2021-10-21 ------------------------------------------------------------------ Just submitted an edit of a short film for my colleagues to criticise. I thought of writing a little something about it. It's a bit challenging, though, since this is a topic I actually know about, unlike my typical rants here. I'm not going to tell you how to compose a story, but instead I will give you a few pearls of wisdom that I have collected along the way. Let's talk about music in film. I use an inordinate amount of time searching for the right song for my videos. I have a system, sort of. The song has to have a structure that you can reflect in your film. This can be chronologically the same as your edit, or you can edit the song to fit your video. Usually it's a bit of both for me. I will first try to find a song that works for the pivotal moment of my film. Then I will go through the other stuff that the same artist has produced and see if there is anything that works for the other moments in the film. If there isn't, I will try to look for another very similar artist, with similar instrument and so on. I will also brutally edit the shit out of the song if I have to. Like, I will loop the tranquil moment of the song and mix it in with the start of the climax and stuff like that. I don't know if these artists would like to see what I did with their songs. Why do I do this? Music is a level of emotional structure for the film that you can't get to otherwise. I can't have an orchestra for my little films, like they have in Hollywood, so I will have to mimic what they do with their orchestras. You can build stuff up without music, but then you are only relying on two levels of narration: What the people say and what you show them do. Music adds sort of a premonition to what the viewer sees because music moves slightly slower than the visual side of the film so it often "primes" the moment before we see it. Also, music can deepen the message of what the characters are saying. I can't make music, so I just have to make do with what I can use. And edit the shit out of it. The hardest thing about music is how to know when you have overdone or underdone it. I personally like to either select a song that is not in discord with what is happening on the screen, in other words use elevator music just to create an ambience, or (preferably) find a song that is pushing the style of the film to the edge of believability. This is really quite hard to do, so I don't actually suggest this for a beginner, but basically I will choose a song that goes as close as I can get to making fun of the genre I am in, without actually going over that limit. The trick to doing this is to find a song that is within a stereotypical movie song genre (strings, ambient, piano, rock) and that has "something" in it. Some clever trick or some note that makes the melody a bit edgy. Then it will work in the stereotypical setting, since it breaks the stereotype slightly. Another thing is to take a melody that isn't sticky. There are a set of melodies that stay in your mind from the first time you hear them. These are bad for movie soundtracks. You may use them in a way that you use the melody in a particular spot in the beginning of the movie and then at a very specific spot in the end, for example, but this has to be implemented in a surgical fashion in order to work properly. And then, when you have made that edit, reaching for the edges of absurdity, you will have to submit it to the criticism of your peers and see if you overdid it. ------------------------------------------------------------------