What I did and why
During the two days of filming the trailers for TryLife I had
several different roles. During the first day, I was a camera operator for the
behind the scenes crew where I was part of a small group who conducted
interviews with cast and crew about what they thought of TryLife and how the
production was going. We did this as they would be informative to put on
TryLife’s Facebook page to give their audience a better insight on what TryLife
is and what it is like to be working on set. On the second day, I was the
director and camera operator for a section of the trailer which in small groups
we planned and organised.
What new techniques were you exploring?
For the filming of the trailer we were exploring different
camera and planning techniques. When planning for an interactive trailer it is
more complex than creating a normal trailer as you have to consider how your
decision routes are going to work to make sure each path makes sense. When it
came to actually filming the trailer on the first day we had to consider how we
were going to film it as we were in a room which was filled with mirrors, so we
had to learn how to shoot the scene without getting any of the crew and
equipment in the way of the shot.
What new skills or processes did you learn?
Throughout this I have learned how to create interactive
videos and the process of effectively planning out these kinds of videos as they require much more work done for them to be successful and not to confuse the audience.
The language you should use to help keep your audience interested in the video. I also learned how to film more effectively by doing the same types of shots all together instead of going in the storyboard’s order.
The language you should use to help keep your audience interested in the video. I also learned how to film more effectively by doing the same types of shots all together instead of going in the storyboard’s order.
What went well?
Over the two days many things went well as we managed to all
work out an action plan of what we were going to film and how it was going to
look. During the first day, we managed to get interviews with many cast and
crew members which were to a good standard.
On the second day, we managed to plan out what we were going to film in detail so that all of the crew knew what we were going to do and how it was going to look. We also managed to film all of the shots that were required within our limited time slot of 30 minutes.
Even better if
The first day of filming would have been better if we were able to get a hold of the cast and crew more easily as for the majority of the time it was extremely difficult to get people to interview as they were either too busy to do so or they didn’t want to be interviewed, this could have been improved if we were able to have more time before they started filming to interview the cast and crew as they would have been more available to do so. Another thing which would have made it better was if we had a chance to interview Hannah as during the day we were unable to ask her. Another thing which would’ve been better was the camera focus as many of the shots taken on the day were out of focus especially the shots where the camera was tracking into Hannah’s face. On some of the shots taken there was crew members clearly in shot who didn’t get noticed by either the camera operators or directors, so to improve this I would do a check before filming it to make sure no one is in shot and would also do several takes of each shot. If I had to do this again I would use a pistol microphone with a pistol grip as sometimes the audio setting levels weren't right with the DLSR camera and the Rode Videomic.| Audio settings we used which were incorrect |
The second day of filming would have been better if we had more time to film our shots as we may have been able to get more takes where we could choose the best shot of them.






















