In the Moonlight poster (top left) I plan to experiment with using different colours on the final edit of my movie poster. In the 71 posters I am going to use the technique of putting an image within another image, or inside the title of the movie. In the Total Recall Poster I might expoeriment with different editing styles on the main image of the poster. In this poster you can see an effect going out of the back of the main character as if he is breaking apart. Finally, the last convention I might use within my movie poster is editing images of the characters in different sizes just like they have done with the Getaway poster but with a car as the main images as well.
Tuesday, 12 December 2017
PLANNING: CREATING OUR FILM POSTER
This is a collection of different movie posters where I can use some ideas from them and incorporate them into my final movie poster. These are other ideas of ways that I can compose my movie poster and also different techniques and tools I can use when creating my final movie poster.
Wednesday, 6 December 2017
RESEARCH: FILM ESCAPE - CHARACTER DEVELOPMENT

We decided to interview our characters, to get to know them. We got our inspiration from what we learnt from a blog called Film Escape. This screenshot is from the website called Film Escape, and is on this post Charlie Sierra writes about a man called Pen Densham who is an Oscar nominated film maker who has made 16 Feature Films. Pen Densham uses the technique of questioning his characters in order to get to know them better. This way he can learn how the characters work which allows Pen Densham to understand each character when filming a feature film. Questioning the characters means that Pen Densham can understand their personalities as well as the way they work.
Our interview included the main characters being questioned about how they feel about the situation they have been put into and what happened along the way. This questionnaire and interview was to find out and further develop our character's personalities so that they are easy to understand when we release our film trailer.
Here you can see the interview where military personnel interviews two of the boys after the attack has occurred...
Thursday, 30 November 2017
CONSTRUCTION: SCRIPT YOUR INTERTITLES
I went over the the BBFC (British Board of Film Classification) website, and visited their subsection where I can view Trailers from recent and old movies. Here is where I am using this collection of trailers to analyse their use of Intertitles.
Lord of the Rings
The Trailer for The Hobbit: Battle of the Five Armies uses intertitles to grab the audience's attention by breaking down a sentence with little snippets that each have its own intertitle: 'This Year, from the Director of 'The Lord of the Rings trilogy'/ prepare for the defining moment of the Middle-Earth Legend'.
However, this is broken up into 5 different parts which are spread throughout the trailer. This means that as the person is viewing the trailer they want to carry on the sentence, and to do so they need to go through the whole trailer. It functions almost like a voice over that is guiding us through. This constant need to know what is being said in the intertitles also means that the viewer watches the whole trailer.
The imperative 'Prepare for' is quite a bold and demanding statement telling all people viewing the trailer to be ready. Epithets like defining and legend suggest the prestige of the project, all of which is enhanced by the glowing gold lettering.
Delivery Man
In this movie trailer the start is where all of the intertitles are seen. They are presented in an almost slide show format with lots of images of people surrounding the intertitles. It is also presented with a voice over that reads sentences with that say very similar things that are seen on screen.
This voice over and style we are presented with at the start of the trailer gives context to the unknown for the scenes of the movie that we see after this intertitles section. After we know that these pictures of people have something in common, we see the next part of trailer which shows what they do have in common. Intertitles here are used give context for the movie and the voice over also guides us through this part.
These intertitles also intrigue the audience because the words unique and common are complete opposite words. This enigma leads to the viewer being tantalised by the hunger of curiosity which leads them to find out what lies behind this enigma. Here the intertitles use of apparently contradictory words unique and common features as a bait that whets our curiosity.
PLANNING: SHOT LIST
This table is the shot list in which we planned how our trailer was going to be shot and what each shot and scene contained.
SCENE
|
SOUND/VOICEOVER
|
VISION
|
ACTORS
|
PROPS
|
NOTES
|
News Reporting
|
Soundtrack
Diegetic sound
|
Newsroom backdrop with visual test rocket launch, via green screen
Mid shot
|
2 different news reporters, one male, one female
|
None
|
Stationary camerawork, this is a mid-shot
|
Tree scene
|
Soundtrack and diegetic sound
|
Leaves blowing in the wind
Close up of leaves
|
N/A
|
None
|
Close up shot, stationary
|
Flashback scene
|
Voiceover
Soundtrack
|
Slow-mo effect
Black and white filter
Low angle tracking shot
Followed by a low angle shot
Followed by a tracking mid shot
|
All three brothers seen in past life
|
Rugby ball
Football
Table tennis table, bat and ball
|
Low angle, slow tracking shots
Followed by a low angle shot
Followed by a slow tracking mid-shot
|
Public Emergency Announcement
|
Voiceover
Soundtrack
|
Public Emergency Announcement with informative text moving downwards
|
N/A
|
None
|
None
|
Plane scene
|
Plane audio
Diegetic sound
|
Stationary mid-shot
Plane interior backdrop via green screen
|
Father of three brothers
|
Mobile phone
|
Stationary mid-shot
Green-screen
|
Packing bags
|
Diegetic sound
Soundtrack
|
Slow, low-angle tracking shot
Blurred filter
|
2 brothers seen packing bags
|
Two rucksacks
Cans of tinned food
Radio
Two bottles of water
|
Slow, low angle tracking shot, cut out when actors walk past the camera
|
Running scene
|
Soundtrack
Diegetic sound
|
Handheld camerawork, two-shot
Slow-mo effect
|
3 brothers seen running
|
2 rucksacks
|
Handheld camerawork, two-shot
|
Hospital scene
|
Diegetic sound
Soundtrack
|
Slow, mid shot tracking shot
|
Mother of three brothers
|
Mobile phone
|
Tracking, mid-shot
|
Shelter scene
|
Diegetic sound
Soundtrack
|
Stationary shot, 3-shot, actors move towards the camera,
|
3 brothers
|
None
|
Stationary, 3-shot
|
Wednesday, 29 November 2017
PLANNING: STORYBOARD
This is what we did when we were planning the different shots and scenes that we wanted to put into our trailer, these scenes are put in chronological order in which they will be presented within our trailer.
Thursday, 5 October 2017
RESEARCH: AUDIENCE PROFILE
Today I started making outline notes about what my target audience for our trailer was like:
Age group: 15-35+, young adults
Gender: both men and women
They are likely to watch TV programmes such as Breaking Bad, Game of Thrones and Orange is the new Black.
They are likely to see at the cinema: Deadpool, Hunger Games, Kingsman: The secret service, The Accountant, Fast and Furious 8, etc
In their leisure time, they will visit YouTube, play video games, download movies, drink Costa coffee / Starbucks; eat at Pizza Express, MacDonald's, Subway or KFC
Clothes: H & M, River Island, Fat Face, Top Shop, Supreme, Superdry, Next, ASOS, Adidas, Nike, etc
Media: iPhone or Samsung for Internet on the move; Mac Book or iPad to see movies, play games, browse and shop; FaceBook for connecting to friends. Instagram for sharing photographs. Snapchat for quick messaging and talking with friends.
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