purplefringe: Amelie (Default)
purplefringe ([personal profile] purplefringe) wrote2019-07-22 06:45 pm

I did my best, it wasn't much

guys, I...I made another Good Omens vid? A third one? I don't know what has happened, I don't understand anything any more, apparently Good Omens is my whole life now. (Which is good, I guess, because I have well and truly noped out of engaging with the Real World in quite a serious way, so it's nice to have something else to think about.)

This one has...Feelings in it. Many Feelings, which I absolutely did not know I had. But there we are. It's also to a piece of music about which I (along with approx. half the world) have Many Feelings, although I did know about those, because I once wrote a 2,000 word email-essay containing some of them. (it's NOT Queen, I promise)

I think I had a lot more to say, but it has temporarily escaped the chronicler's mind. Er. Have a vid, I guess.

Thank you to the wonderful [personal profile] soupytwist, [personal profile] such_heights & [personal profile] raven, who are lovely and thoughtful (and patient, and long-suffering) betas. If you haven't already, you should watch the Good Omens vids such_heights and raven have made recently, which are both breathtaking in very different ways.

Hallelujah
edited by [personal profile] purplefringe
fandom: Good Omens
music: Hallelujah by Leonard Cohen, covered by Pentatonix
summary: there's a blaze of light in every word / it doesn't matter which you heard / the holy or the broken hallelujah. On faith, and falling, and freedom.
content notes: a shot of a snake at 00:18; a brief shot of a nail being driven into someone's wrist at 2:08. (I also have a version without the snake, if anyone would like that one)

ETA: I strongly recommend you go and read [personal profile] elisi's extraordinary Good Omens meta - the first section is a wonderful commentary on Aziraphale's journey as presented through this glorious vid by promethia-tenk, and the second section (about two thirds down the page) is about Crowley, and ties into this vid! YAY, INTER-TEXTUAL FANWORKS \o/


download: 169MB @ mediafire

Also on tumblr and the AO3

stream:


Lyrics
rydra_wong: Lee Miller photo showing two women wearing metal fire masks in England during WWII. (Default)

Re: SCREAMING WITH TIME-STAMPS

[personal profile] rydra_wong 2019-07-28 07:31 am (UTC)(link)
Incidentally, please please don’t worry about your comment about this song being overused - I was not thinking of you at *all*! And I don’t really mind those comments, it’s actually quite flattering, it’s just also nice when people do like the song you’ve picked!

Oh, I love the song! (I imprinted on the John Cale version way back when, but this particular cover is perfect for what you're doing here.)

But it's got such a huge over-familiarity problem, like it's been coated with layers of varnish. It's like the "To be or not to be" problem -- any actor playing Hamlet has to try to figure out a way to walk out on stage and do that speech and make the audience actually hear the words, as if they'd never heard them before, rather than going "Oh, here's the 'To be or not to be' speech".

Which is what makes it so jaw-droppingly impressive that you managed to do that.
rydra_wong: Lee Miller photo showing two women wearing metal fire masks in England during WWII. (Default)

Re: SCREAMING WITH TIME-STAMPS

[personal profile] rydra_wong 2019-07-28 12:08 pm (UTC)(link)
I don’t think I’ve ever had someone respond this enthusiastically or in this level of wonderful detail to one of my vids before, and it’s so gratifying to see, on something I worked so hard on, and I am SO OVERWHELMED WITH JOY

\o/ \o/ \o/ Also oh good now I don't have to feel embarrassed about gushing at such length at you. *g*

This is such beautiful work and you deserve ALL the feedback.

YES. I was worried this might make people laugh

It is a little funny initially (which is not a bad thing at this point in the vid, soften your audience up before you start putting them through the emotional wringer): sushi set to religious music.

But it's also adorable (his faaaaace), and you develop your argument so clearly, showing him handling the book with equal reverence, and suddenly it's not "haha he loves food", it's "OH -- he loves EVERYTHING." *flaily hands*

but this holy reverence for small earthly pleasures is such an important part of who Aziraphale is, and I hadn’t seen it explored seriously in any other vids.

YES.

There's some discussion here you might like, if you haven't already seen it:

https://princessofgeeks.dreamwidth.org/935645.html

his Aziraphale is so concerned about the details! This particular taste, this particular person, this particular vintage, this particular book. It just chokes me up -- the beauty he finds in the details. He never overlooks anything.

And in the comments here: https://princessofgeeks.dreamwidth.org/935645.html?thread=15647197#cmt15647197

It's easy to imagine angelic love as compassion and kindness, but Sheen's embodiment perfectly connects Aziraphale's hedonism and gluttony to his kindness, because he simply takes untrammelled, childlike delight in everything, and he makes it charming and radiant.

and

+1 on embodiment--it's one of those cases where it's SO IMPORTANT that A has that little belly, because its a mark of his ability to experience embodied pleasure in food beyond strict nourishment (or fitting in - do these guys "need" to eat at all?) And that's marked as a kind of wonderful and holy thing, which I think it is

The sushi is a very important part of the theological argument! (Especially, it occurs to me, as it's the sushi that we see Gabriel so baffled by and judgemental of.)

Guessing you've seen Michael Sheen's comments about starting his characterization by thinking about what an angel as a "being of love" would be like?

Ahahahaha, like ALL my vids can be broken down into either ‘shots of people gazing at each other’ or ’shots of people’s hands’. That is all I vid. Oops.

CORE FANDOM MATERIAL. *g* And it means you catch and showcase all these tiny details of performance -- like the swallow at 1.26, or his happy little smile at 2.28, or the way he watches Crowley step up to talk at 3:22. Not just the obvious ones that have already been gif-ed and analysed endlessly.

It’s that, and also supposed to echo all the eye-raises at 2:22 - except this time, he’s looking heavenwards because of *Crowley*, rather than because of God - Crowley, who actually comes to his aid, unlike God.

I didn't consciously catch that (though I see other people did), but THAT'S SO COOL

(Also, not vid-related, but I see you mention being in London on your DW -- did you see Neil Gaiman's confirmation that he had St Dunstan-in-the-East in mind as the church? IT'S LITERALLY A GARDEN NOW, MR GAIMAN SIR YOU SENTIMENTALIST.)

Um. So. That’s the vid commentary you didn’t ask for! *hides*

BUT I WILL TAKE IT HAPPILY THANK YOU.
rydra_wong: Half a fig with some blue cheese propped against it. (food -- fig and cheese)

Re: SCREAMING WITH TIME-STAMPS

[personal profile] rydra_wong 2019-07-28 08:31 pm (UTC)(link)
I forgot -- there's scholarly meta about the theological significance of the sushi scene!

https://popularcultureandtheology.com/2019/06/07/good-omens-and-transformational-eating/
rydra_wong: Lee Miller photo showing two women wearing metal fire masks in England during WWII. (Default)

Re: SCREAMING WITH TIME-STAMPS

[personal profile] rydra_wong 2019-07-31 10:00 am (UTC)(link)
YES, and isn't he just wonderful?? I love every single acting decision he has made as Aziraphale, bar none.

Tangential, but I'm telling everyone they need to listen to his ep of David Tennant's podcast: https://play.acast.com/s/davidtennant/michaelsheen

Relatively little of it's about Good Omens -- though a fair chunk of it is Sheen's Neil Gaiman stories, which are amazing. But it's honestly one of the most fascinating interviews I've heard in a while, and they go deep into acting process, among many other things. And it sounds like two people who know and like each other having a genuine conversation, which is a rare and nice thing in an interview.

(Content note: they discuss experiences of stage fright and blanking on stage in a way which is liable to give anyone with anxiety the vicarious horrors in sympathy.)

I actually have a very poor visual memory, so I have to spend a lot of time scrolling through scenes in microscopic detail - rather than just going 'oh, I know he smiles in that scene in ep 3' and going straight to it.

Huh, that's fascinating. Not what I would have imagined at all -- I'd have assumed without thinking that good vidders must have excellent visual memories -- but it makes total sense now you've said it.

I have actually visited that church!!

Likewise; it's so lovely.

*I'M* embarrassed by how long it's taken me to reply to you each time, but that is because I am a human disaster who is not very good at dealing with compliments and need to work up the courage to look at them

Completely understood, no stress! My personal failure mode tends to be "Oh wow, this person has written me a long and thoughtful comment, I will put it to one side until I have the mental energy to write them an equally thoughtful reply, oops it's been two months."

But FWIW, one of the things I love about formats like DW is not having to have conversations in real-time, and I love it when people reply to something I've said weeks or months after it was posted: the conversation can keep meandering on in its own time! it's great!