Wednesday 31 October 2018

CHECKLIST

What you should be doing (or have done) by now:

Complete the preliminary exercises and post on your blog under the 'page' Preliminary Exercises' at the top. 
Use the media studio (empty Tuesday and Wednesday afternoons, lunch breaks) or edit on your laptop. You can often film on your phone with good results. the aim is to show that yiu have practised.
The link that I emailed to you should prompt you to offer evidence of different kinds of filming and editing practice: 
  • remember to label each (using text within the video work) so the word 'close up' for example comes before your examples of close ups
  • close ups of different kinds
  • continuity editing (the focus here is on editing together an establishing shot, shot reverse shot)
  • the 5 Dollars or Banana Pancakes (the focus here is on editing titles and sound, as in Delicatessen or Immortal Beloved)
  • some camera movement and shot types, such as tilt pans, arc pans, canted angles, perhaps a tracking shot
  • focus pull
  • any other photographic of video work, such as a short piece to camera, like a documentary, or other video work. One useful piece would be to film one of your characters in the the film opening that you are about to create as if you were interviewing them or 'hot seating' them.
  • lighting exercises are also useful experimentation.
  • Some editing techniques that involve transitions such as cross dissolve, fade or wipe.
  • identify the shots in the writing that you provide below each exercise and, where possible, draw attention to how YOU might use such a shot or why you would find it useful. The examiners like to see a link between research and outcome.

What else should you be doing in November?

  • post your research into 3 title sequences presented with image and url link to The Art of the Title
  • summary of genre codes and conventions of film openings presented in Slideshare (or in an infographic such as Piktochart : sign up for free account)
  • SUGGESTED slide titles: 
  1. title page e.g. Film Opening Codes & Conventions (or similar)
  2. The Art of the Title: what it is and why I used it
  3. explanation of main conventions 3 or 4 points perhaps including
    names of principal actors, the director, screenplay, director of photography, title (and so on)
  4. Narrative codes codes
  5. Enigma (because you are all doing thriller style productions)
  6. Logos for distributors, studios, production compamnies
  7. Typeface  - where creativity and originality come in
  8. genre - how the opening sequence establishes it
  9. sound codes in an opening sequence - voiceover, soundtrack, dialogue
  • sign up for a free Scoopit account to start collating articles of interest
  • investigate the stories behind your film opening (such as historical or topical articles) and present them in Scoopit
  • develop your film opening and pitching it to me
  • when it has the green light, writing the treatment
  • write a post about the top line and big question
  • draw a storyboard - start with paper and PostIts
  • location recces presented using a collage tool such as PicMonkey, Fuzl
  • lists of props: what technology could you use to present this?
  • hot seat your characters: script plus video
  • more later....such as shot list and call sheets

What else is in the course? The exam:


https://www.scoop.it/t/thriller-film-codes-conventions

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