Week 12

In the last few days of our term it became clear I didn’t have the time to produce a final cut that met our high expectations, and I therefore planned to come up on the 9th of January, 5 days before the film was due. The whole reshoot process had admittedly left us tight for time, but I was positive I could tie it all together in the short amount we had.

We were also short on time because of fundamental changes made to the film’s structure. While our first two scenes were gripping and exciting, the last three revealed more about Beth’s and Jamie’s relationship, so were naturally dialogue heavy. As a result of this, the second half of the film felt dull and anticlimactic, not living up to the promise of the first two scenes. I decided to keep the same opening scene (Beth’s initial reaction to the murder), but then show the preceding events in order, instead of playing in reverse chronology from the murder backwards. Having the opening scene serve more as a ‘flash-forward’ to the ending established a more consistent and impactful pace, giving the uptight and threatening atmosphere in the dialogue scenes the space to escalate at a natural rhythm, until finally exploding in the climax.

I wanted to leave university with a fine cut of both the original structure and my altered one, as our group could analyse it over the break and I could return to editing with a fresh mind and a precise idea of what needed to be done. I exported my work as a .mov and then uploaded it to Vimeo, which said it would take a few hours to finalise. It was only on my journey home that I tried to view it on my laptop and saw there had been an upload error. I didn’t understand codecs and that the way I encode a file will affect the devices it can be played on, a mistake that cost me valuable time as I wasn’t able to watch my film at home.

When I finally got the chance to edit on the 9th, I was able to send the crew both fine cuts through using Adobe Media Encoder. I found the application’s design clearer and more intuitive than Avid, as I simply had to drag and drop a codec that would suit streaming services onto my .mov file.

My group agreed that the changed structure made the film more dynamic and coherent, meaning it was time to perfect the picture and move on to the colour grade and audio edit.

I was confident I could complete these two remaining tasks in the 3 days I had left, assuming everything went according to plan. Only it didn’t. I had offloaded the original footage and the reshot footage onto Avid through two separate computers, and it was at this point I realised how difficult reconnecting the two would be. To make matters worse, I discovered the magnitude of this problem on Friday afternoon, meaning there would be no staff around to show me how to solve it until the day the film was due. The situation was too complicated to explain via email, although it didn’t stop me trying, and after my workshop tutor couldn’t find a solution, me and the director made the decision to grade our film through Avid to make the best use of our time. Because we were editing with reduced-quality copies of the original files, colour adjustments were more harsh and severe, which made the aesthetics of some shots erratic and inconsistent. My most important and unexpected takeaway from this project is just how essential offloading and formatting your footage correctly is. I’ve learnt to not take shortcuts or act carelessly when it comes to ‘data wrangling’, as I’ve now experienced the colossal impact it can have.

Despite my troubles with grading, I found mixing the audio to be relatively straightforward and rewarding. Apart from Beth’s screams occasionally clipping (due to the mic sensitivity being too high when recording), there were no major problems with the audio. I especially enjoyed applying and customising the effects on Ben’s dialogue to make his voice sound as if it was coming through the phone, adding a sense of immersion and realism to the film.

I uploaded the final cut to YouTube and shared with my team, who all agreed they were happy with the end product. Finally, with a sense of pride and relief, I pressed submit.

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