For my character in my film opening entitled Gone, we decided to
give our protagonist a questionnaire in order to develop his character further.
We looked at an article written by Charlie Sierra about such questionnaires,
and he quoted a book written by Pen Densham (an Academy Award nominated
filmmaker) entitled "Riding the Alligator". In one of the chapters in
the book, he provides a check list of questions every writer and director
should ask of themselves when they are developing their characters. The purpose
of this is to outline a deep understanding of your characters for both the
actors and director, and for motivating your character’s choices or actions.
As my film opening features only one character in a world without anyone
else, we decided that rather than a questionnaire interview, we would use a
video diary of our character asking himself and answering the questions as if
he is communicating through the camera to anyone who might find it, which is a
creative way to handle the questionnaire whilst still keeping with the solitary
theme of the opening.
Script:
DAY 10: 10 days since everyone disappeared. I've been running out of the
food at the house and i'm going to have to find more. Everyone must
come back. I don't know why they're gone.
DAY 37: 37 days since everyone disappeared. I've been looting the food
from the supermarkets. Still no sign of anyone. I'm starting to lose
hope that anyone is out here and that it's only me.
DAY 70: 70 days. All I can think about is my family. Where did they go.
I'm so sick of living this life. No one is going to come for me. I'm
going to die here all alone.
DAY 99: I've managed to recover slightly from my mental relapse. I might
finally start to get used to nobody being here. Local food supplies are
starting to dwindle though, and more and more animals are appearing
around the area. Never hit me how tranquil it all looks.
DAY 112: My fires have certainly improved since this all started. I
hunted for the first time, yet it felt strangely empowering to have
killed the animal. Poor thing. It's been tough adapting to this world on
my own, but I think that I can finally make a life for myself here.
Tuesday, 29 November 2016
Art of the Title: Deadpool
The title of
Deadpool begins with the logo of the intellectual property owner; Marvel. The
establishing shot of this title sequence begins with the camera panning back
from a close up of a man, the entire scene is a continuous, mid-action, freeze
frame of a scenario that appears later in the film. The camera continues to pan
around the car showcasing the mercenaries and Deadpool in the car being fought/
fighting in various different ways; the first mercenary we are shown has been
attacked with a car lighter; the second mercenary we see in a close up of his
face being sat upon by Deadpool as the camera pans from the man’s face; the
third mercenary is briefly shown having his eyes being poked out as the camera
pans past him; the next close up we see is that of Deadpool himself, this is
the first time that the audience is introduced to the protagonist and so the
camera stays on the close up of his face for the longest time out of any
character so far to allow the audience to familiarise themselves with him; the
final mercenary never has their face shown as they are wearing a motorcycling
helmet.
After the slow pan through the car, the camera finally pans back
allowing the audience to see the entire scenario of the burning car and
motorcycle as they both go hurtling through the air before a, presumably,
spectacular crash before the scene is obscured by a drawing of Deadpool
decapitating a someone with the text “Hi! I’m Deadpool”, aiding any fans unfamiliar
with the source material as to who the man in the costume was. Throughout this
lengthy title sequence this movie ironically doesn’t credit the people who
contributed to the film, acting, writing, directing, and instead subverts the
audience’s expectations by instead crediting them by ‘Written by: the real
heros here’ or ‘Directed by: an overpaid tool’.
Tuesday, 22 November 2016
PLANNING: THE TOP LINE AND BIG QUESTION
I watched a very useful presentation created by FutureLearn, an online MOOC on film making, featuring Frank Ash.
To Frank Ash, Creative Consultant to the BBC and beyond, it is important to focus on what the audience would want; what will interest the audience; How will the narrative develop?
Listed below is Frank Ash's advice to aspiring film makers:
To Frank Ash, Creative Consultant to the BBC and beyond, it is important to focus on what the audience would want; what will interest the audience; How will the narrative develop?
Listed below is Frank Ash's advice to aspiring film makers:
TOP LINE DEFINITION: "Think about your favourite book or film or
any ‘good story’ you recently watched online, could you sum up its
narrative into ‘one elegant sentence’ to provide its ‘topping’"
TOP LINE FOR OUR FILM - "A lone soldier returns from a devastating turn in Afghanistan and has become diagnosed with PTSD, where he is cursed to walk the streets of his old life with the nightmares of his life in the army"
TOP LINE FOR OUR FILM - "A lone soldier returns from a devastating turn in Afghanistan and has become diagnosed with PTSD, where he is cursed to walk the streets of his old life with the nightmares of his life in the army"
BIG QUESTION DEFINITION: "What was its big story question, and how important was it to your appreciation of the text?"
BIG QUESTION FOR OUR FILM - "How do you pick up the threads of an old life?"
BIG QUESTION FOR OUR FILM - "How do you pick up the threads of an old life?"
Monday, 21 November 2016
PLANNING: TREATMENT
The story is about a young person, a teenager, that has awoken to find that everyone is just gone, our opening is the person slowly coming to terms that they are entirely alone; beginning with the initial confusion, leading to the denial and finally the acceptance of their situation, being entirely alone. Our opening will begin at the start of this person's day, unnerved by the lack of traffic, their family presumably having already left the house and the eerie silence that hangs in the air. The person gets dressed, rides/walks into school only to find that their school is entirely deserted as well. At this point the character begins to panic, the weight of their situation begins to dawn on them and the surreal reality they have been thrust into. Their disbelief at this new world forces them to set out on their journey to try and find at least some other human, but also beginning their decent into isolation induced mania.
UPDATED TREATMENT:
The story is about a young soldier who has come back from war in Afghanistan. From the start, it is clear that the soldier is suffering from some form of PTSD, so much so that in the scenes they are shot with no other people as if they aren't there, whereas it is revealed at the end that people are there but the soldier's own feelings of anxiety and loneliness makes him think that there is nobody else there, whereas the reality of it as that it's all in his head, and that he is actually surrounded by people (thus depicting the damage that syndromes such as PTSD bring on people) Scenes include one which is shot at the train station when he has just come home, with Close Ups on the Soldiers face to represent his anguish and expression, as well as flashback scenes where he remembers life before he left to join the army.Wednesday, 16 November 2016
RESEARCH: Business of Film
The cultural value of film:
When it comes to the public spending in the arena of the
arts and culture, such as film, policy-makers need to be able to measure the
importance and value of their professional opinions and intervention. David
Throsby is an economist that specialises in the economics of art and culture.
The diagram below is Throsby’s attempt to simplify debate. Throsby bases his
opinions on a definition of value that encompasses cultural value.
The UK is home to the
British Film Institute and was home to the UK Film Council before the BFI was
created, these institutions have published numerous reports on the economic and
cultural significance of film. The most recent of these reports, on the subject
of the economic impact that film has on the country, found that film
contributed £3.67 billion to the UK economy.
Other studies on the cultural
impact of film have shown that films can be more than just an activity, but
they can be used to convey important personal or political messages for the
audience to think about, they can also give new insights into other cultures.
Many films perform well at award ceremonies such as the BAFTAS and the OSCARS, these nominations and awards are, naturally, a sense of pride for the UK. This is one of the reasons why many stars in Hollywood are British. Another increasingly important aspect of film production is tourism; film tourism is the visiting of a place that features in a film or television programme, for example the Harry Potter series being set in England/ Scotland. Film tourism is becoming more and more popular. Approximately £840 million of tourism spending by visitors form abroad can be attributed to film-induced tourism.
Film is often attributed to be the influence for many other
creative industries, as film requires skill in design and lots of creativity
and film was the first creative industry to be supported by film incentives to
show recognition of how important the film industry is.
In
the film industry the term ‘Value chain’ is frequently used to describe the process that it takes to go from the initial conception of the idea to the
final commercial product, the value chain is important for the production of
the film as it includes the pre-production phase, establishing the budget, the
actual production of the film and the marketing
Development ->
Hire director, Option Agreement, Hire Casting Director, Certify as British,
Preliminary Budget, Secure Key Cast, Hire Writer
Finance -> Secure Development finance, Prepare estimates
Production -> Secure Rights, Pre-production, Principal Photography, Post-production
Distribution -> Broadcast license, Video/DVD/VoD licensing
Concept Origination -> Find Ideas.
Exploitation -> Download to Own, Cinema Exhibition, DVD Rental and Sales,
Creative Packaging -> Marketing Campaign
Preliminary Budget, Secure Key Cast, Hire Writer
Finance -> Secure Development finance, Prepare estimates
Production -> Secure Rights, Pre-production, Principal Photography, Post-production
Distribution -> Broadcast license, Video/DVD/VoD licensing
Concept Origination -> Find Ideas.
Exploitation -> Download to Own, Cinema Exhibition, DVD Rental and Sales,
Creative Packaging -> Marketing Campaign
Monday, 14 November 2016
RESEARCH: Twitter
In planning to have a platform to raise awareness of my film, I have made a Twitter account especially for my film, which I can utilise as a platform for the distribution of my film opening.
One of the reasons that Twitter is mostly successful Social Media distribution platform is due to how, to quote Alan Rusbridger, "It's where things happen first". When an important event happens, people can take to Twitter to tweet about the event live or by using the companion app 'Periscope', and its large number of registered users means that news spreads very quickly, even more so due to its use of hashtags which can group posts about the same topic together. Although it has a character limit of 140 characters per tweet, the most tweets are hyperlinks or images, which can be spread from user to user via the retweet or direct sharing functions, which enables more users to see the tweets in their timelines and then have the option to share it further. This practice of distribution extremely useful to distributors as, for example, a famous figure could retweet a tweet about a film, which leads to their hundreds/thousands/millions of followers seeing that tweet in their timelines, this share function makes twitter a useful platform to distribute information about a film or raise awareness about the film.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)