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Atharv Gopaluni
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Overview Pre-Production Production Post-Production Key Scenes Reflection

A Red Light

The Journey of the Film

A Red Light Poster
Role: Director, Writer, Editor, Actor
Year: 2024
Duration: 5 minutes
Genre: Drama
Logline: A short film about the two faces a man shows the world.

Overview

A Red Light was a project I made for my Still and Moving Images class in Spring 2024. It explores the idea of how people present themselves versus how they are when they are alone. It was very much a conceptual idea, and was conceptualized and recorded over the span of about 48 hours.


Pre-Production

I had this rough idea that I wanted to convey this idea of duality and the contrast between public and private personas. When my mind was full of thoughts back in freshman year, I would leave my bed and go to my dorm's common space. I would stare out the window at a red light. I would center myself there. And I based this story off of that.

Script and planning

I did not actually make a screenplay for this project. I just had a very clear idea of what I wanted to do. I had an outline of points, and I filmed based on those.


Production

The filming process was actually rather quick! I recorded the entire sequence fairly quickly, and did sound foley work right after, syncing with the video I had just captured.

Camera troubles

The was my first experience with the Blackmagic Pocket Cinema Camera 6K. And while it does great in low light, it does NOT have autofocus. And this is especially bad in low light. And because of this, there is one out of focus shot in the film that I did not notice when first editing. While this is unfortunate, it's a learning lesson!

Production stills

Foley

This is sort of post-production, but it happened as I was filming. I recorded foley for many of the sounds in the video. This was required as part of the project requirements. Foley recording was quite fun. While there were some instances of it not syncing great, it was mostly a good excercise and learning experience.

Production work

Lighting

Lighting was a very intentional choice in this project. The main chapter of the film, titled "The After After Hours" was entirely blue, to show this sense of sadness and loneliness. And I had to very intentionally set up lights for this. While it could be achieved in post, too, doing it live really made editing easier as well as made it a lot more immersive while I was acting/recording.

Production work

Production Design

The red light that I would stare at most nights was vibrant. It was bright. It was clear from my dorm room. And yet... that light was OFF the night I had to record, which was immensely frustrating. And therefore, I used another red light in the sky, but it was much smaller, and made the ending a LOT more confusing. This is a key production issue I wish I had planned for, and while it probably could have been fixed in post, at the time, it wasn't something I had done or knew how to do, and therefore, this ultimately turned the entire film on its head. While I think the film still generally workds, it is a major aspect of it that I wish was different in retrospect.

Production work

Post-Production

Post-production for this film was quite easy! I did some color grading, cut up the footage, synced audio, and made a quick piece of music for the soundtrack.

Coloring and cutting

Because I had outlined the visual language so clearly in the recording process itself, all coloring was doing was bringing it to a bit more vibrant of a color space. Additionally, I didn't have too much footage, so cutting it up was quite easy too.

Sound and Music

I made sure to clap quite loudly before my takes and before my foley takes, which made syncing really easy. This is a trick I learned back in high school and one I have really taken to heart. Mixing the sound was quite easy, and from there, I made a synth-bass heavy piece of music to really sell the weight of the emotion of the central character.


Key Scenes
Showcase
Key scene from A Red Light
Key scene from A Red Light
Key scene from A Red Light

Reflection

This is definitely my weakest film so far. And yet, I learned a lot from this project, especially about the importance of pre-production planning and how it can simplify production and onwards. If I were to do it again, I would 100% plan more ahead of time. Not having the red light I wanted in some ways ruined this film, so having an alternative plan would be better. I would also record on a camera with a better autofocus system, and perhaps be a little smarter with settings on the camera in general. This project has definitely influenced my growth as a filmmaker by teaching me the value of intentionality in every step of the process. The film received positive feedback, but a lot of constructive criticism as well.

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