Thursday, March 05, 2015

Hello! + Decision Making

I wanted to take this first moment on this new blog to welcome whoever is reading this. Throughout the lifespan of this blog, you will be able to view my journey in creating my final media portfolio for this class, which is quite bittersweet. I have learned so much this year about how important and influential media is to everyone in the world, including myself. A double-edged sword, media is a powerful tool that can either inspire and inform us, or manipulate and coerce us. The beauty of media is in this day and age, we can so easily alternate between being the consumer and the producer. In this way, even someone like me can have substantial influence.

With this in mind, I take this final media project seriously. The guidelines of this portfolio are ambiguous enough that I have an abundance of artistic freedom, and I aspire to make an end product that has significance and puts even the smallest piece of myself out there. For this, I thank you all in advance for reading what is to come and I encourage you to leave as much feedback as possible.

Anyway, yesterday I began work on the AS portion of my portfolio, which is the two minute film opening and everything that goes along with that. I had several "themes" in mind that are personally important to me. Because of this, I knew I wanted to make it a foreign film opening, specifically channeling a Venezuelan foreign film feel (my country of origin), but I also constantly remembered my limitations. Of all of them, one was most important: I don't live in Venezuela, therefore it would be hard to film exterior shots or any type of shots that contextualized the story effectively.

How would I make a "foreign" film when all I have available to me is the U.S? I decided I had to get creative and come up with a hybrid solution. I took to my own experiences for inspiration and decided to make the main character of the opening an immigrant.

In essence, the opening would serve two main purposes:

  • to establish the main character
  • to present the driving conflict

The film would be in Venezuelan Spanish with English subtitles and would began by juxtaposing Venezuela with where the main character moves, the United States. The visuals would show the US (perfect houses, kids playing outside, full supermarkets) and the sound element would bring in Venezuela (poverty, kids getting killed by gangs, scarcity of food) through radio news reports the main character would be listening to. I eventually came up with the general outline that the film would introduce the main character as she moves into her new home, and the conflict would come in soon after when she calls her mother who lives back home, leaving the viewer wanting more.

Basically, the first day was just a series of decisions being made. With a concrete idea in place, I made a calendar for myself of deadlines to follow so I could stay on track and leave time for the A portion. 

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