Monday, 23 February 2015

EXPLORE FILMAKING: NATIONAL FILM AND TELEVISION SCHOOL

I have signed up for a Future Learn course. What attracts me to the course is the opportunity to explore film making and learn from professionals how they take a script to the screen, how they use film language to deliver the plot and theme and, in particular, the special qualities of short films. I hope that it will improve both my film making and my quality of articulate reflection.

In week 2 I learned a good deal about short film making from Destiny Ekaragha in the unit called Having Vision, Telling Stories. Destiny Ekaragha's first short film, Tight Jeans (2008), was chosen for the London Film Festival in that year. She then went on to make her first feature film, Gone Too Far (2014) which was given cinema release is 2014.


What I learned from this introduction confirmed what I had already researched about short films
  •  They differ from feature films not just in length. In a short there isn't enough time for such extensive exposition of themes or introduction to key characters.
  • Shorts require real economy of action, dialogue, plot and locations to be effective
  • Shorts require film makers to work within limitations, most obviously of budget.
What I learned about the difference between plot + theme
  • Theme is main points of the story, an idea that runs throughout the entire movie
  • Plot is what happens to the person
What I learned about visual language

Gone Too Far (Destiny Ekaragha, 2014)
Gotcha (Bryn Williams, 2015)
  • In my two shot, the boys discuss the themes that run through the film (relationship issues, dealing with women, men's roles)
  • I chose my camera angles very carefully: like Destiny's camerawork, I leave the camera "flat on them". I place my 2 characters opposite each other and I leave the camera on them for a long time. This signals to the audience the significance of this scene as the exposition.
  • Considerations for my target audience lie at the heart of my film: it shows a scenario that concerns my target audience very closely - the pitfalls and challenges of the dating scene.
  • I use over the shoulder shots and reaction shots to show the boys' emotions towards the subject.



Thursday, 12 February 2015

PLANNING: POSTER

I have researched short film posters and identified a set of codes and conventions which I have used to inform my initial planning of my film poster.

  • Producer's name: A Bryn Williams film
  • Film Title in large font: GOTCHA
  • Production Company: Hands On
  • Names of actors: Elliot Hogan, Agatha Parry, Amber Saville, Georgina Self, Bryn Williams
  • Written, directed and produced by: Bryn Williams
  • COMING SOON
  • WWW.HANDSON.COM/GOTCHA
  • Twitter
  • HANDSON PRESENTS GOTCHA STARRING BRYN WILLIAMS   ELLIOT HOGAN   AMBER SAVILLE
    GEORGINA SELF    AGATHA PARRY   WRITTEN   DIRECTED   &  PRODUCED   BY   BRYN WILLIAMS
                                                                                                                                                                COMING SOON
                                                                                                                        WWW.HANDSON.COM/GOTCHA

Tuesday, 10 February 2015

CONSTRUCTION: IDENT

In today's lesson I made my Production Company's ident. My idea was to use 2 articulating hands and use stop motion to create  the ident. I used iStop Motion to assist me, this program compiles all the individual photos together into a movie resulting in what looks like a moving image. I called my Production Company HANDS ON