Friday, 30 October 2015

Preliminary task
















Things that I feel went well:
- Presenting it as an awkward/funny interview by quick editing/shots in time with the comical music.
- Props on the interviews desk
- Variety of different Camera angles ( eg over shoulder shot, 2 person shot, extreme close up, point of view)

Things to improve:
- Lighting, a bit to low key at the begging, should really be high key as it's a comedy
- Couple of continuation errors
- Sometimes it's hard to hear what the actors are saying
- Pre plan script a lot more, don't trust improv (as good as it was)
- When interview walks in there is stuff in the background that wasn't there during the interview, should of moved it before hand. (continuation error.)
- Was difficult to time when my actors are free at the same time as me so we had to do it just when it was dark so the light outside was continuously changing
- There was a lot of comical things written on the mans CV which you couldn't read through the camera
- Camera had some issues adjusting to the dark light so the were some lines running up the screen
- Bit longer than expected


Bloopers:

Poster analysis

In class, we were asked to deconstruct a movie poster of our choice. I chose Martin Scorsese's, "Wolf of wall street." We were asked how the denotations in the picture are connoted. Here is what I wrote:-
  • Man in the centre of the poster - protagonist 
  • Smug facial expression - proud of the chaos in the background 
  • Classy hair cut - expensive? Wealth.
  • Not much text - Just the important information/important names (lead role, director) in bold text to intrigue audience. 
  • Expensive suit & watch - Wealthy my who is of importance/power/authority.
  • Body language - power/authority 
  • Based on true story of Jordan Belfort (well known stockbroker) - Audience are interested on how these people live
  • Chaos in the background - shows the madness of the film (comedic value). 

Tuesday, 20 October 2015

Narrative

This will help later on when I start to come up for a narrative for my main task, so I could apply a theory to it to make that even more better.

Wednesday, 14 October 2015

Preliminary task planning


Preliminary task.

For my preliminary task I need to create a maximum of a 2 minute clip, to film and edit a character opening a door, crossing a room and sitting down in a chair opposite another character, who exchange some dialogue. Needs to include  match on action, shot reverse shot and the 180-degree rule. 

Match on action.

Match on action is an editing technique used for continuity editing in which one shot cuts to another shot portraying the action of the subject of the object in the first shot. The action carrying through creates a 'visual bridge' which draws the audiences attention away from slight cutting or continuity errors. It shows a continuous sense of the same action rather than matching two separate things. 


The 180-degree rule.

The 180 Rule is important so the audience can understand where people are in a shot. The rule is that the camera or cameras, should stay on the same side of an imaginary line. The line is drawn perpendicular to the view point of the cameras. The rule enforces continuity. The rule is rarely broken, if it is it may cause confusion for the audience. The only real reason the camera might cross over the line would be for effect.
Here is an example where the rule is broken;  





However, before the rule is broken here, the camera pans round to show the audience the background difference between Smeagol and Gollum, so there is no confusion. The clip shows a violation of the rule for effect. The effect created is that of a shot reverse shot.

Shot reverse shot.

Shot reverse shot in a continuity technique used for conversations, or where characters look at each other or objects. A shot showing what the character is supposedly looking at, either as a point of view shot or an over shoulder shot, is followed with a reverse angle shot of the character themselves looking at it, or of others looking back at them. Shot reverse shot often ties in with the 180 degree rule. 



Examples of two characters having simple conversations, with various camera angles/rules (match on action, shot reverse shot, 180 degree rule) :



Scott Pilgrem vs the World:



BBC's Sherlock:



















The Godfather, opening scene: