Friday, 23 July 2010

The Pitch- get your film idea made in HOLLYWOOD

The Pitch is your opportunity to pitch to make a short film with professional production support worth in excess of £20,000, and to receive advice from top industry professionals.

Once it's made, we'll fly you and a friend or family member to Hollywood. We'll introduce you to film industry professionals such as producer Ralph Winter (X-Men, Fantastic Four) who'll watch your film and give you hints and tips on taking your skills to the next level.

The unique challenge of The Pitch is to come up with a contemporary film drawing upon a Bible story for your inspiration.

Check here for more info...

Excellent Advertising Competition- worth an entry

Be Creative

Be Creative: Be a Screen Champion is a unique competition open to UK students aged 11-19. Students are invited to create an original and effective ad campaign – radio, poster, or film – to support the UK TV and film industries by encouraging people to choose legitimate content in the cinema and at home, avoiding illegal downloads.
With fantastic prizes on offer for winners and runners-up in the 11-14 and 15-19 categories, including iPods, iPads and cameras, this competition offers a real opportunity for young people to actively support film and TV and get rewarded for their creativity. There are also schools prizes up for grabs for the overall winners in each category, to include a set of iMacs with creative software plus video recording equipment.

Check out the creative brief and entry requirements HERE

Wednesday, 21 July 2010

Plans to extend TV advertising by allowing product placement are causing controversy.

Intertextuality is used in music video and film, so why not on UK television programmes?

Bree arrives home in a new silver Lexus and all the other Desperate Housewives gather round to admire it. James Bond taps into a terror network using a Sony laptop. In Moonlight, Beth Turner takes a picture of the crime scene with her iPhone…

All of the above are examples of product placement, a form of advertising in which the products are incorporated into the drama. Recent James Bond films have featured some outrageous examples, such as a character admiring Bond’s watch, or unnecessary dwelling on the screen of his mobile phone. There’s even an official James Bond beer.

On TV, Desperate Housewives is probably the show with the most over the top placement – considering Susan is supposed to be broke, and Carlos and Gabby bankrupt, the Scavos also in financial difficulties following the collapse of their restaurant, and Mike Delfino struggling – it doesn’t stop all those brand-new cars from turning up in the neighbourhood.

ITV have been putting pressure on the British government to change the rules in the UK. It does seem unfair that imported American shows and films can have it, but home-grown dramas cannot. Now, according to the BBC, the ban is about to be lifted. The Guardian reports it here. This might prove to be the salvation of ITV and Channel 4. Coronation Street drinkers in the Rover’s Return can now drink real branded beers (unless alcohol advertising is banned); Foyle can now use a Motorola phone to call the RAF in Foyle’s War (perhaps not); Lewis can now ride around Oxford on a Trek bicycle. I’m sure they’ll think of something.

While this might introduce a new revenue stream for the broadcasters, it hardly helps the creative side of the advertising industry. We’re heading down the road of simply negotiating a placement in a show, leaving it up to the writers to incorporate it in such a way that the viewers won’t turn off. For the Tarquins and Marcuses in the creative agencies, not much work. No animated Nissans or singing builders dreaming about chips.


“By its nature product placement allows marketing to be integrated into programmes, blurring the distinction between advertising and editorial, and is not always recognisable. Studies show that children are particularly susceptible to embedded brand messages and these operate at a subconscious level.”


What do you think?

Read more...from The Guardian

Television Perfume Advertising campaigns

Check out this website for perfume adverts from television.

Princess: Vera Wang Advertising campaign








Dirty: A perfume by Juicy Couture



Check out this article on the Dirty concept.

Pitching Tips

Ten Strategies for Improving Presentations

Presentation and pitching

Presentations and Pitches

A great slideshow that shows how BADLY powerpoint is used.

Colour Theory

Colour theory and the colour wheel

Mise En Scene Analysis

Revision of Mise en scene

Media Studies - Camera Movements Revision

Camera Movements - 180 rule. Revision

Media Studies, How to Guide. Basic Camera Angles Revision

Media Studies - Basic Camera Shots Revision

Film Posters and Typography

Check out this BBC resource on how Typography is used in Film Posters.

New Moon Poster Analysis

Exemplar Film Poster analysis

Teaser Trailer Annotation - New Moon

Exemplar teaser trailer analysis

Empire Magazine Analysis

Exemplar magazine cover analysis

AMAZING Ridley Scott FILM COMPETITION: Be quick!

Competition link

Monday, 12 July 2010

Slumdog Millionaire Trailer

Of Mice and Men Trailer

Frankenstein Trailer

Lord of the Flies Trailer

City Of Gold Trailer

Braveheart Trailer (2005)

Too fat to be a model? The picture that caused a storm in the fashion world.


Too fat to be a model? The picture that caused a storm in the fashion world.
Read more...

Is this what the magazine of the future will look like? | Technology | guardian.co.uk

Here’s a great example of what audience research in Media Studies is all about. It’s not theoretical, it’s not about generalisations. It’s about specific habits and behaviours, so that when you decide the future technology that might replace the magazine, you design something that people might enjoy in the same way that they enjoy magazines.
It's worth clicking the link to watch the video.
Read more...

Publish your own magazine.

Magcloud
Publish your own magazine for about 20 'American' cents per page, apparently. This is what they call a “vanity” publishing service. Actually, what it means is that if you have an idea, you can realise it. Everything that happens after that depends on how good your idea is.

Web Typography

Yet more luscious typography to get 'stoked' on. Yum.

Typography: Past and Future

More on Typography- an arty perspective!

Typography

For the font geeks amongst you- further reading on the luscious topic of typography.

Coursework deadlines and exam dates

Why Study Media Studies?

Why Media Studies IS an academic subject.

Every now and then, Media Studies gets what is ironically called “a bad press”.

Even after a general election in which the media played a pivotal role (television debates, the 24-hour news beast feeding on the corpse of Gordon Brown after his accidental on-mic comment, the on-screen worm during the debates etc.), even after all that, Media Studies gets described as a “Mickey Mouse subject”.

It would be hilarious if it wasn’t so serious. We live in a mediated world, a reality constructed around us and constantly filtered through the media. Although you might experience some of reality directly (in an unmediated way), your response to that reality is inevitably informed by your exposure to the modern media. When you see yourself in the mirror, do you not judge yourself by the standards of beauty and style laid down by the fashion and beauty industries?

When someone is innocently taking pictures of kids playing in the park, are we suspicious that they’re up to no good? In our relationships with each other, do we take people at face value, or do we make judgements based on the way we think they should be? When we desire consumer goods, why is that exactly? Why do we want things? How does that happen?

We get soundbite politics – because of the media.
We get personality politics – because of the media.
We learn to act the way we do – because of the media.
We learn to talk the way we do – because of the media.
We get turned on, we get excited, we get angry, we laugh and we cry – because of the media.
We became convinced that Gordon Brown wasn’t up to the job – because of the media.
We panic about vaccines, medicines, food, drink, sunshine – because of the media.

To understand how things happen, why they happen, and why they keep happening is, for me, a fit subject of study.

None of this is to mention the skills you develop in Media Studies – skills in writing, editing, analysis, research, design, publishing, video and audio editing/mixing, project management, people skills etc. – which are incredibly useful and incredibly transferrable. One of the things you often hear from the media who give Media Studies a bad press is that, “Anyway, there are no jobs, there are too many people coming through and they won’t get jobs in the media.”

Well. Either it’s a Mickey Mouse subject, or it’s “too hard”, a demanding and impossible industry to get into. Which is it? It’s like saying you shouldn’t study Physics because you won’t get a job at CERN; or that you shouldn’t study law because you won’t get to be a “top barrister”. If you study English and you don’t do so at Oxford or Cambridge, what are your chances of getting a “top job”?

The transferrable skills you learn in Media Studies will equip you for working life, whatever you end up doing. And most of you will end up doing several jobs.

So. Next time someone scoffs at Media Studies, ask them this: when did you last go a day without being exposed to the media, in print and on screen? When did you last have an opinion of your own making?

Next time someone calls it a Mickey Mouse subject, ask them this: who owns the Mouse? What other companies do they own? What was the turnover of this company last year? Which member of the board of this company is also a member of the board of another huge company? How does one business relate to the other? How influential are they? Who are their competitors? How does this competition benefit or harm consumers? What ideology does the company who owns the mouse try to impose upon the world? Why do they do this?

My Blog List: Year 11 Double

  • iPhone app Calander - Calander View for iPhone app Second Calander view for iPhone app Final Calander view for iPhone app Final Calander view with colour correction for iPhone
    12 years ago
  • Articles; Relevant To My Target Audiences' Issues - *So far i have found an article and a blog which are relevant to the issues of my target audience. * *The first, a BBC magazine article, talks about the is...
    12 years ago
  • - I have a logo for 1 step 21. I still need to name and come up with an identity for my campaign.
    12 years ago
  • Similar Campaigns! - CALM - Campaign agaisnt living miserably: The Calm Zone is a website that was set up in response to the high suicide rate among young men, currently the big...
    13 years ago
  • Billboard Posters - My Partner Chloe researched the Codes and Conventions of Billboard Posters for our project. She found the following Codes and Conventions following the ana...
    13 years ago
  • The 'Lunch Bunch' - In order to appeal to kids and make them enjoy learning about good food, which will in turn appeal to the parents, i have chosen to create several characte...
    13 years ago
  • New Decision.. - Today we had a discussion as a group and decided that it would be easier to split up into smaller groups/individuals as working in a group of 4 was making...
    13 years ago

My Blog List: Year 10 Media


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