W17-P5 Image Editing by Evan Curby

I just want start out by thanking my friends Martin King and Noah Gutierrez for helping me out with this project. They did a wonderful job acting out the scenes and inputting some funny concepts which I decided to add to this short.

Initially when I started this I was struggling immensely to come up with ideas. I had all these grand concepts, but no idea of how I would be actually able to implement any of them. After struggling and getting nowhere, I decided to keep it simple and stick with what I already know.

I am infatuated with the sport of hockey. I have always been ever since I was a little kid. Everything about it, from the physical act of playing it, all the way down to its culture. With it being a sport with most of it’s players being from Canada, it’s lingo is one that is truly unique. I decided to go with the five most common hockey terms that I could think of with definition. I also wanted to provide a scenario with each word to give the viewer a full idea of how they are used.

I filmed at the Rink Exchange off of 13th street. The sets included the locker room, outside the glass of the rink itself, and the parking lot. I wanted to arrange them to tell a story of the players first arriving, to playing in a game, to leaving after the game and getting ready to head home.

I filmed on a Canon EOS Rebel t5i. I also recorded the audio on the T5i as well. A few concerns I had was the audio recorded through the camera itself was going to be of poor quality and would either peak constantly or be too quiet itself. I was also worried that the initial ambient sounds of the rink itself would over power the sounds of both my actors. We actually had to wait to film the locker room scene because the Zamboni room is connected to the side of it. When we first started filming it the Zamboni came back off the ice and was making an incredibly loud and annoying sound, which lead to laughs amongst us due to the inconvenient timing.

While editing the film to my surprise, the audio turned out alright from the t5i. There is a bit of ambient noise but all of the lines projected over it perfectly fine in my own opinion. The editing process itself was much simpler than I first anticipated. Being my first time ever doing video editing I was in panic mode. Luckily Adobe Premiere was a pretty smooth program to learn. I would have liked to have used Kernkraft 400’s Zombie Nation as the in between scene music since it is pretty much the hockey anthem, but I had to settle for some free generic rock music instead due to copyright laws.

Overall this was probably the most fun I have had doing a project in this class, and I hope you enjoy it.


W17-P5 Image Editing by Evan Curby

I just want start out by thanking my friends Martin King and Noah Gutierrez for helping me out with this project. They did a wonderful job acting out the scenes and inputting some funny concepts which I decided to add to this short.

Initially when I started this I was struggling immensely to come up with ideas. I had all these grand concepts, but no idea of how I would be actually able to implement any of them. After struggling and getting nowhere, I decided to keep it simple and stick with what I already know.

I am infatuated with the sport of hockey. I have always been ever since I was a little kid. Everything about it, from the physical act of playing it, all the way down to its culture. With it being a sport with most of it’s players being from Canada, it’s lingo is one that is truly unique. I decided to go with the five most common hockey terms that I could think of with definition. I also wanted to provide a scenario with each word to give the viewer a full idea of how they are used.

I filmed at the Rink Exchange off of 13th street. The sets included the locker room, outside the glass of the rink itself, and the parking lot. I wanted to arrange them to tell a story of the players first arriving, to playing in a game, to leaving after the game and getting ready to head home.

I filmed on a Canon EOS Rebel t5i. I also recorded the audio on the T5i as well. A few concerns I had was the audio recorded through the camera itself was going to be of poor quality and would either peak constantly or be too quiet itself. I was also worried that the initial ambient sounds of the rink itself would over power the sounds of both my actors. We actually had to wait to film the locker room scene because the Zamboni room is connected to the side of it. When we first started filming it the Zamboni came back off the ice and was making an incredibly loud and annoying sound, which lead to laughs amongst us due to the inconvenient timing.

While editing the film to my surprise, the audio turned out alright from the t5i. There is a bit of ambient noise but all of the lines projected over it perfectly fine in my own opinion. The editing process itself was much simpler than I first anticipated. Being my first time ever doing video editing I was in panic mode. Luckily Adobe Premiere was a pretty smooth program to learn. I would have liked to have used Kernkraft 400’s Zombie Nation as the in between scene music since it is pretty much the hockey anthem, but I had to settle for some free generic rock music instead due to copyright laws.

Overall this was probably the most fun I have had doing a project in this class, and I hope you enjoy it.