- Finish Storyboards
- Finish Script/screenplay
- Locations
- Props
Monday, 25 October 2010
Friday, 22 October 2010
Aims and context (revised)
Aims and context
I will be filming a short sequence from my imagined horror film “Desolate” the sequence I am filming will be about a girl who is being chased by the ghost of a girl she killed in a hit and run and will include a short flashback that shows how the young girl was killed.
In my film I will use various micro-features to create the same effects as you would see in any film of the horror genre for example fast paced editing and dark lighting will be used to create tension. For cinematography I will use high and low angles to show the dominance of the ghost girl and the severe isolation of the protagonist as well as some odd angled shots that coupled with the fast paced editing will disorientate the audience and puts them in the place of the protagonist therefore helping them empathise with the character. I will also use various point of view shots to once again put the audience in the place of the protagonist so that the film has a bigger effect on their emotions as they watch. My film is aimed at the mainstream audience as horror is best suited to teenagers because they feel it is a right of passage to be able to see a film they could not have watched when they were younger. I believe it will be preferred by women because the protagonist and antagonist are both female.
Monday, 18 October 2010
Aims and Context (Original)
I will be filming a short sequence from my imagined horror film "Desolate" the sequence i am filming will be about a girl who is being chased by the ghost of a girl she killed in a hit and run and will include a short flashback that shows how the young girl was killed.
In my film i will use various micro features to create the same effects as you would see in any film of the horror genre for example fast paced editing and dark lighting will be used to create tension. For cinematography i will use high and low angles to show the dominance of the ghost girl and the severe isolation of the protagonist as well as some odd angled shots that coupled with the fast paced editing will disorientate the audience and puts them in the place of the protagonist therefore helping them empathise with the character. I will also use various point of view shots to once again put the audience in the place of the protagonist so that the film has a bigger effect on their emotions as they watch.
In my film i will use various micro features to create the same effects as you would see in any film of the horror genre for example fast paced editing and dark lighting will be used to create tension. For cinematography i will use high and low angles to show the dominance of the ghost girl and the severe isolation of the protagonist as well as some odd angled shots that coupled with the fast paced editing will disorientate the audience and puts them in the place of the protagonist therefore helping them empathise with the character. I will also use various point of view shots to once again put the audience in the place of the protagonist so that the film has a bigger effect on their emotions as they watch.
Friday, 8 October 2010
Synopsis of my film
Synopsis
The sequence begins with the protagonist Sarah driving home from work, she is running late so decides to take a shortcut down a desolate road when her car breaks down. She gets out of the car and opens the bonnet to check what is wrong after finding nothing she closes the bonnet and sees a flash of a pale young girl sat in the front seat of the car. She gets back in the car and tries to start it but can’t she then catches another glimpse of the girl in her rear view mirror. This sparks a flashback of the protagonist accidentally killing this young girl in a hit and run accident a few weeks earlier, she was not paying attention to the road as she was on her phone. After the flashback Sarah gets out of the car and starts to run but is pursued by the girl. Eventually Sarah gets on the ground and starts fumbling through her bag for her phone but because she has stopped the girl catches up to her and the sequence ends here with a cliff-hanger with us not knowing whether or not Sarah is killed.
Wednesday, 6 October 2010
Audience
The chosen audience for my film will be teenagers, I believe that the horror genre appeals to young audiences more than any other genre. It may be because your teenage years are when you are first allowed to watch a film of this genre meaning that every time you watch, it feels almost like a right of passage. My film will appeal more to a female audience rather than a male, mainly because both main characters will be female but also because women tend to favour the horror genre more than men, this could be because they enjoy to be scared more than men.
Monday, 4 October 2010
Genre conventions essay
The chosen genre for my film is horror. I have researched the horror genre conventions:
Horror Genre Conventions
A horror movie is typically used to bring out severe emotions in an audience, for example a horror film will never be truly successful unless it causes the audience to be both scared and entertained at the same time. It is the main aim of a horror film to be unsettling and cause us to face our fears because this is what keeps us watching you do not get the sense of panic and shock with many films from other genres.
A horror film is defined by all the classic elements used, like for example low lit rooms and creaking doors, these are the horror films genre conventions and there are many of them. These conventions usually include the obvious things like dark iconography for example screaming and blood as well as disturbing characters e.g. monsters, ghosts or zombies.
A convention is something that is typical to the story or narrative of the film you are viewing and the conventions change depending on the genre of the film. Conventions are typically seen in the plot, setting, iconography, theme and characters of the film. For example in horror films the plot will always involve some kind of threat, usually death and if the film does not contain this threat then it would not be classed as a horror. So the conventions in the iconography, characters etc are what make the genre of the film recognisable.
Iconography basically means visual and aural signs so iconography of a film in the horror genre would be elements that when you see or hear them you immediately know that the film you are watching is a horror. One of the most famous pieces of horror iconography would have to be the scream as I don’t believe there will be a single horror film in existence that does not include one. Other common icon conventions include creaking doors, darkness, storms and weapons.
Sometimes the meaning of the iconography you are seeing changes with the context or form of the film for example crucifixes are often used in horror films. On their own crucifixes are a sign of god but when put in the context of a scary film a crucifix is usually used or thought of as a weapon for fighting evil. There are lots more very common icon conventions of horror films but some films can contain a lot if not all of them and not be classed as a horror. For example The Mummy (1999, directed by Stephen Sommers) contains blood, a crucifix, an antagonist in the form of a supernatural monster, death and plenty of threat yet it is classed as an action adventure rather than a horror. This will be because although it contains a lot of horror conventions it will contain a lot more conventions of the action/adventure film.
The characters of a horror film are also very typical of the genre there are not many characters that you would not expect to see. Your average horror film will contain an antagonist that is some kind of monster whether it is supernatural i.e. a dead person or ghost, or characters that are completely made up and have no link to reality like vampires and werewolves or it can even be a more realistic source of evil like a masked murderer. Once again characters are a main signifier that you are watching a horror film, if there is a monster in the script then chances are the film will be a horror. Although a lot of horror films contain supernatural monsters like Bram Stokers Dracula (1993, directed by Francis Ford Coppola) and An American Werewolf in London (1981, directed by John Landis) more and more films are starting to contain a believable antagonist. This in my opinion makes the film scarier as you are given the impression that the events of the film could actually happen. These films usually contain a psycho willing to kill for no real reason like for example in A Texas Chainsaw Massacre (2003, directed by Marcus Nispel) the killer is human but for the sake of the horror genre there is a slight unbelievable twist added that makes the character seem like more of a monster, in this film the character wears a mask made of his victims skin because he is badly deformed, this makes him look scarier and seem like more of a monster because a creepy looking killer is what we expect from a horror film as it is one of the conventions.
Setting choices in horror films can be a lot broader then in other genres like for example in the western your choice of setting is very limited whereas with the horror genre there is a much better choice. The most common horror setting is an abandoned or haunted house (The last house on the left, 1972, directed by Wes Craven) they are used in many horror films meaning it is a very popular horror convention and we as an audience identify with this and any film that contains an isolated house we immediately recognise as a horror. Another common horror setting convention is any isolated area like for example a desolate forest (Wrong Turn, 2003, directed by Rob Schmidt) or a desert (The Hills Have Eyes, 2006, directed by Alexandre Aja) or even a village or town cut off from the rest of the world (Silent Hill, 2006, Christophe Gans). The setting is what brings the rest of the conventions together you can easily have a monster antagonist and horror icon conventions like blood and darkness but if they are placed in the wrong setting they mean nothing.
This works with all the conventions. The setting has to compliment the iconography and the characters have to fit in with the setting. Each of the horror conventions included in the iconography, plot, characters and setting work together to make the film part of the horror genre. Although any film from any genre can contain a few of the conventions like blood and death it’s the films that contain almost all of them that really qualify as being a real horror film.
Word Count: 1,025
Saturday, 2 October 2010
Brief
My brief is to develop an extended sequence from an imagined feature. I will use what I learnt in FM1 such as stylistics and theory in the production of my film sequence to help create meaning and establish the narrative. I will be working as an individual but I can use help from other members of the group and in return I will help them in the making of their own film.
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