Monday, 22 September 2014

What should be on your blog to date?

1. Analysis the opening of 2 thriller title sequences with screenshots (you can use Dexter, Blue Valentine, Six Feet Under or True Detective. (Get marked first!!) 2. Thriller Conventions with Images to represent them 3. What is the difference between horror and thriller films (with examples) 4. Re-drafted Seven analysis 5. Typography analysis

Tuesday, 16 September 2014

Six Feet Under Opening Sequence

AS Media Homework Due: Tuesday

Homework for Tuesday 22nd: 1. Analyse the opening of 2 thriller title sequences with screenshots (you can use Dexter, Blue Valentine, Six Feet Under or True Detective.) NOT ON BLOG 2. Start Blog and add the Thriller Conventions Homework with Images 3. Add to blog re-drafted Seven analysis and Typography analysis. Homework for Weds 17th: 1. Give Mrs Goulds your blog address 2. Finish Seven analysis in books 3. Finish Typography in books

Sunday, 12 December 2010

Thursday, 2 December 2010

Things that should be on your blog......

Final Things to Add to Your Blog

Focus and suggestions for your video diaries/ production logs

25213441 Reflective Analysis for the Blog

Good example of how to analyse some opening sequences for your blogs...

To Put on Blog Micro Analysis

Example of a Mood Board

Tips from the Chief Examiner!!!

Please see this link for detailed advice from the principal examiner for Media Studies A.Level. Remember: he writes the papers and instructs who marks them......he is worth listening to!!!

Excellent Example of a Detailed title sequence opening

ANALYSIS OF OPENING SEQUENCE - THE SHINING



The film opens with a series of shots of panoramic landscape vistas showcasing the bleak desolation of the snowy mountainous surroundings, which will provide the backdrop for the film’s subsequent narrative developments. Various birds’ eye view shots intermittently cross dissolve into one another, and depict an expansive clear blue lake, a snow-capped mountain range, and a densely populated forest of evergreen trees. The camera moves swiftly through its surroundings in each shot, sweeping past the breadth of the natural environs below it, and thus conveys to the audience a sense of the massive scale and large land span of the location depicted.

During the camera’s continual movement, it occasionally captures its views from distorted angles, which undermines the idea otherwise created by this series of shots of the benevolent purity of natural beauty and the wintry American landscape. It thus uses spatial manipulation to contradict the principal connotations of the images of nature captured in these shots, and hence foreshadows the heavy deployment of themes and imagery centred upon the supernatural that will follow.

Also indicative of this theme is the use of slow, sombre, unnerving and deliberate electronic music, which in conjunction with the seemingly oppositional images suggest a malevolence to the surroundings shown and imply an unknown danger amongst them.

Eventually the camera finds a road snaking through an aerial shot of a thickly forested area then picks out and follows a lone car in extreme high angle long shot, making its way along the road. The camera gradually moves increasingly closer maintaining its birds’ eye view position, but also gradually rotates to distort the angle and create a sense of unsettling foreboding in the manner described above. A series of shot changes track the car’s journey and depict a range of different natural backdrops indicating the traversal of time and space. As the camera finally tracks speedily in to a mid shot of the car from behind, revealing it to be a yellow Volkswagen Beetle, credits rise up through the frame from below in blue typeface, and each gives way to the next, departing the frame by rising out of it.

The moving camera overtakes the car and veers away to the left, aerially crossing country before again finding the car and tracking its journey, once again with another series of extreme high angle long shots, while the eeriness of the electronic score continues to aurally unsettle the viewer.

The camera’s point of view eventually shifts to depict an extreme long shot of a remotely located building amongst the mountains, trees and lakes. It slowly circles the building, getting gradually closer. This building is the Overlook Hotel, and will be the yellow car’s final destination, and the principal location for almost all of the film’s subsequent action.

Overall, the opening sequence has been gradually building up to this elaborate establishing shot of the hotel, and has served to highlight its isolation and remoteness and communicate an implication of danger, that the audience should by now have associated with this idyllic yet spectral location and its backdrop.

How to create an animatic...

How do I create an animatic?
• Draw storyboard frames - nice and bold with black pen if necessary
• Take individual photos of each frame
• Upload the photos to the computer
• Import the photos into the edit programme
• Drop each image onto the timeline and cut to required length
• Put music or other sound on the audio timeline
• Add titles or effects / transitions as required
• Export to Quicktime and upload to Youtube or Vimeo
• Embed the video onto the blog or save it to a CD

Animatic Example

L3 Group 7: JAHMAL & SVEN - OPENING SEQUENCE ANIMATIC from cmdiploma on Vimeo.

Thursday, 4 November 2010

Production Logos

You need to create a production logo for your opening sequence.

Take a look at some examples below......

We will be having training on this.

But in the meantime you could try out these links for help with creating your logo.......








Copyright free music

Free Sound effects for all your practical productions!!

http://music-for-video.com/

Username: Sparkly

See me in class for password!!

And here for copyright free music downloads: www.freeplaymusic.com

Amazing Title Sequences

Check out some amazing opening title sequences here........http://www.filmjunk.com/2009/03/10/15-amazing-opening-title-sequences/

A great typography website (ideas for titles!)

Create great titles with....
http://www.flamingtext.com/

Thursday, 7 October 2010

Check out Glogster

http://www.glogster.com/

I have found another brilliant online tool - Glogster. An interactive poster design space where music, video, podcasts and still images can be brought together to create a total interactive learning, caring and sharing experience.

Have Fun!

Questionnaire for feedback

See here for an exemplar questionnaire that you could add for feedback....

http://rssmediastudies.co.uk/09blogs/401/

Edit Decision List

You could add one of these to show how you planned for post production............

Fantastic Example of an Audience Profile

This is for a music video but the same principle applies. The photographs of the potential target audience are excellent!

Location Recee Example

Analysing the music you will use. Here is an example....

Example of a character profile

Another treatment example

Treatment
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