Tuesday, 5 May 2015
Thursday, 30 April 2015
Friday, 17 April 2015
Evaluation Screening Feedback
Evaluation screening:
Positive:
Creepy music fits well x9
Effective jump scare x9
Good use of close-ups x2
Intertitles conveyed narrative x4
Good acting
Clear narrative x4
Good sound effects x3
Good editing
Negative:
Can’t hear dialogue x7
Sound levels x3
“Coming soon” intertitles needed
More gore x2
Lack of locations
Saturday, 4 April 2015
Image Analysis (Favourite)
This shallow depth of field shot of Hannibal Lecter is when
he is being questioned through the bars of imprisonment. Straight away we can
say that bars in front of him connote his evil/dangerous behaviour. From
looking at the setting and props of this shot we can assume the mahogany chair
and glass table are connotations of upper-class Englishness. This more comfortable
environment is something you wouldn’t normally see in a prison cell, making him
seems more manipulative and dangerous. The main indications used to show his
psychotic personality is through the use of direct mode of address, expression
and dialogue. His mockery expression and way of talking shows that he is not
bothered about what people think, making him very intimidating to the audience.
Finally through the use of Hannibal the Cannibal they have added historical
context of the real life case of Ed Gein. This has been used to make the film
more realistic and appealing the targeted demographic.
Monday, 30 March 2015
Friday, 27 March 2015
Prop List
Prop List:
-Mask
-Fake Knife
-Fake Blood
We used a mask, as is typical of the genre as we thought it would initially aid an air of mystery to the character and thus make for more of an impact upon the reveal. We use a fake knife for the murder scene and reveal as it too is typical of the horror genre, falling in line with Schatz theory. And we also used fake blood so at to make the piece realistic and aesthetically pleasing for the audience. The rest of props were simply the clothing worn, which we kept consistent throughout re-shooting so as to not ruin the investment in characters.
Stereotypical Fan
Stereotypical Horror Fan
John Smith is an 18
year old student form a working class background. He is a reformer. He wears
dark comfortable clothes, and is not too bothered about fashion. He doesn’t
take life to seriously and is a laid back guy. He works hard at college as he
tries to get the grades for university. He watches a ton of horror films and is
part of the cult classics. He also plays videogames listens and plays rock
music on his guitar and reads a lot of fantasy. He socializes a lot, often
frequenting the local pub where he chills out. He isn’t physically sportive,
instead spending his time working a part-time job to pay for films and his
social life. He likes mainstream horror films, but researches the more gritty
stuff for when he is alone.
Focus Group Screening
Comments from peers:
What did you like about the trailer?
Effective intertitles x11
Variety of shots/angles x8
Good editing x2
Jump scare at the end x12
Storyline was clear x3
Good pacing x3
Good angles
Creepy killer character x3
Creepy setting of forest
What did you think could be improved in the trailer?
Lacked variety of settings
Needs music x15
Needs more scenes x4
Focus more on killer-not victims
Close ups of how scared the victims are
Needs more editing (lighting/sound FX) x3
More dialogue x2
Tuesday, 24 March 2015
Monday, 2 March 2015
Captured (rough cut)
Personally, I think that there are a few aspects that need to be altered to make sure i get the grade i want. We still need to complete filming some scenes but once that's done i think it will start to take shape a lot better.
Friday, 27 February 2015
Mood Board
1. The first image is of Michael Myers from the halloween franchise. He is the typical psycho serial killer. I have included this image as our main villain will be masked in the few scenes his face is shown. We will therefore need a mask that is instantly impacting, and still can’t decide between a basic one such as this or a clown face etc that may add more depth to the character.
2. I have included an image from A Cabin In The Woods to help show our ideal location. We are hoping to shoot in the woods and near old buildings, in isolated locations away from people. This is similar to the cabin in the woods and is one of our inspirations as the isilation and unfamiliar settings will help to unsettle our target audience.
3. The third image is from Blair Witch Project. We have included this imag mainly as refrence to the camera angles. We ar hoping to feature the hand held shaky cam quite a lot, alongside other angles. We hope this will add an air of confussion and dissamay that will, at certain momments, help to build tension as our audience struggle to see the outcome.
4. This is an image from Stephen King’s It. We have used this image as not only are we once again looking at the mask possibilities but this movie deals heavily with psychological horror, something we are keen to explore in our trailer, alongside their well timed jump scares. and building of suspense. This is once agin echoed in king of the ants where the film explores hallucinations and how the strange scenraios are used well to scare the audience.
5. The is an image from Let Me In. This movie deals with how innocence can be exploited through mind games. The main charcter controls men by making them fall in love with her. We have used this as inspiration as we hope to use children in our trailer to shock the audience and in turn appeal to parents who enjoy horrors at the horror itself will strike closer to home.
6. This is our final image. It is of The Woman in Black. We have taken inspiration from this in the form of the fear of the unknown. Our own villain will appear very little and we are more interested in exploiting the fear of his presence rather than possible body horror, so as to in keep with our psychological horror narrative. We are also keen to look at their jump scare momments as they are welll timed and more often than not, catches the audience of guard through stange ways. we wish to replicate this to it full horrific potential.
Thursday, 26 February 2015
Wednesday, 11 February 2015
Magazine cover - Final
I compared my completed horror magazine cover to another professional, well known horror magazine in part 2 of my evaluation.
Friday, 16 January 2015
Class Survey
Personally my favourite horror genre is psychological which is why i chose to base my horror trailer on this. This also means that i will be targeting a wider audience as the survey suggests the majority of people enjoy this particular style.
Thursday, 8 January 2015
Choice of Trailer and Synopsis
Captured: Trailer
Our trailer will be a psychological horror. The first scene will be the stereotypical group of teenagers finding the camera in the woods. We will use an over the shoulder shot to show them watching the footage on the found camera. Also a close up to show the emotion of the teenagers of the horrific footage they have seen. By slowing zooming into the camera when using the over the shoulder shot it will represent that the next scene is of the footage they have seen. The footage seen on the camera will be of a family playing maybe using a few establishing shots to show the location where the children are playing (two young children, 8 and 9 years old and a father) this will than cut to the children hanging on a tree dead. The pace of the trailer will pick up by using a quick montage of the teenagers running and mentally breaking down with the image of the children hanging running through their heads. By using hand held camera shots it will create a feel of panic for the audience watching. The pace will then slow down again showing the tile of the film, CAPTURED, then cutting to a shot of the father pulling a mask over his crying face. Another title of the film release will be shown before using another hand held POV shot of a panicking girl stumbling across a dead body before a jump scare, close up of the killer’s masked face.
Captured: Film Narrative:
A father kills his young children by hanging them whilst filming it, however this psychologically damages the man and turns him insane. Wanting to destroy the footage he travels to a wooded area and throws the camera away. This is then discovered by teenagers camping for the night. After some time has passed the father becomes paranoid someone may find the footage. He backtracks to the woods to find it but finds it in the children’s possession. Slowly he hunts down and kills the children/ witnesses to his own children’s murders before then capturing the final girl. He locks her away but she gets free. She waits for him to return and then slowly beats him down with the original camera. She then exits.
Our trailer will be a psychological horror. The first scene will be the stereotypical group of teenagers finding the camera in the woods. We will use an over the shoulder shot to show them watching the footage on the found camera. Also a close up to show the emotion of the teenagers of the horrific footage they have seen. By slowing zooming into the camera when using the over the shoulder shot it will represent that the next scene is of the footage they have seen. The footage seen on the camera will be of a family playing maybe using a few establishing shots to show the location where the children are playing (two young children, 8 and 9 years old and a father) this will than cut to the children hanging on a tree dead. The pace of the trailer will pick up by using a quick montage of the teenagers running and mentally breaking down with the image of the children hanging running through their heads. By using hand held camera shots it will create a feel of panic for the audience watching. The pace will then slow down again showing the tile of the film, CAPTURED, then cutting to a shot of the father pulling a mask over his crying face. Another title of the film release will be shown before using another hand held POV shot of a panicking girl stumbling across a dead body before a jump scare, close up of the killer’s masked face.
Captured: Film Narrative:
A father kills his young children by hanging them whilst filming it, however this psychologically damages the man and turns him insane. Wanting to destroy the footage he travels to a wooded area and throws the camera away. This is then discovered by teenagers camping for the night. After some time has passed the father becomes paranoid someone may find the footage. He backtracks to the woods to find it but finds it in the children’s possession. Slowly he hunts down and kills the children/ witnesses to his own children’s murders before then capturing the final girl. He locks her away but she gets free. She waits for him to return and then slowly beats him down with the original camera. She then exits.
Class Trailer Review (3)
Name of film: 30
days of night
Year Released: 2007
Genre of film: Horror/Thriller
Mark (after viewing): 9/10
30 days of night’s trailer uses more modern generic horror
conventions to convey the film in the best way possible. There are many
positive aspects to this trailer which is why I think that this trailer works
really well to attract the targeted demographic.
I think overall the structure of the trailer works really
well and there are many different aspects which I could include in my own. A
generic feature which was fulfilled well in this trailer is that it is fast
paced. By keeping the trailer quick using techniques like jump scares and
parallel music, the trailer seems full of impact and will keep the audience
engaged with the trailer. Another aspect they used throughout was the clever
use of collision cutting. By going from
quick to slow scenes it breaks up the quicker scenes and gives a build up to
end to make the final scene as punchy and remember able as possible. They also
used this at the start of the trailer by using a jump scare; this is a common
technique used in horror trailers as It straight away gets the audience’s
attention by making them jump. Finally another aspect which I could include is
the use of intertitles. By having small intertitles throughout it give the
audience rough idea of what the story-line is without giving too much of the
main plot away. I think this is a great technique as it gives the audience a clear
but not obvious insight into the film for them to decide if they want to watch
the whole thing or not.
I could not find many aspects that were unsuccessful in this
trailer but I think there were a few little editing aspects that could have
been altered to make attract the target audience the best way possible, the
main one being the amount of fade-ins/outs. There is a fade out in almost every
clip, even when the clips are really quick. I think that it gets a bit too much
and could make the clips unclear or too quick. Another aspect is the amount of
clips within the trailer. I think it would have had a bigger impact if there
were less clips of narration from the film and more important bits. This would
make the trailer short and snappy. From this I will make sure I don’t make the
same mistakes to get the best results possible.
The trailers average score from the class was 9. I think this is a good score to give
it as it has many generic horror conventions to attract the target audience;
this is also why this trailer got the highest mark out of the all the trailers
reviewed in class.
Class Trailer Review (2)
Name of film: Day
Of The Dead
Year Released: 1985
Genre of film: Horror
Mark (after viewing): 4.5/10
Compared to the other horror trailers this one is seen to be
a controversial trailer as it doesn’t fir the stereotypical conventions of a
horror trailer and may be interpreted as a comedy/horror-meaning the idea may
not come across to the audience as expected.
There are a few aspects of the trailer which I find are
interesting and I could include in my own trailer. Seeing as not much of the narrative is shown,
the trailer is mysterious which might make the audience intrigued to watch the
full movie. Another positive aspect of this trailer is the subtle hints of the
title. Throughout the trailer it relates back to “night” and “dawn” which can
then link to “day”. This would attracts fans of the previous films as they know
what to expect.
Overall there are many aspects of this trailer which I
thought were unsuccessful and would put off the targeted audience. Throughout
the trailer there is an audience in a cinema watching the trailer. Then towards
the end there is a zombie sitting with them. Although this was done for comedy
purposes, I feel as though it doesn’t relate to the film at all; in fact it
sells comedy when there isn’t any comedy in the film. This was a risky move as
it steers away from the target audience and may attract the wrong audience for
this particular genre. Another unsuccessful aspect of this trailer was the
pace. It was too slow throughout and didn’t have a fast paced ending to finish
on. Doing this runs the risk of the trailer not standing out enough to the
targeted audience. Finally, there a voice over through the whole thing which
personally I find is outdated and annoying. I feel that this doesn’t sell the
film the right way at all.
The trailers average score from the class was 4.5. I think it received a score that
low because the trailer wasn’t pitched correctly and didn’t follow enough
horror conventions; this made the trailer not work.
Class Trailer Review (1)
Name of film: Pusher
Trilogy
Year released: 2005
Genre of trailer: Horror/Crime
Mark (After viewing): 8/10
The Pusher Trilogy has a fast paced trailer which includes
montages and highlights of the film to instantly grab the audience’s attention.
I think this works really well next to the genre of the film as it promotes the
film in a quick simplistic way, making the audience want to see more.
There are many aspects of the trailer that I think I could
include within my own, the main factor being the overall speed of the trailer.
By slowly increasing the speed of the montages towards the end, it creates
tension and makes the audience curious as to what the rest of the film is. In
relation to this, by adding dramatic music in sync with the scenes it creates a
bigger impact making the trailer has gained the audiences full acknowledgment.
They have also used quotes from many different organisations and reviewers to
help influence the audience into wanting to see the film that “everyone is
talking about.” I think this is a very good technique as it subconsciously
makes the audience think that it is going to be a good film. This is used a lot
in modern film trailers and is almost always successful.
On the other hand I think some aspects of this trailer might
not have been so successful; the main one being the montages might have been a
bit too quick. Towards the end the montage speeds up so quick that you can
hardly see what is happening. Although this was probably done on purpose it
might defer the audience away from wanting to watch the film. This also ties in
with that I think the overall trailer doesn’t show enough key plot bits; making
the trailer vague and not definitive of what the main story-line is.
The trailers average score from the class was 8. This was lower than my original
personal score of 9 but generally
overall I think everyone agreed that it is a well suited trailer for the niche
genre and it works really well to attract the target demographic.
Solo Trailer Review (3)
Name of film: It
Year released: 1990
Genre of trailer: Psychological
Horror/Drama
Mark (After viewing): 4 /10
To make sure I see a wide range of techniques used throughout
trailers, I decided to choose an older one as it shows how techniques have
changed and improved over the years. This trailer is simply a montage of
various shots within the film edited in a way to make the film look as exciting
to the audience as possible.
I found that there weren’t many positive techniques that I
could pick out from this as it is simply just an edit of clips but a main one
which I could use in my trailer is the use of contrapuntal music. By adding a non-diegetic
song of fair ground music, it creates a spooky feel to the clips making the
audience scared. This is then followed by parallel music alongside quick
editing till the end to build tension but to also create confusion and panic.
Straight away after watching this I found two aspects of the
trailer that I think were unsuccessful and could put off the target audience;
the first one being that there is no narration. I think this is a something
they could have worked on as I feel it is not clear or identifiable what film
is actually about or what the story-line is. Secondly there is a pink banner
around the sides throughout the whole trailer. I think this looks a little bit
tacky and is so bright that it is hard to see what is going on in the scenes of
the trailer.
Overall I think I would give this trailer a 4 as it doesn’t have a very good layout
and just doesn’t give enough detail about the film which could defer the
audience from watching the whole film.
Solo Trailer Review (2)
Name of film: Annabelle
Year released: 2014
Genre of trailer: Horror
Mark (After viewing): 7/10
There is a common trend in technique within modern horrors
trailer and with this being the most recent I can take ideas from the old and
new to make sure my horror trailer is successful. Annabelle is a horror about a
couple experiencing supernatural events after a vintage doll is put in there
house. This is a generic horror narrative making the film have a wider targeted
audience.
A Generic feature which is used well throughout this trailer
is the use of collision cutting. By having slow to quick transitions by using
prolonged darkness, it creates tension and gives a sense of panic and worry to
the audience. By doing this it will make the audience remember the trailer,
making them want to see the full film. They also used intertitles with one
being “Before the Conjuring”. Because this is a prequel to The Conjuring it straight away is targeting the demographic of that
film. This is always a good way to attract the right audience. Finally another
great feature that was fulfilled well was the use of contrapuntal music. By
adding non-diegetic children’s music over the top of a low-key lighting shot, it
creates an eerie feel to the trailer making the audience scared.
However, I think there are many unsuccessful aspects which
drag the trailer down. After watching I straight away thought that it gives too
much of the storyline away. I want to make sure I avoid doing this in my
trailer as I feel it can make the trailer too long and is not punchy enough for
the audience to remember the trailer. From making this mistake it could lead to
losing the audience’s attention or them being disappointed when watching the
whole film.
Overall I think I would give this trailer 7 as I think it is effective but could
have been a little shorter and less narrative.
Wednesday, 7 January 2015
Solo Trailer Review (1)
Name of
film: The Women in Black: Angel of Death
Year released: 2015
Genre of
trailer: Drama/Horror/Thriller
Mark (After viewing): 8/10
I chose to use this trailer as part of my research as it is
a hybrid genre and seeing as it’s only a 15 certificate it has a very wide
target audience. The trailer shows the rough narrative of the film and has key
features of the film to make the audience jump and to make them remember the
trailer so they watch the film.
There are some clever and interesting aspects of the trailer
which I think were done well and I could do in my own trailer. The obvious one
that I could use in my own is the use of parallel music; this helps to build
tension within the scenes and to emphasise the eerie theme of the film. Another
common technique that they used is establishing shots at the start. This is not
just to set the historical context of the film (WWII), but is also to slowly
entice the audience into thinking that it is a drama/romantic film. I think
they have purposely done this to attract a wider audience as lots of people
enjoy dramas. Finally they used a generic horror technique of a jump-scare at
the end. By doing this and other things like prolonged silences and darkness,
it creates confusion and fear to the audience which will in theory make them
want to watch the film.
There is only one aspect of the trailer that I thought was
unsuccessful that might put off its target audience and that is the beginning
of the trailer. There are no indications that the film is a horror at the
beginning. By doing this it could possibly steer away audiences that are fans
of horror as they might think it’s not a horror film or might think it’s
boring. If I was to change I would make the start shorter as I think it might
be a bit long-winded and could bore the audience.
Overall I gave the trailer a 9 as I think it is really well structured and follows generic
horror conventions to make sure the audience want to see the whole film.
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