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DOO WOP (THAT THING)
Lauryn Hill
Director: Monty Whitebloom
A musical video outline
Draft 3
This is a high concept performance video with a unique visual twist, set around a block of streets,
culminating in a block party. We will combine a 60's and 90's vision in the same frame. Lauryn
will appear in both eras.
This will be achieved by shooting the video on anamorphic lenses twice. The two images will
line up to give us a seamless wide-screen picture of the space.
Every scene will combine 60's and 90's action. The image of the 60's will always appear on the
left and the 90's on the right. For example, a wide shot of the street will show buildings, cars,
shops, sign posts, and people all styled in the 60's, whilst the right will reveal a 90's vision of the
same street. These two diverse sets of people will appear to be physically sharing the same
space.
This combined image will confront your sense of perception. It will be realistic and impossible
at the same time. This time machine idea will be all the more striking due to the perfect line up
of the two worlds. Only Lauryn will exist in both worlds. She is our narrator. She crosses the
divide of time.
We are taking our cue from movies like "A Bronx Tale," "Coolie High" and "The Five
Heartbeats," as well as contemporary based films like "Do the Right Thing." However, the video
story is not a literal interpretation of the lyric, rather it is an exploration of the two eras, their
styles, their fashions, their dance steps, their attitude.
We start outside a brownstone with Lauryn and her two crews, one 60's, one 90's. She gets up
from the stoop and begins to walk down the street. As Lauryn and her crew move along the
sidewalk, we continually see both a 60's and a 90's vision of the same thing side by side. Beauty
shops/hairdressers, corner shops, automobiles on the street, guys and girls just hanging out on the
stoops and street corners. Guys chatting up/checking out girls, girls doing likewise.
As we turn the corner we see a block party is in progress. The streets are full of people. There is
a band on stage, or rather two bands, a 60's and a 90's one. The floor is crowded with people
dancing. The two Lauryns move through the dancing people and onto the stage, where the bands
are performing. Stepping up onto the platform, they continue to perform but this time with the
backing of the 60's and 90's band.
The audience responds to these two differing styles of performance with their own unique style
of dancing. This is the heart of the video. In each shot we will see details of both 60's and 90's
dance. We will immediately be able to see the change in dance movement and clothes, and hair
and makeup between the two eras.
The art direction of both the 60's and the 90's will be immaculate. The details of the streets and
the block party will be radically different. It will seem we have compressed 30 years.
In the 60's image an old super 8 camera will be recording the event, whilst in the 90's a new
video camera will be doing likewise. We will see from time to time the point of view of these
cameras. The image on the 60's cameras will be grain and black and white, while on the 90's
cameras it will be lurid, digital video.
In each scene we will see both eras. In each scene we will notice the contrast and sometimes the
similarities in action and behaviour.
Lauryn's performance will be different in each era. The 90's streetwise and confident, the 60's
more innocent. The band behind her in the 60's is a traditional R&B outfit, Wilson Pickett meets
James Brown, with a dash of The Temptations. In the 90's it will be more eclectic with
scratchers and mixers and the whole contemporary crew.
The vibe of the video is up, celebratory, the colours will be crisp and bright. This is not a dark
ominous video. It will be shot on 35mm on Cinemascope lenses. The finished piece will be
highly distinctive and emotionally uplifting, full of energy, life and passion. You will get the
sense that you are there yourself.
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