Friday, 28 October 2011

As of this time, we are still working on the the 'Prisoner' video clip, and within this clip I've had an idea of how the interrogator's voice should be like, as well as the laughing section near the middle of the clip (0:48).

  
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MPMqzuvTpPI


I believe the tone of the voice and the sheer insanity of the voice would add very weird (although tense and strange) vibe and feeling towards the film.I also believe it would make a good voice style because in quite a few interrogation scenes, the interrogator has a unusually deep and thunderous voice.
For example: 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hMTeNjUwlwo&feature=related


The interrogator has a very deep, albeit edited voice, that doesn't let his voice be recognised, the kind of voice gives the representation of a dominant person, someone who is in control and have power over someone else.  

Note: I know a lot of my examples are coming from Games or short films, but I believe games are an underrated form of media, which in the right circumstances give a fantastic atmosphere just as good as any film.

1 comment:

  1. You need to update your blog - you have no information posted about the current project. Furthermore, you are not posting in anything like the detail you need to. Take a look at Flossi's or Katie's "Prisoner" evaluation, or at the amount that Reece and Barry have done so far... You must get into the habit of posting on a regular basis (OCR reccomend one post per day!)

    I agree with your comment about games. Considering the amount of time and effort which goes into e.g. "Fallout" or "Elder Scrolls" games, both of which stand up in comparison to the majority of movies on a narrative level, I think the prejudice is misplaced. "Mass Effect" has such a detailed backstory it's hard to see it as simply a game. With the added advantage that, to a certain extent, you can direct it yourself.

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