reviews

Early Morning Dog Walk 9th April 2008


recording10408

Transcription:

10th April walking the dog.

Thinking - in the journal website thing - that I need to be getting some more stuff about actual research methods. And that could be part of the main website as apposed to the blog, which would be very much this. I could put the reviews somewhere else as well and not have them as part of the blog. It would be just the thoughts, the day to day stuff. I have been looking at animation, pixilation in particular, Angry Kid and the Naked Aussie, and more or less finished the Aardman animation book. Run out of time for one or two of the other books that I got out as they have to go back to the library today, and the Basquat movie which I could watch this morning or take out for another week. Not really got much thinking going on this morning so I won't carry on.... that will be it for today.

Review - some films that I have watched

I spent a day looking at some classic films, inspired partly by reading Brenda Laurel's 'Computers as Theatre' and partly thinking about animation with students, going back to the classic look and feel of film. Inspired also about reading a book by Aardman, with their classic Chicken Run, based on classic POW movies.

The films that I chose - Tiger Bay, Brief Encounter, Goodbye Mr Tom,

With the former two I was really struck by the quality of the cinematography, shot in black and white, with Brief Encounter in particular, shots of the stations, steam from the engines, railings and passages. A particular shot at the end when the woman contemplates suicide, sitting in the cafe not listening to an inane drone of a crone, the camera sit rotated. When she stops herself from leaping in front of the engine the camera rotates back to level.
A beautiful film because it is beautifully simple, and beautifully shot.

The bit from Goodbye Mr Tom that stuck me was the long bicycle ride down the hill. I was only watching this because it was on!

Other films that I could look at perhaps -

A NIght To Remember, The 39 Steps, The Third Man,