Thursday, 22 October 2009
Wednesday, 7 October 2009
Alive in Joburg
If like myself you have recently seen and enjoyed District 9 from South African director Neill Blomkamp, you'll be interested to hear the history behind the film. Blomkamp recieved the backing for the film from the Lord of the Rings himself - Peter Jackson. Jackson had originally signed up Blomkamp to take the helm on his translation of video game smash hit Halo on the strength of one of his shorts, but the project fell foul of studio wrangling. Seeing the potential in the young prodigy and feeling bad for seeing his big break fall through, Jackson suggested turning his earlier short film 'Alive in Joburg', into a feature film. And the rest is history. So without further ado, head to the video below, and enjoy 'Alive in Joburg'.
Tuesday, 22 September 2009
Sound Solution for the Canon EOS 5D MkII
I've been discussing with film-making friends today, the possibilities of recording a short film using the Canon EOS 5D MKII. Of course, alarm bells for me ring when considering how to record sound with the camera being as it is a stills camera. It can record onboard sound and has a 3.5mm jack input for connecting an external mic or break out box, but the camera offers no gain control and so would add auto gain to your incoming audio - not good! A bit of internet research led me to this video - which ironically has slightly ropey sound - but is no less a great tutorial on using an external device such as the Zoom H4N with the camera. I would be looking to employ my Fostex FR2-LE with the camera if possible, but I guess you would just substitute the Zoom out for that.
Advanced Sound for DSLR's from Steve Weiss, Zacuto USA on Vimeo.
Monday, 21 September 2009
Pod Farm Plug in FREE! for 10 more days......
Tuesday, 15 September 2009
Watchmen
1'50".
One hour and fifty minutes.
110 minutes.
6600 seconds.
Is the point in Watchmen on Sunday night when I pressed stop on my DVD player, ready to return to the film the next day. I was really enjoying the film to this point; I spent the whole day telling everyone how great I thought it was and couldn't see why it had got such bad press. Then I went home and watched the rest of it.
And........
The last hour of Watchmen is very dissapointing. The climax is rushed. It has some ropey CGI (namely in the form of a wierd tiger creature with funny horns and a sequence on Mars) and its just well, all a bit corny. Which is a total shame, as up until 1 hour and 50 minutes in I was really enjoying it!
I have to admit I'm completely not a comic book fan - I love Akira and I do enjoy comic book film adaptations, but I have never read Watchmen or many other grapic novels, so cannot approach this film with the same level of critique as its many fans have, who lovingly refer to the originals as 'The Citizen Kane of graphic novels'. But that doesn't matter in this case, as I'm not reviewing the story and comparing it with the graphic novel. I'm reviewing the sound. And the sound is... AWESOME.
I was immediately blown away. The film starts with a bang, as one of the original 'minute men' (a band of masked superheroes) is brutally murdered in his apartment by a cloaked assailant. The editing is incredible; we feel every punch, hear every twinkling crash of smashed glass - nothing is missed. The intricucies of the sound design and mix, to allow each element to punch through and be recognised is unbelievable - unsurprising really considering the amount of talent involved in the soundtrack production.
Taking the helm of supervising sound editor duties was Scott Hecker, alongside Eric Norris as sound designer, Frank Montano as FX re-recording mixer and dialogue and music re-recording mixer Chris Jenkins. Director Zack Snyder worked with this team on his remake of Dawn of the Dead, so the crew already had a great relationship in preperation for the mammouth task of creating the odd-worldy view the Watchmen story takes of our planets history. Hecker had this to say about working along side Snyder:
“Zack's approach is the most liberating that any person working in sound could
ask for, because basically he hands you the ball and says run with it and make
it as beautiful, spectacular, vibrant, colorful, exciting, violent — all those
adjectives — as you can. He really trusts us, which is great, and it actually
started on Dawn of the Dead. But this film has everything in it, from love
scenes to prison riots, wars, Antarctica, Vietnam, an atomic bomb, film noir
Mickey Spillane-type detective storytelling; it's amazing to sit back and watch
it.”
The trust given to the sound team certainly shows in the mix. The fx perfectly flit round the surrounds, and the focus of the spots and foley remain firmly on the action. The screen is never cluttered with FX, and each scene is lovingly crafted to drive the often dark narrative. In terms of sound design, Watchmen is again on to a winner. The LFE kicks in perfectly, worlds are created and given depth through careful selection and manipulation of synth based and organic fx, to create truely unique sounds. The incredible amount of work and care and attention shines through, and each character has clearly been intensely designed to perfection. Heres an extract of Hecker talking about the design for Dr.Manhattan in Mix magazine:
“He's tortured and conflicted and he has human emotions, but he's trapped in
this god-like [form], so we tried to articulate his feelings with various
different sounds that would convey his emotions, whether they be happy, sad or
angry.” Among the sounds that were used for the character were moaning whales.
“But I hate to even say that,” Hecker continues, “because I don't want people
sitting there listening for whale sounds. They've been worked with, modulated
and pitched and whatnot, and it's very subtle. I don't want the audience
thinking about it; you want them to tune into the emotional quality you're going
for throughout the film.”
So from a sound point of view Watchmen comes highly recommended - its just a shame the film couldn't deliver the electricity of the first 1 hour and 50 minutes through to the end.
Tuesday, 8 September 2009
Snow Leopard
Snow leopard is here! I'm literally chomping at the bit to install it, but am of course worried that Digidesign is yet to clear it with Pro Tools and it will cause my a world of pain. I'm usually the last to upgrade my OS (past disasters of friends at University involved them killing months of work by upgrading their mac a week before their final hand in - ouch!), but have been handed hope in the form of the above video which was posted on PT Dudes. It seems to be running fine, so for once I may just give it a spin and see how it goes - armed with a copy of Carbon Copy Cloner so I can make a full back image of my current OS to easily restore if its a world of pain! I shall bring you updates when I take the plunge.........
Audioease Impulse Response Downloads

I was answering a question over on Pro Tools Users today regarding TL Space, and while quickly posting some links to some IR's, I discovered a ton of free downloads on the Audioease website that are missing from my own collection! This is evident in the post pro IR's, with all sorts of fun to be had with Bus tunnels and 25 more domestic rooms! Get downloading here.
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