lola: (vexercises)
lola ([personal profile] lola) wrote in [community profile] vexercises2020-03-17 09:29 am
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1st exercises drops! vidding pechakuchas

Hello all! Today's the day we kick off our first exercise. This exercise is designed to be reasonably accessible to all... if you're new to editing, then it's a doable way in, and if you already know your way around editing software, then it's addictively fun to make these pechakuchas and surprising how well they turn out! 

Here's the description: 

1) Pechakucha 2 ways


Create a video edit of exactly 60 seconds consisting of precisely 10 video clips from your chosen source text, each lasting precisely 6 seconds, assembled with straight cuts. Make two versions of your pechakucha, with 1 minute excerpts from two different songs as audio. Fade in and out on your audio at the beginning and end of the audio clip.

[Word to the wise: Most six second clips that you use are bound to have in-clip cuts--you don't have to go looking only for clips that have no internal cuts. But you can make those internal cuts work for you rhythmically or thematically etc!]


Then, when you're done, come back here to this post, and post a link in the comments to your completed exercise(s) when they're finished! 


[This exercise is inspired directly by the first of the videographic criticism exercises, but modified here to be vid/fanedit focused with the inclusion of music from an outside source. You can see some examples of the videographic pechakucha’s here: http://videographicessay.org/works/videographic-essay/videographic-pechakuchas?path=videographic-exercises and a more vidlike one Lola made here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ls9x7shBjDY.]

For all of these exercises, the rules are hard and fast, unless you don't want them to be :D Some people work best with really specific restrictions, others work best as rule breakers <3

So edit, share, question, mess around, and experiment! Have fun!

Stay tuned for posts & discussions on various video-editing softwares & on choosing your source.



jinkyo: (Warden Hobbes)

[personal profile] jinkyo 2020-03-21 07:18 pm (UTC)(link)
I loved both of these and these two are, for viewer me, the most extreme change of interpretation with different audio.

The Sound of Silence is a sombre song. I've not seen Ever After, but I'm guessing there's some Cinderella-ish themes, with the Angelica Houston character as the evil godmother. A sad song about waiting for your prince to come.

Jump Around - Holy heck! Drew Barrymore's character is transformed into a super badass. I absolutely loved all the swashbuckling, her defiant tromping out of the castle, her wink as she shoulder carries the "prince". This was all so good!

The shot at :39 sums up what I'm hoping I've said. In "The Sound of Silence" The Drew Barrymore character seems frightened at being apprehended by the henchmen.
In "Jump Around", that same expression reads to me like an affront, like "Oh no she didn't call the Sherrif on me!"
brokenmnemonic: (Happy Yellow)

[personal profile] brokenmnemonic 2020-03-22 07:57 pm (UTC)(link)
Ever After is very dear to my heart :) It is a Cinderella remake, you're right - Angelica Houston does a marvellous job as the evil stepmother. Drew Barrymore makes a great Cinderella, and gets to injure someone with a knife, pelt the Dauphin with apples, make friends with Leonardo da Vinci and basically go around throwing gender roles out of the window. I think it's delightful :)

I was surprised at just how sombre the Sound of Silence as, when I was putting the pechakucha together - I remembered it as being a very still song, but I wasn't expecting it to feel as melancholy as it did.

I think Jump Around is closer to how I feel about the film than Sound of Silence, but it was more fun than I expected to do this exercise :) It did make my brain itch a bit, because I kept wanting to tweak things to make the beats fall closer together...

Thank you for the lovely comment! :)