Author Archives: Sydney Says Things

Bulking Up My Youtube Channel – Weekly Summary

This week was a lot. I have to start there. I made three videos this week and each one of them really pushed me. To start, I got actual audio recording equipment from the HCC, which was both helpful for my videos and a lot more work in general. Hopefully, the audio quality will reflect how much more work I put into the audio. I also learned how to use OBS, which was a challenge I discuss further in the gaming post.

Here’s the rundown:

I did two daily creates.

I expanded my course character’s story.

Most of my time was spent making three videos. I made a gaming video, a ranking video, and a video discussing my course character’s prized possessions.

While it was very stressful, I am proud of what I made this week and I hope you all enjoy!

Some of Her Favorite Things: Of Most Importance Assignment

For this video I did the Of Most Importance assignment, where we make a video about our five favorite things, places, people, etc. I decided to do this for my course character. For the video, I made a collage using Landing of her things and other aspects of her life.

I struggled to come up with the visual aspect for this. I tried to incorporate AI into it, but wasn’t able to make it work. I love making collages, so thought this was a good alternative.

I didn’t go to school for math – Ranking Video Assignment

This video is not related to my course character. I chose this purely because I wanted to make a video about drag. In this video, I ranked some drag moments that have been “getting me through the week.” This was the most ambitious video of the three based on the sheer scale. I downloaded a ton of videos – including a 20-minute video for a less-than-thirty-second clip. It is also the longest, at a little under 15 minutes.

That being said, this was one I had a lot of fun on because I really love the subject. I made it all about things I enjoy, so everything I was looking at was something that made me happy.

Professional Gaming: Stories Through Games Assignment

For this video I did the Stories Through Games assignment. I played as my course character for about a week of Sims time. This was the most difficult video to make. I already had the sim and her house created, but needed to get a good recording of the gameplay. After a little research, I downloaded OBS. This was incredibly difficult. I think it is an actual software that professionals use, meaning it is not super user friendly and not Sydney friendly. I eventually got it to work, but it took a long time. I’m proud of myself for sticking it out, though.

The editing for this video was also complicated. I recorded a little over 30 minutes and the final video is closer to 10 minutes, so there was a lot that I cut out. I also had to rearrange some clips. Again, it was very frustrating and time consuming but I did it and I think the product is not bad.

Bless Her Heart – developing my course character

Now that everyone is involved with Aggressive Technologies, it’s time to develop Georgia Finch’s job there. In my original post, I mentioned that she is an assistant software developer at Aggressive Technologies. However, that wasn’t her initial goal. 

Out of college, she applied to an internship program at AT. After completing the internship, AT hires a few interns in jobs than most introductory positions. After Andrea Grant sabotaged Georgia’s internship, Georgia applied for a regular position. She got the job. Now Georgia and Andrea are constantly competing. Georgia may have an official job at the company, but Andrea could get promoted ahead of her.

Since she was in middle school, Georgia wanted to work in coding and technology. Her school offered an after-school program, which her parents signed her up because she was always bored at home. It turned out that Georgia had a natural talent for programming. Ever since then, she has been pushing herself as far as possible.

Georgia works every day to prove she’s the best programmer there. She’s not, but soon, she may be. Stay tuned.

Movies Are My Passion – Weekly Summary

This week had less assignments but a lot of work. I love movies and I am very enthusiastic about movies, so was excited to see that this week was all about movies.

I did two daily creates. I tried to use some photoshop skills, even if the results were very silly.

I revisited my goals from the beginning of the semester. This made me realize I needed to be more thorough with my reflections.

I read articles and watched videos about film analysis. These gave me a good idea of what to look at during the next assignment.

The biggest hurdle was the video essay, which I made about Ex Machina. My methods were not the most effective, but I have a product that I am very proud of. I had two posts about this, which are the actual video and a reflection

Overall I put a lot of effort into this week’s assignments and I think it paid off. Next week I am going to keep pushing myself.

Tearing Up the Dance Floor – Ex Machina Film Analysis Notes

This week I made a video essay about Ex Machina. In it, I compare different technical aspects of Ava and Caleb’s sessions throughout the movie. You can read the transcript of my video and find the link here.

This was a very challenging assignment. I have done some editing and voice recording for school projects, but never something this complex. I was working with a lot more content and trying to bring it all together into a single, understandable idea.

Here was my process:

  • I watched the movie, taking notes the entire time. After, I looked over my notes and found common themes. I then rewatched some scenes and started formulating my general idea.
  • Next, I wrote a script. I wrote it in sections – the introduction and synopsis, a breakdown of the specific things I look at in each scene, the analysis of each scene, and the conclusion.
  • After this I got all my clips. Some of them were not available online, so I had to find things substitutions.
  • Then I recorded my script. I put the audio into iMovie, then the first video.
  • Finally, editing! Since I went scene by scene, I imported each scene and started cutting it together. I know that real editors do a rough cut and do several rounds of editing with increasing detail. I did not do this. Instead, I did one very slow edit that became the final version. My method was not efficient and made it very difficult to fix mistakes. In the future, I will do more research into better techniques and try to implement them.

One issue I made off the bat was with my techniques for collecting videos. I usually operate under the idea that I will do more work if it means I don’t have to figure out something new. This idea was the downfall of this project. Instead of figuring out how to download videos, I screen-recorded YouTube videos on my phone. Besides this possibly being illegal, it means that the video quality is not good. If I make another video like this in the future, I will bite the bullet and figure out how to download videos. It’s long overdue.

Despite all the corners I arguably cut, this was a very difficult project and I am proud of the results. I spent a lot of time analyzing the movie, writing my script, collecting all the pieces, and assembling it. I like the video I created and I am interested to know what other people think about my analysis.

The Framing of Gods – Ex Machina Film Analysis

Below is the transcript and link for my film analysis of Ex Machina. There are some slight differences in wording, but overall this is accurate to the final video. My full breakdown of this process and my experience is here.

Warning: this video involves major spoilers for Ex Machina.

In Ex Machina, Caleb Smith is a programmer at Blue Book who wins a contest to spend a week at the private estate of Nathan Bateman, Blue Book’s CEO. Caleb learns that he is the human aspect in a Turing test, a test that examines the AI of robots. He starts conversing with Ava, Nathan’s latest robot. Caleb uncovers the truth of Nathan and what he is making. In the end, Caleb helps Ava escape. She kills Nathan, leaves Caleb behind to die, and goes into the world, finally free.

During this movie, Caleb and Ava have six official sessions that are part of the Turing test. Every session takes place in Ava’s room, where they are on opposite sides of a glass wall. 

There are many incredible ways that this movie communicates its message. Today I will be focusing on Caleb and Ava’s sessions. Lines, positioning, and reflection show the developing relationship between Caleb and Ava as well as the way they view each other.

First, let’s review these three topics I will use to examine these conversations .

Sitting and standing are very simple, effective ways to communicate power in a conversation. In this movie there are even more specific things the character’s positions represent. When one character is standing and the other is sitting, the one standing is in control of the conversation. When both are standing or sitting, they are equal. Two characters standing shows that they both feel as though they are in control and both of them sitting represents a more casual relationship.

Reflections and lines are prominent in the movie as a whole, even outside of Caleb and Ava’s sessions. When Caleb and Nathan are in the house together, Caleb is often boxed in with lines. The audience sees his reflection more than Nathan’s. Traditionally, mirrors represent moments of deceit, deception, contrast, distortion, and delusion. Nathan hides the truth from Caleb for most of this movie, so every scene with them is full of those ideas. In Caleb and Ava’s sessions, lines and reflections have even more distinct symbolism.

Let’s get into it. First, Session 1. In this session, Ava and Caleb are meeting for the first time. After the title screen, this scene’s first focus is on the sticky note wall in Nathan’s room, which emphasizes the nature of their meeting. They are first and foremost there for business. In the conversation, Caleb is excited and nervous, while Ava is confused given that she has never met anyone other than Nathan. They are both on edge, tense, and uncomfortable with each other.

They are both standing at the beginning of this scene. Both of them are equal in terms of comfort and control, though they believe they are each leading it. Caleb things he is driving the conversation because he is the human in this Turing test. Ava is observing him, which we later learn was probably due more to trying to figure out how she can use him and less because she was enamored by a new human. Ava is mostly shown behind the glass wall, whereas in later sessions the camera will join her on the other side. We see both of their reflections, representing how both of them are changing and how this new situation is challenging them. More specifically it also represents Caleb’s delusional fascination with Ava and the deception Ava is planning for Caleb.

Next, Session 2. A lot of this scene focuses on Ava. The camera rotates around her while she speaks, though Caleb’s reflection is visible almost the entire time. Ava walks around Caleb while Caleb sits still. Ava takes control of this conversation, first with the amount that she talks and then with the power. This is the first time that Ava turns the power off with Caleb in the room. During the main conversation, one of them is always sitting, but as soon as the power is off they both stand. When the power cuts off, Nathan cannot see them. Their awareness of him stifles their ability to talk freely, so when he is gone they are equal.

In Session 3, Ava dresses as a human and asks if Caleb finds her attractive. This is a major turning point in their relationship and Ava’s character. It shows that she has a desire to be human. A large part of this scene focuses on Ava getting dressed, with an occasional shot of Caleb waiting for jer. All these moments of Caleb waiting are shot from Ava’s side of the wall. Similar to how in session 1 we saw Ava through Caleb’s point of view, this time Caleb is shown from Ava’s point of view.

In session 4, Ava cuts the power again. This time, she reveals that it was intentional. This is the most honest scene between them. They are both standing and shown in equal framing. In other scenes, Ava moves a lot, pacing around Caleb. During this conversation, they sit and later stand directly in front of each other. This is a sign of increasing comfort and a more balanced power dynamic

The framing in session 5 changes in one very distinct way – they are both shown over the shoulder of the other. Again, they are both sitting, continuing their casual relationship. Almost every time one of them is focused on, the other character’s shoulder is also in frame. At this point, their relationship is developing past friendly or studious conversation. Caleb knows now that things are not what he thought. He wants to help Ava escape. Ava knows that Caleb trusts her and that her plan is working. They are shown entirely through each other’s point of view because this scene is about the ways that they see each other.

In session 6, neither of them sat the entire time. Caleb enters and waits for Ava to cut the power. He is much more blunt with her, not tiptoeing around the topic at all. He then presents his plan for how he will help her escape. Caleb and Ava are equal in this scene and both think they are in control. Caleb has the plan, but Ava is the one who is winning. The glass wall is not emphasized as a means of separation, but rather a reminder of their goal: free Ava.

In the end, Ava and Kyoko kill Nathan, Caleb is trapped in Nathan’s room to die, and Ava takes the helicopter meant for Caleb into the real world. The last scene shows her in an unidentified city, blending in as a human.

This movie uses a lot more techniques, but the most fascinating to me was the changes in Ava and Caleb’s relationship. This is a very well-made movie that keeps the viewer thinking and double-guessing everything said and done the entire time. I was on the edge of my seat. For all the things that are great, the most interesting to me has to be the framing. Each character is manipulating someone else, so the way they interact is massively important. If you have already watched this movie, I encourage you to watch it again and focus on how each character is positioned. If you haven’t seen it already, I apologize for spoiling the entire thing and I beg you to watch it.

Do I Call It A Film or A Movie? – I read about film analysis

As someone who has watched a good amount of movies and is very opinionated, film analysis and critique is something I enjoy a lot. That being said, I get frustrated with how subjective movies can be. It is hard to separate how we felt about a movie from the movie’s technical aspects, especially because a lot of movies are made to be experienced emotionally and not analytically. These articles showed me what to focus on when trying to make an objective comment on a movie. Sorry, a film.

The main takeaway I had from the reading and watching this week is the different types of film analysis. Here is my brief understanding of them:

  • Iconic: This method focuses on how pictorial/visual elements of a film convey its meaning. It is especially useful for older movies where the image was the main aspect of a film and modern narrative films that try to disguise the technical visual choices.
  • Semiotic analysis: this focuses on the meaning of the story by interpreting symbols, signs, and other themes. It is heavy on analogy, metaphor, and symbolism, especially when it comes to visuals.
  • Psychoanalytical: this method emphasizes a film’s aesthetic and the meanings and effects of that aesthetic on the story and how it relates to the audience.
  • Shot by shot or Mise-en-scéne: this is a technical look at the given sequence of shots in a film, using techniques to break down each image.
  • Narrative: this method focuses on the story of a film, including analysis of the narrative structure, characters, and plot.
  • Cultural/historical: this method places a film in a broader historical context. It looks at how a film fits into history, comments on its time, or otherwise represents the culture in which it was made.

Each of these methods is a unique lens that can be applied to a movie. But to get a full view and understanding, all of them are needed. Some may be more valuable than others depending on the film, especially since the movie itself may focus more heavily on one aspect than the other, but all of them interact to create the final product. They do not exist in a vacuum.

I am ready to take these techniques into the world and start overthinking every movie I watch – which isn’t all that different from what I already do, but this time I will at least have evidence to back me up.