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From
Computer Credible
January, 1999
How To Make Your Movie:
An Interactive Film School is an extremely innovative
and effective program for learning the basics
of film making.
This three CD set provides the sort of hands-on
learning which film making requires. While using
the program, the look and feel of the school
(actual photos), photo realistic animations,
and lack of standard menus eliminates any awareness
that you're actually using software. The ability
to freely open doors and explore various classrooms,
sit in on lectures, and edit your own movie
all add to the realistic learning environment
provided by this software. If you're in a hurry
to access some important piece of information,
or simply want to revisit something you've learned
before, there is no need to wander through the
halls looking for the right classroom. You can
simply click to your destination after bringing
up a shortcut which shows a visual outline of
every branch of the software's content.
Users of the program discover an abandoned
film school watched over by a salty, humorous
security guard. The guard offers advice to the
user and the school's professors leave audible
notes offering information on an array of topics
related to film production. Using photographed
images of an unrenovated, Victorian-era state
mental hospital, the CD-ROM provides users with
the illusion of walking through an actual film
school.
The interactive film school features an all-star
cast of "visiting film professors."
Twelve printable guest lectures includes on
scriptwriting by Lew Hunter, chairman of the
film school at the University of California
at Los Angeles; another on film music by Suzana
Peric, who edited the music of "Philadelphia",
"Age of Innocence" and "Silence
of the Lambs", and one on sound by Murch
who-in addition to his Oscars-earned Academy
Award nominations for best film editing for
"Ghost" and "The Godfather Part
III". Each of the dozen rooms contains
layer after layer of interactive instruction
on such topics as scriptwriting, production,
film grammar, and equipment, to name just a
few.
The package contains three discs and a production
notebook. Discs one and two hold the film school
building and number three is a footage disc.
It holds 40 minutes of digital footage from
the student film featured in the program. Music
and sound files are also included, allowing
the user to edit his own version of the film
with any desktop editing software. Also on disc
three is a detailed academic syllabus for educators
who wish to use the program to teach a one-year
production course.
I highly recommend this title for anyone interested
in learning or teaching the art of film making.
Educators or software developers interested
in developing their own interactive learning
software should consider using this software
as their model.
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