Ideas for good planning and research blog posts.
Research:
- Analyse opening sequernces (not
trailers, not fan-made clips, not sequences from any other part of the film).
The main idea here is to understand how openings work, both artistically and
technically.
- Write a generic conventions
report – a few paragraphs on typical characters, storylines, locations, props
and style of your chosen film genre… include pictures and screen-grabs.
Describe how they might influence your production.
- Audience research. The most
important information here is how your research will inform your production.
Whatever you do, don’t conduct the research then go ahead with whatever plan
you had regardless of it.
- Skills… do some research into
what skills you will need to complete this project. If, for example, you are
planning on including titles which glow brightly, or appear on screen with a
textured appearance or have some other effects applied to them – who will you
achieve that?... Look up some tutorials, ask me, and most importantly, do some
tests. (open up Premiere or After Effects and have a go – NOW – not a day
before deadline.
- Post ‘production meeting minutes’.
If you have a conversation with your group about your opening sequence, that
counts as planning. Who was there? What was said? What did you decide? How did
you arrive that that decision? What were the other options? Why were they
rejected?... during your evaluation you will need to account for your creative
decisions, so writing them down now will help you.
- Write a treatment. That’s your
idea for the sequence written down as a shot by shot account of what your
sequence will look like.
- Script – this should be written
in the correct format – see me or follow this link for the right approach to
your script… you must write one even if there’s no dialogue.
- Storyboard – this should be at
least 15 panels and also follow correct conventions which essentially means including
clip duration, transition/editing notes, camera direction (movement, angle etc)
and a description of the action.
- Shot list – unlike the
storyboard this is a checklist of each and every shot you will need for your
sequence. If you are shooting a conversation for example you will need the
whole thing from at least three different angles (master shot including both
characters, and over the shoulder shot of character A, and an over the shoulder
shot of character B – then you might get creative and include a low angle or
canted angle to give you options in the edit)… all of these will appear on the
shot list so you don’t forget on the day.
- Production schedule – this
should be a detailed account of when you will shoot and edit the sequence and
who will be required on which days.
- Create a production logo – as a
group come up with a concept, then the editor should produce this using
Photoshop or After Effects – look for tutorials or see me for how to achieve
it.
- Production updates – whenever you
make some progress (when you produce the storyboard or script or logo etc)
update the blog – has it been done to the required standard? How does it help
move the production forward? Have you learnt anything useful along the way?
- Test shots – if you are ready
to shoot – but don’t have your actor/costume/location or can’t shoot the real thing
for any other reason, do some camerawork/editing practice. Use each other or
use any available person to stand in as one of your actors and test your
storyboard ideas with a few test shots… these can then be used to test out
colour correction or special effects in Premiere Pro – these can be posted to
the blog… both I and the moderator will be very impressed with your commitment
to improving your production skills!
- Location Recce – grab a camera,
go to a couple of potential location where you want to shoot and photograph
them. You post these to your blog with a couple of notes on how you might use
the location, any problems you may encounter. Consider the time of day you want
to use it, what the light will be like, what other people/traffic might be
around… is it on a flight-path, for example, with airplanes going overhead
every 5 minutes? (that will create sound-mixing havoc in the edit!)
- Props/costumes list. You may
well decide to just use whatever costumes your actors turn up in, but you’ll
get a better mark for demonstrating some prior thought to it… record your ideas
for what characters should be wearing, what make-up you might need, what props
you will need and how you will source them… (remember – no guns/knives/weapons
in public places!!!)
- Soundtracks – start looking for
appropriate royalty-free soundtracks. Write a post on what mood you want to
create with the soundtrack, find a few and post these to the blog. You will
find a couple of links in the left sidebar of this blog under ‘useful links’
- Lastly – A-grade coursework productions
will necessarily have comprehensive planning. While quality of your work is the
most important thing, quantity is the very first thing I and the moderator will
consider – if you want an A-grade, around 50 blog posts across the whole
project including the production and evaluation would be considered a minimum
for you to achieve this.
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