During the filming of my opening, I found many faulty shots within my storyboard. Some showed unwanted background; others didn't let in enough light. During editing I found more bad shots and decided to omit them. An example of one of these would be the match-on-action of the nurse flipping over a piece of paper on the clipboard. It looked very disjointed and unprofessional. Cutting the second shot of the nurse flipping the paper means we could still have a match-on-action from a mid shot of the character to a close up of the nurse and inspector's feet. Whilst editing, I found that brightening of a film clip was possible if I just selected colour correction. I upped the brightness on the scenes of the Inspector's face to balance out the light coming in from behind the character and the shadows in front. This made the character's facial features and expressions a lot clearer.
I decided it was best to leave out Quinn Wakely's thoughts as the sound of the light bulb humming over the Inspector's dialogue was messy and incoherent as it was. I turned down the volume of the sound effect so the Inspector could be heard.
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