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Introduction to Filmmaking. Now is a good time to switch off your mobiles. Ex.1 – ‘Who am I ?’. Take a large piece of paper Using the whole sheet draw a comic-style sequence – 3 cells max Theme ‘who am I ?’ Have a beginning, middle, end Make it outrageous, big & dramatic
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Now is a good time to switch off your mobiles
Ex.1 – ‘Who am I ?’ • Take a large piece of paper • Using the whole sheet draw a comic-style sequence – 3 cells max • Theme ‘who am I ?’ • Have a beginning, middle, end • Make it outrageous, big & dramatic • The story in images should make sense without dialogue
Ex.1 cont. – ‘Who am I ?’ • Give your comic sequence to the person sitting behind/in front of you. • Introduce yourself • Insert big voice bubbles – and fill them in • You are the new author of the sequence. Your interpretation needs to be very clear and specific
Pass on to a third person sitting next to you. They need to let you know if it makes sense Introduce yourselves & DISCUSS Then write your name on the top and submit
Who?Dr Greg Dolgopolov (UNSW)Course Coordinator Contact Details • gregd@unsw.edu.au If you have any questions – come & see me Email: for an appointment or to discuss matters put UIBE in subject heading
Image & Sound literacy & experiment Introduction to Filmmaking:is an introductory production courseIt is not really a theory course It is a pre-production course for developing concepts & the imagination
Develop a film & media audio-visual creativity -- working low tech & lo-fi Encourage creative collaborations & teamwork Introduce some basic videomaking techniques and film grammar Generate a bunch of ideas and concepts for future development Fire up the imagination and provide a framework for realising your unique stories & concepts
Hands-on Introduce a hands-on approach to telling stories and exploring ideas: • Prepare concept outlines, storyboards & soundscapes • Introduce effective creative workflows • Capture and generate images and sounds • Develop documentary and cross-platform concepts • Write a short script • Become a script editor • Design your project photo-essay • Figure out production logistics & budgeting • Work on an adaptation in a group
Figure out which is the best means of production and distribution Experiment with storytelling & image and sound production Develop unique content and challenging ideas for future production Ideas
Course Outline • Photography & image literacy • Film Grammar: framing, shots, camera • Designing films for Sound and soundscapes • Scriptwriting, Adaptation • Portfolios
Assessssssment Photo-Essay (Solo) Due Week 2 Monday 4pm 20% A stills exercise using photos and your own voice to tell a factual, emotionally powerful story (2 mins) Exegesis (500 words) Submitted online on your portfolio website and as a .mov file on disk
Scriptwriting & Script Doctoring (Partners) You will need to write your own original short fiction film script Length: strictly 8 pages. Include a log line, synopsis and exegesis. Script may contain only ten lines of dialogue. It needs to be very genre specific You will also need to script doctor your partner's script - Write up detailed commentary & constructive feedback Submit your script and the accompanying feedback. Your partner submits their script and your feedback.
Workshop exercises & portfolio All course work needs to be presented and archived on your portfolio site This includes work for submission, your pre-production materials and a selection of your in-class workshop exercises.
Adapting a Classic (Group Production) As a group you will select, prepare for a pre-production submission a film ‘classic’ scene of your choice (5 minutes max). As a shot-for-shot remake you will need to stick to the script, the shots, the mise en scene, but you can change the meaning or the inflection. Alternatively you can adapt a literary classic – Focus is on pre-production materials and film style Individual Exegesis (500 words)
Portfolio Wix Weebly Wordpress Tumblr Put up a film on your site that is the ONE film you would recommend www.hoogerbrugge.com
Preparation • If you have a camera enabled mobile phone or a digital stills camera or a video camera - bring it for the next few weeks • Photo-essay/digitale – start thinking about a great idea • Adaptation Proposal ideas now. What do you want people to think/feel/say about your idea? • Figure out what you need to practice or learn in order to realise your idea • Download celtx.com – its FREE!!!!
The Five Obstructions • Doco or Experiment? • Directed by: Jørgen Leth & Lars von Trier. • Denmark (90 min) 2004 • Director Lars von Trier assigns five different impediments to Danish experimental filmmaker Jørgen Leth. In each of the assignments, Leth is to remake his 12-minute 1967 filmThe Perfect Human
Reading 1: Andrei Tarkovsky • Most famous Russian filmmaker since Eisenstein • metaphysical preoccupations provoked ongoing hostility from the Soviet authorities • Visionary approach to cinematic time & space. • commitment to cinema as poetry
Sculpting in Time • cinema's capacity for capturing time • long takes that allowed time to flow through an individual shot. • contemplative, imagistic style emphasised the integration of characters with the world around them, both through their positioning in the frame and through slow, probing camera movements. Stalker (1979)
Sculpting in Time • Proposed a cinema based on the rapt observation of the present moment as opposed to a plot-driven preoccupation with what will happen next. • Rhythm over montage • Focus on cinema as art and not as message
Objectives • To explore the creative and communicative possibilities of film, video and other audio-visual technologies • Present a wide range of audio & visual examples, from cinema classics to the latest music videos and a range of short and experimental films • Explore the creative potential of sound and image with an emphasis on film grammar, photography and the development of original concepts • Act as a preparation for 3rd year Video Exercise & provide a hands on approach to making sense of film theory