Sunday, 10 January 2016

Question 7

Q7: Looking back at your preliminary task, what do you feel you have learnt in the progression from it to the full product?

Personally I believe I have developed a full range of skills as a filmmaker, primarily in the departments of camerawork, sound and editing. Due to myself already studying a technology course in music I already have a skill in sound production and editing but this is only relative to the music industry, so this has helped develop these skills and apply them to sound production in media and film. This has resulted in me being recognized in terms of my skills and ear in sound editing, though I am still not the best in terms of technical talent it has been a big step and assisted me in my knowledge of sound production relative to media.
I have always been interested in editing and have edited small clips on minor software, but not until I purchased a Mac with reasonable editing software like IMovie. Nonetheless I instantly took charge of editing for our preliminary since editing was the one thing I took immediate interest in, and showed natural ability in doing so too. I researched editing techniques and the mechanics of IMovie learning basic, and then more advanced features of it. Again my editing isn’t the best but it was most certainly good enough for the preliminary and has since improved after having filmed Vox Pops and then after observing the editing of our final Thriller piece. I learned how to review individual clips frame by frame, attach and detach sound, add filters and themes and even attach and alter the screen dimensions of an image to match that of the film.
Finally, for our Thriller I was the cameraman so I had a hand in suggesting shots (most of which were controlled by the executive producer, Jack) but for the more complex shots such as the out of focus shot of the victim in the distance was by my hand. Many of the tracking shots, used or unused were suggested and filmed by myself. I took test shots and three takes of each shot we did so that we could either collaborate takes of shots or select the best quality one to unsure we had quality as well as quantity to our work.

There are many strengths and faults to our preliminary but nonetheless it turned out as a success. The strengths were that we held continuity well in our preliminary ensuring we took multiple takes of each shot and making sure each actor does not move, especially when doing the shot of Jordan walking through the door to ensure continuity is held. We ensured the door, Jordan’s position and Jordan’s stature all didn’t change.
Also, we held the 180-degree rule and didn’t break it once, we noticed we had broken it when filming a shot of Jordan placing the phone on the floor so we had to of course return and re-film. It was myself who had spotted this mistake so my constructive critique of our preliminary and attention to minor detail helped us remove any mistakes in continuity and breaks in the 180-degree rule.
On top of that the editing was effective, we managed to use clips and cut out outtakes and still use them successfully. We managed to watch each clip frame by frame, remove loss of words, laughs at the end of clips and even remove the sound of one of the filming crew talking during shooting.
I noticed these strengths and built upon these during the filming of our thriller to make the quality of it better. I applied my critical view on shots and even the editing to a degree making sure that the executive producer agreed with what I pushed forward. I often said after filming a shot that it wasn’t good enough and that it had to be redone or done in a different way using a different angle or distance.
I mainly built off my camerawork skills from the preliminary and decided to look at and play with the Panasonic HD camera we used to get a grip with its features. After gaining many ideas from the preliminary and knowledge of camerawork and filming I delved deeper into the actual settings that can be used for filming, and began to grow picky with how the camera was calibrated during shots. Though my abilities in using the camera weren’t the best, I can pick out which shots I was picky with over some of the others in which I didn’t edit the camera settings with.

On the other hand, there were weaknesses of our preliminary. One weakness was that we had to resort to using a Ken Baker shot because of a continuity break. A Ken Baker shot is where part of the image is cropped and it zooms out over a set period and amount, I used this to remove continuity. Though technically a strength it is also a weakness for good reason. This is since we had to reduce the quality of a small part of the film to cover for a continuity error that was hidden in plain sight. Jack’s stature hadn’t changed a bit to the previous shot but since he’d lifted his arm using multiple takes, his shirt had un-tucked and we didn’t notice until after the filming deadline so I quickly came up with such a solution.
We cut shots off and changed the angle too often when we didn’t need to. We could have left some shots going and not stopped the filming, or recorded off two separate devices to capture the moment twice and evaluate different angles. Or even better collaborate the same shot, from two different places to capture two angles without having to move or possibly break continuity.
In our thriller we avoided zooming in too much but only focused on what we wanted in the framing, and made sure not to crop or Ken Baker any of the clips we used for our Thriller. On top of that we captured shots from both our iPhones and the HD camera to get many angles and takes for each clip. We used the iPhones for POV shots while filming over the shoulder with the Panasonic to capture a first and third person view of the action. We also carried shots on and didn’t stop them unnecessarily.

Discuss specific skills that you have developed filming, editing, etc
you MUST mention continuity, 180˚ rule, shot reverse-shot, match on action, etc How were they useful when shooting/ editing your thriller?

After having filmed our preliminary we kept the 180-degree rule in mind more than most things, since we filmed in two separate locations and not only that but we had a lot of character movement so we had to keep a track of which direction they were moving and which side we did and didn’t want to show. We didn’t want to show the houses but we wanted to show the fields, but the difficulty stood that facing away from the house would result in not showing any fields. We decided to zoom a little and wait for the people’s noise to subside before filming and it completely removed the house from the framing. This allowed us to show the fields without confusing the viewer about which direction the victim was travelling in.
When filming in the garage we didn’t wish to show the door or the boxes of trampolines and pink bicycles at the end of the garage, so we didn’t show many shots from behind Ronan and no shots of the wall to his right. We primarily focused on capturing the torture table and victim reactions.
Keeping the 180-degree rule in mind was very useful; this allowed us to hold continuity all the way through filming since we had no worry of character and prop placement since we told them to stay still, or not look or face a different direction. All we had to do was move the camera, set the settings and zoom and then continue the filming. Thanks to the 180-degree rule we struggled less for positioning for both camera and actors than we did during our preliminary.

As I stated my camerawork and editing skills have increased massively since filming and editing the preliminary. I have done further research and playing around with software to hone my abilities in the meantime, since after filming I want to better my knowledge of filming and editing and make it a skill that I can confidently hold. I can split clips frame by frame much more accurately and I can edit confidently and quickly within minutes rather than hours now, simple Vox Pops, music and titles aren’t an issue nor do they take up much time. I assisted with a small part of the editing for our Thriller since it is only fair that someone else got a shot but I had a part in bending, altering and cropping the sound to match the action of the film. However I had the lead part in filming, I had never used a proper HD video camera before filming our Thriller, so I sat while we were taking a break from filming looking at all of the settings and seeing the impact they had on the image. That is the most effective and rapid way for me to learn since I will know what each setting does. The setting I favored most was the manual focus and the manual lighting adjustment. I turned off the autofocus on everything including the lighting adjustment and came to terms with the manual adjustments and captured a very effective shot of Ronan out of focus with a very traditional, cliché yet conventional shot of the antagonist watching the victim from a darker and more concealed area.

We planned all of the work on our blogs, through heavy research of other thrillers primarily. We read through and worked through our research and planning and centered focus on a small collection of movies. We believed the movies Casino Royale (torture scene), Hostel and The Texas Chainsaw Massacre. However we also approached the public by creating a couple of Vox Pops and common answers that sprang up were Casino Royale, the opening of Se7en and Fast and Furious 7. According to the audiences, conventional movies that open up with the creation of enigmas, intense atmosphere and action all make the viewer want more. We captured those ideas using our own plans and ideas.
Furthermore, gaining the opinions of other people we created and filmed a production pitch specifically for audience response and opinions.  We believed if we offered and pitched our ideas we could gain an idea of what our peers wanted from that and if they saw potential in our ideas, the audience we intended, and the way we wished to promote it.
In the regard of editing we understood that it was conventional for it to be very fast paced during scenes of action. We watched numerous films and reviewed films with synchronous and asynchronous sound and found that our film fit in better with the style of having dramatic, fast paced music to match the severity of the action. Though the most popular choice of editing and sound medium paced cuts with diegetic sound or a low hum edited in. Django: Unchained is an excellent example of this. The editing isn’t fast paced at all and there is nothing but diegetic sound, the same goes for Casino Royale’s torture scene. The slow editing infers a prolonged pain or torture leading to the audience empathizing for the victim and wanting it over and done with. We nearly captured this idea and adopted it but we wanted to steer clear since it was risky and may not have worked. Instead we took inspiration from films like Hostel that had fast-paced torture scenes that have the audience squirming in their seats.

In my opinion our thriller opening was very successful and I believe, personally, that it had many strengths behind it. We used a massive range of shots though the majority were close-ups to highlight props and the victim’s reactions to particular actions for example having a gun put to his head. We believed it was a strong use of thriller conventions and it formed a tense account that made the viewer empathize for the victim.
Also, our quick cuts for editing that match the pace and sound of our music creates further effect, more so towards the end of our thriller. Screeches that ring out as the antagonist grabs the chain, out of tune piano chords play as he slides the bat through his grip as the film cuts off. The sound and editing of clips were indefinitely the biggest strength of our Thriller in my opinion.
For sound I simply used the song Days of Chaos by Kevin Mcleod and converted it into an mp3 file, doing that I took it across to Logic X and used a pitch bend on it, and changed the cents a little so that the song sounded more ominous and sinister.
The camerawork and some of the shot techniques we used, for example POV shots, changing the focus, using camera sway where appropriate and a few tilted, high angle and distorted shots. These were all conventional shot techniques in Thrillers that we had researched to capture a better atmosphere. The shot that stood out to us most was the shot from behind the antagonist as he watches an out-of-focus victim walking in the distance. In one shot we captured the tense and unsettling feel that we wanted and it was our strongest shot, as we mutually agreed as a group.

The weaknesses of the film are most probably the mise-en-scene. The chair we used wasn’t as make-do-and-mend as intended. A wicker chair like that of the one from Casino Royale was more fitting in my opinion; it looks more amateur, sinister in a sense. I wanted to capture the amateur farmer style torturer in the shots to make it seem more resourceful.
The fake blood we used on top of white clothing stained and turned pink, so it looked very cheap and fake. On skin it lasted around half an hour before flaking and peeling off, so we had to top it up every now and then. This risked breaks in continuity and resulted in us not showing clothing for too long in shots, so we were forced to use quick cuts and couldn’t leave shots running for too long.
I also felt the lighting could be better to fit the genre, or we could have at least edited the clip to dampen and darken the light with a small filter and vignette. In my opinion the fact the room is so bright and doesn’t have a grizzly, dark atmosphere with a light centered on the character doesn’t capture the full feel of the Thriller. We couldn’t do much about the lighting since they were bright LED bulbs, so of course the room was going to be bright and defined. We wanted to capture the Texas Chainsaw Massacre feel through the use of lighting but couldn’t quite get there since it was so bright.

I’d have improved these weaknesses and to do that I could have pre-planned and organized for the use of good make-up, I even own a wicker chair but was unable to get a hold of it in time for the filming. In future I would map out what props and resources would be needed and costs if necessary. I feel we could have done better with the use of make-up, and we have numerous friends who could easily create bruises and fake blood using a make-up kit.
In terms of improving lighting I could use one of our test shots, and review all the filters and screen effects I own to see what we could have done. I could see if darkening the picture is an available effect on IMovie, or incorporating a yellow tint to the picture and adding vignettes. Adding these are what I believe could improve the filming since visual and edited effects are a fundamental part of modern film.

These images represent the improvement in our camera work since filming our preliminary. Here it is a screenshot of the preliminary highlighting one of the shots that we should have continued, but stopped unnecessarily. Here we filmed Ronan moving until he left the shot, left it three seconds and made him stand completely still just to be sure we captured what we needed in the shot. This meant there were no repeats of unnecessary cuts, or hesitation before movement and we were able to film in one take.
In regard to the editing, in the preliminary there is a moment where Jordan evidently hesitates before moving, so as editor of the preliminary I should have noticed this sooner and shortened the clip so the movement flowed naturally and not mechanically as if Jordan were under instruction. We kept this in mind during the filming of our Thriller, and as seen the victim’s movement and stature look completely natural and that is because we gave a count in after we started recording instead of before. We were able to edit out the countdown and therefore make the movement look natural.

In these images it makes clear the improvement in props and mise-en-scene. In the preliminary we showed the phone and almost threw it into the face of the viewer, which is a very big cliché. It shouldn’t be used really since it makes the film look rather cheesy and tacky. Instead of this we took heed and showed the props at a tense, quick-paced moment and ensured they were directly below the light and clear to the viewer. On the other hand in the preliminary both the camera quality and the lighting are poor since there is a slight glare on the camera at the top of the image. There is slight blur of the focus in the actual Thriller which is a very good touch to a degree since it is distortion of the shot, assisted by a small tilt to the right. However, to improve the shot we could have changed the focus to be completely focused on the tools. Nonetheless the introduction of props and the shots used are much better than that of the preliminary.



Finally, we improved the costume, use of camera zoom and editing more above anything. In the preliminary we used a standard shirt and tie, with formal wear as a costume for our preliminary, which was rather unreliable. Jack’s shirt kept un-tucking and it resulted in breaks in continuity since it was noticeable in the next shot. We decided to incorporate the use of dark clothing for our antagonist and use lighting to our advantage. A dark set of overalls means you can’t see creases in their clothing and this was crucial since we wanted to show off a lot of the antagonist’s costume.

In terms of editing and zoom, we avoided using a Ken Baker shot again because it reduces the quality of the film by a rather significant amount. We built on this in our Thriller and set the focus, zoom and lighting adjustment settings before we took any shots. This would therefore result in no need for cropping some of the shots and reducing their quality. We reviewed our film thoroughly and decided most shots were too quick paced to notice continuity breaks, we couldn’t spot any in the longer shots so it gave us the confidence we took the correct precautions before each shot.

Saturday, 9 January 2016

Question 6

Q6. What have you learned about technologies from the process of constructing this product?

Research
For posting research and work we learned about many various technologies, again Visme being one of them but common uses for it were Padlet, Glogster, Prezi and Scribd primarily. All the way throughout our blogs are the various technologies. They are nice and easy to use since you can upload work from Powerpoint or Microsoft word and then present them using these sites, or just type it up on them and present it all your own way with their own site presentation features to add additional content to the work and prevent any possible complications with buggy presentation. This typically occurred on Padlet when uploading work, the margins and such were buggy but the way around it is to do the work manually or copy and paste it in instead of uploading it as a document. However they are easy to use and excellent for presentation and uploading essay style, planning and promotional work. I found that Scribd was the best technology to use for posting research since it was compatible for both Word and Powerpoint documents and attached images were compatible. The only downside of using these for myself was that I was running my work off a MacBook, which incidentally was unable to embed files that were on sites such as Padlet or Scribd.
Planning

Other technologies we learned were animation programmes such as Moovly and GoAnimate and those were mainly for the purpose of presentation and summarisations. I learned how to change the animation and use hand drag-in introductions and drag-outs. These are good and useful in future for attracting audiences using playful, neat and to the point animations that give a clear-cut image. However they do require a subscription to improve animations and themes, which do improve the quality and standard of the presentations on both sites. On the other hand I found an equally good presentation site called Visme that is completely free that offers Powerpoint style presentations with basic themes and pictures that are nice, simplistic and even offer external access from pictures and images off the site with its own clip art on offer. I found this very useful during the planning of our thriller and even used a part of it in our thriller pitch, which means that it can definitely be used in future regarding promotion of other future plans and productions.



Here, as seen on my blog, to present things such as job roles we used an online programme called slides which was a more simplistic version of Prezi. We chose to use this for something such as job roles in our planning because we didn't want to use anything too technical, we just wanted to establish and present each role simply. This was done by simply clicking a forward facing arrow that changed to the next slide. Each slide had a profile of each member of our group and put the information across. It is useful for presentations such as formal ones, where you want to get information across directly without distracting the audiences.
It allows you to create a slightly more advanced presentation than a Powerpoint, but again it isn't too technical and can potentially stick to a more professional format. The only downside is that there is no way to upload any presentations from Word or Powerpoint so any previous work done that is to be transferred across would have to be redone from scratch on the website. It is a subscription based website like any other, which has more features that are better as long as they are paid for which would most likely open up options to create more appealing presentations. For example, better backgrounds, animated transitions possibly and more drawing and editing options.

Preliminary
Mainly I have learned about editing and filming using IMovie since I was assigned the role of editor for the majority of our group work when filming Vox Pops, our production pitch and the preliminary task. While editing the preliminary I decided to experiment with IMovie and mess around with its features as much as possible when I noticed a break in continuity and decided I learn the crop features to see if I could remove the break and noticed the Ken Baker shot. I did keep in mind that it affected the quality to a degree and I tried it as a test in the rough edit we made of the preliminary that I could have easily removed if it didn’t work, but it made the preliminary better than the original shot where Jack’s shirt is un-tucked and his arm is lower than that of the shot before.


As you can see the quality isn’t affected too bad and it removes Jack’s shirt until zooms back out thus making error in continuity unnoticeable.
Also I learned how to attach sound to a clip, though what would have been more useful was if I’d have learned, asked for and researched a website that offered sound effects to which I didn’t have to improvise. In this case I had to edit and crop the sound of a hockey puck hitting a metal post, which still worked effectively to imitate the sound of a gunshot. Also the grey lines that are between each clip are where I split each clip and watched them all frame by frame so that I could edit out parts we either didn’t need or bad parts of a clip that we could salvage.

Production and Editing
When filming our Thriller I got to grips with a Panasonic HD video camera, in particular its focusing and camera quality settings. Now there wasn’t a feature to improve the quality of the camera in the dark and quality is reduced in darker environments so we learned to avoid that by testing to see how low the quality goes. Also we learned that zooming reduces camera quality so we avoided zooming too much in our filming but also zoomed in and out to fit and remove objects and surroundings from the frame.
Here we zoomed in slightly to remove a house from the frame that is just out of shot to the left, we didn’t want to capture it and wanted it to look like there is absolutely nothing in the surrounding area and that the character is completely isolated.

I also learned how to play with the manual focus settings very well, since they were slightly awkward to use on the camera we used, since it was a small plastic slider that had to be pushed in, then slid up or down to change focus and is rather difficult to do one-handed. Nonetheless I came to terms with it during filming and managed to capture and out of focus shot of our victim being watched by the antagonist. We learned that focus plays a key part in thrillers so the use of it was very effective and would definitely improve the quality of the actual thriller. The problems we learned with focusing in and out of images is that if there are any images you want to capture between the two are out of focus, so they have to be used in another shot or left out. We were going to use the no trespassing sign but couldn’t capture it between the antagonist and victim so we left it out. Also focus and zoom were hard to grasp since zooming would put the shot out of focus due to the autofocus being turned off, so we had to set the zoom to how we wanted it, and then put it into focus
and at certain points of zooming trying to find the point where the closer object is in focus and the farther is out of focus was very slim so we had to alter the focus marginally.

We also learned to keep the camera steady with the use of tripods and stands because camera knocks and sways make the filming look unprofessional. On my editing software I have a feature where I can reduce camera sway and knocks in which I used during the filming and editing of our Vox Pop. There is an option that allows reduction in camera sway from 0-100%, it doesn’t affect the quality but it crops the image slightly and focuses on a central area and keeps the picture centred on that, and works very effectively. It makes the film more professional, on the other hand the sway can be increased for the effect of a thriller for shots such as POV shots.          

Also, here is a brief tutorial on how I edited some of our clips and what ideas I gained whilst experimenting with the editing of our previous work:

 
I used my knowledge of Logic X to import the track as an audio file, all I had to do then was pitch bend the song, alter the semitones and drop the cents to make a more macabre horror feel to the song. Here is a screen recording to demonstrate how I did it. Adding to the editing of music,  it is similar to that of videos in iMovie. You can split the track at the playhead, and also drag forward and backward from the start or end of the track to cut, loop or elongate the whole thing.

           

Friday, 8 January 2016

Question 5

Q5. How did you attract/address your audience?



For some research into our target audiences and what they expect from our thriller, we decided to carry out a Vox-Pop for a personal insight straight from the people. We learned that our audience expected, primarily, tension and enigmas. Commonly used examples were 'Quantum of Solace', 'Se7en' and 'Fast and Furious 7'. Each of their openings set the scene but also create many enigmas to be answered later on, which is a convention the audience expect from our thriller. In particular, it was highlighted from Fast and Furious 7 that there needs to be 'some enigmas, points of interest and overall something that will interest'. What is meant by this is that we should highlight key props or locations, using framing, clever camerawork and effective miss-en-scene. In doing this we are expected to create enigmas in highlighting these 'points of interest'.

The first image I have selected is one of the opening shots, of our character in empty field land taking a single road. This already creates enigmas, which is what the audience desire. It leaves the audience wondering where he is going, why he is going that way and possibly what will come of him. We used a younger character to attract younger audiences but offered a plot that was also relative to an open variety of audiences.
We used a long shot to set the scene of and convey how alone the character is and establish the surroundings, we have also edited the filter of the image ever so slightly to show that it is a flashback to show how the character/victim got to be where he is later on since flashbacks and breaks from chronological order are conventional in thrillers.
Due to feedback from one of our Vox Pops we saw that long shots and extreme long shots are conventionally used to establish the setting in thrillers. An example being the opening of Se7en as it shows New York skyscrapers and city life, or more closely related The Texas Chainsaw Massacre and the rural farmland that stretches endlessly. We believed we attracted the audience perfectly with the use of this shot.

The next shot is a close up of the weapons table, being menacingly overlooked by our antagonist. We wished to capture shots of them being almost entertained by the selection of atrocious tools of torture and express a more improvised make-do-and-mend style of method with the use of workmen’s tools. We included a pistol, crossbow and knife to portray imminent death and express that there is a possibility of it. With this tense thought running through the head of the viewer we know that we attracted them well by capturing a psychopathic, and psychological introduction of torture.
There is no filter on the shot to show that it is now present time, and we have broken chronological order since at this point we still have not shown how the victim got there. This was mentioned as a response for Fast and Furious 7 regarding enigmas based on situation. A common answer in our Vox Pop was wondering how events transpired during the opening of Fast and Furious 7 so we formulised our own psychological style scenario based off that response.

Next, in my opinion a shot of a weapon closely held to the victim leaves the viewer on the edge of their seat instantly making them want more. At this point we didn’t gain inspiration from any specific film but actually used a cliché that we knew we could effectively use. In any tense thriller, gore or slasher movie a victim is always held face to face with the killer’s trademark weapon, or any lethal weapon that makes the viewer believe the victim is right about to die. Instead of carrying on the cliché and merely killing the victim off, we came to the mutual decision that the viewer will feel almost teased by the use of a close-up to capture both weapon contact and reaction. We asked a number of members of our year group and a common answer was prolonging the tension and teasing the viewer amounts to a better reaction to a conclusion since they want it more.
At this point our selected music begins to climax, and percussion begins to fill out the track and show that this scene is a tense one. Our intent was to leave the viewer panicking and wondering if the character was going to die, whilst being increasingly pressured and unnerved by the music.

Next we show an out of focus long shot of the victim walking away in the distance, focusing on the antagonist stepping in wielding a bat. At this point the music begins to pick up and increase in pace, adding to the already tense atmosphere. This is where we let the viewer know that it will be revealed as to how the victim got into the scene of torture and begin answering all of the enigmas the viewer has been anticipating. Since we put a blunt object in the frame and do not increase the tension of the music, death is not implied so our audience don’t get confused. This is the part we believe hooks our target audience most since it is exactly what they want in terms of a conventional thriller, it creates and answers enigmas, the music matches the action, it is tense enough for them to be asking for more and most importantly isn’t too cliché in the manner of which we filmed. It has the potential to attract the diverse audience in which we intended it to by merely being a traditional, tense and conventional psychological thriller.


Our final shot of the film is a complete match on action sound, as the bat drops there is a screech of some sort. Not only does this signify the end but also this is the part that implies major physical harm or even death. It is an effective cliffhanger that leaves the viewer with only one question ‘did the victim survive?’ The answer to this question will of course not be revealed which, as stated, leaves the viewer desiring more of the film to answer it. This means we gave the audience exactly what they asked for in terms of atmosphere, enigmas and conventions and that we successfully attracted our intended audience. Towards the end of the film we favoured close-ups, POV shots, over the shoulder shots and even the select few distorted and out of focus shots that add to the tension marginally. As the pace of the music increased at the end we formed a sort of montage or compilation of the torturer examining his tools and teasing his victim, tempting him into death and giving in. That is where we took a hold of our target in unnerving the viewer.

Question 4

Q4. Who would be the audience for your media product?

The BBFC are in control of film classification, using a checklist of particular criteria to determine which age rating the film comes under. They are a non-governmental body that have been determining classifications in theatres since 1912 and for DVDs since 1984.  We used the BBFC’s classification criteria as a contribution towards forming our target audience by looking at the following age ratings and pinning the criteria to our film.
   U
   PG
   12
   12A
   15
   18
   R18
The criteria determining age ratings are discrimination, gore, violence, sex, nudity (which can actually be shown to any age, even U if it is not sexualised), imitable behaviour and context primarily. They have the power to push forward for cuts in the movie if there are scenes they believe are inappropriate morally for any age, and can even reject movies or even further so, prosecute if that film contains illegal scenes. We have a darker theme for our film but it doesn’t breach any laws in censorship so we wouldn’t be asked to cut much if not anything by the BBFC. We believe our film would be a 15, we considered 12A since there is only mild gore (blood and scenes of violence) but understood our plot may be too dark to fit that of a 12A so we mutually agreed it fits comfortably in the 15 margin. This is because it has imitable behaviour, dark themes, violence and minor gore so 15 seems most suitable. We unanimously agreed that it isn’t bad enough to be an 18 since 18s usually contain more brutal or psychological themes with much worse behaviour and context.


The BBFC gain income by charging the movie production companies based on the length of the film, just by being an individual company. They are only granted money to cover their costs being an individual non-governmental organisation. Their fees are only organised based on the income they gain from the films they charge; a film is charged by the BBFC.

We decided that people of the C1 class and above on the demographic scale would watch our thriller since a psychological thriller will be fixed on the more attentive and focused people. Psychological thrillers tend to be aimed at the people who pay attention to detail and can follow non-chronological plots so we believed that people with more organized and administrative skills would be best at following the plot of the movie.
Our audience would be people of 15-50 targeted at all genders. We came to the conclusion that elderly audiences prefer more political and historical films such as Bridge of Spies as opposed to torture thrillers with concepts of Hostel included. We aren’t targeting a specific race or religion either, if anything we wish to encourage diverse groups of friends over the age of 15. We chose to use social media such as Youtube and Facebook to promote our product since these two are very popular amongst our target age range. This allowed us to broaden our audience further for anyone whose interest was grabbed by our product.






Having relied on diversity alone we understood that various ranges of music taste, or opinions on thrillers would all be different. But in having opened up an almost complete range of people simply by promoting to groups of people on Facebook with the use of Youtube links it allows an assortment of anyone and everyone to click simply by wording the post persuasively with a small description to bait the interest of social media users.

We gained an idea of what our audience was and what they expected with the use of Vox Pops to capture the opinions and expectations of them. Popular answers were establishing shots that created enigmas, and torture scenes that lack massive detail such as that of Casino Royale, which we gained some of our inspiration from. Our audience were a complete mix of males and females however their interests remained mutual in terms of thrillers and they liked the opening of Se7en and the torture scene of Casino Royale most popularly.