Monday, 28 June 2010
Research and Planning
Before we could go ahead and film we had to complete a number of research and planning tasks, in order for us to be organised and for every group member to know their role in the task.
Shots vary from close up's to tracking shots, such as the screen shots show below.

The shots go in chronological order from left to right.
Personally I found creating the story board of each individual shot of the original video the most important and useful task, this is because without having a still picture of the original shot to hand whilst recording, lining up the shot accurately would prove difficult.
Here is the original video of 'Britney Spears,' 'Hit Me Baby One More Time' that we were re-creating.
We only had around 2-3 days to record and there for re-creating the whole video would prove near impossible, so instead we only recorded the first 30 seconds.
Throughout the 30 seconds there are around 30 different shots, I screen-shot these shots and pasted them into a word document to create a story board.

The finished story board looked like this :
The shots go in chronological order from left to right.One aspect of the planning I think we could of improved on and done more of (given the time) is practise runs through of complicated shots. I feel that if we had planned more before and not worked out what we were doing whilst filming then this would of speeded up the recording process.
Thursday, 17 June 2010
Lip Syncing Task
Our first task to was lip sync to a song, our chosen song was 'The Ace Of Spades' by Motorhead. Before the actual recording of our lip syncing we had to learn the lyrics to the song to make the actual lip sync look convincing. We then had to set the appropriate equipment up (camera, stand etc.) Part of the preparation was actually filling the performer with the confidence to perform the task ahead with confidence.
Whilst filming we attempted to do a straight run through of the song with the lip syncing but found that it was hard for the performer to lip sync straight through and instead had to break the song down into verses and chorus's.
One of the most important parts of the task was making sure the performer was happy and comfortable with what was being asked of them. Instead of just instructing and verbally telling the performer what I wanted out of them, I had to show them and actually get in front of the camera myself and physically show them what I wanted.
After the actual recording of the lip syncing on a 'mini-DV' camera we had to edit the recordings on Adobe Premiere Pro, which is a piece of software designed to enable us to edit the recordings, such as cutting out unwanted footage and also matching up the lip sync with the original recording. We also had to delete the audio file of the recording so that only the song its self can be heard.
Once we had our edited video we then had to upload it onto 'YouTube.'
You can watch our lip syncing video here :
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