Through the Glass


On Sunday, before Halloween, my group and I set to film the scenes we needed for our fascination project. We decided to meet at the Bloomberg Lab in the business building so that we would be able to incorporate the business aspect of the comedy/horror/business genre we were attempting to create a film. We met up and began to review our storyboard created during previous meetings to see what shots would be plausible, what exactly we needed to film, and especially figure out any "b-roll" that we would need to have so that Josh had a comfortable amount of material to edit together. Our group was very lucky that Josh had previous editing experience and was able to execute the group's vision for the film in a way I never thought possible. 

Being an actor in a film was definitely a first-time experience for me and it was certainly an awkward one. Because we recorded ideas as they came to us, we certainly had limited rehearsal time for most of the shots, and we had to figure out very quickly how we should be reacting and things like that. A benefit of the style we chose however was that we wanted to embrace a relatively theatrical and exaggerated style of acting as a call to humor within a horror movie. Being able to essentially embrace the bad acting of my shots made it much easier to execute everything how the group envisioned it to be. 

Our overall goal for the project was to create characters that stayed true to the comedy/horror stereotypes by typically choosing what everyone watching would consider the dumbest possible option. We wanted to try and create enough annoyance with the audience that they would want to start yelling at the screen, like many of us have before, thinking "don't go in there" or "why would you leave the safest room".

Below is a youtube video of our film, Through the Glass

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