Monday, 23 May 2016

Ripper

A short film by James Campbell. Kaan Kurt, late of this parish, was one of the sound recordists.

Closure




Closure, a short documentary made by Northern Stars Documentary Academy, produced by our own Lauren Johnson (currently Y11), was voted best film in the Professionally Supported Factual Category at the Royal Television Society awards last Thursday

Thursday, 17 March 2016

AS Revision

Film Distribution

A2 Planning and Evaluation - with some theory chucked in for good measure...


A2 Planning
 
Planning needs to be thorough and show clear and excellent evidence of research into existing media products. Where possible, link relevant material on the Internet to your work.
 
Your blog needs to be a media production in itself, so you need to include the trailer or music videos you’ve analysed via YouTube or some other moving image file-sharing site. I know we can’t see that at school, but you can do it at home. You should also upload your music track – and others you have considered. 
 
If you want to put a play list on (of stuff you like – this doesn’t have to be relevant to the project, but it could be), feel free. The more the blog looks less like an essay with a few pictures, the better. Try http://www.ehow.com/how_2227764_layout-widgets-playlist-blogger-account.html or http://pera-sa-internet.blogspot.com/2009/06/how-to-put-or-add-playlist-on-blogger.html or http://www.google.com/support/blogger/bin/answer.py?hl=en&answer=80259. There are plenty of other sites that offer advice and help, but don’t expect to be able to access them all at school and because of copyright issues, you might not have access to as wide a range of songs as you’d like – though there are ways around this, such as creating your own site to host the songs.
 
You should each have analysed at least two of the media products you’re creating, including those for your ancillary task. If you’re in a group, don’t analyse the same products.
 
Storyboards and flat plans must be scanned and included on the blog with relevant comments about layout and revisions etc. There’s no rule about what kind of digipack you use (reference sites like http://www.duplication.ca/printspecs/digipack.htm), but be consistent within your group – unless one of you wants to produce a limited edition – and produce variants of the cover in that particular style. Song titles can exist ones. 
 
Compose a synopsis of the film you’ve made the trailer for; outline the story behind your video; transcribe the lyrics of the song explaining how they inspired you.
 
You should show that you’ve attempted to contact the record label that owns the music track (for trailer of music DVD) to ask their permission. You may not get a reply, but you can post the email that you sent on the blog. Explain that it’s for a school project and that you’ll send them a copy of the finished article as a matter of courtesy.
 
You must be able to show that you have edited your work – moving images and still – so reflect this (with images) in your planning and EXPLAIN why. The examiners will want to see the thought process behind such decisions. Try to be sophisticated about this – don’t just say you thought it looked better, even if you did.
 
Produce a profile of your ideal target audience member. Of course, you can make this up (name included), but you’ll need to suggest interests etc that fit in with what you’re doing and suggest they have enough disposable income to buy CDs, DVDs, downloads, go to gigs, wear the right clothes etc. Those of you who’ve done mood boards in art could do one for a target audience profile e.g. http://mediafoundationportfolio.blogspot.com/2009/12/crank-music-magazine-audience-profile.html
 
To break up the blog, you should include some direct to camera pieces, preferably featuring you, but at the very least, you could film interviews members of your intended audience giving feedback on the finished product. This will get better marks.
 
You should link to any useful examples of work or theory you come across and anything worthwhile in the sidebar of http://heworthmediastudies.blogspot.com/. You can change the layout of your blog and create a poll (in gadgets) that you ask (i.e. force) people to fill in as part of the feedback; you should enable comments – you can, after all, delete anything you don’t like; you should create a profile for yourself with a picture and enable followers, encouraging other people in the class to follow your blog – it’s no worse than Facebook and it’ll look as if you’re taking the blog seriously and it may get you higher marks.
 
Outtakes, even (especially?) embarrassing ones, should be uploaded as an extra track on the DVD and onto the blog.
 
A2 Evaluation
 
They can be bullet-pointed in places and you MUST address the following questions, so don’t write the whole thing in one lump and expect the examiners (or us) to sift through it and work out what’s what. Make it as easy as possible for the examiner!
  
  • In what ways does your media product use, develop or challenge forms and conventions of real media products?
 Your product may well have done a little of each. Clearly, you need to refer here to the existing products that you researched and analysed, referencing them against what you have done, explaining why you have followed (or otherwise) the conventions). You must refer to your ancillary product as well as the main one.
 
This next point isn’t a question but you would do well to consider it under the first point or the seconds – or a bit of both…
  
How did you attract/address your audience? You need references to theory here – Naomi Wolf, Marjorie Ferguson, Uses and Gratifications - you are exploiting the theory of Uses and Gratifications because your target audience will identify (though it may only be wishful thinking) with the lifestyle it promotes. Some of you have used people of a similar age to your audience to add to this appeal. Your audience will look to your product for a sense of personal identity and possibly aspire to be like some of the people featured or their lives and problems may reflect the lives and problems of people you know. Your theories need dates. Google them 
  
  • How effective is the combination of your main product and ancillary texts?
  You need to consider what you’ve learned about the way the media produce, distribute and share material. You need to consider the synergy between the products and remember, your work will constitute only part of a promotional campaign for the product/artist and you will need to stress how this works – i.e. the need to buy advertising on television or radio; the need to have a PR department that can push your artist to radio and TV stations so they can get airtime and their work played; the use of the kind of posters and print advertising you see in magazines and billboards. Your artist or movie will have a website created by the production which will feature song samples, trailers, video extracts, photographs, interviews, features, competitions, opportunities for fans to air their views so they feel they are being given some kind of ownership of the product so they’ll be more likely to buy it. You will absolutely definitely need to say in the age of Media 2.0 that you world will be promoted virally on the Internet and on mobile phones, particularly as your target audience is of an age range that favours this kind of technology. You might release your work in advance to specific outlets – e.g. exclusive music video on…? Or how about a teaser trailer campaign leading up to a special screening of the movie (or even just the trailer) to a popular horror site like http://www.bloody-disgusting.com/ so they can post reviews that you can feature on the trailer? Or arrange for the trailer to be shown with popular movies in the same genre. Your movie may be low budget, but so was Paranormal Activity and this is what the filmmakers did there. Google Paranormal Activity and see the way it was promoted and became the success it is. See http://movie-critics.ew.com/2009/10/07/paranormal-activity-marketing-campaign/. http://www.chud.com/articles/articles/21095/1/PARANORMAL-ACTIVITY039S-MARKETING-HAUNTED-BY-THE-GHOST-OF-WILLIAM-CASTLE/Page1.html. You would hope this kind of publicity and releasing the trailer on YouTube would lead to the word being spread on the internet, especially amongst horror fan sites and blogs and influential message board sites like http://www.aintitcool.com/. However effective the combination is, you need to point out that what you’re doing would only constitute part of a larger campaign. Even if most people download music, people who do this still make use of cover art (which comes with the download anyhow, so the cover art is still relevant in the age of downloading. You are providing cultural meaning for the music/film trailer through commercial images and aesthetics. 
 
Where possible link to real-life products and campaigns.  
  • What have you learned from your audience feedback?  
You need to devise another questionnaire to help you with this - one that you could post on your blog. Is your audience one stable and easily identifiable group? Has the audience reacted in the way you expected? What has it found particularly effective about the product (include both tasks)? Why is feedback important in the media industry; how has it helped you construct your productions and how could you learn from feedback after the production is finished?   
  • How did you use new media technologies in the construction and research, planning and evaluation stages?  
It’s important you consider the blog itself as a media production. Unlike previous years, you are not just creating a production that will only bee seen by colleagues, teachers and examiners – you have actually published your work on the web where an audience of millions can see it. Using your blog, you have self-published and some, perhaps even many, of your audience is capable of doing the same, thus breaking down the idea of what constitutes an audience. New digital media “have fundamentally changed the ways in which we engage with all the media” (David Gauntlett, 2007).
 
You also need to talk about your use of cameras and still and moving image editing software to create your media production, giving some specific examples of how and why you constructed particular images or scenes, texts, edits and so on, to reach your target audience. 
 
Finally, some key points: 
 
From past experience, don’t be too critical of yourself. If you say, “I could’ve cut out a particular photograph better,” my reaction would be: “Do it now and don’t be so complacent.” If you say, “I didn’t have enough time to do such and such,” then it’s clear evidence you’ve wasted time and you’ll be docked marks. In other words, if there’s anything you haven’t done, get it done now – and quickly.
  
This response MUST be illustrated all the way through with examples from your work or existing product when you make reference to it. If you don’t illustrate it, you won’t get a mark of C or above and we will be reluctant to enter it in case it results in the marks of the other students being pulled down. 
 
If you’ve worked as a group, your contribution and that of your partners must be made clear.  
 
You MUST use subject specific terminology – i.e. using the correct terms when writing about the processes you went through on iMovie or Photoshop; talking about the camera angles/distances correctly/ discussing conventions and what colours etc have connotations of, especially in terms of your target audience. 
 
Ensure that you haven’t used ANY images that you’ve downloaded from the internet; this includes backgrounds or background patterns. 
 
www.emusu.com - a promotion and digital distribution resource. It will help you consider your music promotion work in the digital age 
 
Genre quotes:  
 
(Tom Ryall, 1998) “patterns/styles/structures which transcend individual films, and which supervise both their construction by the film-maker and their reading by an audience” 
 
Steve Neale (1990) argues that Hollywood’s generic regime guarantees meanings and pleasures for audiences 
 
Neale (1980)- much of the pleasure of popular cinema lies in the process of “difference in repetition” – i.e. recognition of familiar elements and in the way those elements might be orchestrated in an unfamiliar fashion or in the way that unfamiliar elements might be introduced e.g. Scream and its sequels: certain elements are similar in all three films, yet new ideas and material are incorporated into each sequel. 
 
Neale (1990) – Genre is constituted by “specific systems of expectations and hypothesis which spectators bring with them to the cinema and which interact with the films themselves during the course of the viewing process.”
  
Jonathan Culler (1978) – generic conventions exist to establish a contract between and deviation from the accepted modes of intelligibility. Acts of communication are rendered intelligible only within the context of a shared conventional framework of expression.  
 
Ryall (1998) sees this framework provided by the generic system; therefore, genre becomes a cognitive repository of images, sounds, stories, characters, and expectations.
  
Genre has come to represent, as John Fiske (1988) has said, “attempts to structure some order into the wide range of texts and meanings that circulate in our culture for the convenience of both producers and audiences.” 
 
Music video quotes
 
“They now provide pictures for the songs in our heads. Goodbye, imagination… No need to think, to embellish, to create, to imagine.” (Joe Salzman, 2000) 
 
“Often, music videos will cut between a narrative and a performance of the song by the band… Sometimes, the artist… will be a part of the story, acting as narrator and participant at the same time. But it is the lip-synch close-up and the miming of playing instruments that remains at the heart of music videos, as if to assure us that the band really can kick it.” (Steve Archer, 2004) 
 
The presence of women is often solely for the purposes of display and the purpose of this display is to facilitate a voyeuristic response in the spectators, which presumes a male gaze, regardless of the actual gender of the spectator i.e. a powerful and controlling gaze at the female, who is on display and is, therefore, objectified and passive - paraphrasing Laura Mulvey (1975). 
 
“Is the female flesh on display simply a cynical; exploitation of the female body to increase (predominantly) male profit margins, or a life-enhancing assertion of female self-confidence and sexual independence?” (Pete Fraser, 2005) 
 
  • There is a relationship between the lyrics and the visuals (with visuals either illustrating, amplifying or contradicting the lyrics).
  • There is a relationship between the music and the visuals (again with visuals either illustrating, amplifying or contradicting the music).
  • Particular music genres may have their own music style and iconography (such as live stage performance in heavy rock).
  • There is a demand on the part of the record company for lots of close-ups of the main artist/vocalist.
  • The artist may develop their own star iconography, in and out of their videos, which, over time, becomes part of their star image.
  • There is likely to be reference to voyeurism, particularly in the treatment of women, but also in terms of looking (screens within screens, binoculars, cameras etc).
  • There are likely to be intertextual references, either to other music videos or to films and TV texts.  
(Andrew Goodwin, 1992) 

Monday, 11 January 2016

Northern Stars Film Academy

For the fourth year running, a student from Heworth was successful in gaining admission to the Northern Stars at the Tyneside Cinema


Northern Stars Documentary Film Academy to hold gala screening
Tyneside Cinema and intu will play host to the Northern Stars Documentary Film Academy gala screening featuring work by teenagers

Gordon Barr
9 December 2015

Northern Stars Documentary Academy students working at the Tyneside Cinema

Teenage filmmakers from the region will get their chance to shine next week.

Newcastle’s Tyneside Cinema and intu will present the premiere of four short documentaries made by young filmmakers at the Northern Stars Documentary Film Academy.

The films will be shown at a screening for family and friends at the Cinema on Wednesday, December 16.

Over the autumn of 2015, 15 young people aged 15 to19 from across the North East took part in the free programme of workshops at Tyneside Cinema, which gave participants the chance to work with leading industry professionals and gain hands-on experience of directing, producing and editing their own short documentaries.

This year Tyneside Cinema partnered with Freedom City 2017, a programme that marks the 50th anniversary of Dr Martin Luther King Jr being awarded an honorary degree from Newcastle University, and aims to empower and inspire a new generation, stimulate academic debate and an create artistic response to the themes of his speech – war, poverty and racism.

The filmmakers were asked to respond to a challenge from Freedom City 2017 to use the themes as a starting point to create their work.

The four resulting films include a portrait of worker from SSI in Redcar who has lost her job, the experiences of a refugee from Liberia who has settled in the North East, and a volunteer whose personal experiences led her to work with disadvantaged communities in Newcastle .

Mark Dobson, Tyneside Cinema’s Chief Executive said: “The young filmmakers have worked exceptionally hard over the autumn to create four fantastic and inspiring short films, and we’re very proud to present their premiere at Tyneside Cinema.

“This is the third year of the Northern Stars Documentary Film Academy, and we’re incredibly grateful to intu for their ongoing support, which has and will continue to enable us to provide this free opportunity for even more young people in the North East to learn new skills.”
rved


The Northern Stars Documentary Film Academy has been made possible by the support of Intu Properties plc, who co-own intu Eldon Square in Newcastle and intu Metrocentre in Gateshead .

Their partnership with Tyneside Cinema began in 2012, when intu Eldon Square offered the Cinema an unprecedented opportunity to create a unique filmmaking facility in a shop unit on High Friars.

The local success of Pop-Up Film School led intu to look at other partnership opportunities with the Cinema and the resulting development in 2013 of the Northern Stars Documentary Film Academy is now a key part of intu’s corporate responsibility strategy, focusing on support for young people in the North East.

Alexander Nicoll, intu Corporate Responsibility Director, added: “I am very pleased with our partnership with Tyneside Cinema over the last two years and am glad we can support the young documentary filmmakers again in 2016.

“The quality and originality of the films made by young filmmakers since we started supporting this initiative back in 2013 has been outstanding and award-winning.

“The annual screening premiere is a very special occasion for all involved in supporting these talented young people from across the North East and is, of course, a well-deserved celebration for them.”


http://www.chroniclelive.co.uk/whats-on/film-news/northern-stars-documentary-film-academy-10571460