New Supernatural Vid - Deus Ibi Est
Oct. 14th, 2007 03:22 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)

Video Title: Deus Ibi Est
Song Title/Artist: Deus Ibi Est by Isobel Campbell & Mark Lanegan
Show/Character: Supernatural - John Winchester
Length/Format: 2:51, (Xvid, Stream)
Summary: John Winchester single minded soldier.
Download Xvid (720x400 - 35MB)
Download Xvid (480x272 - 25MB)
Low stream @ imeem
Thanks
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Credits/Titles/Effects
I’ve been leaning more towards simple ones lately and I really wanted to flex some of my muscles in After Effects. I did a lot of playing around with cameras in 3 dimensional space for this vid. Most of the ones in the body of the vid are meant to be invisible but the titles are supposed to be a nod to the fact that they are there.
Narrative
I felt it was important to get John’s back-story out of the way as soon as possible so that we know where he’s coming from without having to go over it all. So the intro is a montage of misery for poor old John, leading to him becoming a single minded man with a mission. Find gun! Get gun! Kill YED! If ever anyone were “Leaving Salvation” it’s John (the sign even has his initials) His sons are reminders of the past and also have become hunters in their own rights, something the sad man holding his kids close to him would not have wanted but he made them soldiers anyway. How can those not be sad shores?
There really isn’t “an unknown force” as such. He always knows what he’s doing and why even if it is against his will. The colt was made for demon hunting and over the years bullets have been used by John’s “ancestors”, his predecessors. The colt as the key to the Hell Gate is kind of a leap in logic that frankly, I still don’t really buy it but what the heck, it looks cool.
Even before he’s dead and in Hell, John is underground in the darkest, dankest places, trying to protect his sons from the worst that can happen whilst still being fully prepared to put them on the frontline.
The montage of mythology shots leads us to the colt as the solution. And here we have Dean looking at the gun with greedy eyes but its Daddy’s gun and he can’t have it, not yet. There are other hunters and they have families and they get killed and that’s really not John’s concern because there’s only one death that really mattered to him. Dean is surrounded by dead things and yet he’s still better off than his dad because yet again John is in the bowels of the earth trying to fix everything on his own.
It’s around the line “soldiers come and soldiers go” that John’s attitude to Dean changes he will sacrifice himself for his son so that he can complete the mission. So now Dean gets the colt. A gun and a mission isn’t much of an inheritance but it’s all the eldest Winchester son can expect. Sam is not necessarily to be trusted and certainly is not the right man for this job. John’s not there, in fact he’s never there he’s in a tatty old photo, a reminder of a life that got burned away.
The deal is struck, Dean is saved and John is damned and yet when you make a deal with the devil for the right reasons “God is present” or at least John thinks so. (I think Bobby would disagree.)
So it’s time for John to bow out and leave his eldest son to fight the battle. He leaves with a sense of calm, not so the YED who seems to wonder if he’s made a mistake. History repeats itself so Dean will sacrifice himself for Sam even though he knows what it is like to be on the receiving end of that particular chunk of guilt.
John breaks out of Hell and uses that one last chance to do just enough to give his son time to complete the mission. Dean learned love and sacrifice from his dad and now it’s payback time. The fact that the YED never saw it coming proves that John made the right decision that Dean was the man for the job. And we get the nearest thing to a happy ending that the tragic Winchesters are ever likely to have.
I think the decision to not show Mary but to choose clips that showed her absence was the right decision. She has left a void in their lives and so she is kind of the same in the vid, she’s a tombstone, a photograph, an empty space.
So this is a vid about John the soldier as much as it is John the father. The marching beat of the song emphasises this as does the matter of fact, determined delivery.
Deus Ibi Est by Isobel Campbell & Mark Lanegan
Against my will to these sad shores
An unknown force has drawn me
Bound unto a future shaped by ancestors before me
Day on day I march the beat to someone else's drum
I have searched far foreign lands there's nowhere left to run
Impending storm rise up rise up
Oh demons I shall shame you!
Look down the barrel of my gun and one by one I'll name you
Day on day my brothers leave go marching off to war
Yet we never understand for what we're fighting for
Ubi caritas et amor
Ubi caritas
Deus ibi est
Worldly desires and worldly gains
Designed for worldly men
I'm a master of the heart with ears and hands to lend
Soldiers come and soldiers go some changed by love for thee
A circle in the chain of life all fighting to be free
Ubi caritas et amor
Ubi caritas
Deus ibi est
So come my lord and we shall dance
To God's own private drum
Sweet Jesus and the holy vine
The afterlife to come
Day on day I march the the beat to someone else's drum
I have searched far foreign lands there's nowhere left to run
Ubi caritas et amor
Ubi caritas
Deus ibi est
Latin translation: Where there is tender care and love, God is present.
Feedback in all shapes and sizes is very much welcomed.
no subject
Date: 2008-03-09 02:22 pm (UTC)I just rec'ed this vid as one of my top two favorite SPN vids ever to a new spn fan, and I realized I'd never left feedback.
I can't tell you how much I love this. I think it's flawless. The song choice is so incredibly perfect that I'd swear you'd somehow gotten John to narrate your vid.
The visuals are understated but relentless, just like the man. Marching on and on, tread measured by loss & pain and determination & duty in equal parts. You don't shy away from the dark parts of the Winchesters' story, but you let it play out in kind of a muted grandeur that really communicates its tragedy.
My favorite sections are probably:
**1:01 - 1:11 because it depicts John's isolation and bravery so well (the beat seems to be the water dripping down at 1:07).
**1:32 - 1:37 because it inventively shows how tangled the supernatural is with John's sense of family and the past (and the light blinking on the beat is creepily awesome).
Also? Loved the jaw clench to the beat on :55-:56. Now that's attention to detail.
ETA: I also really enjoyed your notes. I know you said you don't often leave notes, but I for one would love to read notes like this again from you.
no subject
Date: 2008-03-10 06:10 am (UTC)The song is so right for John it does seem as if someone handed him a microphone and said "talk/sing me your life story" kinda like the most depressing Karaoke, ever.
I think the lack of emotion in relating such an epic tale is really the key to understanding John.
1.32-1.37 is my favourite section and was totally inspired by Spike's "it's always got to be blood" speech in season 5 finale of Buffy.
As for the notes I'm glad you liked them and found them useful. I have a knee-jerk reaction to lengthy vid notes, but there have definitely been occasions when I've found notes and audio commentaries have helped me appreciate a vid more. I suppose I would consider doing something like this again if I felt the vid called for it.
no subject
Date: 2008-03-10 11:31 am (UTC)Heh! Even more depressing than Angel's "Mandy," I agree.
1.32-1.37 is my favourite section and was totally inspired by Spike's "it's always got to be blood" speech in season 5 finale of Buffy.
Aha! Interesting--that makes sense to me.
The drawing of the shape on the floor + the same shape in the mobile = total creepy awesomeness.
That section is a great example of taking visuals already meant to be creepy and escalating them to a whole new level of commentary.