Monday 14 November 2011

CHECK LIST : WHAT YOU SHOULD BE DOING NOW

  • Principal photography: the majority of your filming 
  • Post your  call sheets as you do each shoot (remember to remove personal details from the blog once you've made a hard copy)
  • Capturing your rough footage into Premiere or iMovie
  • Checking light levels as you go: if the footage is too dark, re-film now
  • Update your Production Log as you make decisions, plans, lists and revisions; do research or  planning
  • Get feedback and post it on your Production Log. 
  • Include photos, scans, screenshots into your Production Log as evidence of all your activity. Make your log easy for the Examiner to read: use colous to make key terms pop 

Thursday 10 November 2011

GENRE CODES

Remember that visual and sound codes signal genre. Your film opening must have codes that quickly and efficiently signal genre to your viewer. In class Group 3 looked at how to employ the horror genre convention of enigma as well as of false alarm in their film opening. 

For example, in their banshee film, a character may be startled by what appears to be a supernatural figure with a horrific face, but it turns out to be merely a teenager wearing hallowe'en make-up. This false alarm quickly establishes the the horror genre.

Another example that the group have devised is the false alarm in which one of the group appears to be missing, then a stranger's hand is apparently placed from behind on the shoulder one of the group, leading the viewer to fear that they are under attack, but it it is merely the friend after all rejoing the group.