Ideas
Look at urban myths and legends for an idea. These are often the basis for Hollywood horror films.
'The babysitter'
Local myths and legends might allow you to find a good location. For example, Tamworth Castle are often keen to let students film in their grounds which helps with the mise-en-scene
Look at newspapers for ideas. Reality is often more disturbing than fiction.
Tuesday, 30 September 2014
Monday, 29 September 2014
Propps character types
There are a number of character theories to explore.
One of the most famous is by Vladimir Propp who studied folk-tales and outlined seven character types.
Now think of a narrative for your own film using these characters.
One of the most famous is by Vladimir Propp who studied folk-tales and outlined seven character types.
- The villain (struggles against the hero)
- The donor (prepares the hero or gives the hero some magical object)
- The (magical) helper (helps the hero in the quest)
- The princess (person the hero marries, often sought for during the narrative)
- The false hero (perceived as good character in beginning but emerges as evil)
- The dispatcher (character who makes the lack known and sends the hero off)
- The hero (AKA victim/seeker/paladin/winner, reacts to the donor, weds the princess)
Now think of a narrative for your own film using these characters.
Thursday, 25 September 2014
Film techniques
Watch this guide to different types of shots and camera movements. It shows examples of shot sizes and shot type and explains how continuity can be affected by your choice of shots.
This guided will help you to understand how to use and move the camera
Find out more from www.learnboutfilm.com and watch some inspirational short films and an eclectic mix of creative moving image work on vimeo.com
This guided will help you to understand how to use and move the camera
Find out more from www.learnboutfilm.com and watch some inspirational short films and an eclectic mix of creative moving image work on vimeo.com
Wednesday, 24 September 2014
Animated Music Video
How? Very clever Ukrainian animators create a music video using new media technology.
Something to aspire to...
Tuesday, 23 September 2014
FIFA 2015
Coming soon. Analysis of the advert for this hotly anticipated release on Thursday at midnight.
Check out the advert for a sneak preview and make sure you are here on Friday!
Check out the advert for a sneak preview and make sure you are here on Friday!
Counting audiences (Television)
You cannot pitch an idea without knowledge of your audience in terms of scheduling, broadcast flow and most importantly how many people will watch, read or listen to your product.
You need to understand the market in which you hope to compete.
Start with a general trawl through the overnight tv ratings fo the last month to find some interesting stories.
This is quantitative research which will re-inforce your arguments as you can compare your product with similar existing media artefacts.
On The Guardian web-site you will find a media section and areas for press, radio and television as well as film. In all areas there is comment about ratings and audience reception.
Hopefullly you become a habitual user of this web-site which is invaluable for media students.
For example, this link takes you to a discussion of Dr Who and Saturday evening television. You should be interested in and keeping abreast of contemporary issues. This week Dr Who is moving in the schedules to a later slot to accommodate Strictly Come Dancing. Look at the figures and make judgments based on the data.
'BARB measures the television viewing (including viewing through computers) of a panel of over 5,100 households are selected to accurately represent the UK's population.'
Broadcasting Audience Research Board
BBC 1
Collect data and outline what your reserach findings reveal.
Look at similar products to the one that you are making and gain knowledge of the market
Before you say I am doing a music video and there is no data', drill down on the BARB web-site to find your niche. For example, 35,000 people watched 'Crazy Fall Out Boy' videos on Saturday 6pm.
As this quote explains you may have to look at less taditional distribution and exhibition models for short films. However, you should find the exercise informative and will allow you to gain a wider kowldge of the broadcast media.
'In the UK, there are not many short film buyers for traditional TV outlets. Terrestrial channels rarely acquire and schedule non-commissioned short films. Channel 4 / FilmFour will occasionally acquire shorts as prefeature programming, or as part of a film season, where the selected shorts will fit their thematic focus. The BBC at present, only regularly exhibits shorts online (via Film Network), though the Film Network team are working hard to try and change that! Shorts programmes may also appear from time to time on the BBC digital channels BBC3 and BBC4.'(Film Network)
You need to understand the market in which you hope to compete.
Start with a general trawl through the overnight tv ratings fo the last month to find some interesting stories.
This is quantitative research which will re-inforce your arguments as you can compare your product with similar existing media artefacts.
On The Guardian web-site you will find a media section and areas for press, radio and television as well as film. In all areas there is comment about ratings and audience reception.
Hopefullly you become a habitual user of this web-site which is invaluable for media students.
For example, this link takes you to a discussion of Dr Who and Saturday evening television. You should be interested in and keeping abreast of contemporary issues. This week Dr Who is moving in the schedules to a later slot to accommodate Strictly Come Dancing. Look at the figures and make judgments based on the data.
- X Factor and Strictly are in a ratings war on Saturday nights during the Autumn
- Dr Who has gone from 7 million to 5 million viewers since the first episode with Peter Capaldi
'BARB measures the television viewing (including viewing through computers) of a panel of over 5,100 households are selected to accurately represent the UK's population.'
Broadcasting Audience Research Board
BBC 1
- 10.1 million - British Bake Off
- 7 million - Dr Who
- 6.8 million - Eastenders (Tuesday)
Collect data and outline what your reserach findings reveal.
Look at similar products to the one that you are making and gain knowledge of the market
Before you say I am doing a music video and there is no data', drill down on the BARB web-site to find your niche. For example, 35,000 people watched 'Crazy Fall Out Boy' videos on Saturday 6pm.
As this quote explains you may have to look at less taditional distribution and exhibition models for short films. However, you should find the exercise informative and will allow you to gain a wider kowldge of the broadcast media.
'In the UK, there are not many short film buyers for traditional TV outlets. Terrestrial channels rarely acquire and schedule non-commissioned short films. Channel 4 / FilmFour will occasionally acquire shorts as prefeature programming, or as part of a film season, where the selected shorts will fit their thematic focus. The BBC at present, only regularly exhibits shorts online (via Film Network), though the Film Network team are working hard to try and change that! Shorts programmes may also appear from time to time on the BBC digital channels BBC3 and BBC4.'(Film Network)
Monday, 22 September 2014
Documentary - Benefits Street
Channel Four are filming a new series of the controversial and divisive 'Benefits Street in Stockton -on-Tees. This article in The Guardian hints at some of the reaction the show gains amongst audiences and is interesting in that the journalist calls it a reality show rather than a documentary although it is commissioned by the Channel Four documentary team.
Audiences may receive or read this text differently depending on their political views. It is helpful to decide how a left wing or right wing viewer may read this text and the comments at the bottom of the article may help you to understand this.
Watch this clip and discuss your prior knowledge of this programme. What have you heard about it?
Welcome to James Turner Street. Teaser trailer
Analyse the representations in the following clips?
Fungi
Scrappers
Skids
White Dee
Form
So is it a documentary?
Institutions
It is made by Love productions for Channel 4. Find out about this company and its other ventures which include 'The Great British Bake Off' and a planned 'Immigration Street.'
OFCOM received 900 complaints. Look at some of these and decide if you think they should be upheld according to OFCOMs guidelines. This article outlines some of the issues causing complaint.
The original 'Benefits Street' was filmed in Winson Green in what has now become a famous landmark James Turner Street.
An audience of 5 million watched the original series. The highest ratings for a Channel 4 show this year. Why do you think this was so successful?
White Dee has used her new found celebrity to cretae a career as a DJ and a televion celbrity in Big Brother. What do you make of this? This link will take you to an interview with Deirdre Kelly on Newsnight. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gRfRdenFYCA. Kelly claims that they were never told that it would be called Benefits Street.
The founder of the Big Issue John Bird offers an interesting account of his response to the show and the issues raised about the state of our welfare state whilst writing in the Daily Mail.
The Guardian newspaper discusses research challenging the representation of joblessness in deprived areas. The research seems to point out that this myth has been created to suit the purposes of programme makers and politicians.
The final word goes to Charlie Brooker who summarises the whole debate here;
Charlie Brooker on Benefits Street
Audiences may receive or read this text differently depending on their political views. It is helpful to decide how a left wing or right wing viewer may read this text and the comments at the bottom of the article may help you to understand this.
Watch this clip and discuss your prior knowledge of this programme. What have you heard about it?
Welcome to James Turner Street. Teaser trailer
Analyse the representations in the following clips?
Fungi
Scrappers
Skids
White Dee
Form
So is it a documentary?
- Research John Grierson's definition of documentary to gain a historical perspective of the form.
- Look at Grierson's definitions of documentary as a 'creative treatment of actuality' Is documentary an attempt to document reality or is all moving image production mediated and therefore representing reality according to the word view of the documentary maker?
- Look at the history of 'fly on the wall' documentaries.
- Find similar productions
Institutions
It is made by Love productions for Channel 4. Find out about this company and its other ventures which include 'The Great British Bake Off' and a planned 'Immigration Street.'
- Is it falsely representing and exploiting vulnerable people ?
- How does the programme play to 'negative stereotypes' ?
- Why is this termed 'poverty porn' and what other shows can be accused of ,'exploiting vulnerable people'?
- Compare Benefits Street to BBC's Scrappers to see if there is a difference in representations
OFCOM received 900 complaints. Look at some of these and decide if you think they should be upheld according to OFCOMs guidelines. This article outlines some of the issues causing complaint.
The original 'Benefits Street' was filmed in Winson Green in what has now become a famous landmark James Turner Street.
An audience of 5 million watched the original series. The highest ratings for a Channel 4 show this year. Why do you think this was so successful?
White Dee has used her new found celebrity to cretae a career as a DJ and a televion celbrity in Big Brother. What do you make of this? This link will take you to an interview with Deirdre Kelly on Newsnight. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gRfRdenFYCA. Kelly claims that they were never told that it would be called Benefits Street.
The founder of the Big Issue John Bird offers an interesting account of his response to the show and the issues raised about the state of our welfare state whilst writing in the Daily Mail.
The Guardian newspaper discusses research challenging the representation of joblessness in deprived areas. The research seems to point out that this myth has been created to suit the purposes of programme makers and politicians.
The final word goes to Charlie Brooker who summarises the whole debate here;
Charlie Brooker on Benefits Street
Thursday, 18 September 2014
Audience Segmentation
The criteria you want to reach states, ' Research into a potential target audience.'
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We therefore looked at audience segmentation
You are constructing an audience and need
to convince us that there is an audience for your product by defining one in
detail. There may be a primary audience and a secondary one. For instance, a computer game may be marketed
primarily at teenage boys but there is a considerable 30-40 year old male
audience with expendable income who are keen on playing interactive online
games. Identifying a collective identity is key to understanding how successful
the product will be.
Society has created terms to understand
these developing collective identities and is constantly grouping and
segmenting people.
For example,
The term Metrosexual has been around for a
while and David Beckham has been held up as a prime example. A man that is urbane and in touch with his
feminine side. He exfoliates and moisturises and is ahead of the cultural curve
on fashion. Often taking daring choices about hairstyle or clothes this man is
an early adopter of latest trends in fashion and music and everything cutting
edge. What might once have been termed
cool before that became ‘uncool.’ Also
termed a hipster and to be found in the creative industries in urban areas of cities
such as Hoxton or Shoreditch in East London, although I may be behind the times
on this.
Popular culture has wrestled with this type
of modern urban male. One example is the sitcom by Chris Morris ‘Nathan Barley’
which portrays the rise of the idiots and Hoxton fins exemplified by the
annoying Nathan in the times of dotcom startups and the boom of new media.
Another is American Psycho written by Bret
Easton Ellis. Here is a clip from the film starring Christian Bale as the
ultimate New York metrosexual who is so self obsessed that he develops a
psychosis. He has lost all humanity, ‘There is no real me, I am simply not
there’.
We also looked at the term Trustafarian
which we said was someone with wealthy parents who lived in expensive areas of
the city close to ethnically diverse and
bohemian areas. Growing dreadlocks and living on a trust fund this group
is stereotyped as a bit deluded and lost in their attempt to fit in and find an
identity which attempts to disown their privileged upbringing. An example popped up in the recent
Inbetweeners 2 film playing on this cultural stereotype. In this clip the ‘comedian’
Kevin Bishop avoids comedy by representing the type in a way that makes us side
with trustafarians by going for the obvious literal interpretation. This clip shows
the delicate line that comedy walks between humour and the literal stating something so
obvious that the comedian embarrasses themselves or comes across as mean spirited.
Identifying different audiences is big
business now and you may find yourself working in marketing, advertising or an
industry that requires accurate data that shows trends and facts about the UK
audience or indeed a wider global audience.
Experian is a company with offices in Nottingham that holds credit data
on most UK citizens collated from records of what and how we
spend our income. You apply to this
company for a credit check. Another
service they provide is Mosaic which sells this collated data to companies who
can use this information to target consumers and audience. They have created a model of geodemographic
profiling which segments the UK market into over 50 different groups dependent
on lifestyle and income.
Census data from the Office for National
Statistics can also be used to profile a demographic. They have made this user friendly by using
stereotypes to humanize the data.
For example, 7.19% of the population can be put into the
classification ‘Urban Intelligence’
Mosaic have chosen the names Ben and Chloe
to represent this group.
They are young, educated, middle class
starting out in life after being at university
The stereotype is then continued to suggest
they read the Guardian and can be extended to where they shop and how they use
their leisure hours.
This may seem sinister and this information
is being used by politicians to target voters and may affect your credit. When
looking to provide credit it is your postcode and house that may determine your
rating. This article explains how this
information is used by private companies, in some cases unscrupulously to
target groups such as those ‘keen to take advantage of easy credit.’
For your purposes this kind of profiling
will allow you to define your audience with more accuracy and to use the Mosaic
definitions to help you describe the target audience. Weaker answers rely on
outdated models of socio-economic groupings and definitions of class which are
very limited and as the Mosaic example shows this industry is so much more sophisticated
now.
We looked at a range of groupings which
were self explanatory and then others which required definition;
Bank of Mum and Dad
Golden empty nesters
Corporate chieftains
Scattered Homestead – Rural calm/ stand
alone house/ agricultural landscape
Central Pulse – entertainment seeking/
renting city centre flats in vibrant locations near to jobs and nightlife
Village retirement – pleasant village /
amenities that serve social and practical needs
We then
profiled these groups further by considering folllowing factors;
What media they consume
Where they live
Fashion
Music
Days out
Entertainment
Supermarket they use
Like ‘Mosaic’ we gave this couple a name
such as Huw and Glenda for ‘Upland Hill Farmers’ and built up a profile. Through these cultural motifs we can identify
a geodemographic grouping.
You now need to identify a target audience
for your own product.
Tuesday, 2 September 2014
Pitch Week
You will pitch your ideas for your production during the week beginning 2nd September.
Pitch your ideas for your production and accompanying print artefacts.
Present examples of rushes or generation of ideas.
Make it as interactive as possible
This will involve a recorded presentation.
Your audience will be asking questions as they will be representing the institutions who will commission your production.
For example, if you are making a documentary commissioners may be representing the BBC, Channel 4 and Channel 5. Each of these will have a different target audience. You need to explain how your production targets an audience.
- Mind map of your ideas
- Research into influence of exisiting media products (Where did you get your ideas from?)
- Storyboards
- Working Title
- Genre
- Style
- Target audience
What we call 'softer skills' are vital in the job market and highly prized by employers.
Watch two examples of pitches from 'The Dragons Den' to illustrate the importance of a good pitch and to pick out the necessary skills
Firstly, Levi Roots pitches his hot reggae reggae sauce.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kQTzLJCUtjk
Secondly, analyse the weaknesses in this pitch
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kQTzLJCUtjk
20 marks
Planning and research evidence will be complete and detailed
There is excellent research into similar products and a potential target audience
There is excellent organisation of actors, locations, costumes or props
There is excellent work on shotlists, layouts, drafting, scripting or storyboarding
There is an excellent level of care in the presentation of the research and planning
Time management is excellent.
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