Wednesday, April 11, 2012
Video project
Things are getting sticky in the Northeast Kingdom—or at least in a bathtub.
Sierra Willenburg, a senior graphic design major at Lyndon State College, recently finished filming her original thirty minute short film entitled “The Cyborg Rises Up from the Oatmeal” for Advanced Non-linear Video Editing.
Advanced Non-linear Video Editing is a required course for New Media majors with a video concentration. Willenburg had to take the required class as an independent study because it was not offered for the Spring semester.
In order to take an independent study from the college, students must fill out an independent study contract. The contract asks for students to state the purpose of the study, objectives, and reasons for taking the course independently.
Students also must have their instructor, their advisor, the dean and the department chair sign off on the study. Though the form may sound tedious, Willenburg was not annoyed by the process.
“I think I got it all done in a day or two,” she said in an email.
She also believes taking the course independently has not changed what she could have learned.
“I think [taking it as a class] would have been about the same,” Willenburg explained.
Willenburg co-wrote the script with friend and junior English major Peter Nute. They wrote the script while at a journalism conference in New York City.
Willenburg played the role of director and cinematographer and recruited friends and family to help with her with the project. Willenburg’s younger sister, Jaime Willenburg, is the focus of the film in her role as the cyborg. Cyborgs are fantasy creature who have both artificial and biological parts.
Detective White, played by digital media major Bryan White, and Detective Sherman, played by Nute, go to an apartment building to investigate a murder.
It is in this same apartment building that the Cyborg has been living in a bath tub filled with Oatmeal.
“Every time I move my feet there are these little, little, semi-cooked grains and they are kind of going up my pant legs,” Jaime explained how sitting in a bathtub full of oatmeal felt. “It’s not slightly pleasant.”
Though it was not a pleasant feeling, Jaime agreed her suffering was worth her art. Cast and crew worked, played, and acted for about five hours two days in a row to complete the filming process.
“I think this is going to be a great movie,” Barber said excited when filming was over. “I can’t wait to see it!”
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