
These turned out better than I thought they would, but I did end up wasting a bunch of paper trying creative ways to reach the same effect.

I used pictures of paper cut-outs to show energy beams in my video.The characters I have in the scene all have their own distinct personality and movements that need to be emulated and captured, details that weren't easy to capture. Not being able to go back and add frames to the first part of the video was a huge risk that did hurt at times, but it all payed off in the end.Over the course of the scene, Gohan goes from hopeless to hopeful and finally to determined to win. Gohan makes a lot of slow/slight moves that draw attention.The focal point of my sequence is either the character Gohan, or the space between Gohan and Cell where they test their might against one another with giant blue blasts.A lot of times the shots turn out better than expected and yield impressive results, other times the words in a shot can trail off, but facial expressions kept me on track. I used camera angles to find the best shots to match the anime scene's I was representing.The protagonist steels his nerves and confronts the antagonist head on. The composition of my scene is very simple, 3 characters in different spots arranged almost triangularly, say their lines as the drama unfolds.

We were expected to apply audio, use 3-10 frames per second, and photo-edit our frames to match lighting and exposure. Students were expected to act out a scene that tells a story.For this assignment, students were tasked with telling a story using "stop motion like" Flipbook Animation.
