Introduction to Automated Dialogue Replacement (ADR) - YouTube

Channel: Filmmaker IQ

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This FilmmakerIQ Lesson is proudly sponsored by Rode Microphones. Premium Microphones and
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Audio Accessories for studio, live and location recording.
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Hi, welcome to FilmmakerIQ.com, I’m John Hess and today we’ll look at Automated Dialogue
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Replacement or ADR and demonstrate how you can record clean dialogue replacement
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with just a few simple tools What is ADR
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ADR or Automated Dialogue Replacement is the process of re-recording dialogue in a studio
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to replace the dialogue audio that was recorded on set. Now this can be done for
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a number of different reasons: first, there may have been a technical problem with the
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location audio - say a plane flew overhead on the best take, or there was too much
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bleed through from another actor’s mic or maybe the actor just wasn’t on axis with
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the mic during that take.
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In some cases ADR is used to replace an actor’s vocal performance. This is especially done
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in musicals with Marni Nixon supplying her voice to dub over Marilyn Monroe,
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Deborah Kerr, Audrey Hepburn and Natalie Wood.
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You may also have to ADR a scene to replace words to make a more television or airline
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friendly cut of the film.
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I have had it with the Monkey Fighting Snakes on this Monday to Friday Plane!!!
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Or sometimes ADR is used for creative purposes. Marlon Brando is said to have purposefully
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mumbled his way through his lines to force producers to ADR his scenes. During
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the ADR session he could more finely craft his performance based on seeing the context
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in the rough cut of the film.
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But in the world of low budget and independent filmmaking ADR is always seen as some sort
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of bogeyman - something to be avoided at all costs
 but it shouldn’t necessarily
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be. In fact, post production sound, if done with purpose, can actually be a crucial tool
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for the low budget filmmaker.
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See, at the beginning of the sound era at the start of the 1930s, there was no technology
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of recording sound separately from the visual film - no way to dub in dialogue
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or sound effects and music. When the studios were converting in mass to sound, they brought
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in hundreds of radio broadcast and telephone engineers, many who never shot a
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film in their life. As sound was the big new thing, these guys called the shots - dictating
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camera placement and angles almost completely wiping away the stylistic
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advances gained in silent film in the late 20s.
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Selling sound films to foreign markets before there was dubbing was especially hard. Paramount
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bought up a studio in Joinville just outside of Paris France for the
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specific purpose of taking the same script and remaking it in up to 13 different languages.
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Called Babel on the Seine, they would keep the same sets, props, and costumes
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and just rotate the actors for each different language version of the script. This didn’t
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work out so well and Paramount all but gave up on multi-language production by
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1932.
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But the technology of dubbing - called postsycronization or postsync was just around the corner. By
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1935 the position of a supervising dubbing engineer was about the same
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rank as the film editor. By the late 30s, most of the audio in studio films was done
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in post - this freed up the director from the confines of the production audio -
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allowing for the intricate art form that we enjoy today. Even now, it’s not unheard
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of for a major motion picture to have most of the dialogue recorded in post.
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Now when dialogue replacement was first being done, each line that had to be rerecorded
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used a loop of film which would play over and over again in a loop - often calling
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looping. Modern techniques use computers to loop the section which is where we get the
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“automated” part of Automated Dialogue Replacement.
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Talk to most independent filmmakers and they will generally agree that ADR is evil. And,
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yes, perhaps if you’re on a tight budget, having one more unexpected expense,
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especially if it’s because of sloppy location sound work, is a bad thing.
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But the fact is as directors in the 30s found out, ADR and postsynchronized sound can be
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kind of liberating.
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To demonstrate a DIY way of doing ADR, I shot this parody of the closing scene of Casablanca.
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Now I used a liberal amount of fog for this shot and you can clearly hear
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the fog machine whirling away in the location audio track
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So that track has to go. Unless you have a lot of experience working with audio or you
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have really good location sound to begin with, I recommend replacing the dialogue
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for the ENTIRE scene not just a line or two here and there. If you’re going to do just
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a partial ADR, you need to try to get the same kind of mic, the same mic placement,
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and try to replicate the reverberant space you originally recorded in. If you ADR the
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entire scene you don’t have to worry so much about that. Besides audiences tend to
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be pretty quick on picking up when a line has been dubbed over as many of my own YouTube
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comments have spotted when I had to replace a word or two from previous lessons.
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With this scene - we’re going to replace everything.
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With ADR there are two common practices and sessions often use both of them depending
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on the line that’s being dubbed.
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Visual ADR is when you have the actor listen to the line of dialogu and then the actor
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is asked to match dialogue while watching the performance on screen with no sound.
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Audio ADR is when the actor listens to the line of dialogue and recites the dialogue
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along the audio recording - again and again.
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Audio ADR may give a more exact result - as the repetition forces the actor to divorce
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the meaning from the sound words. The line becomes simply a series of sounds - the
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speech to song illusion kicks in and it’s a matter or repeating the song.
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But if you want to go for a different performance, you may just want to have the actor do the
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visual ADR.
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Now let me show you how to do a pretty sophisticated ADR with some basic tools. The first thing
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I did was cut up my edit into small chunks of dialogue to work with - the
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length varies but I like to try keep my segments about the length of a lyric or phrase.
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Now I’ll add 3 seconds to the front of the segment and include visual and audio beeps.
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Then I’ll take this chuck and duplicate it ten or twenty times and render it out as
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a small video file which I’ll load on my iPad. This simulates Visual ADR, but
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sometimes actors work better with Audio ADR. In that case I’ll just loop the line with
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no beeps - the speech to song effect kicks in quicker.
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Now all I have to do is have my actor watch the loop with headphones on and record the
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performance into my digital audio recorder. We want to do this somewhere that’s
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relatively quiet and in a room that’s doesn’t have a lot of reverb. The actor should be
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in the same posture that the line was delivered in. On the Magnificent Ambersons,
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James G. Stewart, head of post production sound had to loop a scene where 6 actors were
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in a car. After getting sound that was too clean, he spent a week having actors
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sitting on sawhorses as he bumped them about to simulate the movement of a car - the resulting
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audio got the seal of approval from director Orson Welles. As far as the
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mic, I’m using the RODE NT-1 condenser mic because it’s one of the cleanest sounding
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mics I’ve ever had the pleasure of working with. With this mic you don’t want to get
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too close or the proximity effect will kick in and make everything sound really deep and
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beefy. About 10 inches away will give us a really natural sound.
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Once each chunk recorded it’s back into the editing suite to place the pieces of audio.
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There are ADR assisting programs available that can stretch and squish your audio
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so they fit over the original but you can also do it manually
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After doing a rough align in Premiere Pro - I found it much easier to work inside Audition
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to get the final mix. Now it’s really easy to get confused trying to watch the
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footage and listen for a match so what I discovered is you get quicker cleaner match by visually
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lining up the waveforms of the camera’s scratch audio - and yes, you are
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going to have to get in there syllable by syllable and shift things around. You can
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try Auditions built in Automatic Speech alignment - sometimes it works perfectly,
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sometimes it’s just not quite right. Getting a good sync is time consuming but it’s worth
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it as small incosistencies can destroy the illusion. I ended up doing two
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sessions because I wasn’t quite happy with my directing performance in the first session
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- hey practice makes perfect. I applied some EQ - taking down some of the low
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range to compensate for proximity effect, added a delay filter of 10ms to dirty up the
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sound with a little combing and dropped in very subtle distant reverb. Then it’s a
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matter of adding in some store-bought tarmac ambiance and a sound effect of an airplane
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passing overhead. I had a friend drop by and improvise some piano music and we
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turn rather noisy sound location sound like this
 into this...
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You're getting on that plane.
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No Richard, I...
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If that plane leaves the ground without you on it, you're gonna regret it,
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maybe not today, maybe not tomorrow, but soon and for the rest of your life.
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But Richard, what about us?
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We'll always have Paris. I'm not good at being noble but it's easy to see
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the problems of three little people doesn't amount to a hill of beans in this crazy world
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Where I'm going there's no part for you
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but even though this is goodbye, you'll always be with me.
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Here's looking at you kid...
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I just sent you a friend request on Facebook.
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What the...
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So we can keep in touch, I'll update my status when I land and then I'll check in at Starbucks
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on the way so you'll know what I'm up to.
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Uh, I'm not going to install messanger...
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That's okay I'll use SnapChat.
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What the hell is SnapChat?
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>>DING<<
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Oh.
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Oh...
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See you online.
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You know, I think this is going to be a beautiful friendship.
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Recording natural audio on set is still regarded as the best way to capture the sound of a
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performance, but we should not think of ADR as a technique only for fixing what
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should have been fixed on set - ADR is a way to augment the production, to keep things
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moving on schedule - for example, you have a scene that doesn’t allow for good mic
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placement because of the camera angle or special effects, or a scene that can only be done
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once and a reshoot would be really impractical for money or time reason. Those are good cases for ADR
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Whatever it is. Practice ADR because you’ll eventually find yourself using it on the way
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to making something great. I’m John Hess and I’ll see you on FilmmakerIQ.com