Tuesday, 26 January 2016

CONSTRUCTION: EDITING

Yesterday, my group and I continued to edit our film trailer. We played around with the colour in a few scenes. Making the scene look slightly more blue gives it that slightly more cold and eerie feel to the trailer.

We also edited some footage we had already previously filmed. When coming up with the idea of our film trailer we decided that the scene of Sydney's death would be several photos - each with a slight progression of the death. That is exactly what we did in yesterdays lesson.

Below is a quick recording of the death scene




Here is a photo collage I made, showing our editing in progress.



Whilst we were editing in the lesson, I was doing some extra research on how other film trailers edited their footage. I ended up watching a few trailers, but I did in particular like the 'Taken' trailer.

Below are some screenshots of the trailer. The editing here is what caught my attention and I thought my group and I could in some way incorporate this into our own trailer.


As you can see from the screenshots above, the colour of 2 of the scenes have turned into an x-ray sort of colour. This is only shown for a split second and is incredibly fast when watching the trailer, however I really like the use of this technique as it keeps the audience interested.

CONSTRUCTION: FILMING

Yesterday, Demi, Kate and I went to Kingston High Street to do a quick extra film scene for our film trailer. We purposefully chose to film just outside "Links London" since it is an expensive jewellery shop and we wanted the audience to clearly see Sydney looking into the window and then deciding to go inside the shop.

Prior to filming, Kate and I brought in two small expensive shopping bags, including Pandora. We did this to further portray Sydney as a character who has an unusual amount of money for her age, who is spending her money on expensive jewellery. This would immediately make the audience question where she got this money from and why she is spending excessive amount of money on this jewellery. These questions that the audience will ask themselves will make the audience wanting to find out what happens in the film. Therefore, the trailer sticks to the codes and conventions of film trailers since it creates mysteriousness, tension and leaves the audience wanting more.

As we were driving back to school, I decided to quickly set up the camera and record the road whilst Demi was driving, I thought that it would be a nice quick scene to include in our film trailer, which would provide more overall scenes in our trailer and also more locations - making it more multi locational.

Below are some pictures I took of my group and I editing the new footage we had recorded.


Friday, 22 January 2016

FEEDBACK: TWITTER

I am tweeting on our film twitter page in order to promote our film trailer. By having a twitter account, we will be able to update our fans about our new trailer and thus keep them interested. We will also be able to build and maintain a relationship with our audience.

By regularly posting new pictures of our behind-the-scenes film this will create a buzz for our film. People who like our page can then go onto 'follow' our page or 'retweet' our tweets. This will then appear on their twitter feed, allowing all of their followers on twitter to view our original tweet. Thus, making our film more well-known and it will hopefully also inspire more people to watch our film.

The Twitter page will also help to promote, distribute and gain valuable feedback from our fans about the film - whether it be about the characters themselves or even about the name of the film - any feedback is useful. We can then go on to use this feedback to improve our film trailer - thus keeping our audience happy and interested about the new trailer.

Since my film is a small, independent production, such media platforms will prove very useful when trying to distribute and raise awareness of my production, especially since it is completely free to use and millions of people go onto Twitter per month. 

Furthermore, since twitter is predominantly used by teenagers and young adults, this means that our tweets and twitter page will mostly be viewed by our target audience, thus attracting them to watch our trailer. 

Below is a collage I made using screenshots I took from our twitter page. I used BeFunky to make this collage.



Click HERE to view our Twitter page

FEEDBACK: INSTAGRAM

I am contributing to our instagram account by posting up pictures. By having an Instagram account, we will be able to update our fans about our new trailer and thus keep them interested. We will also be able to build and maintain a relationship with our audience. By regularly posting new pictures of our behind-the-scenes film this will create a buzz for our film.
People can then 'follow' our page, informing them about an new posts we make.

The Instagram page will also help to promote, distribute and gain valuable feedback from our fans about the film - whether it be about the characters themselves or even about the name of the film - any feedback is useful. We can then go on to use this feedback to improve our film trailer - thus keeping our audience happy and interested about the new trailer. 

Since my film is a small, independent production, such media platforms will prove very useful when trying to distribute and raise awareness of my production, especially since it is completely free to use and millions of people go onto Twitter per month. 

Below is a picture of our instagram page




Click HERE to view our instagram page

Thursday, 21 January 2016

CONSTRUCTION: FILMING

Today my group and I did some further filming in Esher High Street, Surrey. In the scene that we filmed, Aaron ( the main character) is sitting outside a shop, pretending to read a newspaper, but instead he is tracking/ following The Ghost.
I personally got this idea when watching the trailer of 'Taken'. I thought it would be a good scene to incorporate in our trailer since it adds that mysteriousness to the trailer.



To the left and below are two screenshots from the Taken trailer - showing the scene in which the main character is following the antagonist.






Although the scene was only a couple of seconds long I believe this is appropriate since it is only a trailer - not a film - and trailers use lots of scenes from the film but edit it down so that it lasts just a few seconds. Thus, by including short scenes such as the one we shot today, my trailer is sticking to the codes and conventions of film trailers.


Below are some pictures of my group and I editing the footage we filmed.


When choosing a place to film, I made sure that the place where Marcus would sit was in the sun. This would ensure that the viewer is easily able to see Aaron and know what he is doing. If we were to have dark and dim light the viewer may find it hard to see what is happening. Therefore, the location we chose was ideal since it was directly in the sun.





















Since we were at the high street, we thought it might be a good idea to quickly film a time lapse of the road with cars passing by. We have started to edit this new scene into our trailer. We liked the time lapse because it shows the time passing by and also we found that the lighting looked really good in that shot since the light was shining through the trees and buildings.

When editing this footage, my class mates saw our time lapse of the road. When I asked what they thought, they replied saying they thought it looked really "cool". Therefore, already our feedback from audiences looks positive.

Monday, 18 January 2016

FEEDBACK: FACEBOOK PAGE

I was given the task of making a Facebook page for my group for our film trailer. I am therefore in charge of our Facebook page and I plan to continuously update it to keep my followers interested and to maintain or create a relationship with my audience. I will also be able to have deeper discussions with the people who have "liked" my page, whereas the Twitter page would have a limit to my word count. By having longer conversations with these people I am able to gain a stronger relationship with my supporters. Facebook has 750 million visits per month and therefore this would be a good way to further distribute my film.

By having our own Facebook page we are able to promote, distribute and gain valuable feedback from our fans about the film - whether it be about about the characters themselves or even about the name of the film - any feedback is useful.

Since my film is a small, independent production, such media platforms will prove very useful when trying to distribute and raise awareness of my production, especially since it is completely free to use and millions of people go onto Facebook per month.



Click HERE to visit our page.


AUDIENCE ADMISSIONS

Today I read an article by Mark Kermode in the Guardian. I noticed that many points that he made in the article are relevant to my own production. Kermode talked about the different ways that the audience watch films and how by just looking at the box office it doesn't provide a reliable idea as to what type of films have become popular during 2015.

My film trailer, A Question Of Identity, is slick, fast-paced and gripping for our target audience (aged 18 or over). My trailer can compete with the current and continuing audience fascination for the high production values because it is a gripping story and has a lot of action and adventure in the film. It can also relate to the current migration crisis in Europe since there are migrants involved in our film, looking for a new home in the UK. Although my film trailer is not as big as other hollywood films such as "The Hunger Games" and hasn't got the luxury of a big budget, I have tried to incorporate as many scenes into the trailer as I can. This will allow the viewer to see many scenes from the film but only for a split second - this will hopefully attract the viewer to watch the film at the cinema. After watching the trailers from Transformers: Age Of Extinction and The Hunger Games: Mockingjay Part 1 - which, according to Mark Kermode were some of the"most significant movies of 2014", I understand how the editing process is very crucial to make a great spectacle trailer. 

Since my film falls into the category of being a small, independent production it is likely I will bypass the traditional cinema release or having simultaneous release, as Netflix did with Beasts of the Nation. Instead, I will distribute my film online. I will use sites such as Youtube, Netflix and other social media platforms that will allow my target audience to watch my trailer - whether that be at home or at the cinema. In fact, Mark Kermode said "simultaneous distribution is the future. We are moving towards an environment wherein audiences will decide whether to watch a film on the phone, their laptop, their television or projected on the big screen in a cinema".
Films have to have big production values and big budgets to make it to the cinema. Whereas, it is much easier to put your film on Netflix. Mark Kermode states that "with the rise of "on demand" services such as Curzon Home Cinema and the BFI-Player, viewers are becoming increasingly used to the idea that they can choose whether to watch a movie at home or in a theatre". Ben Wheatley's ground-breaking "A Field in England" was released simultaneously across a range of platforms (free-to-air TV, video-on-demand, DVD, cinemas), enabling viewers to decide how, where and when to view the film. Therefore, these "on demand" sites will be useful when distributing my film.

Smaller, independent productions, such as my film, use a range of media platforms to raise awareness of the production. For example, Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Youtube and the official website for the film are all commonly used social media platforms - many of which are free to use, thus making it very advantageous to distribute the production on such websites. On Facebook alone, over 1.2 billion people have an account. This is evidence that there is huge potential to distribute your film to a wide target audience. This is ideal for those who have small, independent productions. Therefore, I will follow this trend when releasing my film.

Kermode talks about the 'role of women in film', with Geena David headlining a symposium on gender imbalance in the media. Director Clare Stewart highlighted the need to 'support women director's across the chain - not just in development but all the way through to making sure there's equity in opportunities for the films to be screened'. In recent years there has been a development in the presence of women in film. For example, Suffragette is a film all about womens' rights and the previous historical issues about this, much of the cast was female and the production team was also mostly made up of females. Thus, this emphasises Kermodes point, that 2015 was a big year for the role of women in film and how they are becoming more dominant. Other examples include the documentary about Amy Winehouse, which became the highest-grossing British-made documentary in UK cinemas. In my film trailer, we have a predominantly female production team, as well as the story of our film being based on a female character. Therefore, this has better established that many of our audience will be female viewers.

For Kermode, blockbusters, franchises and superhero films aren't the only sort of films that attracted audiences in 2015. Independent cinema and art house cinema also played an important role in the success of films in 2015. Some of the movies that have played the UK independent or 'arthouse' circuit this year are: Celine Sciamma's Girldhood, a vibrant evocation of Parisian banlieue life; Carol Morleys The Falling, Debbie Tucker Green's Second Coming, a suburban British drama with a boldly mysterious quasi-Biblical twist and Suffragette, Sarah Gavron's adaptation of Abi Morgan's empowering script, which open the London Film Festival in early October.

Trends such as animation: more than any other area of movie-making, animation demonstrates perfectly how the old and the new, past and future, can coexist. Aardman's Shaun the Sheep finding a firm foothold in the multiplexes, Tomm Moore's Song of the Sea taking inspiration from the hand-crafted 2D artistry of Ghibli, and Laika studios continuing to blur the line between the physical and the digital with scungy delights like The Boxtrolls, its hard to remember a time when ancient skills and newfangled advances were so intertwined. Inside Out: a possible contender for best film 2016?

Thursday, 7 January 2016

INTERROGATING CHARACTERS

Today in class, I looked at the book, "Riding The Alligator" -written by Pen Densham who is an Oscar nominated filmmaker. In one of his chapters in the book, he provides a check list of questions every writer and director should ask themselves when they're developing their characters. The reason for this is to get a better understanding of who or what your character might be and to carry out your story better.

The screenshots below show some of the questions you might ask yourself about your character.




click HERE to see the website for this.

After looking through these questions my group and I decided to do a "hotseat" interview for the main characters in our film trailer.

Each of us picked 4 questions that we would ask the other person and then we recorded the answers on my phone.

I asked my questions to the character Sydney. Below is the video I recorded when asking the questions:



















Next, Kate came up with questions about her own character - the migrant. Demi read out the questions and I recorded the answers. Below is the video I recorded:



















Then, Demi came up with questions for her own character - Sydney. Kate then read them out and I recorded the answers. Below is the video:




















Finally, Marcus came up with his own questions, again, for his own character - Aaron. I then read out the questions and recorded the answers. Below is the video: