I feel that we have put a lot of hard
work and time in to this project in order to get the things that we set out to
achieve. Looking through all of the footage shows that we captured copious
amounts, but I felt it wasn’t shown effectively in the final product. Given
more time I think we could have retrieved these and applied them within the
piece. Still, I think our genre of documentary is very imaginative and creative
and was a very hard task to pursue. I believe that we have thought outside the
box and way outside of our comfort zones in an attempt to push ourselves, which
we certainly have done.
A positive part of the project is the interview
recordings. I have never practiced with sound and thought this would be the
best time to learn more. I had a very limited amount of time to fix these recordings
and practice with the sound track pro. However, I think that some of the sounds
were of good quality and not over intrusive or hard to hear. There was one part
of the films dialogue that wasn’t brilliant but I was un-available for this
part and another member recorded this. Furthermore, I wasn’t given a copy of
this part to save and log, so the sound file was lost meaning that we could only use the cameras microphone which was poor quality.
We originally planned to interview Harry Gration so he
could be the neutral voice within the piece but these plans fell through. To
overcome this we arranged an interview with a Sheffield Wednesday Steward
instead but I felt that he wasn’t pressed enough with
questions such as “Do you know of people who hate Tango'?.
In all, I am pleased with what we have managed to
create when regarding the sounds. It doesn’t contain everything we wanted but
does follow the structure that we planned. Given more time we could have added
more footage and tweaked about with the atoms sounds and interview sounds.
When
it came to filming the work for our piece, we had a very strict regime of what
we wanted to capture, and where and what should be involved in each shot. Every
time we went out to film we stuck by these plans religiously so every shoot was
scheduled and ran smoothly and coherently. I thought this was by far the best
process and it definitely made me, and no doubt some other members of the
group, take the project a lot more seriously as everything was completed on
time and we had an idea as to what we had filmed and what else we needed to
film.
When
I was recording sound for the interviews I tried to remember all that I was
taught in university lectures and all of the knowledge from outside sources
that I have researched. On the first day of filming I encountered problems and
when I listened back at the interview recordings I knew where I was going
wrong, such as the wrong type of microphone being used and being too far away
from the interviewee. Luckily we had other chances to record the interviews so
I learnt from the past mistakes and improved on them to ensure good quality
sound recordings, which I then took on board for all the future recordings.
The
group took the work seriously and as mentioned before, we created lots of
paperwork to back up and enhance the project to guarantee it ran smoothly. This
encouraged me to take a look at the sound and ensure I was logging all of the
recordings and cleaning up the sound tracks and labelling them so it was all in
check and organised. This helped other members of the group and showed I was
taking this role seriously.
When
it came to editing the piece we ran in to major problems and the project was
left to be completed in only one day which was infuriating as we had put so
much time and effort in to planning and getting the footage. However, even
though this may have been our downfall I felt that I learned a lot from this
process.
In
this project I was the sound recorder/ editor. I was at every shoot apart from
one interview recording because of a presentation. I was dedicated to this
project because I enjoyed the topic and I saw how passionate the director was
which spurred me on. I am not wanting to going in to sound as a profession or pursue
it further at university but I chose to do this because no-one was willing to
and I didn’t want to be ignorant and cast it aside. I wanted to try my best and
learn from my mistakes to then make them right.
When both of the projects were constructed I was one of the editors.
In
this project I took a more laid back approach and wanted to let the director be
the director and the producer be the producer because I am fed up of everyone
taking over roles which aren’t their own. If my voice was needed I would speak
up and express my opinion and ideas. Sometimes the director would ask for my
opinion and this opinion would have an effect on some of the footage or change
a sequence but overall I mainly kept to my role until the end when I stepped in
as one of the editors.
At
first, the whole group worked marvellously and we respected each other’s
opinions and ideas. We kept in contact most of the time to either express a
thought or to arrange meetings. If a member was contacted to complete something,
the work was done and to a perfect standard. I aimed to complete all of my
tasks and even volunteered to help others in their work also.
However,
near the end of the project we had some major issues with a member who didn’t
put his full effort in to the project, This left us in deep water and the
project was taken on by three of us, none of whom were the editors. This caused
big rifts in the group and the project was left to be complete in one day
rather than a week, which was originally planned. We had meetings to discuss
problems and he understood that he wasn’t putting enough attention in to the
piece and that he left it down to the last minute. The work was ultimately
completed and we managed to clear up any problems between us at the end of the
project.
Inspiration
for this piece of work came from various TV documentaries and short
documentaries that I viewed in and out of university. When I watched the
‘Portsmouth Fan documentary’ there were a lot of parts that I envisaged for our
piece. In sound terms I wanted to use the whole crowd ambience with whistles
and the band mixed in, this kind of noise makes us come to life and enjoy the
match even more and I thought this would be perfect to kick start the piece. I
looked in to Mic settings and the various Microphones to get an idea as to what
to use for each part of the shoot such as the Rifle Mic to pick up all the
sounds in the stadium and a Lapel mic to just capture the interviews dialogue,
as these are more effective. Other atmos sounds involved in this piece helped
because I was able to identify what people immediately hear when at a match.
This made me note down what I need to record in order to create a proper atmosphere
on a match day.
In
one of my previous lessons I was shown how to correctly use the microphones and
the do’s and don’ts of controlling the boom pole and keeping an eye on the
levels. All of this helped because I knew where the boom should be held to
ensure I captured all the dialogue but most importantly keep it away from the
view of the camera.
I
would say that our ten-minute piece is an Observational documentary as we
simply set out to capture Tango with no interference on match days, which is
clearly shown. Furthermore, there is no interviewer asking questions and it is
left down to Tango to introduce himself and his past events. I would also say that another form of
documentary that the project falls into is expository, because we are basically
showing the audience the ‘better side’ of Tango in order to prove that all of the
negative press that he receives is false, and that he is a decent, down to
earth person.