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major shot breakdown....
Film: Boxes Camera: Sony DCR TRV8, Sony DCR TRV 900, and Steadicam JR Editing and Compositing: Final Cut Pro and Adobe After Effects \ Music and Sound Design: Cubase VST, Soundedit 16, and Final Cut Pro
Clip 1: Intro With the opening sequence, we wound up shooting the entire
segment in one continuous take, using different speeds in post using Final Cut
Pro and the titling sequence to accentuate the boxes in Wren’s apartment and
to really set the tone for the entire film.
Clip 2: Bobby On the Bobby sequence there is a lot of things going on in every frame. We hear about the epitome of white collar crime in the work place, we learn about all of the nicknames they use for women, we learn about dyslexia, we see how Wren and Mattie dodge their bosses, we hear Eager Office Girl’s Militant March. This is also where I our producer, James Portolese makes a cameo when they are discussing the great producer, Robert Evans and we pay tribute to him by adding a picture of him and playing a rather amusing sound effect. The scene was shot in two different office spaces due to logistics and time. We then assembled the performances in post using Final Cut Pro. Also in FCP, we animated the sequences involving Wren and Mattie’s supervisors by scaling each individual video source and composting them into the same space to run concurrently. Each video source was then animated to add a slight movement to the scene, illustrating the distancing between the two of them in the dialogue. Color correction tools in FCP gave us the capability of exaggerating the harshness of fluorescent lights in the workplace.
Clip 3: 5 and 8 When we had the first read through, Rene came up with the John Madden tele-strator on the screen and it is a sequence that everyone can relate to and remember when that happened to them. We cast the roles of the two girls on the set that night and the two
Clip 4: How did I get here? Once again a scene with an unconventional phone ring and it puts Eden and Wren in the same room w/o being in the same room. We get to see Eden’s pain and Wren’s love for their friendship. For creative reasons, we decided to always have the characters inhabit the same space as the other, with the boxes that connect them (the telephone) between them. It was shot in an overhead position handheld using the LCD display as a monitor for the camera movement. With Wren in the Bathroom, he says one of my favorite lines in the film. ‘This is not what they were selling in college’. That line speaks to a lot of people as well. Being alone in the restroom at work is a very private moment and Wren has a lot on his mind. The actual line was actually a piece of action in the script and Wren mentioned that he would like to actually say that line, I agreed and put it back in the script. As Wren’s feeling of discontent build, we begin to see the trappings of technology fill the frame. This was accomplished by animating seven layers of still and video images and by making each image translucent using the image control tools in FCP.
Clip 5: George When Wren leaves it feels like a true Michael Mann moment
with the revolving doors. Using speed controls in FCP, we ran the footage at
regular speed, then on the music cue we slowed the footage down to 65%. Mattie
and Eden’s calls with Wren are filled
Clip 6: Wingman The dance is always a fun moment outside Eden’s
apartment. It’s a free flowing dialogue leading up to Eden’s door.
Clip 7: Willard Willard is another time that everyone has …. The end of
the night, quiet time, placing all the events in some type of order. We
shot this after the Swedes went home and just had |
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