Experience with the job profile camerawork – Scott Daron

My experience of shooting the job profile was not really a pleasant one, or even all that successful of one. I felt really apprehensive and awkward, approaching my sibling with the interview section itself, and even then, it was somewhat difficult. But then it came to the matter of capturing B-footage, and the anxiety I felt got utterly overwhelming. It sucked and I was embarrassed out of my mind just thinking about it. I ultimately got cold feet and opted for royalty-free footage instead.

One-Minute Video Script Description – Scott Daron

Our one-minute video is a pretty simple premise: a bit of a comedy short that involves two students in a study room, trying to do their work, but getting into an escalating back and forth stealing contest, fighting over each other’s supplies and items. We’ll need a study room in the VMMC building or elsewhere as the shooting location, as well as my camcorder as a camera, a tripod to hold the camera steady, and some basic items that serve as the props for the short.

Blog Post: How not to be seen

The digital effects of this work are heavily based on greenscreen, with greenscreen and the backgrounds edited in through that taking up the bulk of the video, creating fake backgrounds and false screen projections, among other things. It seems to go for a more vaguely surrealist approach with visuals that are somewhat strange and repetitive. The typical realism of cinema seems to be subverted in this work, rather than strictly followed for that reason, although it does still try to follow some logic, having hand motions interact with the text sometimes as an example.

Blog Post: Short Documentary about COVID Nurses

Visual evidence is tricky to acquire without access to the actual thing your documentary is about. As the reading itself says: “Making a documentary with visual evidence requires the filmmaker to go out and find something happening in front of the camera that that tells the story to the audience far better than any interview with an expert.” That said, it’s hardly an impossible obstacle to overcome. If I were in the position of having to do so for a documentary about COVID Nurses, I’d probably try to include a variety of approaches for the sake of minimize the need to reuse clips and ensure there’s enough visual variety as to not distract the viewers. I’d include not only actors to re-enact certain scenarios being described in the documentary, but also things such as b-roll footage of various tasks being performed or panning over locations. Perhaps footage could even be taken in other locations where vaguely similar things to the nurse duties and covid infection could be taking place. It would all have to be incidental, and I’d have to react quickly to them, but if it could capture those moments I’m looking for, then that would go a long way to helping out the documentary.

Blog: Shameless framing & editing

The clip we were provided from the show Shameless was rather chaotic and crowded, there’s no disputing that. There’s tons you could analyze and discuss, especially in regard to the continuity of the scene. The stuff that stuck out to me the most would probably be the use of the milk as a visual anchor to give the scene something to center around and bring some structure to this visual cluster. The fact that most of the shots have the milk in the shot brings some consistency, which is a very good thing to keep the chaos from getting overwhelming, especially for folks like me who can sometimes suffer from sensory overload. It’s also an example of continuity between shots, showing what is being done with it and how each shot of it is progressing from the last.