This amazing pack of 4 peaceful night rain sound effects is a great selection to use in a variety of film projects. From city atmospheres, video games or even documentaries, create a beautiful and realistic nighttime scene.
Add detailed rain-falling sounds to your next nature film, night shots or indoor scenes with a dramatic outdoor background. With 3 variations, this sound can be easily used within a dramatic scene to create a strong emotional connection and pure realism.
Rain Scaricare Film
With crisp and clear sounds of rain, storm and thunder, the Rain Background Noise offers 3 different intensities to be used at any time of the day or season. This can be great for a podcast or live reading sessions online where you might want to add some drama.
Looking to add a touch of darker and cold rain ambient sounds to your horror film scenes? The Rain and Storm Ambience is a great fit with 3 different edits that include walking elements and a howling mountain atmosphere.
The classic cold night when a new scary character enters the scene is made perfect with heavy rain and thunder sound effects. Featuring 3 different short to long-form variations, this sound effect pack is a must-have for editors that work on animations and gaming videos.
This rain sound effect is focused more on drops falling and hitting rainwater pipes. Use it as background sound for smaller scenes at the back of the house or a meeting at the park. Definitely a good option for commercials and animations.
Starting with a lightning strike and thunder, this rain sound effect fits perfectly for powerful stormy weather scenes. Perfect ambiance track for a horror movie or thriller chase through the forest. With 3 variations, easily mix and match the sounds for the perfect sound effect!
If you are looking for a great pack of rain sound effects, the Rain Before The Storm offers you 6 great realistic options. The tracks go from calm, quiet rain to thunder and winds and can be used in different movie scenes and settings.
The Thunder Rumbling sound effect is a perfect way to add ambient storm roars to your rainy footage and signal a change of scene coming. Featuring the lightning hits accompanied by flash noises, it can also be used for logo intros or other transitions.
Create the perfect detail for your indoor scenes using the Rain From Indoor collection. From louder sounds close to the window to quieter rain sound effects for interior home scenes. This SFX pack will easily enhance your projects.
For your upcoming creative nature projects, this pack of 4 originally recorded thunder SFX is a great resource to download. All the sound selections are accompanied by rain element sounds and warnings about severe weather.
From wind and storm to rain, lightning, rumblings and thunder, this pack of 3 weather SFX is a must in your arsenal. With a softer tone, they fit perfectly as a background for animations, nature scenes, documentaries or horror films.
Shooting in a colder location known for thunderstorms? Do you have a flooding scene that needs something a little extra? Use this pack of thunder and rain sound effects to recreate a more realistic scene with bad weather.
With long, medium and short versions, this pack of stormy rain sound effects will help you easily create your own unique atmosphere in many different scenes. From nature documentaries to audiobooks, Stormy Weather is a great background rain effects track.
Create an atmosphere of a colder fall night with the Strong Rain track. This long continuous sound effect is perfect for longer scenes featuring rain, heavy rain and downpour. You can easily mix and cut the different sounds to shift between scenes.
If some of your summer shots also have cloudy footage, you might like the Summer Rainy Day track. With 3 different variations, from light rain sound effects to louder thunder and rain sound effects, you definitely need to include it in your editing arsenal.
Do you have umbrella props for your scene under the rain? Then you will definitely need the Rain City Under Umbrella collection of 4 rain sound effects. Enhance your scene with these distinct sounds and create your best work yet.
Recorded from various distances and locations within the house, this pack of 3 variations includes natural sound effects for your animations, film projects and even games. It also includes rain hitting on car windows, useful for many scenarios.
This pack of 4 softer variations of rain hitting an umbrella is perfect if you have close-up scenes requiring more detail. You can also use these rain sound effects for scenes with camping tents or wedding events. Easily use it in both summer and autumn atmospheres!
Foley and sound design work truly make or breaks a scene. Most scenes use a combination of field recordings and ambient sounds, which means you need to find a good library, like Motion Array or Artlist, to easily enhance your film quality. These rain sound effects will help make your love, fight scenes or nature documentaries grab attention. Not only that, sound effects fill aural voids and make your scenes feel more natural and realistic.
Singin In the Rain is arguably the best movie musical of all time, not just because of the music but because of the entire package - the premise, the comedy, the characters - everything here works together to make you feel better any time you sit down to watch it. It's ironic that this movie was thrown together quickly to capitalize on the success of "An American in Paris", since the improvisational feeling of the movie is one of the things that makes it so much fun. Although this film is number ten on the top 100 films of all time as compiled by the American Film Institute, it wasn't nominated for best picture the year of its release, 1952. Although it did well at the box office, it would be over twenty years before people would look back and realize just what a great motion picture it was. Perhaps that was because the 1970's were such bleak and cynical years, with movies that largely matched that mood, that people were eager to rediscover the fun that a motion picture viewing experience could be.The movie focuses on that period of time in which the entire motion picture film industry was in nervous transition from silent to talking pictures. Although the movie compresses time in this respect - the transition actually took about three years - it does accurately describe the technical problems of that era along with their comical aspects. There was an overabundance of musicals in the first batch of talking films, many stars did have heavy accents that made their speech undecipherable or voices that came across like nails on a chalkboard like Lina Lamont (Jean Hagen) and saw their careers ruined, and early sound technology itself was so fragile that you would often see actors speaking to potted plants or to coat racks with comic effect. The preview of silent picture team Lockwood and Lamont's first talkie, "The Dueling Cavalier", is one of the most hilarious scenes in the film. It is pretty typical of what you would see in such an early talking picture - dialogue going in and out of sync, actors and actresses strutting around and wildly gesturing as if nobody can hear them, and dialogue that still resembled what you would read off of the title cards in a silent film - "I love you, I love you, I love you".All of this is one of the reasons Singin' In The Rain will never get dated - it is a comic nostalgic look at a very narrow period in time. This movie is fun outside of its comic take on movie history, though. For one, it's hard to say who steals the show the most, since there are so many thieves involved. Most notably there is Jean Hagen - who actually has a very pleasant speaking voice - as the evil silent star who can't accept her days are numbered. Then there is a 27 year-old Donald O'Connor as Cosmo, the studio music director and sidekick of Gene Kelly's character whose youthful exuberance really shines in the number "Make 'Em Laugh" along with all of his goofy facial expressions. He seems to be having as much fun as the audience. Finally, there are all of the great dance numbers and music, capped by probably one of the most famous scenes of all time - Gene Kelly's rendition of the title number that perfectly captures the joy of a man who has just fallen in love and feels he has the world at his feet. You just can't watch this film and not come away with a smile on your face. It is as good for the soul as chicken soup, just a lot more fun.
The transition from the silent film era to the newly arrived technique of the 'talkies' proved to be the ruin for many well established stars that were great on the screen, but who had no professional training in the theater, or otherwise, and had horrible speaking voices. Thus, a star of the magnitude of Lina Lamont, suffers a hard blow to her career and ego.That's the basis of one of the best movies about old Hollywood of all times: "Singin' in the Rain". The film is one of the classics it is because of the marvelous direction of Gene Kelly and Stanley Donen, two men who knew a lot about musicals. The screen play is by one of the best people in the business, Betty Comden and Adolph Green.MGM was the studio that employed all the stars one sees in the film, and what a cast they put together: Gene Kelly, Donald O'Connor, Debbie Reynolds, Jean Hagen, Cyd Charisse in a dancing part, Millard Mitchell and Rita Moreno. As if those names weren't big enough, there is the fantastic musical numbers that even, viewing them today, have kept their freshness because of the care in which this film was crafted."Singin' in the Rain" is one of the best musicals of all times. It's right up there with the best of them thanks to the vision of Gene Kelly and Stanley Donen and it will live forever as more people discover this wonderful example of entertainment.
In the book The Films of Arthur Freed, Freed made one comment about Singin' in the Rain that always stood out in my mind. As the film was about the Hollywood era when films were learning to talk, Freed said that there was no need to do any research as he lived the research. He and any number of people who were still working at MGM a quarter of a century later.The knowledge that folks had who worked on Singin' in the Rain and the talent of Gene Kelly are the two things that make that film some consider the greatest of all musicals.Arthur Freed who wrote a lot of the song lyrics in those twenties and thirties MGM musicals together with his partner, composer Nacio Herb Brown, just reached into his own catalog for the score. The whole score is Brown-Freed except for Moses which was written by Roger Edens and Adolph Green and Betty Comden and Fit As A Fiddler with lyrics by Freed and music by Al Goodheart and Al Hoffman.The only 'original' song written for the show was Make 'Em Laugh by Brown and Freed and was Donald O'Connor's specialty. You have to put that in quotes because even the writers agreed they ripped off Cole Porter's Be A Clown. Which is from an MGM musical that Arthur Freed produced. Lucky they weren't sued.Of course the number that Singin' in the Rain is noted for is the title tune sung and danced in the splashing rain by Gene Kelly. That and the Broadway Melody ballet became two of his signature numbers. I know I don't enjoy myself as much as Mr. Kelly did in that inclement weather.Jean Hagen got a Best Supporting Actress nomination for playing that 'shimmering star in the cinema firmament' Lina Lamont. Unfortunately she lost to Gloria Grahame for The Bad and The Beautiful. One thing that the silent screen did was mask a whole lot of personalities whose voices did not fit the screen image created. That was done for great comic affect by Hagen, but Kelly in some of his love scenes was using the tragedy of John Gilbert who acted in two much the classical manner as a continental lover. Just think how history might have been different if Gilbert had the background of a song and dance man and could have transitioned to musicals. Of course Debbie Reynolds is just fine in her first real starring part as the young singing hopeful whose career is made by sound. So many in fact were, as many as those that were broken. A favorite of mine in this is Douglas Fowley the harassed director trying to get a talking performance out of the nasal Hagen and dealing with the new technology at the same time.As Freed said, no research was needed. Singin' in the Rain is a product of his life experience in those early days of sound. 2ff7e9595c
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