Thursday, 8 December 2011

Shooting Schedule

Shooting Schedule
DATE
Characters
Location
Duration
Shots
29th November 2011
Ross and Matt
Forest
2 hours
Medium, Establishing, reaction, follow, hand held
1st December 2011
Ross
Car
10 mins
Over the shoulder, side
 2nd December 2011
Ross and Matt
Forest
1 hour
Close Up, mirror, tracking, pan
6th December 2011
Bird shots
Field
20 mins
Long shot

Treatment and Pitch

Pitch and Treatment

NAME: Ross Campbell, Ollie Miller (partner)
TITLE: BirdWatcher
GENRE: Thriller
           
A teenage bird watcher is driving to his favourite spot amongst nature. However today is different. Whilst driving through the vast forest he sees something, someone. By getting out to investigate, he is led deeper into the words, deeper into the unknown, deeper into his fate.
Camera Shots
·        Over the shoulder Shot
·        Establishing Shot
·        Medium Shot
·        Follow Shot
·        Reaction Shot
·        Handheld Shot
·        Mirror Shot
·        Close Up Shot

Target Audience
            The target audience for BirdWatcher is 15 – 30 year olds that enjoy watching films of a thriller genre.  

Possible Logo

Mood Board - Genre

Thursday, 1 December 2011

Research

Research for Trailer

           

            We researched many trailers from our target genre which was horror/thriller. We wanted to establish what made the trailer successful, powerful and what made you want to watch the film. The film trailers we looked at in detail were:

·         Disturbia

This trailer used many different shots, showing the different locations used in the film. The trailer also used fast paced editing, where the editing got gradually quicker throughout. This built suspension and therefore gave the trailer its genre. We also noticed that the characters in the film reflected the target audience (teenagers), this helped the audience relate to what was going on screen.

·         The Crazies

This trailer used sound to create tension. The music gradually got louder throughout, as the trailer led the audience to the climax. The trailer also used diegetic sounds of the outside world to lull the audience into a false sense of security.  

·         The Orphan



This trailer featured the creepy protagonist in virtually every shot, which gave the audience a good sense of the film was about. The trailer also made the genre clear – by adding the films scariest scenes.