Patrick Leong
November 1st, 2010, 02:42 PM
A 2.5 min video montage, featuring some experimentation with timelapse, shot with Panasonic GH-1.
The Bridges of Minneapolis- an autumn portrait on Vimeo
Looking for critiques, thanks.
Jeremy Doyle
November 2nd, 2010, 09:29 AM
That actually made me miss my time living in the cities. Thanks for that.
Patrick Leong
November 2nd, 2010, 08:27 PM
You're welcome Jeremy, glad I could bring a little slice of Mpls to you:)
Scott Brickert
November 5th, 2010, 09:46 PM
What was it you were hoping to say with the piece?
I found the music a bit too strident and repettiittiive for the visuals.
It seemed a bit overstuffed. If you trimmed it down to more poignancy, I bet it would have more impact.
Lots of beauty out beyond the lens, and working the lens and camera as well.
Do another :)
Hank Ebert
November 10th, 2010, 03:05 PM
I like your 8th shot better than the one you opened with. I also would like to see some more telephoto shots and quickened the pace a bit. Otherwise, very nice job and it make me want to visit---but not in the winter.
Patrick Leong
December 4th, 2010, 02:14 PM
The video- originally hosted at Vimeo, is now part of a larger, hyper immersive 360° VR presentation:
Click here to visit (http://www.aerial-xp.com/BOM/), thanks for watching.
Pat L
Hamish Reid
December 4th, 2010, 04:24 PM
I missed this the first time around, but I'm glad I caught it this time -- I really enjoyed it, despite it not being my normal cup of tea. No comments about the soundtrack -- my sound system is disabled at the moment -- but visually, nicely stylized, it kept me interested the whole way through (a real achievement, given I'm supposed to be editing and rendering at the same time), and as someone else said (and as someone for whom anything east of Colorado and west of New Jersey is a bit of a mystery :-)), it made me want to see the place in real life...
Richard Gooderick
December 7th, 2010, 01:50 PM
I wondered what it was about too.
Bridges of Minneapolis or an experiment with time lapse - strung together?
There were some timelapse shots that I didn't care for eg the boat coming out of the lock followed by the shaking leaves. Both would have been better in real time I believe.
It seemed a bit random. It would probably be improved if you took a hatchet to it in the editing room and focused it more on the theme suggested by the title.
There is some sort of narrative line inherent in the material. At the moment it seems driven by technique and is a bit opportunistic.
Having said that, most of it looks lovely.