Tuesday, March 24, 2020

Video Editing Choices



Since the Government has sent us to our rooms and we are inevitably watching more films than usually, perhaps it's time to switch from consumers to producers...

"Don't hate the media, be the media."
- Jello Biafra
FRAMING

Fargo - Framing Relationships | The Cinema Cartography


Usually when we experience media we do it passively. I do it as well, we get wrapped up in the story and the characters and are no longer paying attention to the technical aspects of the production.


TV Shows are typically shot with 3 cameras, alternating between in editing. Other Directors like P.T. Anderson, Stanley Kubrick, and Alfred Hitchcock are auteurs... They put a temendous amout of effort in pre and post production...

An important part of this process is story-boarding and shot lists....









The above Storyboards were drawn by professional comic book illustrators. On independent productions they're usually much more crude:





These Directors meticulously choose where to place the camera, how to block the scene, and what to do in the editing room. 



Discussion:

Why would it make sense to cut on action?

What effect does a match cut have? 

What does a dissolve transition show?


If you show a character from a low angle what does it say about the character? Or for that matter, looking down on a character?





When shooting there's an invisible line that is rarely crossed- 



Why use a Wide/Long Shot verses a Close Up? A Two-Shot verses a Single? Inside the circle of action and outside? Jumpcuts? Parallel action? POV? Over the Shoulder? L and J cuts? Cutting on beat? A Oner? A Reveal? Magic Hour? Slowing down or Speeding up video?

Assignment: Choose a short scene from a movie and point out something about camera, blocking or sound.

Music Videos:


This video seems fitting for the paranoia of today. Anything you like or dislike about the cuts?

Assignment: Choose a music video, show and we'll discuss.

Now it's your turn: 1. Record yourself, family, friends or Choose some video from phone 2. Add music 3. mix in stock footage.

Example:


Alternate assignment: Put pictures from Facebook to music and make video:



FOOT NOTE:

Example of Production that had a lot of planning-




Sunday, March 22, 2020

Pop Icon

                                                  S H A K I R A

                         LOVE   ME      OR        HATE   ME 

             “My brain, I believe, is the most beautiful part of my body.”


Shakira

                       “The leaders are lacking love, and love is lacking leaders.”


                                                Who Is Shakira?

QUICK FACTS

NAME

Shakira
BIRTH DATE

February 2, 1977 (age 43)

PLACE OF BIRTH

Barranquilla, Colombia

FULL NAME
Shakira Isabel Mebarak Ripoll

ZODIAC SIGN
Aquarius



Early Life and Career

Shakira Isabel Mebarak Ripoll was born on February 2, 1977, in Barranquilla, Colombia. With a Lebanese father and Colombian mother, Shakira honors both her Latino and Arabic heritage in her music. She wrote her first song at the age of 8 and signed her first record deal at 13.

Breakthrough: 'Pies Descalzos'

After her first two albums flopped, Shakira took the reins of her third album, becoming involved in every aspect of its production. 
Released in 1996, Pies Descalzos, meaning "bare feet," sold more than 3 million copies. The album featured her trademark sound, a blend of Latin, rock and Arabic musical styles. 
Her follow-up record, Dónde Están Los Ladrones? (1998), which translates as "Where are the thieves?", reached the top of Billboard's Latin charts. Not long after, Shakira won her first Grammy Award (best Latin pop album) for Shakira: MTV Unplugged (2000).
With the success of her albums, Shakira became a music superstar in the Spanish-language markets, known for her strong vocals and incredible hip-shaking belly dance moves.
                                     HIPS DO NOT LIE, DON'T THEY!?
The album reached No. 3 on the charts, selling more than 200,000 copies in its first week of release. Laundry Service's big hits included "Whenever, Wherever" and "Underneath Your Clothes."
In an attempt to increase her American fan base, in 1997, at the age of 20, the singer moved with her family to Miami, Florida, and taught herself to write songs in English. There, she enlisted Emilio Estefan, of Gloria Estefan and the Miami Sound Machine fame, to act as her manager and producer.

Thursday, March 19, 2020



No, I regret nothing


French singer Édith Piaf, also known as “The Little Sparrow,”
was one of the most iconic performers of her native country.

Édith Piaf was born in Belleville, on the outskirts of Paris, on December 19, 1915, and rose to international stardom in the late 1930s as a symbol of French passion and tenacity. Of Piaf’s many ballads, “La Vie en Rose,” which she wrote, is remembered as her signature song. Other favorites among the singer's repertoire include "Milord," "Padam Padam," "Mon Dieu," the charming "Mon Manège à Moi" and the anthemic "Non, Je Ne Regrette Rien." Having a life beset by addictions and related health issues, Piaf died in France in 1963 at the age of 47. She continues to be revered as a national treasure.

Tumultuous Early Life

Édith Piaf was born Édith Giovanna Gassion in Belleville, Paris on December 19, 1915. Much of her past is shrouded in mystery and may have been embellished during her time as a celebrity. It is believed she was named after the World War I British nurse Edith Cavell, executed for helping Belgian soldiers escape from German captivity. Her mother, Annetta Giovanna Maillard, was a cafe singer of Moroccan Berber descent who performed under the name “Line Marsa.” Piaf’s father, Louis-Alphonse Gassion, was a highly skilled street acrobat.
Annetta had abandoned Piaf to live with her maternal grandmother, where she grew malnourished. Being taken from that household by her father or another relative, Piaf then lived with her paternal grandmother, who ran a brothel. Piaf suffered greatly from impaired vision for a time yet also became renowned for her voice at a young age. At the age of 7, she joined her father and a circus caravan to travel to Belgium, eventually participating in street performances all over France.
Piaf later separated from her father, who was often a temperamental, abusive taskmaster, and set out on her own as a street singer in and around Paris. At 17, she and a youngster named Louis Dupont had a daughter, Marcelle, who died of meningitis at 2 years old.

Rise to Fame

In 1935, Piaf was discovered by Louis Leplée, who owned the successful club Le Gerny off the Champs-Élysées. Her nervous energy and small stature inspired the nickname that would stay with her for the rest of her life: La Môme Piaf ("The Little Sparrow"). Piaf received guidance in the literary arts from French poet/historian Jacques Bourgeat, while Leplée ran a major publicity campaign promoting Piaf’s opening night, which was attended by the likes of Maurice Chevalier. She was popular enough to record two albums that same year.
Leplée was murdered the following spring. After authorities investigated her as a potential accomplice to the crime, Piaf and a new team took charge of her career. She began to work with Raymond Asso, who also became her lover, and adopted her stage name Édith Piaf permanently. Continuing the tradition of performing chansons réalistes, she commissioned songs that romanticized her life on the streets, passionately emphasizing her inner strength. The singer worked closely with composer Marguerite Monnot during this time.

Revered by luminaries like Jean Cocteau, Piaf was one of the most popular performers in France during World War II. Her concerts for German servicemen were controversial, although it was later believed that she had been working for the French Resistance and helped Jewish comrades escape Nazi persecution.
After the war, her fame spread quickly. She toured Europe, South America and the United States. Although American audiences were initially put off by her dour demeanor and dark clothes, Piaf garnered glowing reviews and ultimately achieved enough of an audience to warrant several televised performances on The Ed Sullivan Show throughout the 1950s.

Personal Life

The personal life of Édith Piaf was characteristically dramatic. She was involved in three serious car crashes after 1951, leading to morphine and alcohol addictions.
Piaf, living through the hurts and abandonments of her early life, had high-profile romances with many of her male associates and some of the biggest celebrities in France. Known for intense dalliances that fizzled out, she married twice. Her first marriage to singer Jacques Pills in 1952 lasted until 1957. Her 1962 marriage to Théo Sarapo, a Greek hairdresser and performer 20 years her junior who was gay, lasted until her death the following year. 
It was revealed posthumously via letters that Piaf had great affection for Greek actor Dimitris Horn during the mid-1940s, but married boxer Marcel Cerdan, whom she met in 1947, was considered to be her deepest love. Their time together was cut short when he perished in a 1949 plane crash, with the singer recording "L'Hymne à L'Amour" the following year in his honor.

Death and Legacy

Piaf remained professionally active until the final years of her life, performing frequently in Paris between 1955 and 1962. In 1960, though aiming to retire, she had a resurgence of sorts with the recording of the Charles Dumont and Michel Vaucaire tune "Non, Je Ne Regrette Rien," which would become her latter day anthem.

April 1963, Piaf recorded her last song. With an array of health hardships over the years, Édith Piaf died from liver failure at her French Riviera villa on October 10, 1963. (Other potential causes of death have been suggested as well.) She was 47. The archbishop of Paris denied requests for a Mass, citing Piaf’s irreligious lifestyle, but her funeral procession was nonetheless a massive undertaking attended by thousands of devotees. She is buried in Père Lachaise Cemetery in Paris next to her daughter Marcelle.


A lauded biopic on Piaf was released in 2007—La Vie en Rose, with French actress Marion Cotillard ardently embodying the singer and earning an Academy Award. The Knopf book No Regrets: The Life of Edith Piaf, by Carolyn Burke, was published in 2011. 
Plans to mark the centennial of Piaf's birth in 2015 include a 350-track box set to be released by Parlophone and a major exhibition to be held at the Bibliothèque Nationale de France. "The magic of Piaf is her repertoire that touches everyone,” said Joël Huthwohl, the head curator of the exhibit, in an interview with The Guardian. “She sang simple songs with lovely melodies that spoke to everyone at those important moments in their lives."



Source:

Tennis

Who is the greatest of all time?

The greatest 3 players who ever played tennis in modern time are the swiss maestro Roger Federer, The spanish armada Rafael Nadal and the superb serb Novak Djokovic. All together combined, they hold 56 grand slam titles under their belts. Grand Slams are the 4 major tennis tournaments that are held every year and are the most watched by the fans. The first grand slam of the year is the Australian Open located in Melbourne, Vicotria and the surface that is used is hard. Second grand slam is the French Open located in Paris, France and it's surface is clay. Third grand slam is Wimbledon located in London, England and it's surface is grass. The final tournament is the US Open located in Queens, New York and holds a hard surface on it's courts.

Image result for australian open

                             Rod Laver Arena, Melbourne Park

Image result for french open

                  Phillip Chatrier Court, Roland Garros, Paris


Image result for wimbledon

                     Centre Court, Wimbledon, London

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               Arthur Ashe Stadium, Flushing Meadows, New York  

Each of the 3 players are considered legends in one of those 4 tournaments. Roger Federer is the king of grass, winning 8 wimbledon titles and reaching 12 finals. Rafael Nadal is the undisputed champion in the french open, winning a record breaking 12 titles and losing only twice since his debut at the tournament. For Novak Djokovic, he is the ruler in Melbourne, winning 8 australian open crowns out of 8 finals. As far as rank is concerned, Federer comes first with 20 total slams, followed by Nadal with 19 slams and then Djokovic comes last with 17 titles.When it comes to the debate of who's the greatest of all time, it gets really tricky to decide which one of them is the all mighty king. One major factor that should be taken into consideration is the head to head record between players and each other, and when we take a look we see that Djokovic comes on top beating both Federer and Nadal by a slim margin. Another factor is the win loss record for each player on each surface. It's safe to stay Nadal is basically undefeated on clay, he only lost around 10-15 matches throughout his lengthy career. But if we look at grass and hard surfaces, we find that Djokovic and Federer fare better, winning more titles and matches than Nadal. In my opinion, I think that they are all amazing atheletes that took the game to a whole new level, and it's hard to decide which one is the greatest of all time until they all retire so that the debate would be fair for everyone.


Image result for roger federer wimbeldon             Image result for rafael nadal roland garros

       Roger Federer                                      Rafael Nadal


Image result for novak djokovic australian open

      Novak Djokovic

Check out this link for the best points played for the top 3.
Who's the greatest of all time?