Friday 29 January 2016

Film Poster

Hey Guys!

So I've just had a bit of spare time on my hands so I just thought 'hey, I might as well practise making a poster for our film'. After throwing some stuff together on Microsoft Publisher I ended up with this. I think it turned out pretty well for a first attempt so I've decided to share it. Enjoy.

Risk Assessment

Hey Guys!

Before we start our filming, myself and Dan have to fill out a risk assessment for where we want to film. This is to just basically outline any hazards, like cold weather or shark attack, and to say what we are going to do in order to prevent these. As you can see there is nothing extreme but our filming does involve us cross a road a lot at night so we got to be aware of that.

I just decided that it would be worth posting this on the blog.

Quick update!

At the moment we are whipping up our storyboard so expect that on this blog soon.

Monday 25 January 2016

One Page Pitch Video

Hey guys!!

Here is mine and Dan's official pitch video of our thriller opening.

Sunday 17 January 2016

Audience Theories

Hey Guys!!

Here's some stuff about audience theories (I don't know what's up with the paragraphing on this presentation software I'm trying).
The Audience - Created with Haiku Deck, presentation software that inspires

Criteria

Hey Guys!!

Alright, sorry I haven't done any blogs in a while but now I'm back on track.

Basically the other day we watched a few thriller openings filmed by other AS media students like ourselves. We judged them against an exam criteria, much similarly to the ones that real examiners would use. The first one we watched I thought was amazing. Good use of sound, creative variation of shots, nice editing. I assumed that this one would be well in the top marks ban of 48-60. Turns out it was, unsurprisingly, achieving a number in the 50s (I don't really remember what number to be exact).

The next one we watched, and I don't want to be too harsh since I've never made a film and this is their first attempt, I felt was a little bad. Sound volume drastically increased or decreased in random areas, the mise-en-scene to me didn't exactly say 'thriller', neither did the use of high-key lighting throughout. The white font on the titles didn't match well against a white wall too. However, I was then surprised to learn that this film too achieved very high marks.

Next, we watched a couple more. Each had what I thought were massive faults that would lead to low levels such as poor camera work, generic shot-types and overall material that didn't suit the target audience originally aimed at. However, one after the other I was shocked to find how harshly I had judged these as they all achieve decent grades.

Overall, watching these has made me more confident about making our films and has given me a insight into what I believe works and doesn't work. I should hopefully be back on track with posting regular content so stay tuned for more.

Friday 15 January 2016