Tuesday, 30 November 2010

Account of Shoot Day

We began the day with Megan and I rounded up all the dancers and taught them a short routine and then began to paint their bodies with UV paint while Tom and Geroge set up the white performance room and then started making the band practise with the instruments before filming them. The band managed to pick up nicely the song as most of them new their instruments well. Filming the performance room only took an hour and a half, and we were very pleased with the shots we collected.
Next was the UV room, which we set up and then put on the UV light. After Megan and I had finished the first 2 dancers we sent them in to start shooting. Megan would stand and tell them how to dance while filming, while I carried on painting the other dancers. I painted each dancer slightly differantly but with the same intention to make the patterns look tribal. The painted patterned bodies under the UV looked amazing, and we were all very pleased with how it looked on camera (better than expected)
We shot the dancers individually, in pairs and then as a group. we got the dancers to do the sequence and then we got them to improvise. The filming went very well for this as all the dancers could do big bold shapes. The only small issue we had was that the paint dried quickly and flaked off a bit.
We then finally filmed in slow motion a 3 second shot of a drum with blue UV paint on that is being banged. The only problem we had was that the paint was too thick to splash so we had to apply lots of water.
After Lunch we then set up the lazor room. The lazor pens we had, some were weaker than others, and few only had 3 red and the rest green. The green ones worked better. In order to create more lazors we first thought of using mirrors to reflect the lazors into, however this didnt look good on camera. We had one shot of our lead singer, with all the lazors moving on his body. We then did another with one dancer and the green lazors back lighting her and red ones oh her. Her silouette looked incredible, especially when she bent down backwards.
The green screen room was next which only had our lead singer (Felix) in. In this room we placed Felix on a platform and asked him to improvise him moving objects and photos around on a imaginary electronic board. I was on camera for this and filmed Felix doing these movements in wide, medium and medium close up shots.
Our last room was the dry-ice room. This is where most of our problems lied, as the dry ice was very late to be delivered and we had feared that it would not turn up at all. This did take a while to shoot because it took a while for the machine to keep heating up.
The day went very well, and I feel we all worked well as a team, and gave each other equal tasks without any confrontation. We didn't run over time on the day, and now we can begin editing.

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