Sunday, January 17, 2010

Evaluation

Genre and Conventions

For the A2 media assignment we decided to create a teaser trailer in the teen drama genre. We wanted the production to have the look and feel of a British independent art-house film rather than the high gloss of a Hollywood blockbuster.

We researched trailers for films such as ‘Thirteen’, ‘This England’ and also watched trailers and episodes of the television series Skins; produced by Company Pictures for E4.

There are a number of conventions used in this genre which help the audience relate to the movie. Use of a handheld camera and point of view shots draw the audience into the action and make them feel they are seeing what is actually happening. Facial close-ups are used to depict emotions and tight shots of couples restrict the on screen action to a narrow viewpoint.
Teaser trailers are by convention 30 seconds long and give the audience enough information about the film to decide whether it’s their type of movie, but without giving much clue to the actual plot. This convention is not however rigid, as the 2 minute teaser for Avatar proved; Avatar is now tipped to be the most successful movie of all time having grossed £460 million in its first two weeks of release.

By contrast, the 30 second trailer for Lukas Moodysson’s film ‘Lilja 4 Ever’ is very enigmatic, it shows the viewer a close-up range of emotions without actually allowing any kind of insight into whether the film is about happiness or sadness or any point in between.

We wanted to tell the story of a teenage girl’s conflicting personalities whose life was taking a downwards spiral. We decided on “Spiral” for the film’s title. The central character Lindsey Pryce was played by Jennie Lingham-Doe.

To make the trailer fast paced and enigmatic, we edited our footage as a series of fast jump cuts to construct a visual montage in the same way as the trailer for ‘Lilja 4 Ever’. We tried to enhance this by cutting the to the beat of our soundtrack.

The trailer focuses on the central character, there is very little footage which shows any supporting cast. However, rather than shooting the central character simply in a series of situations, we decided to include footage which suggested ideas and situations but allowed the audience to construct its own narrative around them. To achieve this we exported video frames into Adobe Photoshop and edited them to look like abstract sketched which were then used as opening shots for the narrative montage sequences.

Some of the teaser trailers we researched such as Shane Meadow’s ‘This England’ included quotes from reviews of the film. By convention these break out of the trailer as white text on a black background. For our trailer we decided to use still photographs of urban landscapes as a backdrop to review quotes in white type to make them stand out from the background.






For the trailer’s final sequence we constructed a collage of photographs depicting the central character’s life. For this we used baby pictures and old school photographs of Jennie. The sequence was shot in-camera using a slow zoom out from a single photograph, to reveal the collage of photographs together with the name and two dates - leaving the audience in no doubt that this is a memorial but still unsure about the who, what or why ? Hopefully they would want to see the whole film to find their own answers to these questions.

Branding

The title of the film is Spiral. The storyline is dark and dismal, telling the story of a teenager’s downward spiral into a world of alcohol and drugs; eventually leading to her death.

Much of the trailer’s footage is dark with unsaturated colours. To reinforce this we chose dark backgrounds for the poster and magazine cover. We chose the font Courier which looks like a typewriter, suggesting to the audience that this could be an official typed medical or police report. To contrast with the dark backgrounds we chose to set all type across the main and ancillary texts in white.

When designing a poster for the film we knew we wanted to portray the idea of the central character’s two personalities and felt two contrasting pictures of the character could convey this. However, we did not want it to look like it was a film about twins. When looking for ideas we came across a picture of the character ‘Effy’ from the teen drama series ‘Skins’. We liked the style of the photo and we used this as the basis of our poster idea. Below is the photo of Effy:



















We originally decided to have two images of Jennie standing side by side and dressed in two different outfits to convey the character’s two personalities. However, we developed this idea by using a wall in between the two images to suggest a barrier between the personalities. The pictures were shot using studio flash lighting and all members of the Group were involved in shooting, make-up and production of the photos. We had to make sure Jennie’s pose was the same for both shots as for the final poster we wanted to have the character’s hands pushing against each other to show conflict.

The character is wearing two very different outfits. The first is plain. She is dressed in a fully buttoned shirt, her hair in bunches, she has little make-up, and she is wearing a hat. She looks like she has not made an effort and does not care about her appearance. As a complete contrast for the second shot the character appears much more glamorous. She is wearing a dress, heavy jewellery and her hair is down. She is also wearing much more make-up to look like she may be dressed for a party.

We spent a lot of time editing the photographs to find two which complimented each other – particularly the facial expressions – so we could show the two sides of the character’s personality. Using Adobe Photoshop one of the photographs was flipped horizontally and the two pictures were then composited to create the final image. We had be careful to make both pictures the same size and to line up Jennie’s hands so she appeared to be pushing against herself.

To reinforce the concept of a single character with two opposing personalities and to add weight to the film’s title, we added the strap line “One teenage life, locked in a downward spiral” above the picture. The poster also includes the typical conventions of a film poster, with a billing block, review quotes, BBFC age certificate and the various film distributors’ logos. Below is our final poster image:
























The accompanying magazine cover is in the house style of specialist film magazine Empire. We used the magazine’s iconic masthead and included other recognisable cover elements such as bar code, price, cover lines and issue date. Researching past issues of Empire magazine we found that rather than promotional stills of famous actors, Empire magazine prefers to feature the actual character’s from the films it features for example Wolverine and The Joker. We used the Spiral logo in the courier font across the photograph of Jennie in-character as Lindsey Pryce. For continuity and branding she is dressed the same as she appears on the poster which we all felt made an eye catching cover shot. Below is the final magazine cover image:























Audience Feedback
We showed our rough first cut to a selection of people from our target audience. The feedback from the questionnaires indicated that our genre wasn’t instantly recognisable and our story line wasn’t very clear.

Our original trailer concept included a rewind clip which we thought showed the character reflecting back on her life, however the audience did not feel this was clear. Also when researching other teaser trailers we did not find one where the rewind section contained exactly the same camera shots.

We could have opted to re-shoot some of the rewind sequence from alternate angles, but it was not clear from our audience feedback that this would have made the concept any clearer. Therefore we decided to add a voice over where the central character describes how the girl is feeling by saying “I felt like I was losing my mind”.

We also felt that including extra shots to suggest drinking and drug taking which could be familiar or at least recognisable to our target audience.

We also shot a new sequence where the central character showed the two sides of her character to make the storyline clearer while still retaining a slightly enigmatic and montage approach to the trailer.
The audience feedback showed that the audience liked the soundtrack and thought it added tension to the trailer.

Use Of New Media
At all stages of this project, we used new media technologies to research, plan and construct our work.

Our main source for research was the Internet, as it provided us with a huge amount of information and was easy to access. The main websites we used were IMBD, Pearl and Dean and Youtube to research our chosen genre and view trailers in a similar field.
We took montage ideas from Lilja 4 Ever, the use of review quotations from This England and hand-held point of view camera work from Skins, all of which we were able to research on Youtube.

We shot our video footage using a digital video camera which allowed us to import our work directly into Final Cut Express for editing. As the different elements were shot under different lighting conditions – dull daylight, bright daylight, fluorescent lighting and tungsten lighting we were able to colour correct our project for continuity using the ‘colour corrector’ function.
During editing in Final Cut we were also able to speed up some shots and add a blur effect to the shots of the people dancing at the party. This adds distortion and creates a sense of confusion enhancing the idea that the character is under the influence of drugs or alcohol.

The sequence depicting the two sides to the central character’s personality was shot with the character wearing two different costumes. The footage was imported into Final Cut Express and a fade transition applied to blend the shots into one sequence.

We freeze framed the opening frames of some of the video sequences and exported them as digital stills. These were opened in Adobe Photoshop as a background layer and duplicated to create a new layer above the original image. The ‘find edges’ filter was then applied to the new layer which made the picture look like an abstract pencil sketch. Changing the blending mode of the sketch layer to Vivid Light allowed some of the colour and detail of the original photograph to be seen. The images were then saved as TIFF files and imported back into the video project. Below is an example of one of the still images:



Stills for the poster and magazine cover were shot using a digital stills camera and studio flash lighting.

The two photographs for the poster were composited using Adobe Photoshop. The cover for Empire magazine was designed in Adobe Photoshop and Adobe Illustrator.
We used the Apple software package Live Type to add the titles to our trailer and the reviewers’ quotes.

We also used the Apple Soundtrack a digital audio editing software package to create the music soundtrack to the trailer. We made sure it was fast paced and had a heavy bass beat to add drive to the trailer.

Thursday, December 10, 2009

Spiral Teaser Trailer


This is our final teaser trailer.

Friday, December 4, 2009

Progression of trailer

To add a more visual aspect to out trailer we decided to freeze some of the frames and add a drawing like filter to them. To do this we freezed the frames we wanted to look arty and made these into stills, we then impoted these stills into Adobe Photoshop. The picture layer was duplicated and we went to FILTERS>>STYLIZED>>FIND EDGES. We then went into the layer menu and changed the menu which said 'normal' to 'vivd lights'. We then saved this as a TIFF and impoted it back into Final Cut Express. Below is some examples:

final poster analysis



This is our final poster design. When choosing ideas for the image, we knew we wanted to portray the idea of the character having two different personalities. However, we did not want it look like they were twins. We decided that we would have two pictures of Jenny standing side by side wearing two different outfits, this idea then progressed to have Jenny standing side by side but make it look like there is a wall seperating the two personalities. We thought it would be best to have Jenny in the same pose but make sure that the two outfits completely contrasted each other.

We wanted the first personality to be just a plain ordinary teenager, who didn't like to stand out from the crowd and got on well at school etc. To do this we put Jenny in quite plain looking clothes and her hair in bunches with odd coloured hair bands to create the assumption that she has not made an effort with her apperance.The shirt she wore was fully buttoned and she wore odd bracelets on her arms, none that really matched. She is wearing minimal makeup, again to show that she has not made an effort.

The second personality is much more outgoing, she likes to be centre of attention and is constantly at parties drinking alot and taking drugs. Jenny put her hair down and her eye make-up was much darker creating the assumption that she has spent time on her appearnace. She wore a dress, had much heavier jewllery on and her nails were painted black.

To create the wall effect, we had Ellen holding up a piece of flooring with weighted things behind it too. Jenny leaned against the wall in the pose we wanted her in. She leaned in the same direction for both of the outfits and then in Adobe Photoshop we flipped one of the images. Below is a picture Ellen holding the piece of wood:

We added the title in Courier font and added a tag line saying 'one teenage girl, locked in a downwards spiral'. We thought this tag line would make the concept of the two personalities clearer and not that they were twins.At the bootom of the poster we added two quotes that appear in our trailer and added the credits at the bottom. We also included a 15 age certificate logo and logos of different film distributors.

Thursday, December 3, 2009

Empire magazine

We decided to create a magazine cover for 'Empire' magazine as the genre of our film is most suited to this. We looked at many different covers and noticed that the pictures mostly focused on the main character rather than the actor/actress. We therefore made sure that Jenny wore the costume of the character (Lyndsey) instead of clothes in her own style. We chose Jenny to be wearing clothes of the more rebellious side of Lyndsey's character as it is more suited for a glossy cover and is also more eye catching. We chose a pose that would make her look attractive while still being in character, as the more rebellious character likes to be centre of attention.

When designing the cover we looked at the typical conventions of 'Empire' magazine, we made sure the date and price was in the typical place. That a strap line was at the top of the page, and text at the bottom showing what the content of the magazine was. We also added a banner saying 'special collectors edition' this was because as the film is more independent rather than a blockbuster. The text of 'Spiral' is in Courier which is the same as the poster, adding to the theme of film. To make the cover look more interesting we added a blue circle of light to the make the picture stand out.

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

Live Type

On the last slide of the trailer (where Jenny is jumping) we added the title of the film and the release date. We created this in Live Type using the font called 'stringy'. We thought this font added to feel of the other slides where an arty effect is used. We chose the colour black so it stood out from the background. We positioned the the title on the right hand side where the grass verge is, we did not want to overlay the text over the picture because it would have been hard to see. The release date is directly opposite on the right hand side.

Friday, November 27, 2009

Magazine


This is a drawing that i drew as an idea for our magazine cover.