For a film school assignment, the school assigns a student from the audio engineering class, to record on location audio, as well as do the post production audio after.
The audio student recorded all of the audio for me, on set, and now that we were in post production we have to do some ADR which was understandable, but he wants to redo all of it. That's quite a bit. Basically a lot of it was recorded too quiet and you have to turn the speakers literally all the way up just to hear it, accompanied by a lot of the noise floor.
We brought in one of the actors to redo his (he had a small part), and it went well. Then we brought in one of the main actors but it didn't go well cause for some reason the reference video kept screwing up in pro tools. We have been working with in pro tools for two days, and it worked well at first, but then it kept pausing when it was playing and wouldn't work after we brought in the second actor, after the first session went so well prior.
I don't want to have to ask one of the two lead actors to come in again, and feel that maybe we should just live with the noise floor and cut our losses. I mean the actor already agreed to do one reshoot cause of bad weather, and now I have to ask him to come in do ADR for the entire thing, like the audio student asked me to?
But it's also hard to schedule with actors cause the other student works a lot, and the studio we have is often booked in advance. But at the same time, the audio student has marks to earn on the assignment as well, and don't want to have him fail, his part of the assignment, so maybe i should ask the actor to come back again, even after one reshoot, and after the pro tools wouldn't play back the reference video properly?
Or maybe we should just cut our losses and live with the noise high noise floor, and try to cut it out as much as we can and be done with it, and just put that on the audio student? What do you think?
Also, cause of the assignment schedule, we had to have our movies picture locked before doing ADR, and that might be a problem cause I chose a lot of close ups shots, where as if I knew the ADR was going to go so bad, maybe I should have chosen master shots for the parts with bad audio, to make ADR easier, which is pretty much the majority of it the sound being bad.
However, do you think that maybe close ups shots at key moments in the movie are important and I should let poor audio get in the way of the artistic vision, shot and editing wise?
The audio student recorded all of the audio for me, on set, and now that we were in post production we have to do some ADR which was understandable, but he wants to redo all of it. That's quite a bit. Basically a lot of it was recorded too quiet and you have to turn the speakers literally all the way up just to hear it, accompanied by a lot of the noise floor.
We brought in one of the actors to redo his (he had a small part), and it went well. Then we brought in one of the main actors but it didn't go well cause for some reason the reference video kept screwing up in pro tools. We have been working with in pro tools for two days, and it worked well at first, but then it kept pausing when it was playing and wouldn't work after we brought in the second actor, after the first session went so well prior.
I don't want to have to ask one of the two lead actors to come in again, and feel that maybe we should just live with the noise floor and cut our losses. I mean the actor already agreed to do one reshoot cause of bad weather, and now I have to ask him to come in do ADR for the entire thing, like the audio student asked me to?
But it's also hard to schedule with actors cause the other student works a lot, and the studio we have is often booked in advance. But at the same time, the audio student has marks to earn on the assignment as well, and don't want to have him fail, his part of the assignment, so maybe i should ask the actor to come back again, even after one reshoot, and after the pro tools wouldn't play back the reference video properly?
Or maybe we should just cut our losses and live with the noise high noise floor, and try to cut it out as much as we can and be done with it, and just put that on the audio student? What do you think?
Also, cause of the assignment schedule, we had to have our movies picture locked before doing ADR, and that might be a problem cause I chose a lot of close ups shots, where as if I knew the ADR was going to go so bad, maybe I should have chosen master shots for the parts with bad audio, to make ADR easier, which is pretty much the majority of it the sound being bad.
However, do you think that maybe close ups shots at key moments in the movie are important and I should let poor audio get in the way of the artistic vision, shot and editing wise?