Welcome to Doncaster South CLC
Welcome to
Doncaster South CLC
welcome to the clc
help us maintain our high standard environment
• Food and drink • Mobile phones • Chairs • Noise
• Smoking• Poor behaviour • Air conditioning • Tidy Rooms• Moving of Equipment
Unit 2:
Introduction
to Media
Pre-Production
Today:• ‘Board Blast’ – Horror Genre
• Shot Composition/Framing
• The Task
• Storyboards
• The Cameras
• Shoot Your Sequence
• Edit Your Sequence
• Record/Edit Audio
The Key to Success!
• Planning and Preparation
• Effective Research
• Clear Proposals
Board Blast:
Horror Films
Example
Monsters
Haunted HouseKnives
Howling wind
Creaking DoorsScreaming
Shows entire body and some of the surroundings. Often used at the start of a program or scene. Lets the audience know where the action is set.Sometimes called Long Shot (LS)
Wide Shot (WS)
Composition/Framing
Includes the upper half of the body, cutting the person off near the waist. Shows more character emotion, or reaction than wide shot. A typical shot for interviews. Often called Mid-Shot
Medium Shot (MS)
Composition/Framing
“Head and shoulders” shot. Provides even more emotion or reaction than the Medium shot. When focused on objects, helps audience see details that they might otherwise miss. Also commonly used for interviews.
Close Up (CU)
Composition/Framing
Maximum dramatic effect. Used
when speech or reaction is
very important or very
emotional.
Extreme Close-up (ECU)
Composition/Framing
The Task:Working in groups, you’ll storyboard, film and edit a short sequence in the style of a Horror film. The sequence will use a maximum of six different shots. You can use the same shot more than once if you wish.The story: Someone walks into a cupboard/room to retrieve an item (of your choice). When edited, you must record/find sound effects to suit the Genre and edit them to complete the sequence.
StoryboardsProduction/Title
Storyboards
The Camera
Editing:
Cut: The most common transition/edit. Generally used to show the same scene/action from a different angle. It is the replacement of one shot with another.
Dissolve: After the cut, this is the most common transition used. It is the simultaneous fading out of one shot, and the fading into the next. Usually used to signal a change in time or location.Fade: A ‘dissolve’ to or from Black (or another colour). Sometimes used to signal the passage time.