On 03.05.18 Sugini asked me to join her for a meeting with Colin who will be making the music to go with her documentary. She has asked me to come along to help her explain to colin what she wants as myself and her have had many conversation previously about how the music needs to work. This is the main things we spoke to Colin about and asked for:
He will be making three different music tracks each sitting at roughly 2/3 minutes each. These music tracks which each express a particular feeling/emotion so they can be used in certain areas of the documentary to help with the emotional intent. The three emotions we have chosen are one for sadness, one for happiness and one reflective track to show enlightenment.
It has been agreed that the sad track will use a lot of slow low bass noises which sound like gentle solum hums. These are similar to sounds used in Colin's Gunpowder Mill soundtrack but more emotionally appropriated for this piece. It must be slow, deliberate and low.
The Happiness track will be higher piano noises but not fast or too melodic as then they risk causing distractions. It must be slower still but still higher pitched and happy.
The Reflective track will be magical piano sound mixed with other upbeat sound which will agains till be slow so not to distract but will have more power than the others. I found an example for him online of a song 'Chasing Cloud 9' by Luch.
The songs need to be fairly repetitive in melody especially since they will be used more than once and this also gives Sugini the ability to loop them if she needs them for longer.
With everyone in agreement Colin has set out to make the music tracks and intends to have them back to Sugini in two days time. Then Sugini will be able to begin her final assembly adding in all the sound elements and subtitles to the visuals she has edited.
Billie Williams DFSA
Sunday, 6 May 2018
Girl Happy - Final Assembly of Edit
Today I went in to assemble the final edit of Girl Happy with the other Editor and the Director. We have the final colour file back from the colourist, the final audio track back from the sound team, the animations for the opening credits from the animator and the final credits I have on my mac which we made and I have adjusted. We decided to do the final build in Premiere Pro as we have all the footage in the correct format for this and this will save a lot of time as if we were to go back into avid we would have to transcode again etc.
We set up a project and began final assembly. This was literally a case of compiling all these elements together. Once we had them all together we check they were in the right place and everything was synced correctly. We then watched it through to check that everything was correct. At this point the Director pointed out some issues with the colouring and the sound that had not been fixed by the appropriate teams. The colourist had forgotten to colour a few frames in a scene so we contacted her and got her to colour these frames and then transfer us the new file with these frames coloured. However when it came to sound issues with levels etc the sound team were all unavailable and with a deadline fast approaching we have no time to wait around for them. Instead we decided to use our intittive to DIY tackle these issues ourselves, or at least the major ones that we could fix. Here are the issues and how we fixed them:
During the phone conversation with Georgie and her boyfriend you can hear the boyfriend say Georgie down the phone twice as she tried to hang up which is very jarring with visuals. We decided to remove the section Georgie by cutting out this very small section of sound and duplicating some ambience form this scene instead to cover the gap.
The beginning scene has a blanket rustling sound effect as the boyfriend appears from under the covers. However this sound is too loud and isn the right type of rustle to fit the visual. We have taken the loudest sections of rustles where no other noises are heard and no dialogue and lower the levels so it at least isn't as jarring for the audience.
In the shirt when ben sits in his room alone a lot of the sound effects of him moving are far too loud and the rustling of his shirt is again the wrong type of rustling. We decided that we would just lower the whole sound level slightly of this scene to make these sound effects less distracting from the emotional intent of the scene. We also cut out some of the loudest rustles and agin replied it with duplicated ambience form this same scene.
There are other sound issues and colouring issues however the Director has made the agreement with us that at this later stage leading ups to deadline we will export it with the DIY changes we've made to the bets of our ability and then after hand in before she does any premiers or festival entires we are all going to revisit it to get the sound team, colourist and ourselves to improve the small issues left in it. However I feel as an editor I have done everything within my power and time constraints to make this edit as best as it can be I just feel it is a case of poor organisations and timing which has left the film with the few flaws it does have currently.
We set up a project and began final assembly. This was literally a case of compiling all these elements together. Once we had them all together we check they were in the right place and everything was synced correctly. We then watched it through to check that everything was correct. At this point the Director pointed out some issues with the colouring and the sound that had not been fixed by the appropriate teams. The colourist had forgotten to colour a few frames in a scene so we contacted her and got her to colour these frames and then transfer us the new file with these frames coloured. However when it came to sound issues with levels etc the sound team were all unavailable and with a deadline fast approaching we have no time to wait around for them. Instead we decided to use our intittive to DIY tackle these issues ourselves, or at least the major ones that we could fix. Here are the issues and how we fixed them:
During the phone conversation with Georgie and her boyfriend you can hear the boyfriend say Georgie down the phone twice as she tried to hang up which is very jarring with visuals. We decided to remove the section Georgie by cutting out this very small section of sound and duplicating some ambience form this scene instead to cover the gap.
The beginning scene has a blanket rustling sound effect as the boyfriend appears from under the covers. However this sound is too loud and isn the right type of rustle to fit the visual. We have taken the loudest sections of rustles where no other noises are heard and no dialogue and lower the levels so it at least isn't as jarring for the audience.
In the shirt when ben sits in his room alone a lot of the sound effects of him moving are far too loud and the rustling of his shirt is again the wrong type of rustling. We decided that we would just lower the whole sound level slightly of this scene to make these sound effects less distracting from the emotional intent of the scene. We also cut out some of the loudest rustles and agin replied it with duplicated ambience form this same scene.
There are other sound issues and colouring issues however the Director has made the agreement with us that at this later stage leading ups to deadline we will export it with the DIY changes we've made to the bets of our ability and then after hand in before she does any premiers or festival entires we are all going to revisit it to get the sound team, colourist and ourselves to improve the small issues left in it. However I feel as an editor I have done everything within my power and time constraints to make this edit as best as it can be I just feel it is a case of poor organisations and timing which has left the film with the few flaws it does have currently.
'A Journey with Vairavar' (Payanam) Editing Days
For this piece I was originally her Assistant Director in pre-production helping with her idea development etc. However now we are in post-production I have been helping out not only as a AD but as an assistant Editor. Sugini has been editing her piece herself however I am assisting her in this as I have a lot of editing knowledge in terms of technique (narratively and Conceptually) and skills on Premiere Pro. Therefore we booked in two days were I was sitting going over a rough cut she had already made and helping her improve it and giving her advice on it etc. Again this took a lot of time because we had to use a transcript for me to understand the story as the subtitles aren't done yet. Here are the two days of editing we completed and the main points of what we covered:
30.04.18
Firstly as we went through section by section I was again going over the now much shorter transcript and helping her re-word some of the sentences to put it into proper english as some of the translations weren't always very good english. We also wanted it to flow as best as possible in the words as it needs to be poetic so we were just looking into using the best words and translations as we could to make this happen.
I really loved the visuals in the beginning section of the piece and how they introduced the location and the village etc. However my main advice was to make sure her Father gets introduced properly so we know exactly who he is otherwise there may be some confusion over this.
In terms of sound I also felt like we still need to hear natural sounds to go with the visuals as some of them are so interesting and beautiful that the sound will make even more of an experience out of that. This is particularly important in sections where her father isn't taking but should still happen potentially quietly in the background where her dad is talking too just to keep up the atmosphere.
I also told her to think about where the subtitles will go as this may potentially end up influencing the cuts and the timing of some shots as she needs to make sure people will be able to read it.
We then discussed music slightly and how this must come as a secondary element to her dads talking and also the natural sounds of nature etc heard in the shots. It all needs to work together to create an atmosphere.
A lot of the cinematography is amazing however some shots were slightly shaky or too fast moving but this is simply due to the nature of documentary and her trying to capture all these amazing things happening around her. I have suggested she add a stabiliser to some shots as this may help even out he camera shake and also by slowing some shots down slightly this may also help.
She has amazing silhouette shots in her piece where she uses sunsets etc to backlight her father and other objects to give an amazing visual. These shots are just so stunning I feel like she shouldn't distract from the with her dad talking and subtitles. Instead just let the audience enjoy this visual with maybe just some natural sound or music quietly in the background.
The sea shots are so immersive that I have suggested she add the sounds of the sea back in as the visuals are so rich I think an audience will be disappointed if they don't get to hear the sounds that come with this.
There were a few shots which stuck out to me and dint flow completely and one in particular was a bowl of tomatoes. This stuck out because it was a very common object to show us when everything else has been so unique. Also colour wise it doesn't fit in as its bright red compared to all the other earthy tones we've been seeing. She is going to look into changing this fir a shot which flows with the others surrounding it.
There is a moment where her Dad is listing all the wonderful things they have in the village however we don't see the visuals in the order he is listing them. This gives across mixed messages about some of these things and jars it slightly so Ive suggested she simply re-order this.
There are a few shots which I have suggested she cut down slightly just to avoid a few framing and composition issues which can be avoided if she cut a few frames earlier just so we always begin and end on beautiful compositions and framing.
Again due to the nature of documentary there were very minor focusing issues in a few shots which were noticeable to me. I am amazed at how well the whole piece is focused and how amazing it looks so its a shame to have just a few moments where the focus does suddenly drop out so Ive told her to maybe considering removing those moments from the shots.
I told her to think about how long shots are on screen interns of what the shot itself is. For example she has a very still statue shot on screen for too long as there is no movement in the shot so it needs to be on the screen less time than the heavy moment orientated shots surrounding it. Also there are some close up shots which don't have a lot to them which are on screen too long compared to some of the long shots surrounding them which have so much to look at. Its all about getting the timing right for the shots depending on how much there is to take in.
Some shots need brightening but that is only again because we suddenly jump from being outside in a bright colourful place to then inside a dark room/house. Ive told her to just keep this in mind especially when colouring her piece so she can bring up the brightness of some of the darker shots if needs be.
We need to make sure that we see her dad when he says phrases like 'in that corner' as this is him in the interview pointing to something so we should see him point so that the audience can fully follow what he is saying.
There are some moment between sections of the documentary where I think a black screen might be really powerful. This is because her dad says a sentence that is so intense that we need a moment to read it without not other distractions and give us a chance to absorb that before just bursting into the next visual.
Today we managed to get through half the documentary and I think it looking so promising.
01.05.18
Again we were going through the transcript for this second half again making sure it was translated and written in English as best as it could be.
In the really intense war section I felt like we were seeing her Fathers face for slightly too long. I wanted to see some imagery to go with these sad stories he was telling. His emotion is so powerful so I agree we should see him to see this but also we need to see visuals to add to this for us as the rest of the piece has been so visual.
Again there were just some close up shots which needs some stabilisation added to them but this is minor.
In a section about bomb shelter I feel like we loose variety of shots almost because we suddenly get a lot of mid shots of similar looking shelters. I love these visuals but they don't captivate us as much as they could if we see them all one after the other. I have suggested she break them up slightly with more close ups of frightening visuals like the bullet wholes in walls visuals etc.
I have suggested that she use very empty shots lacking people to add to the sadness of some of the parts of the story. In particular the shop and mine section as we haven't got that many sad visuals in this and emptiness is always a good way to project sadness.
Need to keep an eye on how to traditions between certain shots especially those where we see her father get emotional. We don't want to suddenly break this emotion but instead back this up visually and flow out of it and into the next section.
The survival stories her father tells are so intense and so amazing to hear that we need more time between the two of them to absorb what he has said and all the feelings that go with that. We need a break most fro a moment instead of having one move straight into the next. This makes them bigger deals in their own right as well by having a break.
She has a section where we see a lot of trees as this is what her father is talking about but it feels a bit too repetitive and obvious for what he is saying so I have suggested breaking these up with some slightly different shots to keep up the interest.
A lot of the time the she is showing her father in thought she only shows his face whereas as she has some amazing close ups of his hands etc as well so Ive told her to add these to for some variety.
In moments where the tension is building the pace doesn't always build up. I have suggested that a good way to build the pace would be to cut some shots slightly shorter and break them up with close ups which as we have discussed will be on the screen for less time anyway. For example when he is talking about the sea negatively put close ups of the waves and the shore etc.
Wehn he father starts talking about his brother we don't see him and therefore don't make a connection to him. She is going to see if she can use photographs of him to introduce him briefly so then we connect more and get more invested in the sad emotions and imagery to follow.
After this very sad chapter about his brother we defiantly need a slight break before the next chapter as we have just experienced really sad emotions, again this comes back to finding an appropriate transition shot and maybe even having a black screen up for a brief few seconds.
A lot of her travel shots to go in the journey section are beautiful but as expected they are shaky because she is on moving transport like trains. Again I've told her to experiment with adding stabilising to try and solve some of this although animal shake will be okay as the audience will expect this.
There is one mains till reflective shot int eh travels section and this shot is held for too long as it is the only still shot in this section it suddenly slows the whole pace down too much to have it in the middle of this section for too long.
There are also too many airport shots in this travels section which isn't too interesting after a while as we know what an airport looks like and it gets repetitive. Ive told her to maybe cut some of these weaker ones out and instead find metaphorical shots to represent travel such as sunsets and long shot landscapes etc.
In the end life lessons chapter we need to finish the film off with positive uplift visuals which give across the positive message intended. Its good to show him talking to the camera for a lot of this section but we still need visuals for this.
This second session of editing has been really good as I was able to see the changes made from yesterday and then suggest more today and help with them. I am so proud of how far this piece has come especially because of all the hard work Sugini has put into this film and I am so happy to have been able to aid her in this.
30.04.18
Firstly as we went through section by section I was again going over the now much shorter transcript and helping her re-word some of the sentences to put it into proper english as some of the translations weren't always very good english. We also wanted it to flow as best as possible in the words as it needs to be poetic so we were just looking into using the best words and translations as we could to make this happen.
I really loved the visuals in the beginning section of the piece and how they introduced the location and the village etc. However my main advice was to make sure her Father gets introduced properly so we know exactly who he is otherwise there may be some confusion over this.
In terms of sound I also felt like we still need to hear natural sounds to go with the visuals as some of them are so interesting and beautiful that the sound will make even more of an experience out of that. This is particularly important in sections where her father isn't taking but should still happen potentially quietly in the background where her dad is talking too just to keep up the atmosphere.
I also told her to think about where the subtitles will go as this may potentially end up influencing the cuts and the timing of some shots as she needs to make sure people will be able to read it.
We then discussed music slightly and how this must come as a secondary element to her dads talking and also the natural sounds of nature etc heard in the shots. It all needs to work together to create an atmosphere.
A lot of the cinematography is amazing however some shots were slightly shaky or too fast moving but this is simply due to the nature of documentary and her trying to capture all these amazing things happening around her. I have suggested she add a stabiliser to some shots as this may help even out he camera shake and also by slowing some shots down slightly this may also help.
She has amazing silhouette shots in her piece where she uses sunsets etc to backlight her father and other objects to give an amazing visual. These shots are just so stunning I feel like she shouldn't distract from the with her dad talking and subtitles. Instead just let the audience enjoy this visual with maybe just some natural sound or music quietly in the background.
The sea shots are so immersive that I have suggested she add the sounds of the sea back in as the visuals are so rich I think an audience will be disappointed if they don't get to hear the sounds that come with this.
There were a few shots which stuck out to me and dint flow completely and one in particular was a bowl of tomatoes. This stuck out because it was a very common object to show us when everything else has been so unique. Also colour wise it doesn't fit in as its bright red compared to all the other earthy tones we've been seeing. She is going to look into changing this fir a shot which flows with the others surrounding it.
There is a moment where her Dad is listing all the wonderful things they have in the village however we don't see the visuals in the order he is listing them. This gives across mixed messages about some of these things and jars it slightly so Ive suggested she simply re-order this.
There are a few shots which I have suggested she cut down slightly just to avoid a few framing and composition issues which can be avoided if she cut a few frames earlier just so we always begin and end on beautiful compositions and framing.
Again due to the nature of documentary there were very minor focusing issues in a few shots which were noticeable to me. I am amazed at how well the whole piece is focused and how amazing it looks so its a shame to have just a few moments where the focus does suddenly drop out so Ive told her to maybe considering removing those moments from the shots.
I told her to think about how long shots are on screen interns of what the shot itself is. For example she has a very still statue shot on screen for too long as there is no movement in the shot so it needs to be on the screen less time than the heavy moment orientated shots surrounding it. Also there are some close up shots which don't have a lot to them which are on screen too long compared to some of the long shots surrounding them which have so much to look at. Its all about getting the timing right for the shots depending on how much there is to take in.
Some shots need brightening but that is only again because we suddenly jump from being outside in a bright colourful place to then inside a dark room/house. Ive told her to just keep this in mind especially when colouring her piece so she can bring up the brightness of some of the darker shots if needs be.
We need to make sure that we see her dad when he says phrases like 'in that corner' as this is him in the interview pointing to something so we should see him point so that the audience can fully follow what he is saying.
There are some moment between sections of the documentary where I think a black screen might be really powerful. This is because her dad says a sentence that is so intense that we need a moment to read it without not other distractions and give us a chance to absorb that before just bursting into the next visual.
Today we managed to get through half the documentary and I think it looking so promising.
01.05.18
Again we were going through the transcript for this second half again making sure it was translated and written in English as best as it could be.
In the really intense war section I felt like we were seeing her Fathers face for slightly too long. I wanted to see some imagery to go with these sad stories he was telling. His emotion is so powerful so I agree we should see him to see this but also we need to see visuals to add to this for us as the rest of the piece has been so visual.
Again there were just some close up shots which needs some stabilisation added to them but this is minor.
In a section about bomb shelter I feel like we loose variety of shots almost because we suddenly get a lot of mid shots of similar looking shelters. I love these visuals but they don't captivate us as much as they could if we see them all one after the other. I have suggested she break them up slightly with more close ups of frightening visuals like the bullet wholes in walls visuals etc.
I have suggested that she use very empty shots lacking people to add to the sadness of some of the parts of the story. In particular the shop and mine section as we haven't got that many sad visuals in this and emptiness is always a good way to project sadness.
Need to keep an eye on how to traditions between certain shots especially those where we see her father get emotional. We don't want to suddenly break this emotion but instead back this up visually and flow out of it and into the next section.
The survival stories her father tells are so intense and so amazing to hear that we need more time between the two of them to absorb what he has said and all the feelings that go with that. We need a break most fro a moment instead of having one move straight into the next. This makes them bigger deals in their own right as well by having a break.
She has a section where we see a lot of trees as this is what her father is talking about but it feels a bit too repetitive and obvious for what he is saying so I have suggested breaking these up with some slightly different shots to keep up the interest.
A lot of the time the she is showing her father in thought she only shows his face whereas as she has some amazing close ups of his hands etc as well so Ive told her to add these to for some variety.
In moments where the tension is building the pace doesn't always build up. I have suggested that a good way to build the pace would be to cut some shots slightly shorter and break them up with close ups which as we have discussed will be on the screen for less time anyway. For example when he is talking about the sea negatively put close ups of the waves and the shore etc.
Wehn he father starts talking about his brother we don't see him and therefore don't make a connection to him. She is going to see if she can use photographs of him to introduce him briefly so then we connect more and get more invested in the sad emotions and imagery to follow.
After this very sad chapter about his brother we defiantly need a slight break before the next chapter as we have just experienced really sad emotions, again this comes back to finding an appropriate transition shot and maybe even having a black screen up for a brief few seconds.
A lot of her travel shots to go in the journey section are beautiful but as expected they are shaky because she is on moving transport like trains. Again I've told her to experiment with adding stabilising to try and solve some of this although animal shake will be okay as the audience will expect this.
There is one mains till reflective shot int eh travels section and this shot is held for too long as it is the only still shot in this section it suddenly slows the whole pace down too much to have it in the middle of this section for too long.
There are also too many airport shots in this travels section which isn't too interesting after a while as we know what an airport looks like and it gets repetitive. Ive told her to maybe cut some of these weaker ones out and instead find metaphorical shots to represent travel such as sunsets and long shot landscapes etc.
In the end life lessons chapter we need to finish the film off with positive uplift visuals which give across the positive message intended. Its good to show him talking to the camera for a lot of this section but we still need visuals for this.
This second session of editing has been really good as I was able to see the changes made from yesterday and then suggest more today and help with them. I am so proud of how far this piece has come especially because of all the hard work Sugini has put into this film and I am so happy to have been able to aid her in this.
'A Journey with Vairavar' (Payanam) Transcript & Edit Meetings
We met over two days so I could assist Sugini in helping her cut down her piece. She is aiming for 45 minutes to 1 hour but at the moment with everything on her timeline in Premiere she is looking at nearly 3 hours. She hasn't added visuals yet and instead has just be working on the interview footage so she can get the narrative in place. As the interview footage is of her father speaking Tamil she has made a transcript of everything he is saying so that as he speaks I can read along and understand the story he is telling. I then went through with Sugini picking out the best moments and the things we should be told and then eliminating things which don't seem helpful or necessary to this story. I also helped correct some of translation making it proper English. After two full mornings we managed to work through the entire nearly 3 hours of interview and the entire transcript. I have blurred the photos to hide the personal content of the film but here are the transcripts we worked on each day.
25.04.18
26.04.18
After two days of doing this Sugini went away and began cutting down her edit based on all the feedback and advice I gave after going through it and has informed me that it has now been cut down to 35 minutes which is amazing considering it was nearly 3 hours long. This is a much more appropriate and manageable time for her documentary to be for audiences to engage.
'A Journey with Vairavar' (Payanam) Installation Meeting 23/04/18
On 23/04/18 I met with Sugini to discuss the progress of her piece especially now she's in the post-production stage.
Firstly she notified me that the name of the piece has changed to match the themes of the piece more. She then said she had a new time aim which is 45 minutes.
We then spent most the meeting talking about installation plans. This is because we need to have a plan of how we will install ready for hand in so that we know what we will be setting up for the grad show and any other future exhibitions we may be a part of. Here are some of the ideas we discussed:
Her original plan was to build a pooja (prayer room) to put her piece in. However we don't think this is the best way to install her piece as this would be too complex and just distract away from this very powerful documentary she is making. I suggested if she did want to do something along these lines she simply it to just create a simplistic potentially medative space to watch the film in. I suggested she could do this in a number of way. She could mount a large tv screen lower on a wall with cushions and a rug etc in front of it to encourage people to sit down (in this sedative styled space) and really engage and focus on the film. There should still only be very minimal decoration if any though so that it doesn't distract the audience away from engaging with this film as it is a longer film.
If she is thinking of creating a certain type of space to play her film in I also had the idea that she could potentially use her quiet room installation piece she made in the university last year as this is a very small space which has already been made into a medative space. This way people can actually go in here, sit down and really connect with the film in a focused space. The only problem with this idea is it will limit the amount of people who can watch at one time.
We then spoke about sound for her piece and weather she would play this aloud or not. We think that playing it out loud will allow more people to watch at once however having headphones may let people really mindfully focus and engage with the piece as it will limit distractions around them. Headphones is more appropriate in a gallery anyway as it will limit noise effecting other pieces as well. It would be good to figure out if we can have more than one pair of headphones in the tv so at least a few people can watch at once since its so long.
Todays meeting has allowed Sugini to start getting an idea in her head now of how she will want her piece displayed and this is always good to know so that when your editing etc you have a vision of the end goal.
Saturday, 21 April 2018
Payanam Visual Documentary Piece - Meeting - 20.04.18
As you can see in previous blog posts for this piece I was involved as Sugini's AD in pre-production leading up to filming helping her discuss ideas and make decisions about the best actions to take and assisting her in the pre-production process as and when she needed help or wanted to talk through things. It was really nice to get to be involved in this, however I was involved during the production stage as she was shooting in Sri Lanka for 4 week and I was unable to fund myself to go here with her and also unable to take that much time away from my own project. I however am now back involved now she is back as she has completed her filming and now moved into the post-production editing stage. We have had a few brief chats in the past few weeks about thing like arranging footage and logging etc however on Friday afternoon I had an official in depth meeting with her to talk about where she had got to with the edit and see if I could help in anyway. She showed me some of her footage, showed me her planned narrative story and showed me her current timeline of interview footage which is nearly 3 hours long. She was really struggling to cut it down and extract the essentials and as it is in the Tamil language I wasn't able to help too effectively by watching it. Instead she ran through her plan in detail about the story and the story arc she had planned and her fathers timeline of events. I would then help her find better ways of thinking about then and discussed others ways of thinking when editing to help keep only the important and exciting bits but still have it flow. It helps that I am also an editor so I have knowledge on this subject and am able to a assist in this way too. The main things we spoke about specifically edit wise are:
She should aim to cut down the piece to 1 hour however it will probably help her if as she in narrowing it down she begins to already start adding visuals to the interview footage as the visuals will actually allow her to see what works well and what doesn't and then she will be able to refine a lot more based on this as well.
The introduction should introduce the place and culture most importantly and then introduce him as the voice afterwards. Balance between necessary info like introducing her father needs to be balanced with poetic beautiful information about Sri Lanka and his culture to allow some really beautiful visuals and this would be a great way to start to captivate the audience then once you have their attentions then show her Dad visually introducing himself. Sugini agreed that this would help her cut out information as well because then she can grab the audience with information but also visuals and therefore doesn't need to physically say as much about certain things which are shown visually. She also sees how excitement can be added by changing the order around slightly rather than only have the order that he spoke in because introducing him first isn't the most captivating thing about this documentary.
The teenage section of the piece seems like the most important really building towards the main climax so she really needs to work on focusing here in picking up the pace with the editing and making sure to use visuals which start to emphasise that disruption in her fathers story. Then the peak of the piece needs most time spent on it out of all of them as this is about the war and is really hard hitting stuff. Again she should choose her visuals wisely finding poetic visuals which mimic the fearful emotions felt by her father in this section.
After the main peak section we move into a slightly sadder emotion and she can really use this to gradually decrease the tension and fear by slowing the pace right down to again reflect the emotion of this section but also allowing the audience time to reflect themselves in this intense section and then move into feeling the sadness and using visuals which again poetically match this.
For the end resolution section it shouldn't go into too much cliche detail talking about how everything has been nicely resolved, instead it should still be reflecting back on what has happened but with positive outlooks on overcoming everything.
Another point I made is that majority of her audience won't speak Tamil so will be reading the subtitles so its really important to keep this in mind as it will be a different experience for someone who can understand as it would be to someone reading subtitles because the subtitles will seem like ready poetry with this picturesque images and that can really be used to her advantage to make some beautiful images which match really beautifully with lines of poetry almost.
Lastly we spoke about something I mentioned a lot which is editing with emotion! This is a technique Ive learnt from studying poetic visuals and then employed myself and found it to be really helpful. It is always best to know the emotional intention behind each section or scene and really think into that before and during editing so that you can consciously make sure the editing style as well as the visuals and everything else all feeds into that emotional internet that you had.
This meeting was really nice as I loved hearing about how Sugini's filming went and how much it has continued to develop since I was last able to be involved. I also really enjoyed being about to get involved again and help more from an editing point of view this time as this is another one of my passions and I really have enjoyed working on a piece like hers which is so interesting to me teaching a lot I didn't know about her culture and subject matter and also allowing me to work on something so different.
She should aim to cut down the piece to 1 hour however it will probably help her if as she in narrowing it down she begins to already start adding visuals to the interview footage as the visuals will actually allow her to see what works well and what doesn't and then she will be able to refine a lot more based on this as well.
The introduction should introduce the place and culture most importantly and then introduce him as the voice afterwards. Balance between necessary info like introducing her father needs to be balanced with poetic beautiful information about Sri Lanka and his culture to allow some really beautiful visuals and this would be a great way to start to captivate the audience then once you have their attentions then show her Dad visually introducing himself. Sugini agreed that this would help her cut out information as well because then she can grab the audience with information but also visuals and therefore doesn't need to physically say as much about certain things which are shown visually. She also sees how excitement can be added by changing the order around slightly rather than only have the order that he spoke in because introducing him first isn't the most captivating thing about this documentary.
The teenage section of the piece seems like the most important really building towards the main climax so she really needs to work on focusing here in picking up the pace with the editing and making sure to use visuals which start to emphasise that disruption in her fathers story. Then the peak of the piece needs most time spent on it out of all of them as this is about the war and is really hard hitting stuff. Again she should choose her visuals wisely finding poetic visuals which mimic the fearful emotions felt by her father in this section.
After the main peak section we move into a slightly sadder emotion and she can really use this to gradually decrease the tension and fear by slowing the pace right down to again reflect the emotion of this section but also allowing the audience time to reflect themselves in this intense section and then move into feeling the sadness and using visuals which again poetically match this.
For the end resolution section it shouldn't go into too much cliche detail talking about how everything has been nicely resolved, instead it should still be reflecting back on what has happened but with positive outlooks on overcoming everything.
Another point I made is that majority of her audience won't speak Tamil so will be reading the subtitles so its really important to keep this in mind as it will be a different experience for someone who can understand as it would be to someone reading subtitles because the subtitles will seem like ready poetry with this picturesque images and that can really be used to her advantage to make some beautiful images which match really beautifully with lines of poetry almost.
Lastly we spoke about something I mentioned a lot which is editing with emotion! This is a technique Ive learnt from studying poetic visuals and then employed myself and found it to be really helpful. It is always best to know the emotional intention behind each section or scene and really think into that before and during editing so that you can consciously make sure the editing style as well as the visuals and everything else all feeds into that emotional internet that you had.
This meeting was really nice as I loved hearing about how Sugini's filming went and how much it has continued to develop since I was last able to be involved. I also really enjoyed being about to get involved again and help more from an editing point of view this time as this is another one of my passions and I really have enjoyed working on a piece like hers which is so interesting to me teaching a lot I didn't know about her culture and subject matter and also allowing me to work on something so different.
Girl Happy - Editing 20.04.18
On Friday Myself and Maisie met with Tilly to show her the edit we had put together which was improved since she last saw it making changes based on feedback from herself and others including tutors and then making our own judgement calls on the piece. We showed her and firstly we began by fixing the titles and credits in the way she wanted as the documents we had been working forms with the names and roles weren't 100% complete or accurate. This took us some time to adjust and play around with to make sure this was correct now. We then let Tilly watch the entire piece through and see what she thought. She took notes as she did so and then instructed us on minor tweaks and changes to make to the edit to improve further still. A lot of it was simply cutting out/down shots which weren't looking up to standard for example shots with focus and shake problems as we made the decision that even if we lost some detail about the characters or story at least the piece will flow better and look more professional through out. It is just a shame that some shots could have been done a lot better with a proper focus pull or tripod used etc but we have spent a lot of time working around this and finding the best sections of shots were there aren't any mistakes or problems so thankfully this shouldn't be a noticeable problem to any viewer now. We then got people to view it to check that the story was defiantly understandable and that there were no mistakes we may have missed. Then we agreed upon this edit and picture locked it. We then exported a low resolution version of the vide with stamped in timecode and a AF sound file for the sound team to begin working on as soon as possible. This ended up taking longer than we realise to create/export these file types specially as we had some minor hard drive compatibly issues too. However we got these files sorted in the end so that the sound team can begin however we ran out of time to export the full res version and the file needed for the colour grader as this would take at least a few hours. We have spoke to the colourist and made the plan to come in early on Monday and export during the day while working on other things. Then Tilly will take the files on her hard drive to London on Tuesday morning to meet the colourist and transfer them to her hard drive so she can begin work. Other jobs we have also realised we must do on Monday before this final export is to add a few missing extra's names into the credits and add in the animations to the opening title sequence if Tilly is able to get an animator to complete them by then. We hopefully will also have time to double check everything in a few weeks time hen we get the sound and the colour graded film back so we can put it together, add bars and tones, check it over and export the finished version officially. Then in the slightly further future I will be re-editing potentially with Maisie again to short the piece more so that it can be entered into more film festivals as it is currently 20 minutes long and this isn't very film festival appropriate. Roll on Monday! Lets keep this moving forward!
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