Wednesday 20 October 2010

Post 7: Additional Pre-production Documentation

This is our risk assement me inspected the area and analyised the risk
This is our Shooting Schedule, we found out what days our location was free and planned when it would be a good time to shoot.








































This is our cast and crew/ props and costume list, we look at our location to see what props we already had avaiable the thought about that a real doctors surgery would look like and though up of external props.

 
This is our location recce, we went to the location and took pictures to look like yuo could see the whole area of the location we were planning on using.




Mise-en-scene Description

Set Design/ Location
Our preliminary task is set in an office in the school, we choose this office because it’s small like a doctor’s office, and it has dark blue carpet and cream walls and 2 windows that create a natural lit environment also coming from the fire exit door.

Lightening
There was natural lightening coming through the back two windows and the fire exit door and the natural lightening from the corridor when the door was open and through the windows in the door. We used the lights which were on the ceiling running vertically down with 3 lights parallel each side of the ceiling this produced artificial light.

Props
 We had a desk with a computer on it and lots of files to create a realistic image of a doctors office, there was a chair in front of the desk for the patient and chair behind the desk for the doctor.

Costume
MARC= black trousers stripped shirt with tie and a dark cardigan with smart black shoes.
CHLOE= Fur coat dark peach top with leggings and tanned boots.
We chose these costumes so that marc looked smart like a doctor and Chloe looked casual like a patient.

Hair and makeup
MARC= hair, N/A. Makeup N/A
CHLOE= hair, natural.  Makeup natural
We kept the hair and makeup very basic as marc needs to look working class and Chloe is an ill patient.

Character Movement
Chloe enters the room by knocking on the door and entering the room; she walks to the chair and sits down. Marc starts dialogue with Chloe by asking her how she is feeling today the have a discussion about Chloe’s results; marc tells Chloe she is terminally ill. Chloe breaks down into tears and gets up and leaves the room shutting the door behind her.
















Post 4: Script Writing



This is my annotated Script





There are some contiunity issues with our script. The first problem is in the stage directions, Chloe knocks on the door this will need to look exactly the same and the same postion everytime we film this shot to ensure the shot doesnt look jumping in the finished product. Another section of the scipt where we might have problems with contiunity is with chloe crying, this part of the script is being shot from behind Chloe and infront, to insure it looks good in the final product we will have to make sure that all the movements are the same and that whatever actions Chloe makes will be repeated in the next shot of this certain shot.

Friday 15 October 2010

Post 5: jump Cuts, Over-the-Shoulder Shots, Cutaways and Point of View Shots

Definitions

Jump Cut: A cut to later action from one filmed scene to the next, creating an effect of discontinuity or acceleration.
Over-Shoulder-Shot: In film or video, an over the shoulder shot (also over shoulder, OS, OTS, or third-person shot) is a shot of someone or something taken over the shoulder of another person. The back of the shoulder and head of this person is used to frame the image of whatever (or whomever) the camera is pointing toward
Cutaway: A brief shot that interrupts the main action of a film, often to depict related matter or supposedly concurrent action.
Point of view shot: (also known as POV shot or a subjective camera) is a short film scene that shows what a character (the subject) is looking at (represented through the camera). It is usually established by being positioned between a shot of a character looking at something, and a shot showing the character's reaction (see shot reverse shot). The technique of POV is one of the foundations of film editing.


over shoulder shot




jump cut shot




Cutaway shot





point of view shots