Sunday, March 29, 2026

Creative Critical Reflection

After long anticipation, I've finally finished my CCRs. They took lots of work, but I'm very pleased with the way they all came out!

CCR#1


CCR#2​


CCR# 3

CCR#4





Saturday, March 28, 2026

CCR Planning- Part 1

 Now that I have finished my film, I have to start planning out my response to the CCRs. I have about a week to get them done, and ironically, I just now checked to see what the questions are. My mom gave me the idea of first starting out by answering each question in a brief paragraph or 2 first, and then figuring out what creative approach I want to use to answer them. 

The questions for the CCRs are 

• How does your product use or challenge conventions, and how does it represent social groups or issues?

• How does your product engage with audiences, and how would it be distributed as a real media text?
• How did your production skills develop throughout this project?
• How did you integrate technologies – software, hardware, and online – in this project?

Now im going to roughly answer these questions before creating the actual scripts.

For the first question: My film represents the social group of dysfunctional families. I tried to use the absence of the parents to show how the brother has developed his overprotectiveness of his little sister. Also, mental illness is another thing I've represented in this film. Ethan has Antisocial Personality Disorder, which can be seen in him disregarding the bullies' rights as a person, and having no remorse over killing them. This is paired up with his pathological attachment coming from trauma of having a dysfunctional family, creating an altogether unstable personality.

My film challenges conventions by using very unique camera techniques. At the beginning of my film, I basically made my camera into a pair of eyes. I set the camera to first-person view, positioning it at eye level as I walked into the school. Doing so gave the impression that the audience was walking through the hallways.  This being the opening to my film may be startling or even confusing at first, which I feel isn't very conventional. 


For the second question: My product engages with the audience by using visual techniques with the camera, the sound, and the lighting. 

-first-person camera angle

- sound pops and setting appropriate music to give horror vibes

-lighting set low and pale to give the audience that suspenseful feeling

- transitioning titles

As a media text, trailers would be promoted on YouTube, social media like TikTok and Instagram. The actors would promote on their personal accounts, and our actual production company would have their own social media accounts where they also post trailers and things like polls about their favorite characters in the movie, which ties into interacting with the audience.  

I would then put the actual production out on a special premiere, about 3 months later, release it in theatres, and a month later, have it available for streaming.

For the third question, my production skills improved a lot. I didn't have time to film during the brief, so I couldn't make any immediate improvements. But thanks to this project, I was able to identify major ways in my filming part of the production can be improved. 

I noticed that many of my clips were very short and rushed. This was because, during the conversation, I would immediately shut the camera off right after one person said their part, instead of having a gap in between responses to make the conversation seem more natural. 

Also, I learned just how important the ISO feature and the white balance can be in how a film is. When I first began recording, the iso was off, and the film came out very grainy and had black lines running laterally across the screen. I was confused as to why that only showed up in clips filmed in a certain location in the house, but I soon realized it was because the ISO wasn't correctly set to accommodate that area's lighting. 

When using Premiere Pro I learned a few things about how to animate titles and make my productions seem more professional. This included using color corrections. I learned how to match my films visuals with the actual content. Specifically, how to make my scene have a more horror look to it by almost completely draining the color from it and adding dark vignettes to the sides of my film. I could use these skills in future projects; not only in those of horror but also those that are not. This is becuase if im trying to create a film thats very happy and gleeful, which is the opposite of my psychological film, I could just do the opposite of what I did. in this project, giving more life and vibrance to my film, without overdoing it. 

Time management was also key to this prject as when I did sumbmitt it, I did so 5 minutes before it was due. this cuased mounds of unnecessary stress that I definetely have learned from.

I also learned how to correctly export my projects. I have to make sure that I have a folder organized in my files specifically for the film so that it has enough room in the destination to fully save. Also, I must make sure that I save it regularly throughout my project to ensure that if the computer malfunctions, all my work will be saved. I learned this the hard way, as I had multiple times where almost all my work would be deleted, and I would have to start from scratch. Another thing that this project taught me was to make sure that my film is saved as an MP4. I could make sure that it is saved this way if, before I save it, it says that it is being saved as an H.264. If it is not saved this way, then I won't be able to access my project as a file to share with Blogger or any platform.


For the fourth question, • How did you integrate technologies – software, hardware, and online – in this project?

 I used multiple different pieces of hardware to create this film's opening. The first and most obvious would be the camera and the mic that I used. I used a professional camera from my TV production class and a mic that came with a muffler. I also used a phone to film the first minute of the film due to a lack of time to get a camera. 

Though not intentionally, I used a close-up lens on my camera for the scene that follows the title sequence. To use this to my advantage, I used a variety of close-up shots, and it helped the film come out very clear and polished-looking. 

I used Premiere Pro to edit my full brief and used external features, like Adobe fonts for the title sequence. Though not directly linked to my film, I used YouTube to further my knowledge on how to edit on the Premiere Pro software. 



Monday, March 23, 2026

The Final Brief

 After many complications, I've finished my final film opening sequence. I'm not as proud of it as I could've been, but it was the best I could do with the schedules I had to work around.


The Blood Between Us


Sunday, March 22, 2026

Editing- Slowing down clips

 After doing all the color corrections that I wanted, I had an idea on how to get more time for brief: Slowing down each clip. 

I did this by double-clicking on the clip and selecting speed/duration.

After that, I changed the speed from 100% to either 95% or 90%. I made it 95% when there was talking involved. This is because when I made it 90%, it distorted the voices of the actors, making them sound very unnaturally deep. 

This only added about 8 seconds to my film however but something is better than nothing.

Production- Editing- Color Correction

After doing all of the basic editing (which did take a lot longer than I expected), I moved on to making my film seem as "horror coded" as possible.

To do this, I modified the overall coloring and vibrancy of my film. I changed my Premiere Pro layout from Editing to Color- that means that instead of my screen looking like this:

It instead looks like this: 


This allowed me to see the highs and lows of my scene's brightness, adjust the hues, alter the contrast, etc.

Since I didn't have much experience in color correction, I mostly played around with all the different functions and controls until I got the look I wanted. I did have to change the setting based on the general brightness of the scene that was shot, but most of them were the same.


 The setting that I used most frequently was faded film bar to 43, sharpen to 100, vibrance to -63, the saturation to 93.3, then I set the vignance to -1.3. These controls made the scene go from this:



To this:



As you can see, the liveliness of the film was almost completely stripped away from it, giving a very monotone/ slightly eerie feeling to it. The dark edges of the screen gave the scene a traditional spooky look, while also insinuating that this happened in the past.

I only applied these setting to the first section of the film( right before the title sequence) because the rest of the opening was meant to seem like a regular day for the siblings. Contrasting with the scene that just took place.



Saturday, March 21, 2026

Production- Editing -Times

 After I came to the conclusion that I only had enough raw film to get about a 45-second opening, I was very anxious. I thought that there was absolutely no way for me to turn a less-than-a-minute film into a 2-minute one without adding more clips. And unfortunately, I already knew that none of my actors were going to be able to help me get the rest of the time I needed for my brief, meaning that I had to work with what I had.

After putting all my clips in the order that I desired, I started to cut some clips shorter. I hated that I had to do this; however, some clips had my voice in them, saying "1, 2, 3, go", and obviously, I can't have that in my film, so that action I took was definitely necessary. 

Production- Editing

To edit, I used Premiere Pro since that's the platform that I have the most experience with. When I first started editing, I knew I wouldn't have a lot of time because that same day I had to catch a flight out of state, and I wasn't able to bring the device I edit on because it's my mom's. 

However, when I imported the clips onto Premiere Pro I instantly knew: I didnt have enough film to reach the 2 minute mark. I talked with my mom about what I should do and the only thing she could come up with at the time was to try and get more film. Seeing as this was my last resort, I asked my actors if they were able to act once more and waited for their response.

Creative Critical Reflection

After long anticipation, I've finally finished my CCRs. They took lots of work, but I'm very pleased with the way they all came out!...