making a title sequence

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AS Media Studies MAKING YOUR TITLE SEQUENCE

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Page 1: Making a title sequence

AS Media Studies MAKING YOUR TITLE SEQUENCE

Page 2: Making a title sequence

lo ts o f small things add up to get you better marks

Page 3: Making a title sequence

9 Steps to best results!

Page 4: Making a title sequence

What are your strengths and weaknesses?

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Step 1 take stock

• w hat ’s the task? • w hat ’s the assessment? • w hat ’s the t imeframe? • w hat ’s the equipment?

Page 6: Making a title sequence

Your task and assessment

• Titles and opening of a new fiction film • up to 2 minutes • 20 marks Research and Planning • 60 marks Construction • 20 marks Evaluation

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Timeframe and equipment

• build your skills • build up your research • build up your planning • give yourselves time to shoot and edit • keep evidence throughout the whole

process

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keep evidence of everything you do!

Step 2 Add to your blog

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• sound • camerawork • edit ing

Step 3 Build up your skills

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SOUND EFFECTS

these are

VERY IMPORTANT!!!

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Make a list now of what SOUND EFFECTS

You think you could use to enhance your production

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What did you learn from your preliminary task?

Make some notes and add them

to your blog under the appropriate Evaluation question

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• what do film openings actually look like? • what does other student work look like? • what do you need to know about titles? • how are you going to do something that

stands out?

Step 4 Investigate

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key features

• genre • nar rat ive (enigma) • character • atmosphere • sett ing

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film openings to look at?

• start general • home in on specific • make your research focussed and

relevant

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W a t c h a s e q u e n c e a n d d e c i d e … w h i c h o f t h e s e a r e f e a t u r e d m o s t :

• genre • nar rat ive • character • atmosphere • sett ing

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T h i n k a b o u t y o u r f i l m … w h i c h a s p e c t s a r e y o u g o i n g t o e m p h a s i s e ?

• genre • nar rat ive • character • atmosphere • sett ing

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search for student film openings on YouTube

and Vimeo (G321)

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Analyse one or two of them. How successful are they?

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Level 1: minimal 0-23 Level 2: basic 24-35

Level 3: p ro ficient 36-47 Level 4: excellent 48-60

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• possible scenar ios • 25 word pitch • moodboard t reatment • peer and teacher feedback • realist ic expectat ions - keep it simple

Step 5 Brainstorm ideas

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• experiment w ith camera and edit ing • recce shots o f locat ions • examples of shots, costumes, props, etc.

onto blog • stor yboard, animatic, moodboard • logist ics planning, including r isk assessment

Step 6 Planning

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• people, places, props, costumes • rehearsing, directing • equipment, jobs on the day • keeping a record of the process

Step 7 Shooting

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• screengrabs of process • remember impor tance of audio and

t it les • remember importance of sound effects • rough cut deadline and peer feedback

Step 8 Editing

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big picture before fine detail

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• seven guiding questions • 20 of the 100 marks • need to be creative in executions • d ig i ta l depth • Listen to the teacher’s advice

Step 9 Evaluation

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Six most common student film openings

• Saw : victim t ied up in shed

• Scream: hooded stalker fo llow s female victim

• Se7en: killer st icks knife in polaro id photos

• Lock, Stock: gangsters play cards and kill each other

• Waking up: clean teeth, brush hair, leave house

• Flash back or flash forward : “ 2 weeks later...”

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six most common problems • looks m o re like a trailer o r short film • insufficient titles • poor sound, poor lighting • poor ly directed actors, not costumed • confusing fo r the viewer • uses one of the six common openings(badly)

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key advice • plan for everything • keep all the evidence • avoid the obvious • pay attention to detail • make your blog var ied • learn from other work