Wednesday, March 24, 2010

God's Architects

God’s Architects, by Zack Godshall, was an hour and a half long documentary about 5 extraordinary men who “blindly” built different structures for God. Each man had a different story, and a different reason for building their specific structure. Each man was religious, some more than others, and each building was built with a specific reason, history, and purpose.

The film was not broken up into 5 separate chapters, but the stories were inter-woven with each other. I like this film structure much more than “1, 2, 3…”. Most of the shots were not choreographed, it was a lot of him walking behind the person and letting them do what they wanted. I like that we were able to see the men actually building their structure, rather than them just talking about it. We first saw the structure, but then we were able to see and learn the process that goes about making it. My favorite was the God’s Mountain because I got to see the process of making adobe and all the hundreds of paint buckets the man had. He really wanted to send the message “God is Love”, and the shots let us see all the messages the man wanted to send out to the world.

The actual editing was very basic. There were no fades or transitions, just regularly cut shots. I think it would have looked good either way, but I like his choice. The music was original, and really didn’t play that big of a role in the film. It came in during the emotional scenes, for example, when the dad was telling the story of Lacy, his daughter. I really like that the music was original and it shows that he was willing to go the extra step instead of just using someone else’s music.

I really liked the film, and it was much more interesting than what I originally thought. It was simply done, with a simple message about God. We were also able to learn more about the film after when the Q and A. It was a good film and I would gladly recommend it to anyone.

Thursday, March 11, 2010

New Documentary Idea!

My original idea was to interview and investigate the pay cuts in the Jackson Public School System. After a week of sitting on this idea, I have already come across a couple of problems that I will not be able to avoid. I have already used these kids in a video, which took up a lot of their school time. I can’t ask to do that again because the principal and the teacher won’t let me. If I was able to use them again, I couldn’t because they are testing for the majority of the rest of the year.

What I plan on doing now is doing a documentary of the softball team. I thought it would be interesting to film what it is like to go on a road trip, with ups and downs. Fortunately, we leave Tuesday March 16th and staying there until the 20th. I think this will be interesting because people don’t realize how rough it is to go on road trips and the toll it takes on your body, routine, and school studies. I plan on interviewing the team during all parts of the day (waking up, before a game, at night, during studying, etc.) I think it will be funny and easy, but it will also show people what we do on top of schoolwork.

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

Documentary

I’m still not sure what I want to do for my documentary, but my idea right now involves the Jackson Public School System. They are currently making a lot of budget cuts, and that means, art, music, and physical education. I know this really frustrates the teachers because they feel like they should teach their children these things since no one else will. This means they have to spend a great deal of their own money on art supplies, PE equipment, DVDs and CDs. I would really like to interview the teachers and children and get their thoughts about the pay cuts to the arts. I would also like to ask the children what they wish they could do in school that they have not been able to.

Monday, March 8, 2010

Trimpin

I knew roughly what Trimpin was going to be about, but within the first 10 minutes, I was really surprised. The first thing I notices about the film was its simplicity. I think it fits very well because it states early on that Trimpin has no cell phone, website, email, or anything. He is a simple guy with a complex mind. I really like that they included the facts about him in the beginning because it really makes you think for the rest of the film “Wow! That’s awesome!”

I think the filmmaker did a really good job of capturing Trimpin’s own “mind”. All the shots of him in his studio and shopping for parts were hilarious because you think “This guy is crazy”. The shots really make you want to get inside his head because even though the shots are simple, Trimpin makes them interesting and thought provoking.

I know Trimpin is really interesting guy with a brilliant mind, but I almost wish there was someone else major in the entire film to kind of bring it together. I would have made it more interesting and easier to watch because you didn't have to have your attention on one person the whole time. It got a little easier when he began working with the Kronos Quartet. That performance was really awesome.

I liked the film and I thought it was interesting, but it was probably one of my least favorite out of the Southern Circuit Films. I just want a little more action, conflict, or people in general. It was good, just not my favorite. For anyone who is really musical, I would definitely recommend this film to them.