - 0 views

  •  
    Here are some camera movements that expand on basic motions, like pan, tilt, zoom, and focus, to make some neat effects. I like combining these motions for a really cool look and feel to certain shots.
Kurt Lancaster

2009 Golden Globes - LA Times - 0 views

  • BEST MOTION PICTURE, DRAMA "The Curious Case of Benjamin Button" "Frost/Nixon" "The Reader" "Revolutionary Road" "Slumdog Millionaire" (Winner) BEST MOTION PICTURE, MUSICAL OR COMEDY "Burn After Reading" "Happy-Go-Lucky" "In Bruges" "Mamma Mia!" "Vicky Cristina Barcelona" (Winner) FOREIGN LANGUAGE PICTURE "The Baader Meinhof Complex" "Everlasting Moments" "Gomorrah" "I've Loved You So Long" "Waltz With Bashir" (Winner) BEST DIRECTOR Danny Boyle, "Slumdog Millionaire"(Winner) Stephen Daldry, "The Reader" David Fincher, "The Curious Case of Benjamin Button" Ron Howard, "Frost/Nixon" Sam Mendes, "Revolutionary Road"
  •  
    As you begin as a script writer and/or filmmaker, always look best picture nominations as a marker of good writing, in addition to looking at the best screenplay nominations: SCREENPLAY Simon Beaufoy, "Slumdog Millionaire" (Winner) David Hare, "The Reader" Peter Morgan, "Frost/Nixon" Eric Roth, "The Curious Case of Benjamin Button" John Patrick Shanley, "Doubt" As part of your social networking, post ideas and scene analyses to wetpaint. If you're working a blog, examine a director or writer or cinematographer on these pictures and look closely at their past work. Explain how their specific work contributes and influences your work.
  •  
    Look at the Golden Globe winners and learn about how their work can help inspire your work.
Kurt Lancaster

Flick's Mobile Home Park Sunnyvale California San Jose Mercury News - 0 views

  •  
    Follow the saga of Sunnyvale Mobiel Home dwellers as they fight for their homes, then relocate after developers take over the property. Shot and edited by one of the top documentary journalists in the field, Dai Sugano of San Jose Mercury News.
Kurt Lancaster

Left Behind | By Dai Sugano/San Jose Mercury News - 0 views

  •  
    Another great documentary piece by Dai Sugano. He tells the story visually. What can we learn from his approach and style?
Kurt Lancaster

The Anatomy of a Gunshot from Son of A Wanted Man - An Audio Dramatization of the novel... - 0 views

  • The Anatomy of a Gunshot The process of layering effects, allows us to bridge the gap between what something actually sounds like when recorded and what we, as listeners, think it should sound like. Gunshots are particularly difficult to reproduce effectively. They have all the negative aspects you could ever think of from a recording perspective. They are extremely loud, very fast and filled with lots of little details. Creating each gunshot requires several layers not all of which have anything to do with a gun. HINT: Click the to hear MP3 sounds (requires an MP3 player like Quicktime - see apple.com if you need a free version.) The shot that kills Klatt as he holds Mike hostage is a perfect example of the complex layering and sweetening involved in creating gunshots. Some of the layers have little or nothing to do with the original gunshot and some are modified in order to sound more like what I think the audience expects to hear.   I usually choose a gunshot that is from the same or similar weapon used by the character in the scene. (Sharpes Shot) Using this as a foundation I begin to add layers. A deeper boom.  Some echo The bullet sizzle was slowed down from its original   to a more dramatic The bullet hit is comprised of an actual impact recording A hand slap, and last but not least, the sound of a hammer striking an anvil.  All of these pieces are carefully placed, cropped, eq’d and filtered to create the final effect.
    • Kurt Lancaster
       
      Go to the website to play the audio links. It's worth checking out to see what it took to make a gunshot sound more "real" in this audio production.
  •  
    The Anatomy of a Gunshot The process of layering effects, allows us to bridge the gap between what something actually sounds like when recorded and what we, as listeners, think it should sound like. Gunshots are particularly difficult to reproduce effectively. They have all the negative aspects you could ever think of from a recording perspective. They are extremely loud, very fast and filled with lots of little details. Creating each gunshot requires several layers not all of which have anything to do with a gun. HINT: Click the to hear MP3 sounds (requires an MP3 player like Quicktime - see apple.com if you need a free version.) The shot that kills Klatt as he holds Mike hostage is a perfect example of the complex layering and sweetening involved in creating gunshots. Some of the layers have little or nothing to do with the original gunshot and some are modified in order to sound more like what I think the audience expects to hear. I usually choose a gunshot that is from the same or similar weapon used by the character in the scene. (Sharpes Shot) Using this as a foundation I begin to add layers. A deeper boom. Some echo The bullet sizzle was slowed down from its original to a more dramatic The bullet hit is comprised of an actual impact recording A hand slap, and last but not least, the sound of a hammer striking an anvil. All of these pieces are carefully placed, cropped, eq'd and filtered to create the final effect.
Kurt Lancaster

Cinematography - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

  •  
    ASC defines cinematography as a creative and interpretive process that culminates in the authorship of an original work of art rather than the simple recording of a physical event. Cinematography is not a subcategory of photography. Rather, photography is but one craft that the cinematographer uses in addition to other physical, organizational, managerial, interpretive and image-manipulating techniques to effect one coherent process.
‹ Previous 21 - 36 of 36
Showing 20 items per page