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A Day in Kenya's Bush Cotswold Int. Film & Video Festival |
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"The first time you get so close to an animal that you can see the flies on its face, your whole body is quivering."
A couple of years ago Kay Bamford-Burnell and her husband went on safari in Kenya. She recorded more than 10 hours of tape which has so far been distilled into two award-winning shorts: Dawn Till Dusk and A Day in Kenya's Bush. We caught up with her at the Cotswold International Film & Video Festival and asked her about that adventure. "We were in Kenya for three weeks - sleeping under canvas in the actual bush. We were up at five o'clock each morning and used to get back at eight at night, a quick shower then a meal under the stars and straight into bed, with a Masai Warrior guard outside the tent in case the animals came.
"When we were in the Masai Mara a television crew was filming. They cut off some of the territory and they were baiting the animals. Brian our English guide-cum-driver who could speak their language as a native was livid. We tracked our own animals and we would go for days without seeing a soul because we kept away from the tourist areas. Hence we got the pictures. "All the background you hear on the soundtrack is natural sound. The only bit I laid on was where my three colleagues still cameras clicked, I was the only one doing video. I cut those shutter clicks and pasted a neighbouring piece of live sound in their place. There were over 400 clicks to remove.
"The shots of the flamingoes over the lake were the result of patience and being in the right place, we just had to wait. I found it difficult to cope with the heat as we were there all day.
"I did not keep a journal but recreated it afterwards. I knew my feelings. The first time you get so close to an animal that you can see the flies on its face, your whole body is quivering because nature is so marvellous. I knew what I wanted to say. For the first film I used my own voice. For the second I felt it could be controled better if I had someone else speaking my words. Joy Cuthill, a member of our video club - Worcester Camcorder Club - read the script. Dawn to Dusk was edited on my VCR with the old jog-shuttle, but I couldn't remove all the clicks of the still cameras and I wasn't happy with it. A Day in Kenya's Bush was edited on Adobe Premiere with Sound Forge to get those minute clicks out and use lots of other shots as well."
"When I look at my own films I can see the mistakes there - but you have
to stop somewhere. The day I can't see mistakes is the day I won't make a
good film."
How the Cotswold Festival started | Interviews: Eric Cooper
Page updated on 21 March 2008 Authors' views are not necessarily those of The Institute of Amateur Cinematographers Free JavaScripts provided
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