Reflective Writing going forward.

After reading the majority of your Project Brief 1 blog posts (still waiting on a few of you … !!!) I thought I’d jot down a few points for you to consider as we move further down the river and into the jungles of the Studio. These points will make up the criteria / matrix against which I grade your written work in the next project briefs. Remember as well that for Briefs 3 and 4 you will be reflecting on actual process and projects you have undertaken.

  1. Professional standards. How you write in your reflections is a reflection on your own standards. Your standards reflect how you will be in your professional lives and so it matters. A reflection does not have to be formal. It can expressive, humorous, full of disparate connections and varied media. It must however be coherent in that it allows insight into how you got from point A to point B and the lessons you learned along the way.
  2. Referencing and citations. We are in an academic environment and so referencing must be disciplined. Please check the library website for the referencing guide (see Harvard Quickguide).
  3. More on referencing. Referencing points the marker toward your research. This is important to be able to follow the paper trail but also because it allows the marker to understand the extent to which you have been able to absorb, summarise and re-articulate the publication in question. Have you understood its context? Have you transformed its context? Have you used it with interest and insight or are you filling in the wordcount? Illuminate your thinking with supporting text and case studies.
  4. Research. Why research? Because it’s fun and it’s where you deepen your knowledge and awareness of topic. In our case the topic is: ‘who are you and what sort of film are you going to make?’ Noone exists in  a vacuum and in terms of the creative aspect of our course, research means how you contextualise, develop and communicate your ideas.
  5. A point by point way to think about how to structure a piece of reflective writing:
    1. report
    2. respond
    3. discuss (argue)
    4. conclude
    5. points to continue

Interesting film … week 3

Another short. This time Australian and directed by Jennifer Kent. This film was later developed into ‘The Babadook’ (2014). Have a think about the continuity from the short film to the feature film. Is there a theme or a visual style or a soundscape that is consistent across these two films? What might that mean in terms of how Jennifer Kent talked about and pitched her vision of the film?

 

Week 3 viewing

This week we looked at Gestalt principles in photographic (and cinematographic) composition. We focussed on Gregory Crewdson, Cindy Sherman and Arthur Felig in particular for their strong sense of narrative and narrative – tension.

Take a look at this vid for a bit more background on Crewdson and his techniques and motivations.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S7CvoTtus34

 

Week 2 Short Films

These are the films we viewed in the week 2 studio:

Think about the director’s motivation and purpose. What can you see here that might filter through into subsequent filmmaking practice?

Two Cars, One Night (Taika Waititi; 2005)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R6Pc6cBP-8U&index=1&list=PLZS9lo3cG6_Pcw4UuyHk1WaCccz8XA7R9

 

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tvtoyk9DisM

Week 1 recap

This week we started a series of writing activities to brush off the cobwebs, looked at various short films for analysis, discussed some of the basic elements of a film’s composition and style and most importantly discussed ‘theme‘.  For us, theme is a word without a strict definition. It is a word with many possibilities. It is what we want to say to the audience. It is how we want to affect the audience. It is how we bring along our filmmaking collaborators and steer the ship on course. As a screenwriter, or as a visual artist, or as a photographer; as anyone who is trying to communicate anything through visual or audio representation, ask yourself these questions:

Where are you going?

What are your values?

What is your purpose?

What is in your head and heart that you want to transplant into the heads and hearts of your audience?

Ask these questions of any of the filmmakers and their short films that we have looked at this week. What answers can you find? Blog about it!

FYI – these films count as ‘screenings’ to be used for reflections for Project Brief 1.

Semester 1, Week 1

Hi Media 3 and 5 students and welcome to Finding the Ear! All assessed and non-assessed activities and instructions take place during the Studio contact hours. This blog is used as a place of further communication, resource sharing and recaps of our in-class discussions. Please stay tuned to this space.

As the title suggests we going to find the ear. Not literally; figuratively that is. More on that as we go along. To start with, here are links to a set of short films that we will use as case studies to get moving in week 1. Reading list can be found under the ‘readings’ tab on this blog. It is password protected. I will publish the password for you in an email to follow.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pWs1SM0xYiI

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-WhKt_CkXD0