5 from 39

Enjoyed the original 39 steps on the TV the other night. Some giffable moments:

music_hall

 

bang

 

curtains

 

knife1

 

ghost_words

 

I just skimmed through a downloaded version in Movie2Gif and exported a few gifs. One or two I edited  a wee bit in fireworks.

Most of the DS106 croud seem to use GIMP or photoshop for giffing but I like Fireworks. Movie2Gif is just a fronted for Gifsicle which does a nice job of stitching frames together from stills. Fireworks is good for grabing a bit of a frame and ‘spreading’ it over all the other frames to freeze that section of the gif.

This sort of fits the ds106 Assignments: Multi-Frame GIF Story. If I get some more time I might go on with the movie, maybe get 39 gifs from it.

As usual, not much any refection on the movie from me.

Yie Ar Kung-Fu GIFs

This series of GIFs is in honor of the 1985 classic arcade game Yie Ar Kung-Fu.  I’ve already written about my love for this game on the bava, so I’ll save you my usual flood of verbiage.

yie_ar_kung-fuBuchoStarNunchaPoleFeedleChainClubFanSwordTonfunBlues

For the record, this series of GIFs took me way too long. Each animated fighter is its own GIF, and my strategy was to beat each and every character in the game and then steal his or her image as a GIF (a double beat down) That plan went well until I got to Tonfun, then it went to hell. I kept getting beat up by Tonfun, so in the interest of time and family relations I found this video of a perfect game and got the animated likeness of the Blues GIF there. Nothing like starting the New Year with a cheat!

One last thing, you may notice that each of these characters animations are the same as they are in the “Hot Fighting History Next Opponent” cut scene for each of them. Still stuck on the animated GIF cut scenes idea for class arcade games.

GIF ‘em High

This next phase of GIFfest 2012 returns to the movies, and the westerns, with some slices of Hang ‘em High, the 1968 western notable because it was the first one of Clint Eastwood’s westerns that was not filmed in Italy.

I’ve already noted GIFfed some of the continuity problems in the opening credits, now let’s get to the action. Right in the opening sceme, Captain Wilson, the leader of the mob that wrongly accuses Clintwood’s character Cooper of murder, issues the “Hang “em” command that puts the plot in motion.

hang-em

Yes, that is Alan Hale Jr pitching in with the bad guys – how can the Skipper do that? What will Gilligan think?

Brought in to Fort Grant, Cooper is released by Judge Fenton, who makes the offer for him to become a Marshall. The Judge lectures Cooper not to take revenge but to let justice play out (which translates here to hanging by the law)

cooper-becomes-marshall

This GIF had a lot of frames! I was trying to keep a lot of the back and forth of the conversation, so I dropped the GIF down to 8 colors to give it more of a cartoony look.

Of course Cooper turns out to be a more than capable Marshall, he eventually runs into a situation where 3 dudes have stolen cattle, and one of them, Miller, turns out to be one of the crew that hung Muller in the beginning. the crime’s victims want to exact revenge the old way, but Cooper insists on bringing them in, which means, marching them 3 days across the wilderness (including scenes ar White Sands, new Mexico).

I liked this back and forth between Cooper and the guy who wants revenge and Miller, played with a sneer by Bruce Dern. A lot of back and forth glances here.

miller-cooper

Remarkable Cooper heroically brings in the 3 prisoners alive to Fort Grant, but becomes disgusted at the spectacle that the hangings have become, especially since he feels the 2 younger rustlers do nto deserve death.

In this scene near the end, Judge Fenton again goes back and forth, and utters the phrase “hang ‘em high”

Because if the law didn’t hang them, the next posse that goes out will say, “Hang ‘em and hang ‘em high, there’s no justice in Fort Grant.” And if there’s no justice in Fort Grant, Cooper, there will be no statehood for this territory.

judge-cooper

So we have a juxtaposition of what hanging means here in the western frontier, what is the difference between the group think that hung Cooper in the opening from a tree, and the more massive public event in the end, except that it is sanctioned by the court? Hanging is hanging, right? And is there one justice more just than another?

I went a bit more extravagant in these GIFs,m aiming for multiple clip segments, and thus ended up with some bigger files (.5 Mb+). It’s still fascinating to me to isolate the scenes and action to a series of frames. I will slip this one in the Multi-Frame GIF Story assignment.

“GIF ‘em and GIF ‘em high”

spring eternal

All GIFs are from the film Baraka

All GIFs are from the film Baraka

My post on permanence reminded me of this story I read back ages ago from Owning Your Own Shadow by Robert Johnson.
All gifs are from the film, Baraka.


Once upon a time, many moons ago in the middle of a tiny village there was a natural spring that flowed with the most magical water. The water brought health, healing and eternal youth.

For many years the villagers shared the spring for the more it was shared, the more it flowed and its effects were even more magical.

Magical waters brought health.

When word spread of the spring across the lands and overseas, many foreigners made great pilgrimages to visit the village just to take a sip of this wondrous spring.It was such a great journey for some that they would carry containers to capture and bring back the spring water with their friends and family from home who were too weak to make such a great journey.

When some of the villagers saw this, they became concerned and decided that they should limit how much of the spring water foreigners could take away. Some decided they would stand guard around the spring all day. They created tickets and made everyone stand in line to visit the spring. Some people, not wanting to wait in line would sneak in at night and take the spring water when the security was not present.

Eventually, the villagers noticed the footprints of these nocturnal trespassers and decided the best solution would be to create a fence. Over time the fence became a wall. Any villagers who disagreed with the walls were outcasted, pushed out of the village; their land was sold and huge buildings were built to accommodate the paying visitors.

birds around the towers

The wall grew into a towers

As the wall grew in height and width it changed into a series of towers and this not only blocked any view of the spring but in some places it obscured the sun altogether.

In the dark shadows around the tower, makeshift markets popped up selling trinkets and other useless memorabilia that made a mockery of the spring.

What none of these people noticed was that the spring lost all its magic. It no longer had any special characteristics. It became plain water, which if you even tasted it wasn’t even safe to wash with it, let along to drink and quite possibly instead of giving your eternal life it would make you ill.

Down the path, far away from this madness, where the villagers who had been exiled and ridiculed continued to share and be open, a tiny little spring of water popped up. And it was magical.

It was magical

It was magical

Every time greed grew and people tried to control access to the spring, it lost its magic and the spring would pop up in new place.

Where you least expect it

Where you least expect it

Fort GIFpache

Here comes my epic multi GIF bonanza as part of the ds106 GIFfest, it might fall into a Multi-GIF story.

It’s BROUGHT TO EXCITING LIFE!

exciting life

What follows are 16 GIFfable scenes from the 1948 John Ford Western, Fort Apache. Rented from the nifty little library in Pine, AZ, the movie appeals on several levels, first because of the iconic scenery of Monument Valley it might be 100 miles from the real Fort Apache). Yes, the mittens are familiar, but it’s that vast space the Ford used so well to back narrate the story.

You also have some name stars, John Wayne, Henry Fonda, even a adult-ish) Shirley Temple. It’s a slice a bit different from the typical cowboys versus Indians, though both are present, but really dives into the tension of the white settles who had lived long enough in the southwest to appreciate and understand the land and te people versus the Eastern presence represented by Henry Fonda’s Colonel Thursday, who blindly put his stature, class, and textbok ideas above the common sense of those like John Wayne’s Sergeant York.

Among all of this is also a bit of slapstick humor, especially the local Irish Cavalry men, who had little interest or respect for Thursday’s formality.

What follows is not a recap of the story, but some key moments that, to me, are drawn out by the GIF process if isolating scenes and ten narrowing them down even more to 3-14 frames.

01-stagecoach

The opening scene brings the arrivale of Colonel Thursday and his daughter, the unlikely named “Philadelphia Thursday” to Fort Apache, the “distant outpost”. The opening jockeying of the drivers, laughing it up, contrasts with the uptight expression fo Henry Fonda’s Colonel Thursday– and Philadelphia? She;s mesmerized in her Big City hat. This extends into their arrival, as no one is even expecting Thursday, who is flustered at the lack of formality.

I liked the repetitive pattern of the spinning wheel here, that cried for GIFfing.

02-mrsorourke

GET MRS O’ROURKE! In showing the importance of people here by their reputation, a call is put out (literally passed down the sidewalk by person to person) to find Mrs O’Rourke, the woman who apparently gets things done. Help is needed to young Philadelphia Thursday, who has asked for help in getting her new home in the Fort set up.

This scene two had this great pattern of the message being passed down the sidewalk, and then return as Mrs O’Rourke ran back up the sidewalk.

03-philly-michael-horse-ride

Did you think there would not be romance on the Fort? That was also obvious in the first scene, that the newly arrived Philadelphia would be smitten by the younger Michael O’Rourke. It was this horseback ride out into the wilderness that would set the stage for the conflict with her father.

But here, out in the classic landscape of Monument Valley, it’s all goo goo eyes.

04-thursday-desk

Henry Fonda plays the prim, proper, and out of place Colonel Thursday to a tee. He’s all about formality and West point, and doe snot even realize how out of his element he is in here in the Southwest. He’s all paperwork.

I like how the last frame capture the pencil tap.

05-2-troopers

These two soldiers a recut loose from the stockade to go on a special detail. Young O’Rourke returns from the horse ride with Thursdays daughter, with news of the slain cavalry men and cut telegraph wires. The new Colonel is both furious at the young O’Rourke for having been out with his daughter. He does not see him of being the same class, but is also impressed with the young officer’s report. These two Irish soldiers are sent to fetch the bodies of their comrades who were slain, and express their anger at loosing their buddies.

06-york-beaufort-water

Given his experience and relationship with the great Apache Chief Cochise, Sergeant York (John Wayne) and the Spanish speaking/translator Sgt Beaufort ride out from Fort Apache to find Cochise down in Mexico. It’s a long journey (ironically they are seen at the top edge of the Goosenecks of the San Juan River, and then even crossing the river at the bottom, although this is geographically north of Fort Apache. Geographic license trumps scenery.

Here they are sharing their last bit of water, passing the canteen. This is one of my favorite GIFs, as it seems to loop around perfectly.

07-cochise

A very short sequence here shows the presence, calmness, and assuredness of Cochise, played by Mexican actor Miguel Inclán. This sequence focused on Cochise, but the background shifted around a bit. Since this was only 7 frames, I went in and traced out his figure, and removed the background from the frames, leaving one solid background, in this way isolating his movement.

08-buenos-tardes

Another key moment here that shows the respect between Sergeant York and Cochise, while at the same time realizing they are caught up in a larger battle. Here York puts his arms out to match Cochise, and give a respectful greeting, of “Buenos Tardes”- I love the framing here of York under the long rifle of Cochise’s comrade.

09-horse-walk

This begins a sequence of GIFs representing the readying of the Cavalry to head out and meat Cochise and his own army, who is heading back believing that there is an opportunity for peace or to be treated with respect. He had led his people away fro the reservation that was supposed to be a safe place, but was abused by the profiteer who ran the operation.

This is an amazing sequence, which was, as described in the documentary on the DVD, filmed in infrared film to enhance the power and contrast of the skies. Apparently the actors had to wear brown makeup to keep their faces from being bleached out. But its also, how they are filmed almost as “statues” .

10-forward-ho

11-york-ho

FORWARD HO! They march out, York still believing that they are headed out to follow through on the offer he and Cochise had agreed upon.

But Colonel Thursday has no interest in keeping York’s agreement. He belittles Cochise, speaking with disrespect, and demands a respect he has not earned. Thursday is under a false delusion that his rank in the US Army has that much power.

12-indians

Cochise realizes he has been tricked, but also that it is this “great White Father” from the east, not his friend York. But there will be a battle, and here you can sense his disgust as he looks out over the Army. The INdians, however are going to eb perched high on the cliffs over a narrow canyon, the trap is set…

12-troops-horses

And there they go, in a nice neat row marching right into the trap! Like good soldiers…

Thats te end of my GIFs, though of course, not the movie. There is a battle where most of the army gets cut down, including Colonel Thursday, and the final scene years later, where we learn that history has overly glorified and magnified the role of Thursday, which, in many ways, is likely a parallel for Custer.

There it is 13 GIFs for this movie! What a trip.

Dead Zone Crash

Here is my first experiment with animated GIF montage. It’s pretty hard to do, and this attempt is from perfect, but I am starting to get a sense of how this works—and want to do a series focusing on David Cronenberg‘s The Dead Zone to figure this out.

Multi-Frame GIF Story

If a picture’s worth a thousand words, then a GIF must be worth a few thousand words. So a collection of related GIFs must be equivalent to a novel, or a script, or something truly powerful, right??

Tell or relate a story (or link up key ideas or themes from a movie) by assembling a number of animated GIFs into a storyboard or framework. Credit for the idea goes to Jim Groom, who suggested it.

Multi Frame GIF Story: Beaker’s Hair

The ds106 Digital Storytelling GIFfest (known as GIFestivus2012 around here) continues, this time with a two-fer. As well as providing another submission for the Animated GIF Assignment 856: Muppet GIF assignment, it’s also going to reflect a new Animated GIF Assignment 880: Multi-Frame GIF Story.

Thanks to Jim Groom for pointing me at the multi-framed GIF story idea. It seems like an excellent way to highlight important themes or details within a longer narrative, like a movie (hint, hint). But it also tells a nice visual story here from this short muppet clip.

I’ve always wondered what Beaker did to get his hair like that.

Beaker1_280 Beaker2_280
Beaker3_280 Beaker4_280
Beaker5_280 Beaker6_280

Some thoughts, just as I finish finagling these six GIFs into a nice table so they can be viewed in tandem.

  1. I didn’t know that you could get electric metronomes. I guess you maybe need them for really, really long songs.
  2. The fifth panel was made using a small number of sporadic frames that existed as the lights shorted out now and then in the original clip. I thought it would be neat to envision how this might look with a longer sequence of darkness. The big plume in the upper left was the result of a little photoshop editing.
  3. I wonder how this might be different if I applied the “less is more” approach, say three or four key frames per GIF. Hmmm. Maybe I’ll revisit this when I’m out of other ideas for GIFestivus2012.

Neat, eh? Now I want to do this with a movie. I wonder which one I’ll try? Hmmmmm.

Dead Zone Crash

Here is my first experiment with animated GIF montage. It’s pretty hard to do, and this attempt is from perfect, but I am starting to get a sense of how this works—and want to do a series focusing on David Cronenberg’s The Dead Zone to figure this out.

dz_crash_1dz_crash_2dz_crash_3dz_crash_4
dz_crash_5dz_crash_6
dz_crash_7dz_crash_9dz_crash_10
ds_crash_12