Thursday, 21 January 2010

Account of Shoot Day

Our shoot day began at nine and finished seven hours later. I was pleased with our set on the day because it was identical to the our set design and storyboards. In this time we shot roughly a half hours worth of film, all of which will be divided down into five minutes worth of footage, which will hopefully be horrifying.

I think that overall, the day went well, our main actor, Rory, whom we chose to appeal to a niche audience of teenagers, was fantastic and made our lives very easy, the make up was superb on the day and was hugely life-like, but I think we could have controlled our dead bodies a little bit better because there were time when a lot of them were talking and it used up time we could have used to film little bits and bobs that would have made the finished product better. We worked surprisingly well as a team, Tom was a nice dictator of a director, Tamara was the producer who was constantly running around fixing things and making sure people knew where they needed to be, Alex did the lighting and the boom mike and I filmed the whole ordeal. It could have been worse.

The Reason we chose Rory was quite specific, our film is largely very similar to the saw films and the hostel films, our features a formulaic story line and isn't particularly dependant on development of character. One of the big reasons we chose to use Rory is that he does Drama and we all already knew that he was a phenomal actor, another big factor is that he could grow a convincing beard, we needed this to make it look like he had been in the same place for a while.

In terms of technicality, we used a Sony PD170 to film our production and we used one redhead lighting device strategically placed behind our window as to manipulate the affect that sunlight was coming through the cracks. We used the Genie scissor lift at one point to film a high sequence, and we used tracks to film Rory falling through a door. We used a Sennheiser microphone on a boom stand to record all of the sound, we may not use some of this sound as it sounds tinny.

There were times when Tom was trying to be a little too optimistic and there was a tracking section of filming which I didn't get quite right. But these were all tiny details that will not affect the overall product. Our roles within the group stayed as we had planned them to throughout, if any thing had changed it would be Alex who did the sound as well as the lights, but this wasn't difficult because there was barely any lighting and hardly any sound besides the FX we recorded and the screaming bits.

I was Head of Photography, Tom was Director and Tamara was producer. If i could change anything now i would change the shots of the bodies, where there were flashes of light, because i don't think that this is particularly justified as the audience wont have a clue as to where the light came from. Our shots we chose to take are almost identical to the storyboard. We didn't need to scout locations as we only shot in the studio. Our film differs from the preliminary task because we only shot about four shots in the preliminary task, whilst in our thriller we shot a whole range of shots. Also we recorded sound for our preliminary task, but we did this only with voices in a studio, but in our thriller we recorded footsteps, breaking glass, nails hitting the floor and a torch rolling around. Our story was also much more developed, but that was to be expected.

But what's done is done, and I am ecstatic as to what we got, and I am eagerly anticipating the editing process.

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