Grease is the Word

Grease is the GIF
Well my chosen Gif anyway!

For our first assignment we had to chose our favourite, or least favourite movie, and then go on to create  a GIF out of it for the ds106 page.

I decided to chose the film Grease, I love this film and honestly I’m a sucker for the happy ending. This song has always been my favourite to sing and dance to with my friends.

If you haven’t watched this film or want to know more about it, including actors, directors ect… head over to IMDB.

Grease

“As You Wish …”

"So Long..." animated GIF by aforgrave, from The Princess Bride 600px at 32 colours,

“So Long…” animated GIF by aforgrave, from The Princess Bride 600px at 32 colours,

This is one of my favourite moments from Rob Reiner’s classic, The Princess Bride, released in 1987. It comes right at the end, in an incredibly touching scene, when the Grandfather (wonderfully played by the late Peter Falk), uncomfortable with what to say as he is leaving, fumbles to make sure he has everything (is he checking for his glasses?) before departing. In the end, he just throws up his arm, already looking away, and says, “So long.”

What doesn’t show in the GIF is what comes immediately after, where, at the door, he pauses as his grandson (Fred Savage), initially dis-interested his grandfather at the beginning of the film, stops him to say, “Grandfather, you could come back, and read it to me again, sometime, if you want.”

The grandfather’s final words, so telling after we’ve just seen the story, are priceless.

“As you wish …”

I GIFfed this over a month ago, originally intending it to be part of a larger series of GIFs from the film. That will still happen, at some point, but other GIFs came along in the interim as a result.

However, this was one of the first GIFs I worked at reducing in size through the use of a mask. The file size, at 32 colours, when saved at 280 pixels wide, is on the order of 450 KB. This one, at 600 pixels wide, is larger. While the number of frames is high, that is intentional because each one highlights a decision point in Peter Falk’s movements — leaving out any one would make his movements seem less detailed, less absent-minded than he intended. About the only thing better than seeing this as a GIF, is seeing the actual clip, with his, ongoing utterances “alright, …. okay ……, alright, ….. okay, ….. so long…”

So good.

 

 

Deleted Scene from “Reçette Pas Nécessaire” Later Shows Up in “The Shining”

“Deleted Scene from “Reçette Pas Nécessaire” (print damaged during processing) by aforgrave, on Flickr

A poorly developed film negative (see above) resulted in this scene being edited out of the final cut of the third film in Julia Child’s “Le Chef de la mort” action trilogy, “Reçette Pas Nécessaire.”

You can get some sense of the original drama in this animated GIF assembled from two frames salvaged from the scene:

“Deleted Scene from “Reçette Pas Nécessaire” (restored as animated GIF) by aforgrave, on Flickr

As her fans know, Child was often heard exclaiming, “Why use just one knife, when a cleaver and a handful of knives can do such a better job?”

It is commonly agreed upon in Hollywood by people in the know that due to the unfortunate mishandling of the original negatives for this scene in “Reçette Pas Nécessaire,” when the effect was again attempted many later by the same cinematographer while working on The Shining, it was the latter film that benefited from the first exposure of the effect to theatre-going audiences.

A GIF from The Shining, commonly agreed to be derivative of the original (but damaged) scene from the much earlier Julia Child film “Reçette Pas Nécessaire.”

Most agree that, despite the improved technology used in the later film (better lenses, larger film stock, and most notably, colour), the use of a single knife and the absence of a corpse within the shot diminishes the effect from that of the Child original. There is no doubt that the later entry is clearly derivative.

“Oh, we saw The Shining once on VHS,” Child said many years later. “It doesn’t bother us in the least. We had fun making our films, and after a career of sharing our expertise in both the cooking and film industries, we’re just happy to see that our work is being valued and re-served to sate the appetites of today’s young people.”

This is my first official (albeit contrived) entry for the Visual Assignment 2: Say It Like the Peanut Butter assignment. Yes, this GIF is from television, rather than from a favourite movie, but it stands on the originality of the flickering knife effect, the resultant homage that it pays to the assignment, and also helps to set the record straight about the true origin that Shining GIF. LOL.

(In actuality, a static image from this would have been my preferred photo source for The Daily Create TDC 381: Julia Child Action Poster, but the quality of the video was too poor and too dark.)