Our class was privileged enough to be given the opportunity to visit the British Film Institute in London as an extended teaching session related to our main task. We were one of many schools and colleges that attended this event. There we had a few sessions with a renowned media teacher, showing us various examples of opening scenes and teaching us various factors to include in them. These sessions were incredible helpful as it brought to life many ideas and questions people had related to what was to be done for our main task.
Secondly, we had a Q and A with a film maker called Corin Hardy. Corin came in to promote his new film "the hallow", critique some of our ideas for opening scenes and give us an insight into the development of ideas and the amount of effort put into filming. He also showed us the opening scene of his film before it had even been put in cinemas!
here is a link to his web page; where you can find trailers, interviews and much more- the website
Tuesday, 15 December 2015
Sunday, 15 November 2015
Never Back Down: Scene Analysis
In a media lesson last week, Mrs Banks tasked us with finding a clip from a film or TV show and making a short presentation on it in front of the class. I chose to analyse the final fight from Never Back Down (2008). This scene combines aspects of dialogue with high adrenaline action.
Firstly, there is evidence of close up shots of Jake and Ryan ( the two fighters) where Jake is talking about it being "a spectator sport". The close up here emphasizes that there is no other focus on anyone else in the scene accept for the fighters. This is further accentuated by shifts in camera focus as Jake begins to walk away from Ryan. During the fight there is the use of Go pro cameras to provide the audience extra immersion as these cameras give a good POV shot. This paired with: the superb choreography, the special effect used to accent the power behind Ryan's strike to Jake's side and the graphic match at the finishing moments of the fight linking back to Jake's first fighting lesson make for a great fight scene.
As this scene is only available on vimeo, i could only link it rather than including the clip in this post. Apologies for any inconvenience.
The scene on Vimeo
Firstly, there is evidence of close up shots of Jake and Ryan ( the two fighters) where Jake is talking about it being "a spectator sport". The close up here emphasizes that there is no other focus on anyone else in the scene accept for the fighters. This is further accentuated by shifts in camera focus as Jake begins to walk away from Ryan. During the fight there is the use of Go pro cameras to provide the audience extra immersion as these cameras give a good POV shot. This paired with: the superb choreography, the special effect used to accent the power behind Ryan's strike to Jake's side and the graphic match at the finishing moments of the fight linking back to Jake's first fighting lesson make for a great fight scene.
As this scene is only available on vimeo, i could only link it rather than including the clip in this post. Apologies for any inconvenience.
The scene on Vimeo
Preliminary task: Finished clip
Preliminary task: description
We were tasked with a preliminary task to show our understanding of camera work and action in a scene. In this task we had to include examples of; match on action, shot and reverse shot and a small section of dialogue. we were given the equipment we would need for the clip. The list included a camera, tripod and SD card to save our work on to. after filming, we were given some lesson time to complete the editing on the task. this included learning about cuts, transitions and credits; all in aid of finding the right balance for the short piece. This task has helped my understand some of the intricacies of working on a film set and that it is okay to be picky and want things to be perfect.
Tuesday, 29 September 2015
Editing- Cuts
Last Thursdays lesson we were focused on cuts. Primarily, how cuts can change the pace and feeling of a scene. A good example is a car chase scene, like this one from the "Bourne: supremacy":
This clip clearly shows how Quick cuts can make a scene seem quicker and more action packed. Because of the speed of the cuts, it adds to the overall speed that boost of adrenaline this scene is trying to achieve. The quick shots mean that there is little time for the audience to think about or dwell on each shot. Yet when the action stops or slows down, the shots get longer, giving the audience some "breathing room"
dialogue scenes or scenes where there is a lot more information to process tend to have slower shots due to the fact that they are trying to get you to absorb new information; often so the info is fresh in your mind for later on. An example of this from "in Bruges" (apologies for the language...)
This clip clearly shows how Quick cuts can make a scene seem quicker and more action packed. Because of the speed of the cuts, it adds to the overall speed that boost of adrenaline this scene is trying to achieve. The quick shots mean that there is little time for the audience to think about or dwell on each shot. Yet when the action stops or slows down, the shots get longer, giving the audience some "breathing room"
dialogue scenes or scenes where there is a lot more information to process tend to have slower shots due to the fact that they are trying to get you to absorb new information; often so the info is fresh in your mind for later on. An example of this from "in Bruges" (apologies for the language...)
The History of Editing
In one of last weeks lessons we learned about the history and development of editing. This was displayed to us through the use of a very informative video linked below:
Monday, 21 September 2015
Camera shots
In Wednesday's lesson, we learned about different camera shots. To help cement our understanding, built up examples of each one that we learned about and put it in a power-point.
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