Tuesday, 5 November 2013

Draft call sheet


Call sheet

Title of page: AS Media Studies Call Sheet for (...)
Track: ...
Length: ......
Shoot Date:
Location: Paddington station
                London
                Praed Street, London
                W2 1RH
Crew: Thomas Stevens
Crew: George Flack
Crew: Kate Bradford
Crew: Charlie Myers
Camera equipments: ...
Lighting equipments: ...
Props: ....
Wardrobe: .....
Wardrobe: ......
Wardrobe: .......
Wardrobe: .......

Prop list

A briefcase, package (box), brown paper, string, trench coat x5, an old car, a handbag, heels, fedora, cigarette

Wednesday, 16 October 2013

Action adventure analysis

SHERLOCK HOLMES A GAME OF SHADOWS

The genre of this film is a crime and action and adventure hybrid.  This can be guessed from the suspense, conflict and from the fact that it is Sherlock Holmes.

In the extract there is not as much conflict and combat as in other film openings.  But there is enough to get the audience engaged and interested in the film.  For example in the very opening of the film Doctor Watson is giving a narrative of what year the film is based and what is happening in the world at the time.  Then the action begins by a street and tent filled with people blowing up.

The suspense in this film is shown straight from the beginning.  The first part of this is who is blowing up all these places the anarchists, the nationalists or the other unknown party.  The second part is a parcel, simply that is it we see the bottom half a man and a parcel in his hand, which he then gives to another passer by.  The suspense in this part who is the new recipient and what is in the parcel.  All of which gets revealed later in the film.

The hero is mentioned early on in the extract but he is not seen until near the end and even then he doesn't look like himself.  The hero of course is Sherlock Holmes.  He might not be described as the typical hero, but he is most definitely a hero.  He is shown to be the typical hero by being described by his friend as kind of different to other people.  There isn't much else to go on in this short extract to show that he is the hero of the film. 

Wednesday, 9 October 2013

09/10/13 RESEARCH: LOCATION

production log

09/10/13

In the lesson today we were looking at different locations we could possibly film in for the opening.  Since we had discussed the possibility of using an old fashioned train and a train station I was looking in to places that still had old steam trains running for day trips or really just for any reason and I managed to find two places which could be good.  I found them because I had all ready been to them once before.  The places that I found where the bluebell railway and the watercress line both of which are close enough that the whole group can get there to film and they both have old fashioned steam trains that still work.

http://www.bluebell-railway.co.uk/


http://www.watercressline.co.uk/?jssCart=f174cdd2a07d851afcbc5b15a513be82

We also did some other research into places that were in the train stations that we though in filming in such as buildings that where in Paddington station to see if they were suitable to film in the only problem with that is getting permission to film there.  We will work on that when we get to it

09/10/13 RESEARCH: FILM NOIR

I used these books to do some research into film noir and what we were going to do for the film opening and from these books I noticed that the key things with film noir are

  • low key black and white visual style
  • roots in German expressionist cinematography
  • derives from crime fiction of US Great Depression
  • central figure often an private eye (THE BIG SLEEP 1946)
  • or a plain clothed police man (THE BIG HEAT)
  • an ageing boxer (THE SET-UP)
  • a hapless grifter (NIGHT AND THE CITY)
  • or simply a victim if circumstance (D.O.A)
  • film noir nearly always have a strong female character who resist and disturb the male ordered world
  • gives us pleasure by making us uncomfortable: anxiety vulnerability and fright are all part of the thrill
  • characters faces often partially shadowed to create hidden threatening spaces
  • often sleazy, milieu of claustrophobic alley ways or destered spaces alternating with gaudy night clubs and swank apartments
  • high contrast lighting

Tuesday, 8 October 2013

08/10/13 PLANNING: LOCATION

Production Log

08/10/13 single lesson

In the lesson we carried on with writing the treatment which we started in the last lesson.  When we got to the end we looked back over the treatment to see if there were any parts that didn't make sense or could be improved upon.  After we had looked over this we decided to start discussing locations for where we could possibly film the opening and what would be happening in each of the scenes.  We decided to look up old looking train stations to see which one would go best with our time period.  We looked at using Paddington station and also St Pancras.  We decided on having it that we possibly use the outside of St Pancras and the inside of Paddingto.

08/10/2013 PLANNING: TREATMENT

Film Noir Treatment

The film opens with a CU of a hand wrapping a package of a box wrapped in brown paper tied with frayed string.

Cut to the outside of ST PANCRAS STATION of a YOUNG WOMAN.  She wears an iridescent tan trench coat tied at the wait with her hair tightly crimpled into a bun.  Cut to the inside of the station.  A train departs from the station signalling this by the WHISTLE and HORN of the train.  There after the young woman walks along the platform of the station with a small tan leather handbag hanging from her right hand, carrying a package covered in brown paper with white string tied around in her other hand.  The CLIP-CLOP of the young woman's HEELS is heard.  News of a murder is depicted.

A SUSPICIOUS LOOKING YOUNG MAN  walks behind the young woman.  He wears a light tan trench coat with a dark coloured fedora on his head.  The young woman drops the parcel from her left hand and falls on the ground.  THE young man picks up the parcel off the ground of the station.

Cut away shot to THREE MIDDLE AGED MEN wearing dark trench coats and fawn coloured fedoras acting furtiverly.  One of the men throws a cigarette butt onto the ground and stamps his foot on it to put it out.

THE young woman walks out of the stations with the man following behind her.  She approaches a vintage car parked outside the stations;she gets into the car with help of the DRIVER who opens the door for her.  The woman notices that the driver isn't her normal driver and asks where her usual driver is, followed by the CAR DOORS LOCKING.

Next, the THREE MIDDLE AGED MEN are seen discussing a newsworthy, debatable topic.  While discussing, the three men are pushing around a picture of the young woman seen earlier in the opening and portray a reflection of mysteriousness amongst them.  It then pans back to the young woman in the back seat of the car.  Followed by the loud sound of a GUN SHOT.

Thursday, 3 October 2013

02/10/13 RESEARCH/PLANNING: TREATMENT

production log

02/10/2013 double lesson

I started the lesson by checking my blog and editing previous posts with print screens and hyperlinks.  After I had done that we got into our groups and started to work on our treatment.  We started by doing our own research into what a treatment was and then collating all the data back to the rest of our group.  We then started to discuss some of the finer details about the treatment before we typed it up.  We discussed things like camera angles, background music, props and filming locations the more of which we will do in the next lesson.  We then went onto one of the macs and started to type out the treatment.  We had to keep going back and changing things because we either thought of something better or we decided that something didn't need to be there.

Tuesday, 1 October 2013

01/10/13 PLANNING: TIME, PROPS AND STORYBOARD

production log 01/10/2013

Single lesson

In the lesson today we discussed what time period the film opening would be based.  We discussed it for a while and had to decide between it being based in the 1920's or the 1940's in the end we decided that the movie opening would be in the 1940's.  We then started to discuss what props we would need to get for the opening.  All that is needed to be done now is the storyboard, to actually get the props work out were we are going to need to go to film and then I believe we can start filming.

Sunday, 29 September 2013

29/09/13 RESEARCH: SCOOP IT

Scoop it: film noir

I did research into film noir and all the information i found I put onto a scoop it page.  I found websites completely dedicated to film noir and then others that had parts to film noir but I put them all on to scoop it

http://www.scoop.it/t/film-noir-by-thomas-stevens/curate

Scoop it: thriller codes and conventions

I also created a scoop it page for the codes and conventions of the thriller genre.  It contained info about the genre and what people believe are the codes and conventions of the genre

http://www.scoop.it/t/thriller-codes-and-conventions/

Wednesday, 25 September 2013

25/09/13 RESEARCH/PLANNING: FILM NOIR AND PROPS

Production log 25/09/2013

Double lesson

Today I started by going through some film openings which I had watched from a week ago and improved on what I had written for them.

Then once we had finished doing that we got into our groups and started to do some more research into our possible film opening.  So we discussed more about what we needed to do before we could start the more advanced work for the opening such as getting props, making a story board and working out what else we would need for it outside of props.

After we had done this we did research into film noir which is what the film opening is going to be. We all did our own seperate research and then showed it to the rest of the group everything that I researched is on a scoop it page.

Tuesday, 24 September 2013

24/09/2013 PLANNING: IDEAS, MUSIC AND OPENING

Production log 24/09/2013

Single lesson

We started the lesson by getting into our groups and getting the documents we had made in the double lesson before hand.  After we got these documents out we started to discuss more possible ideas and refine our ideas from the last lesson.  Once we had started doing this we started to think about the type of music we could have in the background off the opening and we came up with the possibility of using the Johnathon Creek theme tune because it sounds suspicious and mysterious.  We haven't made the final choice about whether to use that particular song yet but we should do that in the next lesson.  We also started to discuss whether or not to have the film opening in colour or in black and white.  That again is undecided and hopefully we will finalise that decision in the next lesson.

Thursday, 19 September 2013

18/09/13 PLANNING: INITAL IDEAS


Production log 18/09/2013

Double lesson

When we started the lesson we got in to our groups and started to discuss some of the ideas we had.  We put down the ideas we had on a piece of paper in a spider diagram and then discussed them.  After we had down that we started to say which ideas we liked, which ideas we didn't like and which ideas we thought were good and would work as a film opening. 

After we had been discussing that we started to research ideas and then we decided on doing a film opening which was based around film noir/ thriller.  We then started to discuss ideas and thins that we could do for a thriller spy kind of film and we put them all down in a list on paper.  After we had finished with those ideas we started to draw out a basic storyboard idea on paper.

Tuesday, 17 September 2013

17/09/2013 RESEARCH: FILM OPENINGS

Production log 17/09/2013
 single lesson

I watched the first three minutes to the English patient (Anthony Minghella 1996)
  • the film starts with a black screen with names appearing on it with the intro music starting to play
  • a hand then appears with a paint brush painting a picture which looks like human figures
  • it looks like the hand is painting on a cave
  • it then changes shot to an ariel view of a desert and sand dunes which look oddly similar to the background that the painting was on
  • a shadow of a plane then appears giving the audience a feeling of flying over the desert
  • the top of the plane then comes into shot and the main character I am guessing appears
  • the shot then changes again to blew the plane and you see three people who then start firing at the plane with a flak cannon showing that the film is set at the end of WW2

I then watched the opening to the film Made In Dagenham (Nigel Cole 2010)
  • we watched this to see about camera angles and what establishing shots where used
  • this was to help us decide how we would do the camera angles in our movie opening


We then got into our groups for the film opening and started to discuss ideas.  We started to discuss some of the ideas that we had for possible film openings

Wednesday, 11 September 2013

11/09/13 RESEARCH/PLANNING: THE BRIEF

I watched The Day After Tomorrow (Roland Emmerich 2004)

· This film opens with a long track shot over the Antarctic
· The shot is long to create the feeling of a remote location and to show that the location is quite dangerous
· It is done to make the audience feel as if they are on a plane travelling
· I wondered if this CGI or real footage, but the way it is done to make the audience believe that it is actual footage of the Antarctic
· The colours used in the opening are dark blue and white to build to the dramatic atmosphere
· All the credits had a reflection in the water to make it look that bit more real
· All the information is up front before it then starts with the live footage
· When it changed from the opening credits of the track shot to the live action it showed a flag and the location of where the place is.

Planning: The brief
I am working in a group of four. The other members of my group are Charlie, George and Kate. We have chosen brief 7 (video). The opening sequence from a new film, including titles, in any genre or mix of genres such as a comedy or thriller together with a storyboard. Maximum length: three minutes
I watched the opening to the television show Spooks
The genre of the show is spy and crime genre. From the first opening and the opening credits I could tell that it was based in the world of spies because of the phone call between two of the characters and the hidden object in his draw. The credits move quickly from one shot to another but not so quick that the audience can’t see what is in the image, they also do split screen images with the image of a person on one side and a building on the other presumably the building they work in

11/09/13 RESEARCH: THE ART OF THE TITLE

Production log 11/09/13
double lesson

The art of the title

I watched Pacific Rim (Guillermo Del Toro 2013)
·        Very dark colours, very technological, very masculine
·        The CGI in the opening credits show scenes of fighting which look like they are going to be in the film
·        The shots that appear in the opening sequence look very metallic to put more emphasis on the fact that there are robots

http://www.artofthetitle.com/title/pacific-rim/


Pacific Rim







I then watched the opening for the film Lemony Snicket's A Series of Unfortunate Events (Brad Silberling 2004)
  • the opening was very foreshadowing it showed clips of things that were going to happen later on in the movie
  • the people in the opening looked like they were puppets which could be saying that they don't have control over themselves that someone else is controlling them
  • there is also an eye which keeps appearing in all the clips which could be to say that the children are being followed or watched where ever they go
http://www.artofthetitle.com/title/lemony-snickets-a-series-of-unfortunate-events/
I then decided to watch the opening for Reservoir Dogs (Quentin Tarantino 1992)
  • the opening introduces all the main characters that are going to be in the film and who they are played by
  • the music is very catchy and makes me want to continue watching to see what happens
  • the shots are establishing shots which go one after the other to introduce all the characters
http://www.artofthetitle.com/title/reservoir-dogs/


Sunday, 30 June 2013

Italin for beginners

The three main characters in the IT crowd are Roy, Mos and Jen.  Roy is lazy, where as Mos is technical but because of this also incredibly stupid.  That may sound weird but because of how technical he is there are sometimes when he does things that he thinks are technical which then later on will turn in to something would make people think that he was someone incredibly stupid.  Then Jen is someone who says things when she thinks no one is listening which then gets her in to situations that will just make her look bad.

Mos is comic because when he puts his phone in his top pocket he thinks he is being smart because it is quicker to get to his phone, but it is actually stupid because it falls into the toilet when he goes to flush it.  Jen is comic because she makes quick responses to what people say without even thinking about the consequences.  Roy is comic because when he hears about his girlfriends parents dieing in a fire at sea parks he gets really obsessed with it and his life starts to revolve around trying to work out how it happened.

The audience are positioned in relation to each character in a way where they know more about the characters then the other characters do or more then they know about themselves.

Friday, 10 May 2013

essay


A comparison of how women are represented in fragrance advertisements from the 1920’s, 1980’s and 2012

 

I have chosen to compare three advertisements that span nine decades: Babani of Paris Elizabeth Arden (print 1920s), The Senchal Woman (print 1980s) and Encounter Calvin Klein (moving image 2012).

The three advertisements provide very different representations of women: Babani presents the idea of a woman as an exotic, mysterious and distinctive creature, whilst The Senchal Woman is depicted as being powerful, independent and assertive above all.  By contrast, the woman in the Calvin Klein TV ad Encounter is the passive object of the man’s desire, the prize of a successful man.

 

Babani Elizabeth Arden (1920s, print)

 

The representation of the woman in this advert is exotic because of the clothing she is wearing.  She is holding what looks like an exotic bird.  The perfume bottle is in an arch that looks like it is from a foreign country such as India perhaps.  The name Babani of Paris is named after Babani which was a fashion house in the French capital Paris.  The woman is looking away from the viewer of the advert and is looking confident whilst looking at a bird.

 

The clothes she is wearing cover her legs and there are no sleeves on the top part.  The clothes she is wearing look exotic and from a country maybe India or a country from Asia.  The clothes in this advert are very different to the ones in the second one I choose because in this advert she is showing a lot of her body with the clothes she is wearing. 

 

The slogan “chooses for you the rare fragrances of Babani” is suggesting that the fragrance could be exotic, rare and from a different country perhaps one from somewhere in Asia.  Saying that it chooses for you could mean that it is trying to say that it is different for every person, trying to make it seem that it would be specific only to do with them.

 

I believe that this perfume advert is trying to say that if you wear this perfume you can look, act and be as confident as the exotic looking women in the advert.  This is something that women in those times would have wanted to be so that they felt better than other women.  I believe that the target audience for this one is women because it has a woman in the picture and because it is a fragrance advert not an advert for a man’s product such as cologne or deodorant.  Also because the fashion house Babani was a store that sold women’s clothing.

 

The senchal woman (1980)

 

In this picture the women is centralised and is standing in front of the Empire state building.  Which is where a lot of powerful people work and live.  So the advert could be trying to make the link that she is powerful.  Like the first advert she is looking away from the person looking at the advert.  The perfume bottle is to the right of the advert while as in the first one it is on the left.

 

The woman is looking confidently in to the distance.  Maybe at something or maybe at someone.  The slogan “she’s not going to marry the boy next door” gives the impression that this women is self reliant and doesn’t need a man to be successful.  The clothes she is wearing suggests that she might be wealthy to afford clothes like that.  The clothes are different from the first ones because in this one it covers her arms and her legs are being shown.  While as in the first one the clothes cover her legs and show her arms.  This one is also made out of animal fur while as the first one looks like it was made out of cloth.

 

The type of shot that they used for this advert in movie terms would be called a hero shot.  Where you see the main person by themselves and you can see all of them and that is what they have done here.  I think that it is trying to say that the woman in the advert doesn’t need a man to help her become someone that she can do it on her own.

 

This perfume advert I believe is trying to say if you wear this perfume you can be self reliant and not need to marry the first man you see to become somebody. Also it could be trying to say that if you where it you could be like a women who is rich and powerful.  I am guessing that the target audience for this advert is women because of the title The Senchal Woman and because in the picture it is a woman.
 

 

Calvin Kleain encounter (2012, moving image)

 

Encounter http://www.encountercalvinklein.com

masculine. intriguing. seductive.

Encounter Calvin Klein delivers a message of a modern, unapologetic masculinity. A distinctive sensual woody fragrance, Encounter combines an addictive blend of freshness, warm cognac and sensual woods.

 

Unlike the other two adverts this one features a man in it.  The woman in this advert is represented as a kind of prize for the man.  She could be called the prize for the man being able to get round the dangerous cliff road to the house sitting right of the edge of a cliff.  The whole advert is much like a Bond film in the way the man is driving then at the very end he gets the woman.  This advert, unlike other moving image adverts this one does not use celebrity endorsement and uses two people that people would only know from the Calvin Klein adverts.

 

The first main shot we see of the women is her looking out of a rain covered window as if looking and waiting for someone.  The first main shot we see of the man is at the beginning when we see him driving in his car towards the house on a cliff with the women in it.  The next one we see of the women is just after the man has arrived and gone in the house, we see the bottom of her dress, her legs and her high hells.  I think this might be used to try and attract men to the advert by using the male gaze of the camera to show parts of the women that aren’t covered by her dress.  The shot right before the end of the advert shows just how dangerous the area that the couple (now kissing) are in, with rocking cliffs and big waves right beneath the balcony they are standing on.

 

They used the name encounter for this advert and fragrance because the advert has two people who meet one another in an encounter.  The advert could be trying to say that if you use this fragrance then you can encounter someone that you like, or perhaps someone that is extravagant and exciting.  Someone who is worth a drive over a small cliff road to a small house.

 

The advert shows the man as being quite powerful and masculine.  Saying to the target audience, which could be men that if you wear this perfume you be can as powerful and masculine as the man in the advert.  The woman in the advert is being represented as a seductive force to get the man to come to her if this was a perfume which was directed at women it could be trying to say that it was trying to persuade them that if they bought the perfume they could be seductive and get every man they wanted.

 

This advert shows that woman as maybe wanting a man, while as in the second one it is saying that she doesn’t need or want a man to make her successful.  This advert is different from both of the other adverts because this one shows a love attraction between a man and a woman.  While as in the first one it just has a woman standing and the second one is saying the complete opposite of this one by saying you can be reliant by yourself.

 

The advert is quite dark and gloomy for the first few seconds of it but then it gets a little lighter as the man finds the women in the house.  With the music it uses the lighting of the advert, the rain and the setting makes the advert work really well and would make you stop and look at it say if you where fast forwarding through adverts on the TV.

 

The woman in this advert compared to the women in the other two seems to be more longing.  Unlike the other two adverts this women seems to want a man in her life where as the other two seem to be more stable without a man in their lives.  The clothes the woman wears in this advert are different to the ones in the first two adverts because in this advert she is more revealing of her figure while as in the first two the women have more of their body covered.

 

At the beginning of the advert the camera is moving quite fast and the different shots are changing quite statically.  From two second into the advert to seven seconds the shots change quite quickly showing how fast the man is going driving the car.  But then once the car has stopped and the woman has been brought into the advert the advert starts to stay on the same shot for more time.  I think this is trying to say that now that the man has gotten past all the dangers of the road he can slow down and get the girl.  Most of the camera shots in the advert are close ups of the people’s faces. 

Thursday, 25 April 2013

Iron Man Audi R8/ Skyfall Heineken adverts

Lets start with the Skyfall Heineken advert.  This advert is a mini action and adventure movie because it has suspense and a chase scene in it two of the things needed to make an action and adventure movie.  The advert starts with Daniel Craig (James Bond) walking through a snowy train station being followed by two men, probably hitmen, the bond music is playing in the background (one sign of an action and adventure movie).  He then bumps into a man who just happens to be in the wrong place at the wrong time.  The hitmen then think that Bond have given him something so start to chase him.  Action and adventure clue one.  After the man has jumped on to a train next to him the music changes and the atmosphere around him changes as well.  The atmosphere goes from one of a dark and cold atmosphere to one of excitement.  Then walking through the train carriage he realises that the hitmen are stilling following him, but now the arena has changed and the man is now stuck on a train being followed with no were to go, adding another aspect to the advert, suspense (sign two of an action and adventure movie).  Then once he has gone through most of the train, through a gambling room, a secret Russian spy carriage, a freezer carriage and then a bar area he finally bumps back into Bond.  Who gives him two bottles of Heineken then starts running with the hitmen following him.  The advert ends with the bond girl from skyfall giving him a brief case.

Now for the Iron man 3 Audi R8 advert.  This advert starts by making the audience think that they could be watching a trailer for the Iron Man 3 movie because it starts straight away with clips from the movie.  Then it says "there is never a bad day at work" which tells you that it is not a trailer for Iron man 3 but a car advert.  Then it goes to a shot of Robert Downey Jr getting into an Audi R8.  A shot of the car then driving down a highway at fast speed then ends the advert.  The car they used in the advert also made another link to the film by being the same colour as his suit red.  How the advert is a mini action and adventure movie is because it features scenes from an action and adventure film.

Saturday, 20 April 2013

film/ TV intro that I think is good

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hCVmAXjbj4k Intro to a TV show called Person of Interest.  I chose this one because it is different to other TV shows, where others have opening theme tunes that stay the same for every episode this one has a introduction to the characters and gives an understanding of what the programme is about.  It introduces the two main characters in the show and how they came to meet and what they do that makes the show .

Thursday, 18 April 2013

archetype

Archetype is a recurring character type in films and example would be snow white and the huntsman.  The definition of archetype is the oringnal pattern or model from which all things of the same kind are copied or on which they are based,a model or first form, prototype

Friday, 22 March 2013

draft for essay


A comparison of how women are represented in fragrance advertisements from the 1920’s, 1980’s and 2012

 

I have chosen to compare three advertisements that span nine decades: Babani of Paris Elizabeth Arden (print 1920s), The Senchal Woman (print 1980s) and Encounter Calvin Klein (moving image 2012).

The three advertisements provide very different representations of women: Babani presents the idea of a woman as an exotic, mysterious and distinctive creature, whilst The Senchal Woman is depicted as being powerful, independent and assertive above all.  By contrast, the woman in the Calvin Klein TV ad Encounter is the passive object of the man’s desire, the prize of a successful man.

 

Babani Elizabeth Arden (1920s, print)

 

The representation of the woman in this advert is exotic because of the clothing she is wearing.  She is holding what looks like an exotic bird.  The perfume bottle is in an arch that looks like it is from a foreign country such as India perhaps.  The name Babani of Paris is named after Babani which was a fashion house in the French capital Paris.  The woman is looking away from the viewer of the advert and is looking confident whilst looking at a bird.

 

The clothes she is wearing cover her legs and there are no sleeves on the top part.  The clothes she is wearing look exotic and from a country maybe India or a country from Asia.  The clothes in this advert are very different to the ones in the second one I choose because in this advert she is showing a lot of her body with the clothes she is wearing. 

 

The slogan “chooses for you the rare fragrances of Babani” is suggesting that the fragrance could be exotic, rare and from a different country perhaps one from somewhere in Asia.  Saying that it chooses for you could mean that it is trying to say that it is different for every person, trying to make it seem that it would be specific only to do with them.

 

I believe that this perfume advert is trying to say that if you wear this perfume you can look, act and be as confident as the exotic looking women in the advert.  This is something that women in those times would have wanted to be so that they felt better than other women.  I believe that the target audience for this one is women because it has a woman in the picture and because it is a fragrance advert not an advert for a man’s product such as cologne or deodorant.  Also because the fashion house Babani was a store that sold women’s clothing.

 

The senchal woman (1980)

 

In this picture the women is centralised and is standing in front of the Empire state building.  Which is where a lot of powerful people work and live.  So the advert could be trying to make the link that she is powerful.  Like the first advert she is looking away from the person looking at the advert.  The perfume bottle is to the right of the advert while as in the first one it is on the left.

 

The woman is looking confidently in to the distance.  Maybe at something or maybe at someone.  The slogan “she’s not going to marry the boy next door” gives the impression that this women is self reliant and doesn’t need a man to be successful.  The clothes she is wearing suggests that she might be wealthy to afford clothes like that.  The clothes are different from the first ones because in this one it covers her arms and her legs are being shown.  While as in the first one the clothes cover her legs and show her arms.  This one is also made out of animal fur while as the first one looks like it was made out of cloth.

 

The type of shot that they used for this advert in movie terms would be called a hero shot.  Where you see the main person by themselves and you can see all of them and that is what they have done here.  I think that it is trying to say that the woman in the advert doesn’t need a man to help her become someone that she can do it on her own.

 

This perfume advert I believe is trying to say if you wear this perfume you can be self reliant and not need to marry the first man you see to become somebody. Also it could be trying to say that if you where it you could be like a women who is rich and powerful.  I am guessing that the target audience for this advert is women because of the title The Senchal Woman and because in the picture it is a woman.

 


 

Calvin Kleain encounter (2012)

 

Encounter http://www.encountercalvinklein.com

masculine. intriguing. seductive.

Encounter Calvin Klein redefines modern, unapologetic masculinity. A distinctive sensual woody fragrance, Encounter combines an addictive blend of freshness, warm cognac and sensual woods.
 

Unlike the other two adverts this one features a man in it.  The woman in this advert is represented as a kind of prize for the man.  The whole advert is much like a Bond film in the way the man is driving then at the very end he gets the woman as you can see in the picture above.  This advert unlike other moving image ones does not use celebrity endorsement and uses two people that people would only know from the Calvin Klein adverts.
 

The first main shot we see of the women is her looking out of a rain covered window as if looking and waiting for someone.  The first main shot we see of the man is at the beginning when we see him driving in his car towards the house on a cliff with the women in it. The next one we see of the women is just after the man has arrived and gone in the house, we see the bottom of her dress, her legs and her high hells. 
 

They used the name encounter for this advert and fragrance because the advert has two people who meet one another in an encounter.  The advert could be trying to say that if you use this fragrance then you can encounter someone that you like, or perhaps someone that is extravagant and exciting.  Someone who is worth a drive over a small cliff road to a small house.

 
The advert shows the man as being quite powerful and masculine.  Saying to the target audience that could be men that if you where this perfume you be can as powerful and masculine as the man in the advert.  The woman in the advert is being represented as a seductive force to get the man to come to her if this was a perfume which was directed at women I would say that it was trying to persuade them that if they bought the perfume they could be seductive and get every man they wanted.

 
This advert show that women as maybe wanting a man, while as in the second one it is saying that she doesn’t need or want a man to make her successful.  The advert is different from both of the other adverts because this one shows that love attraction between a man and a woman.  While as in the first one it just has a woman standing and the second one is saying the complete opposite of this one by saying you can be reliant by yourself.


The advert is quite dark and gloomy for the first few seconds of it but then it gets a little lighter as the man finds the women in the house.  With the music it uses the lighting of the advert, the rain and the setting makes the advert work really well and would make you stop and look at it say if you where fast forwarding through adverts on the TV.


The woman in this advert compared to the women in the other two seems to be more longing.  Unlike the other two adverts this women seems to want a man in her life where as the other two seem to be more stable without a man in their lives.  The clothes the woman wears in this advert are different to the ones in the first two adverts because in this advert she is more revealing of her figure while as in the first two the women have more of their body covered

Wednesday, 20 March 2013

Sherlock Holmes

The genre of this film is historical action and adventure.  The film is in the historical genre because it is based in Victorian London.  The film creates the spectacle of the world of Victorian London in 1891 through its location shots of an old London, all the buildings are old buildings that are still up in London.  Another way that I could tell it was Victorian London was from the fact that the streets of London where light by gas lamps.  A third way of telling that it is Victorian London is that the police and Watson are in a carriage being pulled by horses instead of in fast cars which would be in films based now.  The shot of Saint Paul's cathedral anchors the location as London because it is a monument that I would automatically make me think of London

The camerawork shows that the scene contains speed and motion because the carriages are moving quickly being pulled by the horse's and there is a quickly moving London behind Holmes to show that he is trying to get somewhere fast.  One of the shots that is used is showing how bumpy it is inside one of the carriages because the camera is jumping up and down and juddering, it is probably being held in someones hands instead of a tripod because if it was on a tripod it would be still where as in someones hands it will move with them.

Now on to the editing of this extract.  In this extract from the film we see in to Holmes' thoughts where he is thinking about how to take down one of the men working for the villain of the film.  It is done in slow mo so we can see every last detail of what he does then it is also shown in real time so we can see how he does it. 

The sound at the beginning of the extract is another way of telling that it is based in Victorian London because there is the sound of horse shoes on cobblestone and the sound of wooden wheels turning and rolling over cobblestone roads.  The music in the extract is quite fast this helps build up the tension when Holmes is running.  It probably makes the audience think will he get there in time to rescue the girl and stop lord blackwood or will the Lord succeed.

Sunday, 17 March 2013

Robin Hood

The 2010 film Robin Hood is definetly an action and adventure film because within the first nine minutes of it there is already a fight scene.  The action scene in this film is typical for the time period it is set but not for films that are based now or in the future because in this scene they are using medieval weapons such as swords, crossbows, bows and arrows and battering rams.  Instead of films based now where people would probably use more deadly and bigger weapons such as guns and tanks.

In this extract from the film the hero is also met, Robin Hood.  He is the typical hero in this first part of the film a man who fights for the good, right and a man who would risk his life for the inocent.  Him fighting for the good and right is shown by him battleing under the command of the King of England.  Then he shows that he is a man willing to risk his life for the inocent is when I'm guessing a friend gets caught in the gate of the French castle and he runs forwards through the volley of arrows being shot at him to get him down to saftey.

A second man who could be called the hero is King Richard.  In this extract from the film he is the hero because he is leading the English army in to battle and to victory and unlike cowardly generals he is at the front of his troops.  But later in the film he could be called the bad guy because in the text which appears in the extract it says how he is plundering his way to Britain.

This first scene I belive trys to makes the audience feel as if they could trust Robin even thought they know later that he is seen as the bad guy in the eyes of the law he is still a trustworthy man.

Sunday, 3 March 2013

Austin powers

The part of the Austin power film Gold member we had to watch was the first four minutes of where the film has gotten Tom Cruise to play Austin Powers in a spoof film opening for a film about Austin Powers directed by Steven Spielberg.  All ready in the first four minutes the film has combat scenes in it with a helicopter chasing after a woman on a motorbike and Tom Cruise shooting the helicopter with machine guns.  Those first four minutes also have speed and motion in them because there is a fast car, a helicopter and a motorbike.  All chasing after one another.

It kind of has a stereotypical secret agent a man who can get the girl straight away but saying that it then it doesn't show stereotypical secret agent by the secret agent being Austin Powers a crazy hippy from the 60's.  In my mind a stereotypical secret agent is not a man wearing glasses, an all blue outfit which is a coat and trousers and weird looking cufflinks.  No I see a man wearing a black suit with a white shirt and a black bow tie.  But I guess that is what makes Austin Powers so different.

Also meet in the first four minutes is a stereotypical bad guy wearing a grey suit and holding a cat.  In my mind that is what I picture when I think of a stereotypical bad guy.  Someone wearing a suit which is grey or white and holding an animal.

Wednesday, 13 February 2013

Mission Impossible

Today in the media lesson we watched the first ten to fifteen minutes of the first Mission Impossible.  We then had to write down notes about the music and the characters that where meet in those first minutes.  This is those notes and some other things that I am adding in now.

Music.
  • The music was very up beat, fast and just like the theme song for James bond if someone where to know the tune they would instantly recognise it
  • The music featured mainly drums to make it sound more heavy in tune
  • The song itself was very catchy
Characters.

  • In the those first ten to fifteen minutes watched all but one of the characters that where introduced where killed, which to me seems kind of odd, the film has just started and then what happens well, all the characters but one are dead
  • The one character that survives is called Ethan Hunt he is in all of the Mission Impossible films
  • He is first seen in a hero shot
  • He is shown to be a strong and resourceful character because even when the mission is going wrong and all his team are being killed he still trys to make the mission a success.  But if you haven't seen the movie I will say now he doesn't managed to make the mission a success and the mission fails.

Friday, 8 February 2013

Representation in Gladiator

In the opening ten minutes of Gladiators the first character is met Maximus played by Russel Crowe.  He is in my mind the General of a Roman army, this was shown in the way he was dressed, the way he spoke and from how the troops reacted when he walked past.  He wore a cape which looked like it had been made out of the fur of an animal and unlike the normal infantry his chest piece had a metal bear head on it and was different to the ones the infantry was wearing.  What made me think he was the General from how he spoke and how the troops reacted was that when walking past the normal infantry they where all bowing to him and how he was giving words of encouragement.

In the opening ten minutes of Gladiators binary opposites are shown from how each different unit of troops wore different things and from the difference in what they where wearing compared to the horde they were about to fight.  Each unit of infantry wore different costumes so the front line troops wore metal helmets and chest plates.  While as the archers had metal helmets and chain mail chest plates.  The differences in costume between the Roman army and the horde was that the Roman army wore metal and where shaved while as the horde wore animal fur and all had beards.  The costumes also counted of the weapons that all the people where holding.  So the Roman troops where holding spears and metal shields, the archers where holding bows and had quivers on their backs loaded with arrows and then the horde had wooden shields and what looked to me like wooden spears.

 The first ten minutes showed stereotypes by making the horde very brutish and angry. Then they also showed this with the Roman infantry and Maximus, because when I hear the word Roman I do think of a man in a metal helmet, metal chest plate and leather trousers.  Also because when I hear the words Roman General I think of a man who is wearing a cape probably red, and had a chest plate that is shinier then all the other Roman infantry.

If the sounds used in the opening ten minutes weren't there then those ten minutes would have just seemed less realistic and fake.  The sounds they had in the background of the ten minutes was the sound of people marching into position ready for a fight and also in the background behind that I could hear someone shouting what sounded like to me orders to the infantry.

Wednesday, 6 February 2013

Skyfall

Representation of the characters met in the first eleven minutes of the new James Bond film Skyfall. 

The first character met was James Bond himself, wearing what I would picture when I heard the words James Bond, Daniel Craig wearing a suit and holding a pistol.  We see him first in a hero shot where it isn't possible to see his face but it is still obvious it is him by the way he is standing.  He is the hero of the film and also the first character we meet in the film just like many other movies.  He is made to look strong, bold and courageous from how he stands just like you would expect the best agent in MI6 to be.

The next character we meet is M, Judi Dench.  She is shown as a women who can do what she likes and control people because she is the leader of MI6.  We then see in the first part of the scene and later on in the eleven minutes we watched that she has no care for the lives of her agents and that she just wants to get a hard drive that was stolen from MI6 back.  She shows this by telling Bond to leave an agent who is bleeding out, and go get the hard drive back and later on when she tells Bonds sidekick to take a shot even though Bond could get hit instead of the villain.  This could also mean that she just wants the mission to be complete no matter what the consequences.

The third character we meet in this beginning bit of the movie is Bonds sidekick, another agent of MI6.  She sees herself as being just as good as Bond at what they do for a living and believes that they are equal.  She shows this from how she acts.  But at the end of the first elven minutes we see she isn't as good as she could be because she takes a shot and hits Bond instead of the villain, who then gets away.

The final character we meet who we never see again is a stereotypical bad guy who like Bond is also wearing a suit and wielding a machine pistol with an extended ammunition holder.  He shows he is the bad guy by shooting at Bond in the middle of a market place.  Also like other modern day film bad guys (mostly Bond ones) he has a fast car as to make it easier to try and get away from the hero of the film.