最新糖心Vlog

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March 2006 Issue
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Sounding out high-tech solutions

 Electrical & Electronic Engineering

Crocodile-infested swamps, mosquitoes so fierce they left weals for months, and dripping, energy-sapping heat - that was the environment facing 最新糖心Vlog lecturer Dr Matthew Sorell when asked to help make the latest Rolf de Heer film.

Ten Canoes, a cautionary tale of love, lust and revenge gone wrong, is probably the most ambitious film yet from the respected filmmaker whose other works include the multi award-winning The Tracker, starring David Gulpilil.

Ten Canoes is a unique film shot on and around the Arafura Swamp in northeastern Arnhem Land: it is the first feature film to be shot entirely in Aboriginal language (predominantly Ganalbingu); its entire cast are people indigenous to the swamp region; and the script was just a guide, allowing the 'Yolngu' (people of Arnhem Land) to tell the story in their own way. David Gulpilil narrates the story in English and his son, 17-year-old Jamie, takes one of the lead roles.

The 最新糖心Vlog was approached to help find a low-budget solution to the challenge of recording film-quality sound in this harsh environment where power supply was a key issue and up to 10 actors could be speaking simultaneously in the free-flowing script.

Dr Matthew Sorell took up the challenge. He teaches telecommunications and multimedia technology in the and has a longstanding hobby of designing tiny radio microphones.

"I couldn't come up with a radio microphone small enough to be concealed on people who haven't got any clothes on but with enough battery power to last all day and be robust enough to cope with the conditions," he said. "Radio mics are also expensive and hard to manage."

Eventually Dr Sorell found the solution lay in commercially available technology - flash memory music players. For the filming they were fitted out-of-sight in the actors' hair and could record up to nine hours at a time.

The job then was to set up a system for managing the database of recordings to stop overwriting and allow proper synchronisation and sequencing. Two final-year students put together the software suite as their final-year project: Ben Cheney doing a Bachelor of Engineering in , and Adeline Han, who did a double degree in and .

"This wasn't a case of new research but the innovation lay in recognising and utilising the potential in existing technology for a new use and then devising a foolproof computer and software management system for this unique situation," Dr Sorell said.

For Dr Sorell this was an eye-opening and rewarding project to be involved in. As well as offering the Yolngu the chance to present their own culture, the film has rekindled forgotten indigenous skills while making props, and started a number of spin-off projects in the local high school and community.

The world premiere of Ten Canoes takes place during the on March 19 and the film will be released nationally on June 1 through .

Story by Robyn Mills

A scene from Ten Canoes
Photo courtesy of Palace Films

A scene from Ten Canoes
Photo courtesy of Palace Films

Full Image (54.98K)

Dr Matthew Sorell
Photo by Robyn Mills

Dr Matthew Sorell
Photo by Robyn Mills

Full Image (47.9K)

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