Cheerio, old chap. Brandt Leeds here; currently in Bournemouth, England. I’m studying Film Production at the Arts University College.
Technically in Poole, Dorset (just inside Poole’s city line), AUCB is an art university that is located on the southern coast of the United Kingdom, complete with sandy beaches and magnificent cliffs that look out to sea.
I’ve been at the University for three weeks, a fortnight of which was an induction period to get acquainted with the other international and film students. The first week I met students from all over the world who are studying many different forms of art at AUCB: fine art, graphic design, costume design, digital media, performance make-up, acting, film, photography, etc.
We went on a trip to the Jurassic Coast, where countless fossils have been found from that period. It was quite beautiful.
A lot of my international friends live in East House. Many of them are Norwegian. Don’t ask me why.
I was put in the West House, which mostly contains students that started classes a couple of weeks before I arrived. They are a part of the “foundation” curriculum and will be exposed to many different art forms, with the ultimate goal of deciding on a specific major at the end of the year.
The rooms are small but cozy… I don’t have to share it or a bathroom with anyone else, which is nice.
The shower is definitely different from home, though:
Other differences that were blatantly obvious:
• There are eight coins that are regularly used. The one and two pound coins are taking some getting used to:
• The (clothing) washing machines are near/under the kitchen sink:
• Clubs and parties:
During the second week I met a lot of the film students that were from the UK and our professors.
We’ve been slowly easing into the film curriculum, starting with the “One Still” project. The “One Still” is a picture that each student takes, planning for it to be the last storyboard of a twelve-to-fifteen-shot silent short film based on the words “arrival” or “departure.”
Mine was about a kid who chooses drugs over important things, choosing to depart from his problems:
Eh, cheesy, I know. My group, Group F, ended up choosing this picture to develop a story from:
Group F is now in the process of coming up with a simple story idea that will result in this picture being at the end of the film. Generally, the short needs to be around a minute and a half.
We will shoot on a Bolex H16 and will have roughly 100 feet of 16mm film to work with. Time-wise, that’s about 2 minutes of film. There will be no second takes.
Interesting tidbit — The Bolex is hand-cranked. With each full crank, the motor will run for about 25 seconds. The camera:
Once we convert the film to digital, I’ll upload the finished product.
I’m also taking a black-and-white photography class one night per week. We just developed our first negatives last night and will print them in the next class. I’ll upload the photos as well.
I’m really enjoying myself here. It’s much different… It’s a lot of fun getting to explore a new continent.
More to come.
Brandt