Showing posts with label Maya. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Maya. Show all posts

Friday, January 25, 2013

Zero Dark Thirty: The final scene



Kathryn Bigelow’s latest film, Zero Dark Thirty, is the story of the courageous CIA agent Maya, played by Jessica Chastain, who is pushed to her limit over ten years attempting to find Al Qaeda leader Osama Bin Laden. Throughout the movie, Maya drives herself into the ground interrogating terrorists, travelling through the Middle East, and finishing paper work while trying to stay out of the line of fire. She loses friends, colleagues, and almost her own life in her struggles to stop the man responsible for plotting the September 11 attacks.


While the climax of the movie is one of the final scenes where Navy S.E.A.L. Team 6 enters Bin Laden’s compound, the final scene of the film shows true emotion of those that were part of the real event. In the final scene, Maya walks onto the empty plane, sits down in her seat, and as they close the door, she begins to cry. Throughout the entire movie, Maya is perceived as the tough, dedicated agent who does not care about anyone else’s opinion of her. In her eyes, her job is to find Bin Laden, which she dedicated her first twelve years in the CIA to doing. But, after finally catching him, she is so overcome with relief that she cannot help but to cry. Her experiences during her time in the Middle East could be contributing factors, but from my perspective, the pure relief of finding that one thing she was looking for takes over.

It is the last scene of the movie, but I think it was one of the most revealing scenes of the film. This is the first time we see the true emotion and damage that this impossible search put on her life. It is also the first time she lets down her tough façade and we see an emotion that is not anger or determination. It revealed what was building up inside of the mind of each person on the task force in Pakistan. While I believe the acting was phenomenal throughout the entire movie, this scene in particular stood out to me because it reflected the feeling of the actual agents in their position.  

This entire film was amazing, and I highly recommend it. 

Thursday, November 1, 2012

Motion Graphics and Animation!


So this post isn't really entirely Fiction Field Production related, and I'm sorry. I hope you can forgive me. BUT it is about Motion Graphics and Animation, so it'll be super cool, I promise.
I ended up enrolling in not one, but two of Arturo's classes this semester and I decided to post today about the other one, Motion Graphics, because we're all thinking about registration about this time of the semester.
SO. The class, which meets twice a week, deals with learning animation and effects in Adobe After Effects. We've also spent some time discussing other programs, including Photoshop and Maya, but we spend most of our time learning After Effects.

After Effects Launch Menu
So far this semester we've learned various elements of After Effects, including how to use rotoscope, motion tracking, green screen, color correction, and we've played with many of the effects that come with After Effects. 

Our first assignment that we completed on our own was a music project. We had to pick a song that we liked and make a graphic video to accompany it. Some people made lyric videos, which are becoming very popular on YouTube. Others made more interpretive videos, but all of them were really cool, and it was interesting to see how everyone interpreted the assignment. 

For my project, I did the song "Radioactive" by a band called Imagine Dragons. I really liked the feel and the beat of the song, and I used it to create my general theme of "red" and "sparks." 

My Lyric Video Project
I really liked this project because it gave me a chance to figure out After Effects for myself, and use the information I learned in class. I used many of the effects I learned in the class, but I also utilized one of our class resources. This great website, Videocopilot.net specializes in 3D effects in After Effects and other various motion graphics software.

If you're interested in motion graphics and animation, feel free to ask me about the class! Good luck with registration :)