Video Elements
This week we work on gathering photographs and video/film footage to accompany your script.
Alternatively, as BU students, you can request access to the Adobe Creative Cloud software package, which includes two useful apps for creating movies, Spark and Premiere. I personally prefer iMovie, as it offers more options than Spark without the complexity of Premiere. But Adobe’s software is really impressive.
Come to class with your laptop loaded with video editing software of your choice and with this package of photographs and video clips:
- a-roll
- b-roll
These clips are taken from a class I taught this past summer. My goal was to demonstrate that the technical challenges of combining video in iMovie pale in comparison to the rhetorical challenges of Invention, Arrangement, Style, Memory and Delivery—all of which I failed, to varying degrees.
Note: if you want to add clips from YouTube, you will need to download the file to your computer. As of Nov 28, 2018, you can do that using the site savefrom.net, and opting for 720 mp4 format.
For HW, post a brief progress report, as follows:
- One ¶ detailing what you’ve done;
- One ¶ detailing any setbacks or challenges you’ve encountered.
I’m particularly interested in discussing how Michael Tucker of “Lessons from the Screenplay” alternately mutes and unmutes video from the movies he discusses, how he quotes from stage directions to focus attention on the original screenplay, and how he introduces ideas from Secondary Sources—dramatizing that move not just verbally but visually.
Come to class ready to discuss.
For HW, post your draft video in the comments, below.