I love the smell of GIFs in the morning

I decided to start off the week in a productive fashion by knocking out one of the harder assignments for the week.  Before I start, I should mention that I love GIFs.  I find them hilarious, but I’ve never tried to make my own.  That was an ordeal to say the least.  I learned that the MPEG Streaming software doesn’t allow for a large amount of frames, so I had to compress my clip down a whole lot more than I would have liked.  From there it was fairly easy to import into GIMP and create it into a gif.

With that being said, I think the clip came out very well.  A big thanks to the DS106 wiki which has a fantastic tutorial on how to create gifs here.   It may take some trial and error to get a gif that works well, but it’s well worth it.

Stay out of Malibu, deadbeat!

My first GIF!

This was a clip from my favorite movie ever, “The Big Lebowski,” a movie which is, by far, one of the most hilarious pieces of cinema ever.  If you haven’t seen it, drop whatever your doing, make yourself a white russian, and go see the movie.  The entire rant which leads to the confrontation above can be found here.  Plan on seeing many more gifs from me in the coming months.

In other site news, I’m still fidgeting around with themes and widgets and the like and any creative input would be appreciated considering I am design impaired.

Handy Set of Guns

Nicolas Winding Refn’s avant garde movie Bronson is a semi-biographical account of Britain’s self proclaimed “most violent inmate.” This movie was a real step forward in the now renown movie star Tom Hardy (Bane). The flick has TONS of fighting, mumbling British accents, and great ’80s music. The gif below is a loop of Bronson showing of his “skills” that made him famous, something that he very much desired.

To make this gif I had to download two different–but free–types of software. MPEG Streamclip to download youtube videos (its important to get the beta version) and GIMP to compress all the image sequences. There is also a VERY help full video, that walks you through step by step. Here it is:

Hope this helps

 

My First GIF!

The Avengers!  If you haven’t seen this movie, it’s amazing.  I loved it and laughed so hard when I saw this scene.

So, we were given this assignment.  I’ve never created a .gif before and had to do a little bit of digging before I finally figured out how to make one.  I don’t have photoshop, so I had to resort to a website called MakeAGIF which is actually REALLY handy.  I hope that we are aloud to use this site to create our work?  I had the video file that I wanted, and I took screenshots with VLC and then uploaded them and then it created this gif!

I really enjoy this particular clip because it is funny but at the same time makes me think of how I felt when I was first told to create an animated gif.  My brain felt like Loki’s body at first.  These sorts of things are a bit daunting to me when I have to do some research and figure out how to do something that I’ve never done before and then create it.  I’m really glad that I got it done though because I thought it was a fun process!  I’m sure I’ll find an easier and more efficient way to produce a gif as the semester progresses.

So far, every assignment that I have done for this course has been one that I enjoyed in the end.  I can definitely see though how people say that it takes time and to not procrastinate.  I’m trying to get everything done as early as I can so I can go back and edit it later on in the week if I need to before I actually submit the assignment.

Criss Cross: Sharpening Her Nails

I think the noir animated GIFs this semester are going to be fun! This GIF features Anna Dundee (played by Yvonne DeCarlo) sharpening her nails in Robert Siodomak’s 1948 noir Criss Cross, a film wherein Burt Lancaster reprises his role as chump from Siodomak’s 1946 The Killers. This film is an awesome companion film to The Killers, and it was actually remade in 1995 as The Underneath by Steven Soderbergh—a film I also really like. The plot centers around an armored car heist and Steve Thompson’s (Burt Lancaster) ill-fated romance with a quite memorable femme fatale. I like this GIF because it really captures Yvonne DeCarlo’s beautiful caginess throughout the film. She is filing her nails while the robbery is being planned, looking up stonily as her lover seals his fate.

The Killers Animated GIF: Headlights

This is the opening scene from Robert Siodomak’s 1946 noir classic The Killers, which is an extrapolation of Ernest Hemingway’s short story by the same name. That’s part of why Hemingway starts off the hardboiled course, and this film is one of my favorites, if not my favorite, noir of all time. Ava Gardner is the most seductie femme fatale ever, and while no Barbara Stanwyck in Double Indemnity, Kitty was still ferocious. And Burt Lancaster plays the greatest sap in noir history between this film and Siodomak’s other noir masterpiece Criss Cross (1948)

This animated GIF is interesting in that this scene of the headlights in the dark is a recurring visual theme in not only noir films (think the beginning of Kiss Me Deadly) but a motif David Lynch comes back to again and again, particularly in Lost Highway. I won’t be so bold as to say this is the “first” example of it in cinema, because I would ultimately be proven wrong. Nonetheless, it’s certainly an early noir visual motif of cars, killers, shadows and night which brings that sense of impending doom and blind fate to the fore.

I Feel Sick

This guy in a asdf YouTube video thinks that he’s sick.

 

Animated Giff’n

Finally.  I got around to making a few animated Gifs.  I chose Ghost World.  I love Thora Birch’s interpretation of Enid.  Birch’s expressions are priceless, and kind of capture what I feel at least a few times a week.  Is it healthy to possess so much teenage angst at 36?  I’m not so sure.

I decided to use the first day of summer school since the expressions in this scene sum up how Enid feels about a lot of the bullsh**ery that exists in the adult world.  For those of you who haven’t seen the movie or read the comic, Enid has just graduated from high school with the provision that she take and pass a summer art class since she failed the class during the school year.  Enid happens to be a talented artist.  I wonder how Enid would have done if she were in a class structured more like an independent study…

Here are those Gifs…

There’s too much dead time at the beginning of this first clip, but it was the first attempt.

Thora Birch in Ghost World

 

This one didn’t turn out quite as I had imagined either.  I also screwed up on the resizing.  But these things happen.

More Enid in art class

 

This one is my favorite:

Yup. Enid in art class

 

I followed Jim Groom’s tutorial.  Very helpful stuff there.

 

 

 

 

 

Shark GIFing for ds106

jim groom posted a GIF of Henry Winkler’s infamous/iconic shark jump this morning.

 

 

I can’t imagine a world where media-saturated Bava had missed the origins of this trope.  And if that’s really the case, then maybe he missed the Arrested Development sequel as well.

 

I'm off to Burger King

 

I’ve really been enjoying this process.  Alan suggested that I detail the Photoshop steps for GIFing (simple, but often hard to find), so I tried to live record a tutorial video as I made this one.

 

 

The other voice Annika.  She waved at the computer a lot.

 

 

I Believe So Strongly in #ds106

For a few years, I’ve watched the explosion of amazing film-clip GIFs take over the web. Even as the #ds106 crew churned out fantastic artifacts in class after class, I consistently viewed that as a consumer.  Clearly it involves a lot of aestetic judgment and technical skill.  It belongs in the “complicated with Photoshop” bucket, aka the “Not for me!” pile.

WRONG!  Make art!

So while I know that my craftsmanship is weak, at least I can step it up on a curatorial level.  These are all from one of my favorite films, Soderbergh’s cinematic throat clearing excercise Schizopolis!

I believe so strongly in mayonaise

“I believe so strongly in mayonaise.”

That last GIF is cut from an amazing sequence where Soderbergy runs through a dozen hideous faces in a bathroom mirror, and then snaps back into normalcy in a split second when someone else walks into the restroom.

The other cult gem of my DVD/VHS collection is John Greyson’s Zero Patience.  Sadly, most of my immediate thoughts for GIFs involve incidental or pupet nudity.  I’m living with a holistic public identity, but I recognize the benefits of keeping the bathouse barbershop trio out of my google results.

Oh, and while I’m at it, have a little Fred Rogers.

Animated GIF: This is not Timothy Carey

Story: It’s been more than a quarter of a century since I first watched Paths of Glory. At that time, the experience of watching the nearly 30 year old film was profound. As part of my research into Timothy Carey’s career apart from World’s Greatest Sinner, I was delighted to find Kubric’s amazing World War I film available on YouTube (link above). Though Carey is only a supporting character actor, the scene of him approaching the firing squad is at the same time haunting and unforgettable.

My purpose in watching the film wasn’t to find a moment to turn in to an animated GIF. And the one above isn’t even of Timothy Carey. The scene in which this young soldier appears for a cameo comes at the end of the film and is also unforgettable but on an entirely different emotional level than with Carey. It suggested itself to me as an animated GIF immediately.

Assignment: This is my second stab at the Say It Like Peanut Butter assignment in the past week. I’ve heard there are some ds106 participants who think nothing of posting seven or eight animated GIF assignments in day so don’t think I need to worry about going back to the well so frequently. Besides it’s a good way to stay in practice.

Process: The process was essentially the same as described with the Repoman clip last week using layer masking to reduce the file size. As the original video was of higher quality that the stuff I usually find on YouTube and the scene so beautiful, I decide to sample the frames at the higher rate of 8 fps.

I’ve been trying to make the GIFs as small as possible recently and the best way seems to be reducing the number of frames. The color reduction that Mark suggested seems to be done automatically by GIMP as the file is created.

To do the layer masking, I created an oval selection with 5 pixels of feathering around the soldiers face. The layer mas was applied to 14 of the 15 frames that were created by MPEG StreamClip. So the rest of the tavern scene around the soldier is essentially a still photograph. The size of the GIF with layers masked as described above is 975 kb.

I created another one, for the purpose of comparison, with all 15 frames in tact. The size of this file was 1.6 MB.

It would appear that dramatic file size reduction can be accomplished with Jim’s layer masking technique (linked to in the repoman post. We should all be very grateful for the Bava, indeed.