Open Source



 
Making movies is expensive. Please support Valkaama and Open Source filmmaking.








 
Donations
 
2010-03-04 - 25 €
 
"Einfach nur klasse!"
 
2010-02-03 - 15 €
 
"Michael Voigt"
 
2010-02-01 - 8 €
 
"Valkaama - hoffentlich reicht es für das nächste Projekt"
 
2010-01-31 - 8 €
 
"http://swatinem.de Für freie Kultur."
 
2010-01-30 - 8 €
 
"Arpad Borsos"
 
2010-01-27 - 10 €
 
"Software-Entwicklung und Administration Stephan Maka"
 
2009-11-06 - 10 €
 
"Andrew Baxter"
 
2009-09-07 - 30 €
 
"Valkaama... ein großartiges Projekt"
 
2009-02-05 - 10 €
 
"Jakub Klawiter"
 
2008-09-12 - 10 €
 
"free arts"
 
2008-09-11 - 5 €
 
"http://falken-leipzig.de"
 
 
We would like to thank everyone who donated to Valkaama.



 
Media
 
29.01.2010
 
 
Interview zu Valkaama
 
27.01.2010
 
 
Valkaama - Open Source Film
 
25.06.2009
 
 
Open Source Film goes Beta
 
03.04.2009
 
 
Open Source Film
Bericht zur re:publica '09
 
31.01.2009
 
 
Breitband - Portrait
 
02.01.2009
 
 
Angeklickt
 
01.01.2009
 
 
Pressemitteilung
 
01.11.2008
 
 
Trackback - Kurzinterview
 
24.10.2008
 
 
mySputnik - Kurzinterview
 
08.09.2008
 
 
DPA Pressemitteilung
 
04.09.2008
 
 
Surftipps September
 


 
 
 
Valkaama is based on the novel Valkama written by Hendrik Behnisch. The book has been published in March 2010 in German language.



 
Supported by...
 
VEB Film Leipzig
 
Consulting
 
Piratenpartei
 
Source files distribution
 
Digitmedia
 
50 GB Postproduction Webspace
 




 
 
About...
About...
 
Valkaama is a collaborative Open Source Movie.
 
 
Important facts in short:
 
- Our FTP postproduction server: valkaama.digitmedia.de
- Valkaama is licensed under Creative Commons by-sa.
- The film is an open source no-budget full feature drama.
- Valkaama = valkama (Finnish: home) + kaamos (Finnish: polar night)
- Contact: e-mail, Skype.
 
If you want to screen Valkaama in your cinema, TV station or on your webpage in high definition, you can license a 1080p copy.
 
 
 
Link:en:24   Valkaama Teaser Remix

posted: 2009-08-20
 
I recently got to know about a Valkaama teaser remix made by Kurt W. The video is nicely composed starting with Lasse's letter to Ari followed by various scenes of the movie where Ari's death is used as an interlude. For the music Kurt used one of the Crossroads tracks. Have a look:


 
 
Link:en:23   Valkaama goes Beta

posted: 2009-06-24
 
With added music, opening sequence and credits Valkaama now is a complete movie and hence the first Open Source feature film. In order for you to see the result of the last three months efforts you can watch and download the current version of the movie here.

Although the movie is complete it is still tagged as Beta. The reason for this is that like in (Open Source) software development improvements are still possible. For Valkaama this means that the current music score will be improved and that even two new scores are being created. If you want to check out the ongoing work on the music please visit our YouTube page.
 
 
Link:en:22   Reuse, Remix, Mashup... why Open Source is also important for moving images

posted: 2009-06-03
 
An important part of what the whole Open Source Movie thing is all about is to enable others to use the material we produce for their own purposes. And one really great example for such a usage of Valkaama is West Latta's tutorial on how to make a film score on audio tuts+. So let's shortly analyse why an Open Source Movie like Valkaama which uses an OS compatible license such as the Creative Commons by-sa is needed for people like West to safely use external clips in order to do such great stuff as film score tutorials.

Liberal licenses like the Creative Commons licenses you can apply in order to give others the freedom to use your own creative work within a safe legal framework. The license hereby clearly states the DO's and DON'Ts when it comes to handling the material. So why is an Open Source compatible Creative Commons license the best choice?

As you probably know there are 6 standard CC licenses which consist of one ore more of the following modules or conditions: by (Attribution), nc (Noncommercial), nd (NoDerivs) and sa (ShareAlike). If you now make some research you will quickly find out that most of the few free movies you can find on the web are using the condition nd, and almost all of them the condition nc. So why is that counterproductive for people like West? And furthermore, why he couldn't make his tutorial without access to the movie's sources?

First of all free movies licensed under nd conditions don't allow you to make any modifications to the material. Hence they are useless for any reuse, remix or mashup and... no tutorials with these. Second of all, the nc module is quite a trap. On the webpage West's tutorial is published it is possible to gain access to premium content (source files, bonus tutorials and more) by paying a monthly fee. Although this particular tutorial which uses scenes from Valkaama is freely accessible the fact that it is also offered within a commercial framework clearly infringes the nc term. The same applies to the small commercials displayed on the webpage.

Well, so much for the licenses... As for the sources, why exactly are they needed? The reason for this is quite simple, yet important: the source tracks containing the dialogues can be downloaded separately from our FTP Server. Since they aren't mixed with music yet, you can simply add another film score without having to separate voice and music before. A task which is nearly impossible by the way.

Resources:

- The Process of Score Composition Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4
- Tutorial videos on vimeo: First draft, Final score




Note: This version of scene 56 still has some color grading issues we're trying to fix in the forthcoming BETA of Valkaama.
 
 
Link:en:21   Subtitles and Script online

posted: 2009-05-01
 
The English subtitles of Valkaama can be downloaded now. Hopefully other language versions will follow by the help of people who like our movie and our free culture project. If you want to make subtitles in a different language you can use simple programs like Subtitle Workshop or others. All you need is the current Alpha 2 version of the movie and the English subtitle file which already contains the timings of the dialogues.

Apart from the subtitles the script of the movie is now also available as a PDF file in English and German. Get it at the Sources page.

Update (23.05.2009): German subtitles are available.

Update (16.06.2009): Polish subtitles are available.
 
 
Link:de:20   Konferenzvortrag Re:publica '09

posted: 2009-04-07
 
Am 2. April habe ich auf der Re:publica '09 einen Vortrag über Open Source Filme gehalten. Eine schöne Zusammenfassung davon gibt es auf der Webseite des t3n Magazines. Die Vortragsfolien könnt ihr hier ansehen und vielleicht kann ich noch ein Video dazu auftreiben, da einer der Konferenzteilnehmer seine Videokamera dabei hatte und die Präsentation aufgezeichnet hat.
 
 
Link:en:19   Valkaama Alpha 2 online

posted: 2009-03-25
 
The Alpha 2 version of Valkaama is now available. The most important improvement affects the sound which has been completely reworked by Michael Georgi. For a more detailed overview of what has changed, have a look into our changelog.
 
 
Link:en:18   YouTube Partner Program

posted: 2009-03-23
 
from: YouTube (service@youtube.com)   -   to: Valkaama

Dear Valkaama,

Thank you for your interest in the YouTube Partner Program. Our goal is to extend invitations to as many partners as we can. Unfortunately we are unable to accept your application at this time. The current level of viewership of your account has not met our threshold for acceptance.

Applications are reviewed for a variety of criteria, including but not limited to the size of your audience, country of residence, quality of content, and consistency with our Community Guidelines and Terms of Use. Please review the program qualifications (http://www.youtube.com/partners) for a complete list of our criteria.

As we continue to expand we hope to be able to accept a broader group of partners. We have registered your interest in the program and will continue to monitor your account for potential future acceptance into the program.

Thank you for your understanding.


----------

from: Valkaama   -   to: YouTube (service@youtube.com)

Dear YouTube, Inc.

Thank you for the automatic review of our Partner Program application and account data. We understand that quality cannot be evaluated by algorithms or simply doesn't matter. Next time we will produce tons of videos of animals playing the piano. This kind of content seems to be more suitable for a broader audience. We have learned our lesson.

Thank you for enlightening us,

The Valkaama Team.

 
 
Link:en:17   Safe colors and related problems

posted: 2009-03-21
 
When applying color grading to video it is usually recommended to stay within the safe colors. Safe colors range from values 16-235 for each RGB value. This is the broadcasting world.

In the computer world however we got the full range of RGB colors with values from 0 to 255 and that's a tricky thing to combine. If you want to play a game on your broadcasting-world TV set and the game shows a dark object on your computer screen (RGB values lower than 16 for one or more of the color channels) your TV might not understand that and display everything below the safe values as its lowest value so you will loose all the details. The other way round, when playing back safe color coded video on your computer screen, you will not get a nice black but rather a milky look since the dynamic range of the computer screen isn't fully used.

To compensate this, today's graphics card drivers usually can either be set to display the full dynamic range for video (0-255) or use the limited 'safe' range (16-235). And here is the trap. With the wrong setting you might have a nicely looking video displayed on your computer screen while the image on other computers with different settings will be much worse. This is exactly what happened at the first public screening of Valkaama. What was intended and displayed on my laptop you can see on the left-hand side of the picture below. What the beamer was showing you can see on the right side.

After a day of searching for explanations of this bug I changed my driver settings to display the full dynamic color range for videos. This resulted in my laptop displaying videos much darker. Now I only had to do the color grading for most of the scenes again... and raising black levels as well as tweaking the gamma and brightness values brought the details back. Thank you graphics card driver for another 2 days of work.



A smart explanation of the issue can be found here ;)