Thursday, 13 October 2016

AS G321: Preliminary Task - SHOT ORDER



Shot Order

  • Establishing long shot
  • Mid shot of her outside the house
  • Close up face confusion 
  • Mid shot Pushes open the door
  • Tracking shot see’s her enter the house (camera is transferred through the window, displaying Emily in the house.) CLATTER NOISES
  • Over the shoulder shot as Emily looks at the mess the robber has created within her house. 
  • Out of the corner of her eye she sees a shadow, quickly pans at canted angle to moving object and back quickly. 
  • Tracking shot follows Emily down the hallway from over the shoulder perspective looking around, see’s robber behind fridge.  
  • Janice(robber)tilt from her feet upwards to her face.
  • Two shot of both looking shocked
  • Medium close up of Emily “Who are you?” 
  • Shot reverse shot for dialogue. 
  • Emily is punched in the face in a medium close up shot and a tracking shot of the hand moving before impact. 
  • Close up of Emily on the floor
  • POV shot from canted angle on the floor as her vision begins to fade, kitchen floor. Slowly loses focus. Impairment shot. 
  • Tracking shot from Emily’s face, through the corridor and out onto the drive as thief runs away. 

Shot Filming Order

EXT Shots filmed first

  • Establishing long shot (first shot)
  • Mid shot of her outside the house
  • Close up face confusion 
  • Mid shot Pushes open the door

  • Tracking shot from Emily’s face, through the corridor and out onto the drive as thief runs away. (last shot)

INT Hallway shots

  • Over the shoulder shot as Emily looks at the mess the robber has created within her house. 
  • Out of the corner of her eye she sees a shadow, quickly pans at canted angle to moving object and back quickly. 
  • Emily is punched in the face in a medium close up shot and a tracking shot of the hand moving before impact. 
  • Close up of Emily on the floor
  • POV shot from canted angle on the floor as her vision begins to fade, kitchen floor. Slowly loses focus. Impairment shot.
  • Tracking shot follows Emily down the hallway from over the shoulder perspective looking around, see’s robber behind fridge.  

INT Kitchen shots



  • Janice(robber)tilt from her feet upwards to her face.   
  • Medium close up of Emily “Who are you?” 
  • Shot reverse shot for dialogue. 
  • Two shot of robber and Emily

AS G321: Preliminary Task - STORYBOARD


Tuesday, 11 October 2016

AS G321: Preliminary Task - SCRIPT



IT'S MY HOUSE!
SCENE 1



EXT. EMILY’S HOUSE. DAY.

Establishing shot of house. The front door is open. EMILY walks up to the  door and stops as she sees it is open. Mid shot of EMILY looking at the open door, confused. Close up of the door as she pushes it the rest of the way open and steps inside. 

INT. EMILY’S HOUSE. DAY.

She looks around and sees movement out of the corner of her eye. She walks cautiously into the kitchen, where the thief is trying to hide. 

EMILY
Who are you?

THIEF
Who are you?

EMILY
The owner of this house! What are you doing in here?

THIEF
Oh… I… The door was open, I thought it was for sale, I was just having a look…

EMILY
Well this is my house and it’s not for sale.

THIEF
Sorry… I’d better be going now then…

EMILY
You better or I’ll call the police.

The THIEF looks around nervously, looking for an escape.

EMILY
Wait… are you robbing me?
THIEF
Umm… no?

Over the shoulder shot pans down to show the valuables the THIEF is holding behind her back. 

EMILY
I’m calling the police.

EMILY turns around, looking for the phone. The THIEF quickly goes out the kitchen door and hides in the living room. EMILY turns back around, holding the phone.

EMILY
Wait where…?

The THIEF leans back round the kitchen door.

THIEF
Have a good evening!

The THIEF punches EMILY, who falls to the ground. POV shot from EMILY lying on the ground and the THIEF’S feet. Tracking shot starting with EMILY lying on the ground and pulling back through the hallway and out the front door as the THIEF leaves the house and runs down the road. 



AS G321: Preliminary Task - TREATMENT

Working Title

It’s My House!

Synopsis

Emily comes home to find her front door wide open. She rushes inside and there is a stranger in her kitchen. She asks who they are and threatens to call the police. The stranger denies being a robber but a pan shot reveals to the viewers the stolen goods hidden behind their back. Emily is suspicious and turn to find the phone to call the police, but when she is looking away the stranger slowly leaves the room. Emily turns and is shocked but then the stranger sticks their head back around the door and wishes Emily good day before leaving again. The scene ends with a long shot of the stranger sprinting away down the road as a police siren blares.

Characters

Emily -  A teenage female, who who owns the house.
Thief - A thief who tried to steal the house and does everything she can not to get caught.

Film Techniques

We will film on a Canon EOS 700D and use three-point lighting to light the scene. The techniques we will use are:
Match on action
Shot/reverse shot
180 degree rule
Tilt
Pan
360 degree tracking shot
Over the shoulder shot

Product Considerations



We intend to film in a house and the surrounding streets. 

Wednesday, 5 October 2016

DSLR Guide


DSLR stands for Digital Single Lens Reflex. It is a camera with one lens and a mirror which reflects the light, where pictures are recorded on a digital card instead of film.

Exposure


the amount of light a digital camera’s sensor captures when a photo is taken.
too much light results in a washed out photo (overexposed).
too little light results in a too dark photo (underexposed).
a camera’s aperture, shutter speed and ISO settings directly affect exposure and allow you to control how the photo will look.
Overexposed:

Underexposed:



Aperture
size of the lens opening.
a low f-stop number allows in more light, which gives a shallow depth of field and an out of focus background and foreground.
a high f-stop number allows in less light, so has a wider depth of field, giving a sharp foreground, mid ground and background.
Large Aperture (f22):
Small Aperture (f2.8):



Shutter Speed
controls how long the shutter opens to expose the image sensor to light.
a short shutter speed means the shutter is open for a very short amount of time. This allows less light to get to the image sensor and means a photo can capture a fast-moving object.
a long shutter speed means the shutter is open for longer. Therefore more light can reach the image sensor and photos taken of a moving object will be blurred.
Long Shutter Speed (1sec):

Short Shutter Speed (1/6000)



ISO
how sensitive the image sensor is to light.
the higher the ISO, the more sensitive the sensor, and the brighter the image will be.
the lower the ISO, the less light will come in and the darker the image will be.
using a high ISO in low light will produce a grainy image, so it is best to use the lowest ISO possible, and adjust the brightness of the photo using other elements such as Aperture and Shutter Speed.

High ISO (6400):


Low ISO (100):