THE 48 HOUR HORRORFEST HAS BEEN CANCELED DUE TO THE LACK OF TEAMS.
We are revising and re-scheduling the challenge, so try to put together a team now and we will know the date in the next couple of weeks.
Part 1
Part 2
Posted by - Joseph Crawford
Cast:
William Lynn – Zombie Bill
Tanya Darabcsek – Frances / Cop #1
Alvaro Coronel – Cop #2
Laura Rollins – Jogger
Cassandra Lee – Voice of Melissa
Crew:
Benjamin G. Krumm – Director
Sarah K. Kelce – Director of Photography
Joseph Crawford – Video Editor / Sound
Amanda Aschinger – Executive Producer
Oleg Passer – Executive Producer
Justin Loase – Co-Producer
Wilson Wood – Special Effects Make-Up
Jack Roper – Music
Posted by Webster University Video Program at 3:14 PM 0 comments
Labels: Benjamin Krumm, Joseph Crawford, Sarah K. Kelce, Student
by Lorna Gaffney - Senior Video Production
My Video II final project. My video one final project had some serious men bashing, so I figured it was time to due some women bashing as well. Bottom Line: Just a reminder that gorgeous creature you take home from the bar will probably be a lot uglier in the morning. :)
by Josh Moore - Senior Video Production
A short spoof of the Dateline investigations.
by Benjamin Carrico - Senior Video Production
16mm silent black and white film concerning the end of the world.
by Anthony Sanchez
This was a project I completed for a Video II course. It uses Radiohead's "Fitter Happier" song (poem), conjoined with images of someone in a more productive state mind consuming state.
I got a chance to work an interview with the artist Maya Lin recently. If you're not aware of her work, she's probably most famous for the Vietnam War Memorial in Washington D.C. The Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis is currently housing her exhibit Systematic Landscapes, and they needed to get her on tape during her brief visit here for the opening. If you haven't seen the show, you should.
The interesting thing about this video is that the actual interview footage of Maya and the footage of Kathryn asking the questions weren't shot on the same day, or even in the same room! Due to a variety of circumstances, we had to do them a week apart, and while the original interview was held in the main gallery, the pickup stuff was shot in a classroom. The lighting in each room was very different, so I had to compensate a great deal in the field and in post. Both were shot on a Sony PD-170, but the main interview used a full three-point Arri Softbank kit, while the pickup was shot with natural light and an Arri 650 to fill (we used the white wall as a backlight). Cutting the sound was a bit challenging, as it had to seem seamless between the shots.
This is not at all uncommon in real-world production, and it seemed like a good thing to post here. Enjoy!
-Aaron AuBuchon, Video Production Program Facilitator
Last week, the Video II class went en masse to the Water Works event at the Pulitzer Foundations for the Arts. Over thirty video producers had works on display there on three different screens. Working in groups, they captured b-roll and conducted interviews for short documentaries about the event. Due to the nature of the event, the Pulitzer won't let us put the results up on our blog, but they will be placing them all up on their website. As soon as we have them finished, I'll put up the link.
Pretty cool, huh?
-Aaron AuBuchon
by Amy Farfan - Senior Video Production
Masking project for my Special Effects class. I took three shots of the exact same scene with the same person in three different places and combined them in After Effects using masks.
by Jake Welch - Senior Video Production
Short video of my Color Blind friend who dreams in color.
Final Project for Video I sophomore year.
by Kara Miller - Senior Video Production
Human interest piece generated from pre-existing footage.
by Mary Jordan - Senior Video Production
Final video project for my video production 2 class. Lauren
receives shocking news about her best friend.
by Kat Touschner - Senior Video Production
Video editing assignment. Originally for video II.
by Joseph Crawford - Senior Video Production.
A final project for Video II. It's a trailer for a film that may never be made.
St. Louis poet Jason Turner gave a reading of his poem "Shaman's Soup" which I them interpreted with what seemed to be appropriate visuals. The main reason I put this up is to explain the concept of compositing. The quality is crap- hooray youtube!
-Aaron AuBuchon, Video Program Facilitator
This is A Letter Home, my Video Production 2 final. It was shot on two days in New Haven, MO with my family and friends acting as the crew. The footage was captured on a Sony PD-170 and edited with Final Cut Pro, a few of the shots have smoke effects in them, that I added from Motion. I hope you enjoy, and if your interested in working with me, I would be more than happy to collaborate. Please post your work as well, and maybe we can learn something from each others work! This blog could be a great resource for the Webster Video/Film community, so please add on to it.
Thanks,
Aaron Holdmeyer