A fight video shot on Austin Texas ‘s famed sixth street.
I am posting this as part of an experiment as to how I can increase traffic to my website and UP its google ranking! My great “serious works of art” don’t seem to be garnering much attention, maybe some exploitative trash will!
I am still devoted to using Adobe Photoshop and Adobe After Effects and FLASH to create impactful motion graphics…. but…. no bucks no Buck Rogers!
Someone from “google business” called to verify my business listing.
I said ” this seems suspicious” and they hung up.
They said ” are you Austin Sky International??
I responded with ” No, I’m…. wait… wouldn’t you know WHO I’m supposed to be? This seems suspicious..”
and they hung up on me
I googled their number ( that showed up on my phone, (323)531-5932, and they’re a well known scam. I may prank call THEM tomorrow…. anyone ever get hit with this scam?
So you want to be a filmmaker but don’t have the time / money to go to film school?
Here is your first free film lesson
Get a camcorder, any camcorder, with a zoom- which I think ALL of them have. DON’T buy a DSLR, yet, they’re too hard to learn.(If you already own a DSLR with video capabilities…. ok… use that!)
You don’t even need to buy a NEW camera- scour goodwill or local pawnshops!
Zoom in on the subject of the shot.If its a wedding and the subject is a pastor speaking, then its the pastor speaking.
Zoom in ALL the way- get perfectfocus then zoom out.
If its is a horror movie and the villain is stabbing someone then subject would be….. hmmm…. the victim.Focus on the subject and let the rest of the scene be as focused as it naturally falls. It will look pretty good.
How lit is too lit? For a beginner, just look through the cameras viewfinder… it it seeks too hot / too bright move the light a little bit further away
For home movies, the cameras built in mike will be ok IF you put the camera REALLY close to the subject.
If you are interviewing someone, some one is giving a speech,an actor is giving a long monolog- consider this:
a $79 mike that goes into the smartphone that you and every one of your actors and crew members already owns!I own a samsung but Im sure that Apple iPhones and whoever else’s have a voice recording app!
Even is you are shooting your video on a smartphones video camera, have another smartphone in the subjects front pocket.I once shot a wedding with the groom having his phone in his front pocket, no microphone, just the phone itself, and I edited the grooms sound with my cameras video! It sounded great!
As a beginner, always always always use a TRIPOD!Nothing screams out “ amateur” more than shaky hand held video footage. Get ALL of your footage, even close ups and B-Roll, using a tripod.As a beginner try not to have your hands anywhere near the camera. You won’t be able to resist the urge to zoom in and out or move around.Even if you are shooting on a phone- get a tripod.
Here is a pretty good phone cameratripod:
and for Pete’s sake don’t hold your phone vertical! keep it horizontal.
If you MUST go hand held, stay zoomed out wide and get as physically close to the subject as possible.
And always remember to shoot do that people other than you need to be able to view it and understand whats going on.
Yes some movies and TV shows use handheld. The opening of Saving Private Ryan comes to mind. But they’re deliberately using handheld footage to make a point they’re TRYING to make it look rough and shaky. its handheld footage shot by experienced professionals using expensive state of the art equipment. Even the much maligned “Blair Witch Project” was shot mainly with tripods ( at least the first act was).
I shot this wedding reception many years ago hand held and I cringe at how sloppy it looks:
If your computer system, comes with some kind of video editing software, use it.Otherwise get a “real” editing system like Adobe Premiere, Final Cut Pro or Sony Vegas.They don’t cost much more than the amateur apps and think about it- if you spend 6 months or a year struggling to learn a professional application you will be much more hire-able if you apply for a job in the video field.If were hiring an editor, someone with a lot of experience editing home movies with Premiere or Final Cut would be more attractive to me than someone who’s been using “ Larry’s magical home video maker!”
Learn Adobe Photoshop!Not “learn something LIKE Adobe Photoshop” But … learn Adobe Photoshop!
Watch a lot of films made on youtube. Every single one of them was made by someone who THOUGHT he was making a masterpiece that they THOUGHT would take them into the big leagues. Some are good, some are well intentioned but kinda awful, many are just awful!Learn from their mistakes!
Two last things
Even if you can’t afford “film school” consider take ONE film or digital video class at your local community college.You can make friends with the teacher and or fellow students and work on projects together! As a student you can get the Adobe Creative Suite for a FRACTION of what it normally costs.
And…. the class itself should teach you something!
Lastly- everything I said about tripods and keeping all your shooting safe and boring….eventually you will outgrow ALL that and be shooting hand held and using gliders and sliders like a boss!
Now start practicing today! Make a “documentary” on your family or sport or hobby!If its no good – so what? Just don’t post it to youtube! Your next one will be better!
Getting and sending physical Christmas cards have been a tradition for centuries (or…. maybe just one century!). It didn’t always have so much to do with emotions, family or religion. I think it was sometimes about networking- letting contacts, business acquaintances etc know your new address, reminding them that you’re still around…..
Physical Christmas cards have getting replaced by emails and myspace / facebook posts for almost a decade…..
No you can’t hang emails over your doorway……. but here I am folks! Merry Christmas and Happy New Year!
At christmas time the new york rock radio station I loved would play snippets of the Beatles Christmas albums. They DJs said they were sent out to members of the British Beatles fan club as Christmas gifts but weren’t sent out to American members…
Thus they were rare and apparently much sought after expensive collectors items. And now here they are for free.
Star Wars: The Force Awakens is full of eye-popping effects, both practical and CG. And if you were paying attention, you may have noticed a bit of stop-motion animation thrown in there as well. After the jump, watch a video showing the Force Awakensstop-motion sequence came together under the guidance of VFX wizard Phil Tippett. (Minor spoilers for Star Wars: The Force Awakens ahead.)
The Force Awakens stop-motion sequence comes as a little Easter egg for fans. When Finn is aboard the Millennium Falcon, he accidentally hits a button that turns on the Dejarik holochess board. He stares at it for a moment, attracting Chewbacca’s attention, before turning it off. The moment has no real impact on the plot; it’s really just there as a fun callback for fans of the original.
As teased way back in July, Adam Savage dropped by Tippett Studio to see Tippett and his team work on the stop-motion animation sequence. If you’re interested in Star Wars making-of lore, or just stop-motion animation in general, the video is worth a watch. Tippett and his team discuss the process of animating these little monsters, and also about Tippett’s work on the original film.
It’s interesting to see that J.J. Abrams’ preference for practical effects over CG ones for The Force Awakens extended even to the holochess set. It probably would’ve been simpler to recreate it in CG, but it wouldn’t have felt quite the same.
As Tippett explains in the video, bringing back the holochess set wasn’t as easy as dusting off the original models. “We got a call from [Lucasfilm president] Kathy Kennedy saying that they wanted to restore the original chess set from Star Wars, and the problem was that the characters that we had made, you know, close to 40 years ago, were in a horrible state of disintegration,” he said.
Though they knew exactly where the originals were — on a plaque presented to George Lucas — the figures were beyond repair. “They were made out of a rubber that disintegrates over time, and turns into like graham crackers,” said Tippett. So he and his team went into the archives and used photogrammetry to reconstruct the characters for 3D printing. The new figures are made of silicone, and should last longer than the old ones did.
Best of all, Tippett reveals that the holochess game as seen in The Force Awakens is actually a continuation of the holochess game from A New Hope. “We elected to pick up where we left off … and we just swapped out who wins this time,” said Tippett.
The Star Wars: The Force Awakens stop-motion sequence, along with the rest of Star Wars: The Force Awakens, is in theaters now.
Ive seen a lot of fan film, ALL are well intentioned but many are painfully amateurish…. kids in costume in their local park banging toy sabers together…. fanboys in front of a green screen, using the camcorders mike…
There was the classic TROOPS, whos producers wisely played to their weaknesses, that since they were shooting on video why not just make it look like an episode of the TV show COPS…?
This “Empire Falls” looks like they were copying the look seen the “Force Awakens” trailer…… they really did a good job BUT arent the troopers now retconned to be clones of Jango Fett and if they DO mix in new recruits don’t they give the newbies haircuts? Still I give this an A for effort and a B-plus for execution!
And lets not forget the first ever Star Wars fan film: