Thursday, 27 April 2017
Evaluations: Question 7
Looking back at my preliminary task what did I learn in
progression from it?
Before the preliminary task I had no real previous
experience with filming or editing, so the preliminary task was the first time
that I had a chance to do this, so in short I learnt how to film and edit from
the preliminary task.
The narrative for our preliminary task was thought out in 1 hour
meaning we didn’t know what the actors would say and we didn’t have time to
think through where we would film. Whereas, the main task, we had a while to
think of the narrative we even had time to update the narrative, we also had
months of time to research the genre and compare our ideas meaning we can have
the best chance possible. In the preliminary task I didn’t think to film from
multiple angles and multiple times meaning the actual scene looked really
scruffy. Whereas the main product is totally smooth as we filmed each shot from
3 different angles, we also waited 3 second before and after we were ready to
get as much clip to edit as possi
ble.
ble.
Lighting in preliminary task |
Lighting in main |
The quality of sound, I would say is our strongest point, in
our product we have a long news broadcast that we actual got Dominic McGuiness
from talk sport to voice act for, this was done in a professional studio meaning
the quality of sound is pristine. I think that I edited the sound very well
when it came down to it, the quality of sound in the preliminary task was a
very bad point for us, during the filming we had chairs screeching, the
dialogue was quiet and we had no music in the task what so ever. I managed to
include a sound bridge which is great for continuity. Also the music in my part
is a smooth rhythm classical tune that connotes he’s living a boring, alone
life but there’s a chance for happiness.
In conclusion, I am extremely happy with how our final
product turned out, I was actually worried that it would be a total disaster
but I feel I came through to create the best product with the potential I had,
I put 100% effort into the creation of my section, the only problems lie with
Alex’s section as he had problems filming on the day, with many poor shoots
meaning the time ran down and he had a dark set to film with.
Tuesday, 25 April 2017
Evaluations: Question 4
Who
would be the audience of your product?
Our demographic will be from the ages of
12-21 I know this from doing the survey that allowed us to get the specific
needs of our audience. They will also be 50/50 male female as we have
challenged the male gaze theory so we will have less male viewers as expected,
and because we are going to distribute to cinemas we are aiming for working and
middle class viewers, that is the demographic of our audience. The demographic
is known as the Hollywood demographic, they are famous for flocking to the
cinema to watch any movie that contains action, another reason why we are doing
this is because recent stats show that 40% of spy/action genre movies are of
the ages 15-24, this means we can theoretically fill half of the cinema with
our intended audience .This is relevant to the demographic of our
audience as they are male and female 12-21, this is the Hollywood demographic,
meaning they want a lot of action in the movie, however our audience said they
wanted some psychological aspects to it so we gave the antagonist a mental
disability that he fights off gradually.
Our audiences psycho-graphic is that they like action, at
fast paces too, they also like a little bit of psychological aspects, I also
researched that they like to build adrenaline whilst watching the movie, hence
the need for fast paced action. We have also added a dual narrative into the
product which means the ideal age range may find It harder to follow the plot
but they will be satisfied with the product. Given that our audience likes
mission impossible and spectre it’s a good thing that we based our product off
of the James Bond franchise with a twist. This why I think we will have success
in the UK box office.We have a secondary audience that is the age of 25-40, this would be older people or parents taking the younger end of the main audience to go and watch it at the cinema, the main demographic could recommend the product to the older audience meaning the words spreads faster.
Evaluations: Question 2
2: How does your media product represent particular social
groups?
I also represented the elderly as a social group, our
protagonist is an elderly man at 50 years of age, this shows the audience that
he is the underdog, he is also shown as alone, from the no photos around the
house, and the minimalist atmosphere in the scene.
Another class that is represented is the
middle class, the protagonist is middle class in our product, this is to create
a binary opposition with the antagonist, the difference between rich-poor and
good-bad, this is also shown by the ability of the characters, shown through
the dual narrative that flicks between the two classes. Our opening sequence
contains a dual narrative. The dual-narrative shows the difference in class as
the protagonist wakes up and makes a brew then hears the news of the incident,
whereas at the same time the antagonist is pulling the victim out the car and
head butting him for speaking, also the soundtrack changes from a peaceful tune
to a more upbeat action track along. This shows the correlation of the middle
class compared with the negativity of the lower class.
Friday, 21 April 2017
Change In Credits
After my most recent editing session i have come to the conclusion that I need to change the font of the credits.
I have decided to go with the combat ready font as i believe it makes the credits look not to childish but suits the action style that we are aiming for in the task.
Combat Ready
I have decided to go with the combat ready font as i believe it makes the credits look not to childish but suits the action style that we are aiming for in the task.
Combat Ready
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