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About this blog Creating SpacesProduction and the Creative Spirit |
Monday, September 27, 2010
Post written by Ann Michel and Phil Wilde, principals, Insights International, Ithaca/New York City
In 1988, we made a film about kids growing up poor in rural New York State. This period was before the internet and perhaps many of our readers were born.
The kids who were willing to be in the film, with the parents of those kids agreeing, did so out of a sense of wanting to share their stories with us as filmmakers they trusted. We explained to them that this film would be shown to social workers and people in the business of helping kids throughout NY State.
The film was used extensively as a way to introduce professionals to the world as these kids saw it, so these professionals could better serve them.
Only kids are seen and heard in the film – the presence of the adults is felt but not shown. We used only the first names of the kids, and did not identify the places they lived. When the kids and their families gave us permission and access to their lives, we all had a sense of the extent to which this film would be seen and used.
Now the question arises, should we upload this film online?
We all know what happens the moment something is posted. It can be watched and used (if it is good) by people worldwide. It can be sliced into bits, re-mixed and re-used. It can be quoted and misquoted. We will have no idea about where and how it will be watched and used.
Is this online environment fair?
Is this reuse a violation of the privacy of the participants?
At the time the people in the film agreed to participate, this sort of thing was not technically possible. Now it is.
What are the ethics of uploading documentary films shot when the internet did not exist?
Thursday, September 9, 2010
Blog written by Ann Michel and Phil Wilde, coprincipals, Insights International
Why should you bother to create a sound track from scratch and mix together audio tracks into a sound track, a soundscape?
Is it worth the effort?
Sometimes less is more.
What about silence? Try it.
Nothing challenges our busy brains more than to fill this silence, this void.
A little silence can go a long way.
Musicians know this. Without a rest note, there is no syncopation. Syncopation adds interest, as do many other musical forms.
Go ahead. Get your viewers to work a little.
Creating a good sound track requires great subtlety. And it is subtlety and nuance that separates competent, good work from great work.
Monday, August 2, 2010
Blog written by Ann Michel and Phil Wilde, coprincipals, Insights International
Which comes first, the picture or the sound?
For me, it is often a song or sound that catalyses a show. I love to edit to music. I love to find the rhythm and flow in images and their sequencing based on a great song.
In a production, finishing up the audio track is usually done last.
Many musicians scoring a soundtrack for you will require a "picture lock" version, a completed, edited show to work from.
This can leave you editing the picture with only your brain—and not your heart.
However, if you know and trust your collaborators, this reverse process can work.
Sometimes, you can get early versions of music to edit to, to set your moods and rhythms.
This creative exchange between editor and sound designer can be the best part of production, going back and forth, editing and mixing with your heart as well your brain.