Friday, 27 January 2012
Chuck Jones - Looney Tunes
The cartoon sketches with Coyote and Roadrunner follow rather strict rules. One of the rules is that Coyote always has his contraptions and plans turn on him, also his parts and contraptions are always from the company called ACME as you can see in the picture on the left. Another one is how Coyotes is always beating by his contraptions in a way where gravity is his worst enemy. For Roadrunner his rule is that he can only say "Meep Meep".
Audience Research
Before filming our thriller we did some audience research to find out what aspects of thrillers people prefer.
The questionare above asks a question which tell us three words which best sums up a thriller. We then gathered the three words from all the twenty questionares and put them into wordle which give us the most common words used lager than the least used words. Below is the wordle we got.

The questionare above asks a question which tell us three words which best sums up a thriller. We then gathered the three words from all the twenty questionares and put them into wordle which give us the most common words used lager than the least used words. Below is the wordle we got.
Thursday, 26 January 2012
Script of our Thriller
In our Thriller opening there is no script due to there being no dialoge. But intead we will use many diagetic and non-diagetic sounds, The non-diagetic sound consists of music which we have gained from an unsigned band called The 99's, the image below shows one of the members of the band conferming that we are allowed to use one of their songs.
If there is any other additional music we will require we also signed up to Mobygratis.com so we will have and music from there at our disposal. Below is a screen grab from the Mobygratis website.
Filming Location
In this post there will be images of the location where we are going to film our thriller, the location is Chole Bencini-Harding's House in Plastow.
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| Bedroom where Protagonist wakes up. |
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| This would consist of the shot where the protagonist moves to the bathroom. |
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| Bathroom where the Protagonist brushes his teeth. |
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| Where the Protagonist leaves after completing his routine. |
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| Where the Protagonist makes and eats his cereal. |
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| Another shot of the kitchen. |
Call Sheet
Date of Filming: 29th January 2011
Location of filming: Chloe Bencini-Harding's House
Cast: Conor Wilkins & Laimonas Andriejauskas
Crew: Conor Wilkins, Chloe Bencini-Harding, Frankie Mcfarlane and Tori Weatley
Props: Bed, Alarm, Clock, Clippers, Knife, Towel, Fake Blood, Shower, Mirror, Mask, Cereal, Toothbrush and Tooth paste
Costumes: Protagonist in the sequence has a suit whereas the Antagonist wears all black and a mask
Location of filming: Chloe Bencini-Harding's House
Cast: Conor Wilkins & Laimonas Andriejauskas
Crew: Conor Wilkins, Chloe Bencini-Harding, Frankie Mcfarlane and Tori Weatley
Props: Bed, Alarm, Clock, Clippers, Knife, Towel, Fake Blood, Shower, Mirror, Mask, Cereal, Toothbrush and Tooth paste
Costumes: Protagonist in the sequence has a suit whereas the Antagonist wears all black and a mask
Conventions of a Thriller
Wednesday, 18 January 2012
Treatment Sheet
Name of our film: Routine
Outline of idea
The beginning of the opening is the morning routine of a man who has OCD. the routine consists of him waking up, brush teeth, eat cereal, and leave house. This routine happens three times and on the fourth time things in his house are changed and moved and he then sees something written on his bathroom mirror. this then makes him aware someone is in the house so he goes to get a knife to defend himself but he is then attacked by the killer.
What Resources will we need?
2 actors
Houses
Knife
Tooth Brush
Mask
Justification of ideas in relation to genre
'Who dunnit' theme
Outline of idea
The beginning of the opening is the morning routine of a man who has OCD. the routine consists of him waking up, brush teeth, eat cereal, and leave house. This routine happens three times and on the fourth time things in his house are changed and moved and he then sees something written on his bathroom mirror. this then makes him aware someone is in the house so he goes to get a knife to defend himself but he is then attacked by the killer.
What Resources will we need?
2 actors
Houses
Knife
Tooth Brush
Mask
Justification of ideas in relation to genre
'Who dunnit' theme
Wednesday, 4 January 2012
Maguffin
A Maguffin is a device used by Alfred Hitchcock in his films.
A Maguffin is an object which the story evolves around and
motivates the characters. For example in a film where terrorist are trying to retrieve blue prints of a weapon of mass destruction while a group of spies prevent them from doing so. The the blue prints in this film would be the Maguffin.
A Maguffin is an object which the story evolves around and
motivates the characters. For example in a film where terrorist are trying to retrieve blue prints of a weapon of mass destruction while a group of spies prevent them from doing so. The the blue prints in this film would be the Maguffin.
Suspence & Shock
In thrillers the use shock and suspence is quite common, but they are very differnt devices.
Suspence is the use of building up tension for the viewer, an example of building up tension is Sabotage by Alfred Hitchcock. In Sabotage there is a scene where a child is transporting a package containing a bomb across london, but the child is unaware of the bomb in the package. This is what creates the tension for the viewer, and the tension builds as the timer for the bomb continues to tick away. This is suspence.
Shock is use to give the viewer a scare, an example of shock is in Children of Men. In Children of Men at the begining the main character enters a cafe to buy a coffee where people are watching the news, the character then leaves the cafe. After leaving the cafe the character puts his coffee down to pour a drink into it, but as he pick it up the cafe he was in instantly exploads thus causing the audiense to jump in shock.
Suspence is the use of building up tension for the viewer, an example of building up tension is Sabotage by Alfred Hitchcock. In Sabotage there is a scene where a child is transporting a package containing a bomb across london, but the child is unaware of the bomb in the package. This is what creates the tension for the viewer, and the tension builds as the timer for the bomb continues to tick away. This is suspence.
Shock is use to give the viewer a scare, an example of shock is in Children of Men. In Children of Men at the begining the main character enters a cafe to buy a coffee where people are watching the news, the character then leaves the cafe. After leaving the cafe the character puts his coffee down to pour a drink into it, but as he pick it up the cafe he was in instantly exploads thus causing the audiense to jump in shock.
Red Herring, Cliff hangers & Enigmas
A Red Herring is a device which draws away the audiences attention from the truth. For example in a film where a man is being accused of being a serial killer where all the evidence points to him, but it turns out its not him.
A Cliff hanger is a device which i sometimes used, and it is when the main character in a dificult dilemma or confronted with a shocking revelation. This can entice the audience to keep watching to see of the situation they are in gets resolved.
An Enigma refers to a puzzle, something mysterious, inexplicable, a riddle or a difficult problem.In thrillers this is commonly something which the protagonist has to try to find out or solve before the narrative is solved and the film finnishes.
A Cliff hanger is a device which i sometimes used, and it is when the main character in a dificult dilemma or confronted with a shocking revelation. This can entice the audience to keep watching to see of the situation they are in gets resolved.
An Enigma refers to a puzzle, something mysterious, inexplicable, a riddle or a difficult problem.In thrillers this is commonly something which the protagonist has to try to find out or solve before the narrative is solved and the film finnishes.
Cinematography
Cinematography means the use of the camera, this is the different shots and camera movements used to film.
Types of Shots:
Types of Shots:
- Close up - This is mainly a shot of the face and neck, mainly used to show facial expression and emotion of the character.
- Extreme close up - This shot is used to focus on a small part of something.
- Midshot - This shot is normaly comprised of the head to waist of a character.
- Long shot - This shot is used to show a characters entire body.
- Extreme long shot - This shot is used to show the surroundings of the character.
- Point of view shot - This shot allows you to look through the eyes of the character.
- High angle shot - This shot makes the viewer look down on the character thus putting the character in a position of weakness and the veiwer in a position of power.
- Low angle shot - This shot makes the character look down at the viewer therefore making the viewer seem inferior to the character.
- Over-the-shoulder shot - This shot looks overe the characters shoulder to show what they are looking at.
- Pan - The camera rotates from left to right
- Tilt - The camera tilts up and down
- Dutch tilt - The camera tilts on an angle to give a disorientation effect.
- Zoom - The camerqa remains still but the focus is adjusted to move either towards or away from the from the object.
- Reverse zoom/Contra-zoom - When the focus zooms in while the camera moves out (or vise versa).
- Free camera - A camera which is free to move around.
- Trackcamera - The camera moves fluidly along a set of tracks in a certain direction.
- Dolly - A dolly camera is on a set of wheels so it can be moved in any direction.
- Crane - The camera is placed on a large crane arm which enables it to move around the set with ease. It also allows the camera to move quickly between on different heights.
- Rolling shot - The camera moves diagonaly, making the image askew
- Handheld - The camera is held in a hand and can therefore move in any direction. The result is usually a very shaky picture.
- Steady cam - The camera is worn on a weighted harness to keep it still and balanced, whilst allowing the freedom in hand held filming
Types of Thrillers
Spy - These thrillers would usually be based on a group if spies trying to prevent a maguffin from falling into the wrong hands.
Psychological- This type of thriller would usually be based on a story where the pritagonist and antagonist are preying on each others minds.
Legal - This type of thriller would usually be based around a court case where protagonist is trying to prove the antagonist guilty.
conspiracy - This type of thriller would be orientated around an enigma which would be based around a government.
political - This type of thriller which would be based around presidentual issues or assassinations.
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