Friday, 12 February 2010
EValuation Deadline
A number of students have spoken to me about problems uploading the PowerPoint to the blog.
If you are still having problems uploading to the blog please send the PowerPoint version of your evaluation to me via email at hknott@brit.croydon.sch.uk
This way we will know that you have hit the deadline and that your work is complete.
Please do not panic - technical difficulties will be sorted out in time.
Wednesday, 11 November 2009
Pre-Production
Thriller Film Ideas and Blogs
In groups you need to mind map, explore and blog all of your ideas that your group has for your Thriller film. Remembering everything you have learnt about the Thriller genre and video production.
What is your final idea? Why did you choose this? You will present your ideas to the class this Thursday (Hannah’s lesson). What feedback did you get? Do you agree with any suggestions made? Remembering to add this to your blog
Once you have decided on your idea and Alison and Hannah have agreed with your production, you then need to start completing pre-production paperwork. This includes the following:-
Shot List
Detailed storyboards
Location information
Character information
Props list
Detail on target audience
Production schedule
These need to be added to your blogs
You will only be able to book a camera and shoot once the pre-production paperwork is complete. Our advice is to split this work amongst the group, making you each responsible for certain areas.
Be creative and artistic, use all of your knowledge and skills to plan beautifully shot opening sequences.
Thursday, 15 October 2009
Deadline and tick lists
- Defining the genre
- Thriller Openings and textual analysis
- Sub-genres
- Locations, set design, costume and props
- Target Audiences
- Directors
- Film reviews
- Actors
- Production companies
- Music
You should also be blogging you’re developing technical skills and your experiences of filming and editing in the prelim task.
Areas to cover for the prelim task:
- Which camera are you using?
- Explain your knowledge of camera shot types and angles explaining how these communicate to audiences.
- What is continuity editing?
- Explain the 180 rule
- Explain what a 'match on action' is. Remember you can use diagrams / drawing etc.
- How did your filming go? Did it happen as planned? Did you have any technical difficulties?
- What have you learnt from the pre-lim filming exercise? If you could do it again, what would you do differently?
- Who did what in the pre-lim?
- How do you feel you performed in your role?
- What camera / editing skills did you have before you started? What skills have you now got?
- Are there any more specific or identifiable skills that you will need for your thriller?
Well done to all those students who have already added multiple posts, many of which make really interesting reading. The ones that work best are those that have included personal responses to found material, i.e. a film reviews, responses to theory, film analysis. This approach demonstrates an engagement with the material and is evidence of your growing knowledge and understanding of Thriller films. Keep it up.
You’re a great class and we’re really looking forward to working with you on your thriller practical next term. Have a great holiday and remember that the deadline is the first Tuesday back.
Tuesday, 29 September 2009
Up to speed
During the lesson on Thursday 24th September you familiarised yourself with your groups blog, how to create, edit and delete posts and how to add images and video to your posts. The blog should record your technical and theoretical development throughout your practical.You have been asked to get your blogs up to speed and to record all your learning so far in terms of your camera skills, prelim task and thriller opening analysis. Appropriately title each post and cover one point per post, for example;
Thriller codes and conventions
Thriller openings
Camera shots, movements and angles (class notes and images)
Camera workshops
Prelim Task
Remember to reference all secondary material correctly.
When using images taken from a google search find out the URL of the site that the image orginated from.
Good luck and we look forward to seeing you next week.
Wednesday, 23 September 2009
Introduction to the Thriller Blog
Ongoing accounts of technical workshops (video/editing) and personal skills development
Independent research into the thriller genre, target audiences, institutions
Notes and records on actors, locations, costumes and props
Pre-Production work including shotlists,scripting, storyboarding, production schedules
Accounts of filming and evaluation of production roles
An individual evaluation
Collect evidence (primary and secondary photographs and videos) as you go along and make regular posts at relevant times throughout the production.