Tuesday, 13 December 2016

I am a huge fan of Wes Anderson's POV shots he uses in films. I really want to adapt this style for the beginning of the film when the main protagonist prepares his equipment, I feel this shot would fit this scene the best aesthetically.
Youtube Film maker, Casey Neistat also uses the same type of shot in many of his videos, most notably in his short vlog 'Fat and Lazy', where he uses this shot and some drawings to explain his daily routine.
This video shows Casey Neistat's 'wildly functional studio'. At 04:50, Casey shows his homemade POV camera system, by using a plank of wood with a camera attached to it hanging from a pallet, and a clamp to adjust the camera's view from above, I could this simple filming technique when creating these shots.

Costume ideas

After some research for costumes for my short film, I found many modern pagan organisations from all over Europe. We will take inspiration from their costumes for our film creating our own.
This costumes mainly involves using animal fur and masks created from animal bones. 
I am thinking of using a cow skull to incorperate in to a mask. And different colours of fur mixed into one costume.

This costume inspires me to incorperate straw in to one of the costumes, to do this I will need to create separate sections for each limb and then join them together. I have an idea in my head of creating a straw kilt/skirt for one of my costumes, using thick brown rope as a belt.



The costumes has some sort of shells or stones tied through a string hanging from the clothing. I want to emulate this effect for a costume, to do this I will drill small holes through multiple sea shells, then put string through them tying a knot at the bottom of the strings, If i create around 30 1 meter strings, this could easily make do for a pagan style costume.

Monday, 3 October 2016

Genre Analysis (Mockumentary)

A Mockumentary can be a short film, television show or feature film which looks and sounds like a real life factual documentary when it is actually fictional, basically a fictional documentary. 
The codes and conventions of a Mockumentary:

  • They use the same codes and conventions as a Documentary. A narrator throughout, footage of events, photographs and interviews with 'specialists' or 'witnesses'.
  • Interviewee is commonly placed to the left or the right of the screen, with a medium close up shot on them, although close ups or even extreme close ups are used to convey emotion when strong points are made by the interviewee.
  • Establishing shots range differently but usually tend to show the place where the documentary is based.
  • Archival photos used in docs are used with zooms in and out of the main focus of the photo.
  • Archival videos are also used as well to explain the documentary more.
  • Mise En Scene in the background of the interviews usually tends to be on the subject or same theme as the documentary

Tuesday, 20 September 2016

Applying narrative theory to short films

When applying narrative theories to short films in particular, it is quite difficult to fully put forward Propp's theory of the 8 characters as from looking at the codes and conventions of short films, the amount of characters tends to be quite low. The narrative theorist Tzvetin Todorov's take on narrative is one that can be applied to a wide range of short films. One of the short films I watched called 'Where You Are' uses sections of Todorov's thesis on narrative well.

<iframe src="https://player.vimeo.com/video/180000452" width="640" height="360" frameborder="0" webkitallowfullscreen mozallowfullscreen allowfullscreen></iframe>
<p><a href="https://vimeo.com/180000452">Where You Are</a> from <a href="https://vimeo.com/user28501454">Graham Parkes</a> on <a href="https://vimeo.com">Vimeo</a>.</p>

The beginning of the short film or the equilibrium shows a mother and son playing hide and go seek together. The mother plays along with her son as he hides, she knows that he has hidden in the red hamper in the room yet she plays along checking other places in the room to finally come and catch her son in the hamper. All is normal until she goes to the hamper where she seen her son, and when she opens it up, he is gone.

The disequilibrium comes in to play, the mother is so confused and begins to panic, going through the rooms of the house to look for her missing son, in each room she goes into something very unnatural is happening, a chaotic wide shot shows the mother's husband sat at a table covered in paint acting like everything is normal while the mother is even more confused. The mother keeps on looking for her son, she goes upstairs to his discover his new oddly decorated room to see him but he is 10 years older. The scenes get even more bizarre and intense as her son runs off and she keeps searching for him, she ends up in an under-construction housing estate where nothing but disruption is taking place; people fighting, men in cages, slaves and her son sitting on a makeshift throne on a pile of rubble inciting a fight from down below. Things spiral even more out of the ordinary when after her son runs away again, she searches to find him and when she does, he is a fully grown man moving out of the home where he once lived.

The resolution comes internally with the mother as all of her fears of what her son is up to conclude with pride in what her son has become. She sees her son as a man moving out with his partner, starting his own new life and he is fine, this relieves the mother of all of the terrible thoughts in her head. The mother tells her son 'I love you James' 

Some elements of Todorov's theory do not apply to this short film, but the new equilibrium is still a feature. At the end of the film the son comes back out of the red hamper and is reunited as a child from the beginning, The new equilibrium. 

In applying Strauss' narrative theory to Where You Are innocence vs bad behaviour is contrasted, where the mother has the idea in her head that her son is being bad behaved as she goes into her head imagining all of the worst things he could possibly do, but in the end she comes back to the reality that her son is still just an innocent young boy.

Codes, Conventions and Patterns in Short Films.


Short Film- A film that is not long enough to be considered a full-length feature film. The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences defines a short film as an original motion picture with a running time of 40 minutes or less.


OPENINGS


After watching a few short films, I have realised that some of them follow similar patterns and structures, for example, the first pattern I picked up on is that many of these short films get straight in to point and are filmed in a way that it seems mid scene. I also grasped a firm impression on the character quicker than I would in a full-length film, as a full-length has more time to build up a character progressively. Short films tend to begin with a title straight away within the first 15 seconds where as most films' titles' are shown after the opening scene, or ending. This reinforces my point how short films get straight to the point. Here is examples of a few short films I watched which began with the title.


 A Short Film I watched called 'Where You Are' by Graham Parkes begins with the title then a mother and son in mid conversation. With no narration or build up we are put straight into the scene, firstly hearing a part of their conversation which is the main theme of the short film. This scene is continued at the end of the Short Film


This pattern continues. When I watched 'Stryka' by Emily Carmichael, the opening scene for this shows 3 people sitting where one begins to laugh, again we are shot in to the middle of a scene where we don't know what happened but we're in the moment. The ending of Stryka is a continuation of the opening also.
CHARACTERS
Short films tend to have a small variety of main characters. The fact that these films are what they are (short), means that there isn't enough time to delve in to more that 2 or 3 characters. If there were more than 3 characters, it wouldn't allow the viewer to relate to all of the characters in the short amount of time that is a short film. Short films usually tend to have one main protagonist throughout the film. For Example, "Lonely Planet" by Alex Burunova only has 2 main characters in the short film, with the girl being the main.
LENGTH
Anything over 40 minutes would be considered a feature film. Short films usually last 5-10 minutes, but can be longer.
"Lonely Planet" - 24 minutes
"Killer" - 20 minutes
"Where You Are" - 13 minutes

BUDGET
Most short films would tend to have a low budget, reason being that most short film makers are independent. Many actors in short films are amateur actors, so they wouldn't be expecting a high payment. As well as having to pay the actors, directors and producers also need to get payed, this 'Budget Breakdown' shows the actors, producers and directors being payed hourly for a relatively cheap price in comparison to full feature films. The Breakdown also shows the costs of props, equipment and location rental. There are a lot of factors involved in creating a short film, but a lot less than a full feature film. The grand total shown for this certain film was £571.50, which is quite cheap compared to full feature films.

TWIST
Short films tend to have a twist or at least an element of the film that is completely extraordinary. The endings of short films are usually clever and leave a message to the viewer. In the short film 'Black Hole', the main protagonist gets more than he bargained  for and this was conveyed in a very smart way, with a message telling the audience that being greedy is immoral.