Amateur Filmmaking
With the upcomming commercial, I’ve been doing a lot of research on SL machinima the past couple of weeks. I run very hot and cold with wanting to be involved in this aspect of creation. You’d think as a filmmaker I would have embraced it from the start.
Last summer I worked on a short piece by doing all the animations for the main character. The thought of me doing that was far better then the actual experience was. I think for the most part my issue was that they wanted too many animations in a very short time and then the script just kept changing. I worked my ass off and luckily got it done on time.
At that time, I started watching a bunch of projects that people had posted on the forums and youtube. This nagging voice inside my head kept repeating the mantra of “just because you have editing software doesn’t mean you can edit.” I know it sounds so snobbish. But it’s bloody true. It doesn’t mean that you can only edit if you’ve gone to film school. I watched people pay thousands of dollars and take all the classes and just still not get it. And I yet remember an amazing stop motion animation short in my first semester film class. Editing is an art form and like everything else creative some people have it and some people just don’t.
So, instead of me just harping on everyone and screaming amateurs(!), I offered editing classes. See, very few people have a pure natural talent and it’s pretty damn obvious that you couldn’t say that about any of the stuff I saw. While there are certain rules, most can be broken given the right circumstances. It’s more of teaching a way of thinking and seeing. The only problem is is that you can’t teach that in a day. It needed to be broken up into a series of classes.
So, I spent days and days writing out all the different aspects I felt would be helpful. I got screen grabs of all sorts of films. I really spent a lot of time on these classes. I even offered it twice per week. But like everything in SL, while people were excited for the first 2 classes they just stopped comming. Ok fine… I didn’t need to waste my time if no one thought they needed it.
Anyways, I’ve been watching all sorts of projects this week and it’s making me want to gouge my eyes out. I’m serious. I am so tired of seeing cheesy transitional effects. I’m tired of seeing lllllooooonnnnnggggg shots where there is this pause before and after the movement. I’m tired of not seeing cutaways. And I’m really bloody tired of the amount of disolves people use. We have a saying.. if you can’t cut it, disolve it. Which means when there is no way two shots that need to go next to eachother can work, you throw in a disolve. But they are so overused in amateur video. When you overuse anything, what happens is the reason for it is completly lost. I even remember the sheep boasting about some corp video they made a while back that had a disolve between every bloody shot. ‘eh but then again, that is corporate video *laugh*
I’m going to make my commercial anyways. Yeah, it might not be “flashy” (aka overflowing effects) enough for some people. But I now know no one else that I could find has used the idea I’ve planned.
Sorry.. just had to rant.