The best part about this video in my eyes is that unlike other emesis blue edits, its not just little clips taken from the movie with a song played over the whole thing. he uses different audio over different clips in a way that both makes sense and adds to the feels of the thing.
You should really get into it pal! It's a really funny lore and you'll alao understand more about the film knowing it. You can check out how it goes reading the TF2 comics! (Btw I'm only saying if you want to, just saying cuz I thought youd like it!)
You somehow utilised the cinematic shots intended one way, for another way, and succeeded in creating a piece of media that has both cinematographic symbolism and cool aesthetic
@@tenwhoever The way I see it, you mashed together cinematic shots which, feel like they go together naturally, for example: 1:10, the plague doctor bathed in red, transitions to a spy, bathed in red looking down a corridor, to another corridor bathed in red. The original meaning of these shots is to symbolise trauma, death and passing each in their own separate way in the story, but you, by merging them together, created significant character comparison and introduced the theme of unending trauma and pain which pairs which not only matches the themes of the original film but compliments it so so well. 2:47, the spy raises his gun to shoot, and is followed by the shot of the scout dying. This scene was my favourite edit of yours. In many films, especially propaganda or war films, they mask the faces and identifiable traits of the enemy, such as in Top Gun, where you can only see the tinted visor of the pilots. They do this as too make them unsympathetic by removing their human traits. In the original scene in the film, Spy kills the pyro out of revenge for torture and inhumane acts. He is seen as a masked monster whilst scout dies in the PTSD fever dream and is seen as being niave and sympathic in the war. But in the film he also turns into a monster afterwards. So inadvertantly, you created two separate meanings which diverge from the film's themes but ultimately fit in still very well. You compared the death of a monster to the death of a human, or rather, challenged the perspective that is; killing something that is a monster, or killing it before it becomes a monster. DO NOT GET ME STARTED ON THE AUDIO EDITING I LOVE THIS EDIT SO MUCH
Bro cooked, ate, and left no crumbs. Perfect pacing, amazing song choice, meaningful clip placement and creative audio usage, this video has it all. All to the Confinement song too. Emesis Blue does feel like something out of SCP (why does confinement have to be the closest thing we have to an SCP show).
@@damjan3710 The artist/animator for Confinement (an SCP series, so naturally you already know bad's about to happen) had a schizophrenic breakdown and falsely accused someone of sexual assault, then made the last release of Confinement basically a long-term sexual assault cut before completely eviscerating their own online presence.
@@kiva9996I'm pretty sure it wasn't them, but a friend of theirs who made the false claims. And he supported his friend in it. The creator just didn't back down and apologize when the allegations were proven false
I dunno if anyone noticed, but during the segment showing M on scouts tv, the subtitles change based on what is being said outside of the movie. Say for instance, "the lads probably mince meat by now!" When demo is talking over the clip. Amazing love letter to the best SFM I've seen in a while, bravo!
@Birdguy112 Most likely not. It's based on Emesis Blue and has entirely different pacing, framing, and animation styles. Plus, there's the fact that Confinement and its creator are a little infamous.
Not a reference, for one. This song existed before that ill-fated series. For two, I'd say making false accusations and an animation that's basically just sexual assault before nuking your entire internet presence is pretty freaking bad. Lord Bung is a degenerate.