Wednesday 19 December 2012

Evaluation Question 3 Possible Idea



This is my idea for my final version of my Evaluation Question 3, but I am not sure if this is the version I will go for as my final copy. I may attempt to create another 'TV Commercial' type video using MoviePlus, rather than the more simple Animoto format I have used here. I'll think about it over the next few days.

Tuesday 18 December 2012

Evaluation Question 4 (Draft)


How did you use media technologies in the construction and research, planning, and evaluation stages?

Media is known for being very technologically centered  and it was obvious from the beginning that a wide array of different technologies would be needed to create, research, plan, and evaluate our music videos and ancillary texts. I have tried to use as many different technologies throughout my work, to create variation and to experiment with how different pieces of technology could help me to achieve what I wanted with my video and ancillary texts. Below, I have stated each piece of technology I have used in this project.

Websites

Blogger (www.blogger.com)
Blogger was a vital part of my project, enabling me to keep all of my work organized, and in one central spot. I have used blogger as a main hub for all of my work throughout the research, planning, construction, and evaluation stages of my project, and with Blogger’s labelling system, it means that I can see any of the work I have done, incredibly quickly. The posting system is also very useful, as it lets me post my thoughts and ideas, alongside my work, as I go along.

YouTube (www.youtube.com)
YouTube, the most popular video sharing website in the world, has also been a very useful tool for my project. Using it, I have been able to upload all of the videos I have created for my project, including the final music video, and all of the drafts before it. I have then been able to embed my YouTube videos onto my blog to keep them all in the same place as the rest of my work. The commenting system on YouTube has also been a lot of help, letting people view my video and drafts, and then comment their views and ideas straight onto the video, letting me get what people think at real time.

Animoto (www.animoto.com)
Animoto is a quick, and easy to use video creation website. On it you can easily put together quick, presentation style videos, using pictures, text, and music. It is slightly restrictive, as it follows several set themes, and has little room for any real editing, but as a quick presentation creator, it has been a lot of use. I have used Animoto for my pitch video, and for the final evaluation question three.

Twitter (www.twitter.com)
I have also used social networking site, Twitter, in my project. I created an ‘official’ twitter page for my fictional band to give them some character, and to create more realism. On it, my band can make announcements and talk directly to their fans. It is also a good way for me to get feedback on my work from people who follow my own twitter account.

Facebook (www.facebook.com)
Facebook, another social networking website, has been used primarily for feedback purposes. On it, I have posted my final video to allow my friends to watch it and feedback their views on it, to me.

Yahoo Mail (www.yahoomail.com)
Yahoo Mail has been my main email site for this project, allowing me to send my work home from the school PCs if I need to work on it anymore.

Research & Planning

Google/Google Images (www.google.co.uk)
Google was the primary search engine I used during the research and planning stage of my project. It allowed me to access millions of websites and billions of pictures across the internet, which gave me a grand scope to take my research from.

Samsung Galaxy Ace GT-S5830
I used my android phone, the Samsung Galaxy Ace GT-S5830, several times in the process of creating my video. All of my location test shots were taken with the phone’s 5 megapixel camera. I also used it to take photos for the band’s twitter page. Another thing I used the phone for was to arrange the filming days with everybody, using its calling and texting features.

Microsoft Word 2010
The definite choice for word processing software, I used Microsoft Word 2010 for any writing I needed to do for my blog. It allowed me to plan out what I had to do, create bulletproof lists of what a certain piece should include, write these very evaluation questions, etc. It is an extremely useful piece of software, and I think most of the work I now do would be lost without it.

Windows Movie Maker
I used this limited, but simple piece of video editing software early on in my project to put together a short animatic. Although troublesome to use, this software did the job reasonably well, though I know it was definitely below par for my final pieces.

Production

Panasonic HD Camera
The camera I choose to film with for this project was a Panasonic HD Camera. It was versatile and handheld, allowing me to take it through the woody locations without any difficulty. It was also extremely easy to use and set up, which gave me the option of spontaneous ideas and filming certain ideas as they arrived. The HD capabilities meant that the video quality would be high as well.

SanDisk 8 GB SD Card
I saved all of my film footage onto a SanDisk 8 GB SD Card. I felt that I wouldn’t need over 8 GB of memory for my filming, so didn’t see any reason to pay more for a card with greater memory. The SD reader on my laptop allowed me to easily transfer all of my footage straight from the SD card to my editing software.

Adobe Photoshop CS2
Despite being a slightly older version of Photoshop, this is the version I used on my laptop to create my digipack, advert, and to draw all of the artwork that was used in my digipack. It enabled me to easily put together the layouts for all of my ancillary work, and in addition with the touchscreen laptop, it made drawing the artwork surprisingly easy.

Post Production

HP TouchSmart tx2
This is the laptop/tablet I used for the majority of my project. It features a touchscreen which can be swivelled around and place down like a tablet if it is to be used purely as a tablet. It can also be operated as a normal laptop however, featuring the usual keyboard and screen set up if desired. I found the touchscreen extremely useful when it came to drawing the art for my digipack. The ability to use the built in pen to draw straight onto the screen was perfect for what I needed to do.

College PCs and College Apple Macs
I used the college PCs and Apple Macs throughout my project to upload different pieces onto my blog, or to add new blog posts.

AVS Video Editor Trial Edition
I tried out the free trial edition of AVS Video Editor for the first draft of my music video. I found that although easy to use, this piece of software did not provide the quality of video that I required for my final piece.

Serif MoviePlus X5
For the editing of my final music video, after trying out several different pieces of software, I settled on the less-widely known Serif MoviePlus X5. I found this software very easy to pick up and use, whilst still giving me all the features I needed, one of the most important being the ability to lower the brightness and saturation of the clips I was using. It was also extremely easy to export my video from the software to a DVD and onto YouTube, which was a bonus.

Evaluation Question 3 (Draft)


Feedback has been a vital piece of coursework, allowing me to improve and fix my pieces at every stage of production. It’s the main part of evolving and improving a product. Finding out what your market feels about you piece is a useful way to work out what is good about it and what needs to be improved. During my project, I have received various pieces of audience feedback at many different stages. Without the feedback, I would never have realised the major things that needed changing in my first draft, such as the need to put the monster in the background more and not show it properly at any point, maintaining the suspense that I lost too early in the first draft. The following is the main feedback I received on my piece:

"Video fits in with the genre well. Quite scary at times, but I suppose that's what you want it to be like, and it suits the genre very well. The actors are really good. I like the theme of little red riding hood also; it's different. When you do the singing with the face paint, it suits the genre really good and the lip syncing is good. Well done man." Vishal Kumar

"Excellent use of mise en scene and well thought-out location. Effective lighting and accurate lip syncing. Good use of contrasting colours with the girl's little red riding hood type appearance.
Good editing of shots, which creates suspense and maintains interest all the way through."
Ben Scott

"Narrative works well with the shots. The parallel editing is effective is a lot of shots. Lighting works well the dark genre. Well done :)" Sian Lynes

"The narrative works really well with the video and the whole concept is very effective. If anything, maybe making some shots lighter would of been better to be able to see things in more detail." Laura Ward

"The narrative is by far the most effective aspect of the video; it is believable as it feels very much like you are watching a story. Good use of filters and effects; adds to the creepy atmosphere.
Costume/makeup choices fit well with the theme of the video, and the syncing of the guitars and singing to the music is very accurate. The only criticism I can make is that some shots are a little too dark, particularly the shots of 'Manson' singing. Well done, though."
Martyn Hollinshead

"The narrative is really well thought out and generally scares us, which is what we presume you intended. Your costume and make-up is really well done and you look the part. The effects/editing in the video is very effective and advance. If there was one thing to improve on, then it would maybe be the lighting on the main singers face, because it was hard at times to see the lip-syncing." Mattie White & Steph Law

"Good narrative and good costume. Maybe the end could have been scarier as it built up to just her eyes being closed. Makeup and transition are very effective." Mae Burton & Laura Barsby

The song and genre I chose to use for my music video is not a particularly popular one in modern society, with metal and Marilyn Manson falling more on the boundaries of youth culture. This came as a sort of blessing in disguise, as it meant that all of my feedback would be mostly unbiased and based around the video itself, rather than a love for the music being used. There was still the chance that someone would give negative feedback based around not liking the genre or song, but this was highly unlikely to happen given the lesser known song I used.                                        The feedback that affected my choices the most however, was what I received after my I made my first draft. This was highly influential over my decision making process as it was the major crossroads in the project, in which I could have gone in many different directions. I feel my first draft was not up to scratch but feedback from it gave me the means to get it to the stage that it is today, what I consider a big step. This included the idea of using a little bit more of the singing and guitar sections in the video, to attempt to improve the overall acting, and to hide the creature more and to never show it fully, as this ruined the suspense and horror of the situation. This feedback also confirmed that the strongest point of my video was the narrative I was attempting to create through it, and that this was the point I should put focus on.

Monday 17 December 2012

Evaluation Question 2 (Draft)

How effective Is The Combination Of Your Main Product And Ancillary Texts?

For a musician to market a song or album well, everything has to connect, forming a campaign. The album artwork, advertisements, and music videos all have to follow the same line of thought and themes. I have tried to emulate this in my final pieces as much as I can, although occasionally I have forgone this for certain features.
I feel the two pieces of my campaign that connect together the most successfully are my digipack artwork and my advertisement. I made sure that both feature the same kind of imagery, although I was going to base my advert on the inverted crucifixion image inside of my digipack, until I realised that this was too in your face and that something more subtle would suffice. I then chose to take the image most people would see when they thought of the album, the front cover, and then base my advert around that. By showing the entire body of the image from the cover, I feel that I have successfully connected the two texts together into a campaign, whilst still creating a difference between them. It would have been far easier to have just used the exact image from the front cover, but I felt that this would be a cop-out and ineffective as a campaign.
My video is a little bit more different and hasn’t got as strong connections as the ancillary pieces do, but I feel it still connects well as part of a campaign. As the music video is not the only song on the album, its connection isn’t 100%, as it doesn’t copy the artwork themes. It is still however, based around that strong theme of horror that is seen in the artwork adorning the digipack and advert. I felt like this was the most important feature for me to get across in all of my pieces; that scary, fear-inducing imagery. I also chose not to use any photographs in my digipack, preferring to go for purely illustrations. I feel this is reflective of my genre, heavy metal, and that photos of the band would have dampened the horror ideas I was trying to get across. Because of this, I lost a major link between my ancillary texts and my video, as none of the band members featured in the video are shown anywhere in any of the rest of the campaign texts. As I didn’t have this major connection, I had to try and keep the campaign idea between the different pieces, in other ways.
Another difference between my ancillary texts and my video was the absence of any gore in my video. The artwork in my digipack, especially the crucifixion image, was quite gory, however, I felt this wasn’t needed in my video. I wanted my video to go for a more psychological idea of horror, in the vein of Marilyn Manson, rather than a bloody one, as shown in some of my digipack. This means that the two pieces do contrast slightly when seen together, but I feel still form a successful campaign.
Finally, I used a great deal of desaturation and darkness on both my video and ancillary pieces, to create an essence of horror. This means that both pieces fit together, due to their similar colour schemes of dark grey and black. I felt that putting a lot of my video in the shadows, helped to boost the fear factor of it, and then this meant that darkening the digipack artwork combined the two pieces into one campaign, and continued the general theme of darkness and horror throughout.

Sunday 16 December 2012

Evaluation Question 1 (Draft)

In What Ways Does Your Media Product Use, Develop Or Challenge Forms And Conventions Of Real Media Products?


For my video, digipack, and magazine advert, I realised that I would have to follow many of the conventions of the metal genre. Heavy metal is a very visual genre of music, relying greatly on a set of preconceived forms and ideas. If my video was to succeed and fit the role I wanted it to, it would have to stick to these conventions pretty well, although some developing or challenging of the conventions would make it stand out from the rest. The main artists I chose to base my work on were shock metal bands like Marilyn Manson and Rob Zombie. These bands focus greatly on horror and controversial imagery, sometimes being very anti-religion and anti-society. I have tried to keep this with my project, especially in the digipack and advert campaign, using several horror-based drawings to keep my work following the conventions. My video also contains a horror theme, primarily in the hooded figure stalking the girl throughout it. Marilyn Manson is usually more subtle during his music videos and doesn’t usually follow a strong narrative, although I felt this was the route I wanted to go down, rather than just random gothic images.                                                     

I turned the darkness and saturation down on most of the shots in my video and on my digipack and advert images. This fits with the metal genre well, as they prefer to go for a darker, more twisted, and fiercer view of reality than other music genres do. I made sure that the girl in the video was wearing a bright red coat, as not only did this link it with fairytales like Red Riding Hood, but it also stood out even more once everything around it in the shot had its saturation turned down. The red stands out beautifully against the greyscale surroundings, giving connotations of danger, as red can signify this pragmatically.                                                                                   

The location my video was shot it was some woods around my local area. Dark woods have been used several times in metal videos, so I felt like I was sticking a convention of the genre by using a location like this. Metal videos that are set in woods include the video for ‘The Animal’ by Disturbed, ‘Curl of the Burl’ by Mastodon, and ‘The Amity Affliction’ by Chasing Ghosts. The foreboding forest could be said to be a cliché, but I felt like it was the only location where my narrative would make sense. Using that sense of nowhere to run, and obscured vision, that a forest creates.                                                                                                                                  

The artwork used in my digipack and on my advert follow strong rules of heavy metal conventions. Metal artwork is known for being hand drawn illustrations, usually portraying fantasy scenes or monsters, as mine does. I have gone for a more horror theme, as stated before, so have tried to connect the generic metal artwork with the themes that bands like Marilyn Manson and Rob Zombie use in their work. Also, the image of a man on an upside crucifix plays on two conventions of metal. The first is the controversial anti-religion and anti-Christian imagery that Marilyn Manson in particular uses. One of his most controversial albums, ‘Holy Wood (In the Shadow of the Valley of Death)’ features a similar picture, of Manson himself on the cross. The other feature found within many heavy metal albums and songs, is the strong Satanic or quasi-satanic theme that they utilise. The fact that the image shows a man on an inverted cross links to Satanism, as this is one of the signs attributed to it.

Wednesday 12 December 2012

Final Music Video Feedback

Once again, feedback is incredibly useful for any piece of work. Even though I have now made all the changes I will to my video, and have created a final version, I still feel that class feedback is useful. So for the second time, I have let my classmates watch my video and feedback and thoughts they have on it.


"Video fits in with the genre well. Quite scary at times, but I suppose that's what you want it to be like, and it suits the genre very well. The actors are really good. I like the theme of little red riding hood also; it's different. When you do the singing with the face paint, it suits the genre really good and the lip syncing is good. Well done man." Vishal Kumar

"Excellent use of mise en scene and well thought-out location. Effective lighting and accurate lip syncing. Good use of contrasting colours with the girl's little red riding hood type appearance.
Good editing of shots, which creates suspense and maintains interest all the way through."
Ben Scott

"Narrative works well with the shots. The parallel editing is effective is a lot of shots. Lighting works well the dark genre. Well done :)" Sian Lynes

"The narrative works really well with the video and the whole concept is very effective. If anything, maybe making some shots lighter would of been better to be able to see things in more detail." Laura Ward

"The narrative is by far the most effective aspect of the video; it is believable as it feels very much like you are watching a story. Good use of filters and effects; adds to the creepy atmosphere.
Costume/makeup choices fit well with the theme of the video, and the syncing of the guitars and singing to the music is very accurate. The only criticism I can make is that some shots are a little too dark, particularly the shots of 'Manson' singing. Well done, though."
Martyn Hollinshead

"The narrative is really well thought out and generally scares us, which is what we presume you intended. Your costume and make-up is really well done and you look the part. The effects/editing in the video is very effective and advance. If there was one thing to improve on, then it would maybe be the lighting on the main singers face, because it was hard at times to see the lip-syncing." Mattie White & Steph Law

"Good narrative and good costume. Maybe the end could have been scarier as it built up to just her eyes being closed. Makeup and transition are very effective." Mae Burton & Laura Barsby


I am very happy with all of the feedback that I have rcieved from my final video, and I feel that I have improved it tenfold from the first draft a few weeks ago. The one criticism people picked up on was the lighting being too dark in some shots. I appreciate this, and probably did have it a little bit too dark, but it was a design choice in an attempt to create the right atmosphere. The other interesting point that Mae and Laura brought up, was their view that the end of the video, where the girl "dies", was too anticlamtic and that something more excited should of happened. Again, I chose this ending for a reason, as I wanted it to be subtle and contrast the gore of my digipack slightly. I feel however, that both criticisms are valid, and I would definitely consider changing a few things if I went back to do it again.