Friday, March 28, 2014
Kelsey Best
Mark Ladd
Flash Project
In
our original story, Cinder, we chose
to explore the mind of someone who witnesses the end of the world from the
safety of space. By doing this, we worked to show the story from both a first
and third person perspective, opting for sound effects and scenery to help tell
the story. It begins with our character, a man in the military, waking up to
the sounds of sirens from his army base. He quickly dresses and rushes outside,
finally arriving at his destination: a launch pad with a space shuttle.
Switching to first person, we see the inside of the shuttle from his
perspective, highlighting the fact that he is alone. The shuttle launches,
spiraling upward away from the Earth. Meters on the dashboard indicate that
something is about to collide with the Earth, but the added soundtrack acts as
a comic relief, reminding the viewer that this is indeed the end of the world
as we know it. The Earth is destroyed by an asteroid leaving the viewer with a
cliff-hanger ending. The manner in which the video ends leaves us to ponder our
own mortality and the fragility of both human life and the Earth itself.
We
used a combination of stop animation and video game-like graphics in this
piece, changing styles as the perspective changes. This acts to emphasize his
loneliness as he transitions from the Earth into the shuttle, and then into
space. Watching the Earth be destroyed and experiencing the notion of being the
last person alive provides the character with a sort of false hope. Though he
has survived the asteroid collision, how long can he survive alone in space?
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