I keep meaning to update
Jun. 17th, 2007 03:24 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
(It's not that I have nothing to say, it's just that I have no time to say it in.)
Music video:
I'm very happy with how my vignette turned out! Jim Jacques, one of the film program faculty, volunteered his house and his car for me to use, and I am so grateful, it was awesome of him to let us invade. The footage looks great--all of it does, we got some incredible stuff with the band at the Mesa Arts Center.
There are currently three finished cuts of the music video:
Performance only version, on youtube.
Tony Mundell's edit, on youtube--uses the vignette footage in 20-30 second sections, so, whole vignettes at once.
Shawn Gulney's edit, embedded quicktime--uses the vignette footage interspersed with performance and other vignettes through out.
Tony's is definitely the best to watch if you are watching particularly for the vignettes (not that some of us are biased that way at all!) but I haven't decided which is my favorite version overall.
I signed up to help in post, so I could have a shot at editing a version if I, basically, well, if I bought another drive so I'd have enough space to store all the footage. Heh. I may yet do that.
I already have a copy of the footage from the vignette I directed. It's such beautiful stuff that I am planning on using it for my project for the Final Cut class I am currently taking this summer. None of my vignette has the band in it, and I'm planning to use a different soundtrack, so there shouldn't be copyright issues.
Music video:
I'm very happy with how my vignette turned out! Jim Jacques, one of the film program faculty, volunteered his house and his car for me to use, and I am so grateful, it was awesome of him to let us invade. The footage looks great--all of it does, we got some incredible stuff with the band at the Mesa Arts Center.
There are currently three finished cuts of the music video:
Performance only version, on youtube.
Tony Mundell's edit, on youtube--uses the vignette footage in 20-30 second sections, so, whole vignettes at once.
Shawn Gulney's edit, embedded quicktime--uses the vignette footage interspersed with performance and other vignettes through out.
Tony's is definitely the best to watch if you are watching particularly for the vignettes (not that some of us are biased that way at all!) but I haven't decided which is my favorite version overall.
I signed up to help in post, so I could have a shot at editing a version if I, basically, well, if I bought another drive so I'd have enough space to store all the footage. Heh. I may yet do that.
I already have a copy of the footage from the vignette I directed. It's such beautiful stuff that I am planning on using it for my project for the Final Cut class I am currently taking this summer. None of my vignette has the band in it, and I'm planning to use a different soundtrack, so there shouldn't be copyright issues.