⥠Hi guys! ^^ Here's another FULL-length video I finally got completed! YAY! :D â¥
⥠This was actually for a project in school that's supposed to show how well we know Romeo and Juliet.... So.... I don't know if I exactly showed that purpose, but I hope it's accepted anyway! ;) Wish me luck!
⥠OK, so I REALLY love this song! Thanks, AviiAvatar, for the idea with your Arthur and Gwen video! ^^ I thought this song would fit Romeo and Juliet as well, and since we were reading and watching the movie in my English class, I decided "why not?"
⥠There are a few glitches in it as you'll see. I was up all night trying to piece together an entire third of the video to meet the project deadline. I BARELY made it! I was really tired, so please cut me some slack! haha *Plus the fact that I was pretty high off of chocolate might have something to do with it!*
⥠Anyway, I hope you will enjoy! ^^ I did edit some footage a little bit so that it's watchable for all audiences! (the honeymoon part can get a little TOO romantical!)
And PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE do not use this video in any of your works! Please? I've been through a lot to make this, and you using it as your own really disrespects me and all my hard work. I will let you download for your own entertainment, like watching it on your IPod, but please respect me. OK?
⥠Song: I'd Come for You
⥠Artist: Nickelback
⥠Clips: Romeo and Juliet (1968)
⥠Couple: Romeo & Juliet
⥠Program: Sony Vegas Pro 8.0
⥠Time Taken: 3 days (not kidding! I hate deadlines!)
Disclaimer: I do not own any of the material used in this video. The clips all belong to Paramount Pictures, and the song belongs to Nickelback. Again, I own nothing. This was not used for profit in any way.
Southwestern U.S. travelogue flies around in modern 1930s airplanes, stopping off at Albuquerque and an Arizona dude ranch, all the time focusing on fashions worn by its cargo of aspiring Paramount starlets. Excellent pre-World War II fashion footage in Kodachrome, plus documentation of affluent tourist destinations. Produced and directed by Harry D. Donahue. With Mary Martin.