2. Here, these are all the clips I’ve recorded.
I decided not to rename the files as
although it would help tremendously in
ordering the film, I don’t have enough
time spare to be able to rename them as I
have to focus on getting this first draft
done for the date I set for myself.
3. Here, to put the clips into the timeline, I simply
dragged the clips to where I wanted them to go.
Furthermore, to split the clips, I clicked the orange
scissors icon that is on the timeline which splits the
clip directly in which I can delete whatever I’d like
by pressing right on the mouse or ctrl+B on the
clip I’d like to delete and hovering over the delete
option. This tool allowed me to cut out all the dead
space and increase the structure and flow of the
short horror film.
4. Here, I decided to raise the brightness of the nightmare
sequences so then it is very visible whilst having
darkened under tones. This increases the quality of the
short horror film as it means that scenes can still be
dark but have visibility which will engage my target
audience since they wouldn’t want to watch something if
it was too dark to make out anything.
5. Here, I experimented with different
transitions for my text however I believe
they would’ve taken away from the final
product, so I deleted them and eventually
decided on a text specific transition that
made it more seamless. In addition, I
experimented with how long I wanted the
transitions to be and, in the end, having it
go across the full text made the product
more professional.
6. Here, with the text, to add to the
high quality, I added an effect
which made it so the text will go up
the screen. This added to the
quality of the product as rather
than the text just appear and
disappear, it resembled a
professional movie with the credits.