Showing posts with label Evaluation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Evaluation. Show all posts
Monday, 1 April 2013
Sunday, 31 March 2013
How effective is the combination of your main product and ancillary texts?
In order for a film to
become successful a lot rests on proper marketing of said film as it is not
just a film anymore it is a media package. It is not just the trailer that
makes someone want to watch a film; it’s the posters and reviews as well. If a
poster is not effective then it won’t grab the audience’s attention so I tried
hard to relate my poster to my film, as well as my review to my film. Film
reviews also play a key part in the marketing of films; if a film gets a bad
review then it will become less likely to become as successful as one with a
good review.
In order for films to spark the audience’s interest early on
teaser posters are released, this is what I did with my short film poster. My
poster feature a photo Barbie following her drug overdose, it featured very few
details only the name of the film, the tagline, release date. Although in lower
case, smaller to the eye, are the name of my production companies and the names
of those starring in my short. The combination of both my short film and poster
works well together in my opinion, both represent Barbie in a different light
one that no one expects. In order to create an effective poster I researched
heavily into different types of posters and deconstructed them. I mainly
concentrated on minimalist posters, as that is the type I wanted to produce for
my own. One of the posters I looked at was the Star Wars teaser poster, now
this was a rather simplistic poster but it told a lot about the story without
doing much, the shadow that Anakin casts on the house in the background is that
of his future self. This was very effective and I wanted to portray something
like this in my film poster. But instead I went down a different path, one that
would better represent my film as a whole. By incorporating an image of Barbie,
a close up image of her face, it shows her vacant stare. I felt this was
important for my poster to show this as even though it is impossible to change
it is key for my short as it represents the whole storyline. In hindsight I think a different image may have been more effective instead of the one I have chosen as this image may have given too much away in the plot or confused the audience.
As important as a
poster is to the proper marketing of a film a review is as important or even
more so as a review can make or break a film. There are many different mediums
in which reviews of films can be made, even a tweet or status update can be
classed a film review in this day and age. If a film were to receive a bad
review then the likelihood of it becoming successful takes a massive dip. When
creating my film review I believed it to be important to style my writing
around that of other reviews to make it more realistic. After lots of research
into different film magazines I styled my writing style on different
journalists and how they review a film. I felt it was important to have a
common theme running through both of my ancillary tasks and my film, the
constant Barbie pink colour scheme I felt to be important as it kept bringing
the audience back to the main aspect of my short. I feel that my poster and
film review work well together and are in keeping with the genre and design of
my film and complement each other in numerous different ways.
In what ways does your media product use, develop or challenge forms and conventions of real media products?
There are many
conventions of short films which I both used and developed upon. One convention
of short films is that they have very few characters, as it would be impossible
to adequately introduce lots of different characters into a film which is so short;
this is something I implemented in my short. I have very few characters in my film;
only the title character, Barbie, and Ken have a back story as it would be
impossible to go into detail about every character’s life history, as that
would turn a short into a longer film breaking another convention. The length
of a short film is probably one of the most important conventions as in order
for a film to be classed as a short it needs to be between 3-30 minutes long.
My film does conform to this convention as it is only just under 4 minutes
long.
Another convention of
a short film is that this is a twist in the story; my whole film is full of
storyline twists. In order to keep the audience laughing my storyline keeps
them guessing adding shock value. It is not the typical Barbie and Ken story,
the whole thing is a twist – the atypical Barbie story flipped on its head. The
story is the opposite of what you’d expect, just what a successful short film
aims to do.
I wanted to emulate a
comedy style mockumentary, in order to understand the conventions of this genre
I researched it thoroughly. By looking at other films in the mockumentary
genre, one in particular being from the creators of “Funny or Die” videos. Many
of these videos are mockumentaries or comedy shorts, taking ordinary situations
and flipping them on their hear making them unexpected and amusing just like
how I wanted my film to come across. One short film in particular I looked at
was “Home For Actresses” this is a short documenting a home where actresses go
to learn their craft, it is a documentary style short but it is comedic.
As my short is a stop
motion film I challenged one of the conventions of this genre by incorporating
an element of live action within the stop motion. Most of my film is stop
motion however, I made it a film within a film adding the conversation with the
Real Life Barbie, this does not conform to other stop motion or mockumentary
short films.
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