Ok, in the interest of brevity (don't laugh dammit, this is still shorter then individual replies!) I'll lump the comments here and respond 'en masse.
inthesto wrote:
Ones with substance. I don't care if the opinion is overall positive or negative, but tell me what was good or bad. My timing was off? My use of filters was good? TELL ME TELL ME TELL ME.
Agreed. for the tecnical details, does a timing break down work better, or does a few general comments referencing the areas in question do it?
Artistic merit then. (noted)
Otohiko wrote:
Other than that, technical stuff is good to nitpick errors, though I'm even more interested what they thought of certain things on the vid on artistic levels, etc
But then I also try not to op vids that are just too basic. It just feels like I might seem mean with my criticism, while the creator would simply learn through guides and practice anyway
I know what you mean, it seems heartless to go through a video with dozens upon dozens of errors and pick them out, on the other hand, *I would want to know*.
(nitpicks plus artistic merit (noted)
Calim wrote:
Both because if we don't opinionate on the wee ones...
For some reason this conjured a drill sergent giving an orientation to a bunch of Oompa Loompas.
"Now listen you wee men, you think I'm going slack on your because you are short, fat, purple and spent your lives as slaves in a chocolate factory you are SOO wrong" !!
godix wrote:
I find the my ops are geared towards newbies or those that I can actually help in some way
Regardless of that I noticed that when I offered free ops most of the videos were good enough that I didn't regret offering free ops. Several were even suprisingly well done vids that I kept around and would not have seen otherwise. Enough were good enough that I think next time I bother to change my sig I'll follow Scintilla's lead and start pimping other people in addition to myself.
...I guess the person interested in improvement is more likely to respond.
Wholehearted agreement here. I was quite surprised by the variance in the quality of the videos submitted, I've only opped 72 as of this post but even on the ones that you expect to look like dirt there are gems.
I too will be doing the SIG thing now that you pointed it out, it's cool. I noticed Corran does the something similar.
Op the ones that can use it, low score and newbies for the most part them. (noted)
pen-pen2002 wrote:
I find it's not so much the quality of the vid that effects me as the style. A straight action vid is much harder for me to op than a more artistic one. ...I try to give reviews that cover both specific things as well as larger issues.
In general though I try to always have a section explaining scores and a timing breakdown section.
I've started this too. At first I was worried that it might seem like I was trying to pad the word count of the video for a higher worthiness rating, then I decided that since I'm not, who should care? The other thing I started doing is a "first impression" part, where I just mention how the video worked or didn't work sans any technical details.
Artistic merit and 'style' (noted)
Scintilla wrote:
I guess that means I'd better appreciate ops that talk about the concept and flow and what I could have done to improve those, but I don't remember getting too many of those...
And I've found that, much of the time, I'll only bother to reply to opinions that actually have some substance to them. Do people really care that much about getting replies? I don't.
Hmm, I always like to check back and see what a person thought of my review. Specifically, sometimes there are mitigating circumstances, or details that I might have been unaware of. (the example that comes to to mind is one where I thought a person had put in fan art, but it was just actually a weird part of the actual series). I've noticed also that the more technical detail and thought that is put into a video review , the more likely a comprehensive response is.
which brings me to..
Arigatomyna wrote:
I stopped giving random reviews because I realized I didn't really want the 'time-frame' ops anymore. I wanted the ones that look at the big picture, especially from those who actually liked the 'idea' and might have opinions on how the idea could have been brought out better.
"If you review this, I'd really like to know how you saw the concept, the larger picture. Any picks at the little details, the cuts, tiny quality flaws, aren't really necessary. I probably already know they're there.
But very few make any comment on what type of review they'd like to get.
So, a basic: what I liked, didn't like and would change if I were magically you type review works best for you?
I agree on the part describing what type of OP a person would like to have. For me at least it lets me know if I'm going to put the video through the washer and find the dirt, or if I'm just going to watch it and make some general comments.
For someone with a pile of opinions, I usually figure that a couple of detailed reviews have already been left, so I keep it basic (usually). Given that you have a
substantial number of videos, and almost all of them have a decent number of ops, would you tend to agree with that as a generalization?
And, also (noted) that you prefer the artistic merit review.
downwithpants wrote:
My ops. Hrm I dwell on how well on subjective topics (scene selection, capturing the mood, direction, flow, concept) more than technical details,
As for which videos I op, I op new videos with fewer ops more. I know there's the "heavily-oped editors still want opinions" argument, and occasionally I do op those videos, but some creators I think would benefit from my criticism more than others
For receiving ops. I don't mind low scores or high scores. But I like personal details, like how the video made you feel, not just whether you liked it or not, but did it overwhelm you, did it bore you, did it make you laugh. Thats the most important aspect of making a video - communicating a feeling to the viewer not directly through words, but through psychological factors in the video. so, i want to know if i succeeded.
I like suggestions and tips too.
Details on feelings, wins the day yet again (noted).
I agree on the whole concept of the video, IE: that it's supposed to be a synergistic combination of music and images that hopefully through the effort of the artist becomes greater than the sum of it's parts. (or is that a redundant statment?)
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General comments and observations:
I notice that on the whole, the people who responded here want opinions on a more artistic level than a technical level. In other words, did the video work for you or not, and what made it work?
Then again, looking at the quality of people who responded that's not overly surprising. Ironically, this is a more difficult type of review for me to do. I mean, pointing out sequencing errors, and inconsistencies in color palette, or even trying to find the measure of progressive sequencial events is easier than that for me. Primarily this is because a) I have not a shred of artistic talent in my body. If I do something and it looks artistic, thats because I followed artistic rules (things like complementary colors and symetry), and also because b) did I mention the artistic thing?
I really like some of the ideas that were mentioned here, and I'll be implementing them myself.
One thing that I saw is that everybody wants to have the review be 'worth' something, no matter how good the video is. I try this myself. In fact, even on my highest scoring video (wasteland, if you want to know) I still made some observations that hopefully were of use.
Thank you all for your thoughtful and insightful responses. Hopefully, the next review that you get from me, will be one that you find useful, and informative.