Tuesday, 14 December 2010

Advanced Portfolio 2010-11 - getting started

Please ensure that you visit my blog and add yourself as a follower - this wil make it much easier for you to saty in touch in the future.

Rememeber that by using blogs we, as teachers, can monitor and advice (by posting comments) you from a distance. In addition, it allows you to seek guidance by following your supervisers blog - this will have tasks, deadlines, useful sites etc for you to read about.

Make it a habit - visit your supervisers blog at the start of your lessons.

Wednesday, 21 April 2010

THE ADVANCED PORTFOLIO EVALUATION - just in case you have mislaid your guidance sheet.

Marks for your advanced Portfolio coursework are distributed as follows :-

Products Research and Planning Evaluation
60 20 20

•Advanced portfolio Products (Film, Poster, Review) – Final deadline 1st April.
•Research and Planning are ongoing (and you should continue to add content over Easter)
•Individual Evaluation – Draft deadline = 19th April. Written over Easter.

Your Advanced Portfolio Evaluation should be posted as your last Blog entry.
Evaluate all 3 aspects of your portfolio
Each individual has to write an evaluation using the guidelines below.

It is essential that this is written in Blog format - not as an essay. Therefore use :-
• clear headings
• precise bullet points,
• lots of visual material,
• hyperlinks to relevant websites,
• embedded video.

Questions around which to structure your evaluation.

1. In what ways does your media product use, develop or challenge forms and conventions of real media products?

For this section, you must consider carefully how you have used the genre/s and/or styles that your film incorporates. For many of you, this means how you have used the style of social realism, and possibly how you have used other genres with it, such as comedy, or romance for example. In addition, examiners will expect you to discuss how you have used the short film format. Some areas for discussion for each might be:

Social Realism – study the notes you made in class on this particularly British style, including its conventions and aims and its style. You should remind yourself of key directors here, such as Ken Loach, Andrea Arnold and Mike Leigh, and revise the key aims of Social Realist directors, especially in terms of representation (who do they aim to represent and why?). Also, use the research you did into Social Realist short films (eg Wasp), and make sure that you understand how the narrative of these short films usually works, and revise narrative theory from last year (eg Todorov).
You should be showing that you understand the contexts for the kind of film you have made. You will need to explain those contexts in terms of typical narrative structure, typical aims for representation and character types, typical use of mise en scene, typical use of sound, typical use of editing, typical use of camera and typical themes and issues. This is a very good opportunity to incorporate links to examples of films, shots from key films, or other visual material. What you say here will depend on the key genre/s and styles your group has chosen to work with.
Once you have established the conventions for your type of film, you need to decide to what extent you have conformed to these conventions or to what extent you have departed from them. You will need to show that you understand the implications of doing either: for example, how does your choice help the film to target your audience more effectively?

2. How effective is the combination of your main product and your ancillary tasks?

For this question, you need to consider how well the whole portfolio would work in a real commercial context: you are essentially being asked how you think the two ancillary tasks would work as part of the whole marketing package represented by the portfolio.
You need to assess how well you have communicated the appeal of your film for your audience in the poster, and be precise and accurate about how the poster does this. You can include visual material here from the poster design to illustrate, and perhaps comparisons with real media output. Select detail from the poster (eg representation of character, themes and issues, location, use of colour) and justify your use of these elements in relation to what you would want your target audience to understand and potentially enjoy in the film.
You need to do the same for the review – explain carefully what aspects of the film you have chosen to discuss in the copy and show in the image in order to address the audience for the magazine. Consider whether the audience for your film and the magazine audience are the same or different, and how this shaped the copy and layout of the review.
Overall, you are being asked to justify the ways in which you have represented your film through the poster and through the review.

3. What have you learned from your audience feedback?

You could have completed the audience research via your blog, social networking sites, email, phone, youtube or in person, and it should all be recorded on your blog. Whatever the context, it is essential that the feedback you have collected as a group is actually from representatives of your target audience. Your audience demographic should be clearly defined at the start of this answer, and it should be discussed as a valuable indicator of whether you have successfully managed to target and appeal to your audience. Your answer should not simply describe or quote from responses, but must answer the question: ‘what have you learned?’ This means that you must analyse and explain the responses in the context of your aims for the film, and use the responses to further evaluate your work. For example, if a respondent says that she wasn’t clear about the significance of a prop you have used, then you might deduce that your film lacked some important shots that might have clarified the importance of that prop to the narrative. Aim to group similar responses together and comment on them together.

4. How did you use new media technologies in the construction, and research, planning and evaluation stages?
‘New media technologies’ includes the digital cameras used, apple mac editing software (i movie or final cut pro), garageband, blogging, social networking sites (if used), indesign, photoshop.

Discuss each of the stages referred to above, and evaluate your own personal use of the technologies. Explain in detail what you have learned in each of these technologies, making precise references to any new techniques you learned, and if you worked in final cut this time instead of i movie, explain clearly why this was. For your role in the print ancillary tasks, be clear about how you used the programmes, and evaluate your contribution. Incorporate visual evidence wherever possible (eg drafting work on the print task to illustrate use of a particular tool).

Individual draft deadline for Evaluation appearing on blog – Monday 19th April

Monday, 19 April 2010

DEADLINE TODAY

You should have uploaded the draft evaluation by the end of today. If you miss this deadline, you should not expect to receive the same level of support as those that do meet it.

Thursday, 15 April 2010

Inconsistencies between poster and film

It is possible that the title style that you used in your original film is now different to that used on your poster. Really, they should be the same style. You may need to go back to your film and alter the font style of your title if time permits, or atleast recognise this inconsistency on your blog

BLOG EVALUATION BY END OF EASTER HOLIDAY

Over Easter, you need to work on your individual evaluation of the entire portfolio for the blog. The deadline for the draft of this to appear on the blog is April 19th (first day back). In one of your lessons this week you will receive instructions for this which you must read yourselves very carefully before you start. You will need to have got some meaningful target audience feedback by the time you write it.

Wednesday, 31 March 2010

Tuesday, 30 March 2010

Sizing your film review for Little White Lies

As you are using In Design, you cna measure the dimensions of the magazine in order to accurately reflect the dimensions of the actual magazine. This will ensure that your font size accurately reflects the magazine. Ask Andy or Richard to help you. The dimensions of the magazine are 24.5 cm by 20 cm.

Sunday, 28 March 2010

The final draft of your film poster

I can only feedback if the poster is uploaded on your blog.

Thus, I can't comment (Danny and Chris) at all if there is no poster on your blog. The rest of you, I have posted comments, although with some of you, you actually had older versions than I saw last week. Do ensure that you all have your completed version posted by the deadline. There is a time and date after which work cannot be accepted. We also want you to submit a Black and White version only (absolutely not colour - do not waste valuable resources). Do this as an A3 if possible. We will then be able to go to your blog for the colour version. Listen out for final instructions this week.

Friday, 26 March 2010

Feedback on the evaluations

having now marked these, a number of common factors are coming through about how you can improove these :-

1. Use your media language where appropriate - the terms associated with camerawork (angles and movement as well as shot distance), editing (how has continuity been achieved) , mise en scene (all 11 aspects) and sound. For instance, i don't think I came across the use of the word "Parallel" once to describe music matching events on screen. This distinguishes you from non media studies students, which is what you are. It also demonstrates high level skills of application.

2, Make comparisons to existing media products (seen on the film side of your course - Leigh, Loach etc)- "similar to particular scenes in films you have viewed" -this will be something to explore when you discuss your film poster. This is good practice becuase it makes links with your planning and research.

3. Refer to media theory and concepts where appropriate - for instance, some of you made references to issues about the representation of gender, audience demographics etc

4. Continually illustrate with particular scenes from your own work.

5. Be honest. Far too often, you have avoided discussing problems you had, or problems with your finished product. Don't bury your head in the sand! By admitting to these problems and, more importantly, by discussing how you overcame them or how you could have overcome them, you are demonstrating that you understand what a good product should look like and demonstrate.

6. In the section "on how successfully you have used digital technology" - be reflective and discuss what you have been able to do - How has final cut been an improvement, What have the blogs allowed you do this time round, what has garageband allowed you do?

Thursday, 18 March 2010

Little White Lies Film Review

Your lessons this week have established :-

Target Audience
Layout
Language

as regards Little White Lies and Film Reviews written in this.

I would recommend that you blog selective elements of what we have done in class this week, embed links to the Magazine and Church of London, scan some reviews to illustrate layout and language.

You can then start on the exercise of writing your own review.

Stage one is to upload the basic design and the image that you intend to use.

Stage two is to start to write the article in the style of the magazine. This will require research and time!

In the meantime I will start to look at your poster's and leave comments on them for you to act on.

Wednesday, 17 March 2010

Evaluative Essay - Deadline 1 week from issue

The following brief will be issued to you during your second lesson this week. This is a conventional essay, and should be handed to your supervisor by the one week deadline.

TASK: TO WRITE AN ESSAY EVALUATION OF YOUR SHORT FILM, INCORPORATING TARGET AUDIENCE FEEDBACKLENGTH: about 1500 WORDS
Context

For your A2 qualification, you need to evaluate your production work in 2 contexts:

1. The Evaluation stage of the Advanced Portfolio (worth 25% of the Portfolio, or 20 marks)
2. Section A of the exam (Theoretical Evaluation of Production, worth 50 marks: part 1a, describing and evaluating skills development over the course of the production work, and part 1b, evaluating the production in relation to one of 5 media concepts).

Even though the evaluation you write for the blog will not be an essay, the evaluation for the exam will be, and this exercise should give you some practice at doing it.

In your essay, answer the following questions:

• How successfully have you used digital technology in your Advanced Portfolio work? Have you developed skills in this area since the Foundation Portfolio? Have you learned any new skills, such as final cut pro or green screen, or the blog itself? (Main task only at this stage – cameras, vision and sound editing, special effects).

• How creative is your work? (Consider your use of film language in camera work, mise en scene, sound, editing, themes, issues, narrative). Have you experimented at all with any film techniques? Have you attempted to be original in your work? Have you adapted or been inspired by the work of any other director/s? Give precise examples as evidence.

• How effective do you think your role was in research and planning? Explain what you did in these areas, and evaluate your success and input. Give precise examples of your role.

• Describe what you were trying to achieve as a group in post-production (editing), and what techniques you used. For example, did you aim for continuity, did you achieve it, and how? If you have any more to discuss and evaluate related to sound or vision post production work that you haven’t discussed above in digital technology, discuss it here. Use examples to support the points you make.

• How did you use, develop or adapt the conventions for real media products of this type (consider the short film narrative, genre and style)? Provide detail from your film as evidence.

• What have you learned from your audience feedback? (This must follow research with several representatives of your target audience, and can be conducted via social networking sites such as Facebook, email, the blog itself, phone, or in person. The results can be gathered by all of you together and shared)

DEADLINE: 1 WEEK FROM TODAY – AND TO BE SUBMITTED ON PAPER AS A WORD DOCUMENT.

Logos for Film Funding companies and competitions

Any logos you wish to include in your poster design can be copied from the k drive (under visual arts and media, media studies, a2 media, logos).

Tuesday, 9 March 2010

Heading - please add a heading "Poster ideas and draft"

I want to comment on each of your contributions to the Poster design process and give feedback on your first draft. One title is enough and I can add a post underneath for each member of the group commenting on contributions and the first draft.

Thanks

Example of Independent Company marketing of short film

Look at the link to Cowboy Film on the right as an example of an award winning short film which was more conventionally sold to its audience.

Deadline Friday 12th March - what you need to have done!

1 Final edit of short film, including sound and titling
2 First photoshop and indesign draft of poster design chosen from the sketched drafts for each of you that should have been uploaded last week. It is important that each of you demonstrates having contributed to the design of the poster through the initial sketched design (last week's deadline).

Poster Research

You should have already analysed existing relevant poster designs as part of a previous deadline. Now that you have had lessons on this, you may think it's a good idea to edit those posts to add more detail and relevance to your own design ideas. If you didn't make that part of the previous deadline, you need to do that research asap. Each person in the group should have contributed to the research on poster designs and posts need to be headed with names to appear on the archive. See examples on this blog for ideas.

Thursday, 4 March 2010

Film Poster work to blog

We have looked at film posters for "Fish Tank", "This is England" and "Le Donk and Scor-Zay-Zee". You should blog comments on atleast two of these film posters. In particular, using Film language (Textual Analysis), expalin how meaning is communicated about :-


Representation - Who, How, What sort of female/male is she/he/they?

Genre - What sort of film is this, how do we know?

Narrative - What will this film be about? How do we know?


In addition, consider who the Target Audience for the film is. (consider clues such as mention of Awards? Print Media? Assumptions?)


Once you have completed this, you should do some of your own research and blog along similar lines other indepenedent, low budget social realism films (or Thriller or Horror).

Sunday, 21 February 2010

Reminder about posts

So that it is easy for us to award marks to you individually, please remember to put your name in the heading for a post when you are posting as an individual - that way it will be easy to see who did what in the archive. If you are posting often as a group now, make sure that there are still some elements which you are responsible for, so that there are clear ways to differentiate between you. It's in everyone's interests to do this.

Ancillary Tasks Interim Deadlines Coming Soon!

Watch this space for more advice and information on the Ancillary Tasks and guidance on deadlines.

Some lessons will be allocated to analysing film magazine reviews, and to working on the poster using Photoshop and InDesign. We will advise you of this very soon.

The aim will be to finish the entire portfolio very soon after Easter. Consult your booklet for the main task if you are unsure of the various parts of the portfolio.

Next Stages, including developing work on Ancillary Tasks

When you have finished the rushes, you will need to go on to the next stages of the work (you can always go back and re-shoot if necessary, or add to footage with 'pick ups').

Begin to work on the following in your groups (most of this is for the main task short film):



Final Deadline Four: Editing
Final edit completed, with no further time being allocated

On the group blog by the deadline below:

- frequent posts explaining the editing process, aims, techniques, decisions, choices and any reasonable difficulties experienced with technologies. Use terms wherever appropriate
- audience feedback on the finished film (use the areas listed for questions in unit G325 to help you focus on questions to your audience) – gathered via the blog, social networking sites and other means, and recorded on the blog
- the finished film uploaded via youtube to the blog
- further research and planning for the 2 Ancillary Tasks (see later advice on this)

Friday 12th March

Deadline tomorrow

As you should all be aware, the deadline for filming is tomorrow. If you are accessing this post today (Sunday), do a final check on what is required, as stated in your booklet:

A2 Media Studies

Deadline Three: Production Work
All rushes to be completed and logged on the Mac you are using

On the group blog by the deadline below:

- Allocation of roles for filming
- blog to be updated continuously with all decisions and discussions taking place, using as much visual material and links as possible; all members of the group to be represented on the blog and posts colour-coded
- discussions of the use of technologies (especially camera) – any new techniques tried, any development of skills learned last year, any problems or shots you were unable to produce
- for the review and poster, initial decisions about images to use are to be posted, with proposed images, and links to real promotional material and reviews, where possible
- Target audience feedback on raw footage (sample shots or sequences shared through blog), and collated with summary decisions

Monday February 22nd (after Half Term)

Monday, 8 February 2010

Preparation for Filming - IMPORTANT

If you still have any filming left to do, consider whether you might take a digital camera with you to grab some well composed publicity shots for your poster or the review. Remember what you learned about the use of images in print last year in your training.

Preparing for the Ancillary Tasks

Look at your booklet for marks and essential details, but more information will follow on this immediately after half term.

THESE ARE GROUP TASKS

USEFUL LINKS APPEAR ON THE BAR TO THE RIGHT OF THIS POST

You should have begun some of the preparation if you have completed all of the tasks from the last deadline (eg research into marketing of short films, institutional background for Wasp and one other).

You should do the following now though:

- research existing posters, especially for the genre/style and audience you are using (see links, but find more)
- start to think about dividing up the work - who is good at what? (Think about the design of magazine page, use of InDesign and Photoshop, written communication in the style of an existing film magazine, images needed for the poster and the review and more, as a starting point)

Preparing for the Ancillary Tasks

Look at your booklet for marks and essential details, but more information will follow on this immediately after half term.

THESE ARE GROUP TASKS

USEFUL LINKS APPEAR ON THE BAR TO THE RIGHT OF THIS POST

You should have begun some of the preparation if you have completed all of the tasks from the last deadline (eg research into marketing of short films, institutional background for Wasp and one other).

You should do the following now though:

- research existing posters, especially for the genre/style and audience you are using (see links, but find more)
- start to think about dividing up the work - who is good at what? (Think about the design of magazine page, use of InDesign and Photoshop, written communication in the style of an existing film magazine, images needed for the poster and the review and more, as a starting point)

Risk Assessment

Before you go out filming, it is essential that you read the Risk Assessment procedure for the college, and sign to say that you have done so. This is a change of procedure, and you will not now be permitted to borrow equipment unless you have signed this agreement.

These are on the K drive and must be read. there is one for filming internal to the college and one for filming "outside" the college.

Thursday, 4 February 2010

Things to be getting on with

If you are unable to get on with filming in lesson time (and this will apply to most of you), you should be getting on with the following:

- continue to check that you have completed fully all of the tasks from the last deadline, including the ones preparing you for the poster and film review work.

- research existing examples of film promotion for the genre/style and audience for your film (posters, ads etc). Copy images of these and comment on their effectiveness, and methods, using image analysis terms (eg mise en scene, shot terms)

- research existing examples of film reviews in film magazines as inspiration and again, copy images and other links. These tasks are to be done as a group, but sign posts.

Bear in mind that the deadlines for the ancillary tasks are likely to overlap with editing deadlines, and that you will be pushed for time.

Sunday, 31 January 2010

For Amie, Emma and Jo

Sorry, but could not post onto your blog for some reason.

Fantastic amount of work here - I am staggered by your output.

Few things to consider

1. Your animatic - should be the same length as your film. Each shot should represent the actual film shot. So, if this is the end version you are a few minutes short.
2. You will need to consider title and end credits as well at some point - will they be integrated into film or "subtract" seconds from your footage?
3. I believe Marion discussed with you the possibility of some ambiguity in the ending - have you considered this?
4. Representation - well done you have considered how you will portray young people. There are two issues here, both Gender and Age!
5. Glad to see you are identifying who your target audience is. I was a bit concerned when you begaan to blog the views of family - remember they do not form part of your target audience.
In your discussion of narrative, consider "Narrative Structure" - how does yours relate to some of the theorists that we have looked at - it may adopt this or challenge it.

Well done for alos considering issues around the industry aswell.

Update - comments on your second deadline - Pre production Planning

Please read your blogs carefully and look at any comments. By and large, most of you have good ideas, some need a little bit of working on. Please try to ensure that it is easy for me to identify this your final ideas for filming, perhaps a heading of "Final Submission for Short Film" with an accurate animatic and some expalnation - that would be very useful to me.

Thanks

Wednesday, 13 January 2010

Snow

Yes, college was closed today, however, you should be working independently now - you can still view the films on either the Virgin Media or BBC websites and so, no alterations to the deadline for Friday.

See you all tomorrow.

Monday, 4 January 2010

Heading Two

This should be "Research Tasks"

Use the link to Virgin Shorts/BBC Short films on the right hand side of this page

a) Using the prompt sheet/handout, you need to blog comments on "Joy Ride".

b) Using the prompt sheet/handout, you need to blog comments on the other 4 films referred to on the Prompt sheet".

c) Again, using the prompt sheet/handout, you need to blog comments on any Short films that you have viewed on the Virgin Media site or BBC site.

Rememeber, your blog must look like a blog and not an essay. Use multi media applications wherever you can - links, stills, video clips, comments etc.

Heading One

This should be "Lessons learnt from the Foundation Portfolio".

Visit your evaluation of your AS coursework and remind yourself of any mistakes made. Most important, blog on how you intend to rectify these problems this time around!

Andy paul has your AS blog address from last year.

Advanced Portfolio Brief

Happy New Year and welcome back everyone

I will now be using this blog as the front page of the Advanced Production for those whom I will be responsible for. If you have not already signed up to follow this blog then do so now. It is your responsibility to to keep yourself up to date. This is the first part of your advanced production instructions and a more detailed booklet will follow. A good tip is to start looking at loads of short films Virgin Shorts and BBC Film Network are good places to start.


What does the Advanced Portfolio consist of?

The Advanced Portfolio has three parts, all of which relate to each other:

The Main Task: creating a short film lasting 5 minutes

Ancillary Task: creating a poster to advertise the film
Ancillary Task: creating a review of the film for a magazine


This booklet only concerns the Main Task; further advice will be given for the two Ancillary Tasks later this half term.

What do you have to do for the Main Task?

The OCR specification states:-

Main task: Produce a short film in its entirety, lasting approximately five minutes.

DEADLINE FOR THE MAIN TASK: HALF TERM – EXACT DATE TO BE ADVISED

In order for you to be able to answer questions in the exam based on your production work, you must work within the following genre or style frameworks:

• Social Realism
• Horror
• Crime or Thriller
Or a combination of these…(hybrid)


Also, in order to answer other possible questions in the exam, you must consider the following areas in your planning:

• Narrative structure
• Representation
• Genre
• Audience
• Film Language

Is this an individual or group project?

• This is a group project.
• You have to work in groups of no more than 4.
• Despite it being a group effort, you will still be marked as individuals. So, if an individual in the group does very little, this will be reflected in that individual’s mark.
• You have a responsibility to each other – do not let each other down. Group members have every right to inform their teachers of individuals who prove to be unreliable.
• As occurred during the Foundation Production work, Andy and (technicians) will also be keeping a record of which group members are involved in the editing process and this feeds into final grades