Friday 30 April 2010

What Have You Learnt About Technologies From The Process Of Constructing Products?


Above are still images from various thriller films produced by Alfred Hitchcock. When researching ideas for our thriller, we discovered how Hitchcock extended his work into the 1940's in a number of brilliant black and white films which resulted in great recognition and success in his name. In admiration, we decided to film our thriller in aim of using a black and white effect on Final Cut Pro.


List of Black & White films:

  • The Lady Vanishes (1938)- with Margaret Lockwood, Michael Redgrave, May Whitty
  • Rebecca (1940)- with Joan Fontaine & Lawrence Olivier
  • Foreign Correspondent (1940)- with Joel McCrea & Laraine Day
  • Suspicion (1941)- with Joan Fontaine & Cary Grant
  • Shadow of a Doubt (1943)- with Teresa Wright & Joseph Cotton
  • Saboteur (1942)- with Robert Cummings & Priscilla Lane
  • Spellbound (1945)- with Ingrid Bergman & Gregory Peck
  • Notorious (1946)- with Ingrid Bergman & Cary Grant
  • Stagefright (1950)- with Jane Wyman & Marlene Deitrich
  • Strangers on a Train (1951)- with Farley Granger, Robert Walker, Ruth Roman
  • Psycho (1960)- with Anthony Perkins, Vera Miles, Janet Leigh

    Editing Software helped us to create this black and white ef
    fect. Using Final Cut Pro, we went to 'Filters' and then 'Effects' and finally applied the 'Desaturate' to the whole selection of the film.

     









    Then we applied an overlapping effect by lowering the transparency level on the selected clip which is circled in the screenshot below. This was done in order to emphasise that it is a dream as she is tossing and turning whilst the images overla
    p.  













    We then used a camera flash effect in her dream of the fire and newspaper article to give the impression of memory re
    lapse and an uncomfortable nightmare. We selected 'dip to colour dissolve' effect and selected the appropriate timing. 













    Another effect used was the 'blur' effect for when the young woman wakes up from her bad dream and looks around in disbelief. The blur was used to show her vision as unsteady and her mind being all over the place. The type of blur we used was 'radial blur' because in comparison to the other blurs it made it
     seem more realistically chaotic. 













    The most complex effect used which we feel gave our thriller the most edge was the cloning effect because it really showed the female's psychological state of mind. When filming, we filmed the actress with continuity in mind as if we had placed her on a different background then it wouldn't have worked because we needed to put the hallucination in the mirror. 
    We cropped the selection needed and then placed it into the mirror clip and positioned it so viewers could see the hallucination clearly. For the transition to have been smooth, we used the 'fade in/fade out dissolve' effect. 


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