I saw the angels sing a long to wake up the beautiful sleeping world

Sunday, January 24, 2010

Post Preduction Editing

Last weeks class completely changed my conception on the way that the film making process is carried out. When you take into account the ways in which the allotted financial backing for a motion picture is distributed, you begin to associate the bulk of the film making process to the actors. I always thought that the director created a script and a basic outline for scene placement and filming styles and relied on the hired actors and camera crew to bring the story to life. After watching the bonus disc features from the Star Wars and Lord of the Rings trilogies, it seems that the actors, themselves, are one of the least important aspects of the film making process overall. If you think about it, it’s really kind of hard to validate the amount that actors are paid these days. The way that Lucas and Jackson were talking, they could take stock footage with seemingly anyone standing in on the roles they created and use post production processes to make a masterpiece.

The discussion from last week got me thinking about the future of acting as a career. I was discussing the idea that, eventually, advancing computer technologies and financial demand will cause the acting profession to disappear. Why would a company supply the money to pay expensive and demanding actors when a director could use computer graphics to create the same cinematic experience for a fraction of the price? As soon as we are able to create computer generated graphics that are indistinguishable from real flesh and bone, I believe that those who make a living on acting careers will be part of the unemployed.

The most fascinating part of last week’s lecture, in my opinion, was the section from the Return of the King that gave an account of the crew that ventured from place to place using various materials to bring a scene to life through sound. I am probably not the only person that doesn’t give much credit to the sound aspect of a movie apart from the accompanying music score. As dumb as it probably seems, I have never actually thought about the sound clips as an entity separate from the images they are incorporated with and certainly never considered the time it times to create them. In my mind, it kind of seemed like the process of creating the images that I see on screen produced the sounds that give them detail; as if the creation of one automatically led to the creation of the other. I’m pretty amazed by how naïve I was to the process.

After being educated on the amount of work that sound technicians are assigned for each motion picture, I can’t help but wonder why there are no awards that serve to recognize the work those teams undertake. Aside from the team that assembles the filmed shots and sound clips to make the final product, I think that the sound crew has one of the most important and time consuming job in the entire film making process.

3 comments:

  1. I've never thought about the possibility of acting disappearing as a profession. It seems quite possible though, with all of the advances society has already made in the art of film. It's a scary idea to think about all of the careers that will no longer be needed.

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  2. terrifying thought.
    Even robots are accompanying surgeons performing surgeries!
    I think that people enjoy there celebrity gossip too much to phase out actors and actresses entirely. I mean all of the cool animation and affects still need faces.

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  3. For sure! Sound Technicians are like the unseen heros of the movie. I mean would you stick a mike all up in a horse's business if you weren't even sure it would be the right sound? Dedication! You are all about the world of sound; I bet you really connect with this aspect of film.

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