Friday 26 October 2012

Mr.M Film - Lost & Learning


Documentary Genre


Unit 27 LO2 – Documentary Genre – Help

Expository
Expository Documentaries, is a nonfiction film that emphasizes verbal commentary and argumentative logic. Expository documentaries use a voice of God narration, for example: As narrator, Queen Latifah is the voice of authority for Arctic Tale. Direct presentation of facts
Can include all kinds of evidence
An Inconvenient Truth is an example of an expository documentary because it relies on verbal commentary and argumentative logic to make a strong case for prevention of global warming.






Observational
Observational style documentaries have, No narration, minimal voiceover, sometimes not even interviews - just scene after scene of raw footage strung together in long takes, real time, synch-sound, in which the characters and their often-turbulent lives drive the film. You will almost never see or hear the filmmakers.
Armadillo is a purist observational masterpiece, the story of some young Danish soldiers and their platoon deployed on a tour of Afghanistan, no voiceover, no narration, not even any interviews.





Interactive
Interactive documentaries are often a personal project, a good example of this is ‘’Bear 71’ a documentary made by the executive producer of Bear 71. His name is Loc Dao, and he is the narrator throughout the documentary, this documentary is the 2012 interactive National Film Board of Canada web documentary. The Documentary is about a Grizzly bear in Banff National Park, who was collared at the age of three and was watched her whole life via trail cameras in the park.





Essayistic
An essayistic documentary is made very simply; it is simple because it is as easy as documenting on an essay. Uses ‘first person’ address, these documentaries include personal opinions and stories from a personal viewpoint. These documentaries sometimes can be objective towards a subject but does not try to be. A good example of this is, ‘The Forgotten Space’, it follows container cargo aboard ships, barges, trains and trucks, listening to workers, engineers, planners, politicians, and those marginalized by the global transport system. This Documentary uses descriptive documenting, interviews, archive stills and footage, clips from old movies. The result is an essayistic, visual documentary about one of the most important processes s that affects us today




Experimental
Experimental documentaries are usually made from a personal account; the filmmakers are experimenting with different forms of media to get a different ‘unique’ style of documentary for the audience. Also an experimental documentary is an artistic practice . Experimental documentaries have no limits at all they can be about anything, so there are a huge variety of experimental documentaries. One documentary ‘Mayhem’ by Abigail Child is about social order and how sexuality flows in an atmosphere of sexual tension, danger, violence, and glamour. Its is clearly a experimental documentary because of its vastly odd topic.




Performative
Performative documentaries are a mix of drama and documentary, they rely on recreations to assist the story behind the documentary.  A good example of this is, ‘Touching The Void’, the true story of two climbers and their perilous journey up the west face of Siula Grande in the Peruvian Andes in 1985. All the footage is reenacted and there is a little bit of narration with the footage this also assists the storyline.


Tuesday 2 October 2012

Questions for Interview - P.Dabbs


Questions for Interview with Perry Dabb’s
Hi Perry, I know your interest is EXPO, please tell the viewers and me what EXPO is?
What’s good about EXPO?
What was it likes to meet Ben 10’s voice actor?
I know you also have met Mike Tyson, was that at EXPO as well?
You’re an avid film buff right? Well what’s your favorite film, and why?
You’ve met Warwick Davis, did he inspire you think about him?

Interview Research

Interviews
This is a guide on how to set up your equipment, to make an effective, insightful and powerful interview.
Lighting
Firstly, we’ll start off with the lighting of the interview, lighting will dramatically affectthe look of the interview, and three-point lighting is the best way to light your interviewer & interviewee. This will give a much more professional and satisfying look to the interview, so it will be aesthetically pleasing to the audience.
Mise-en-scene
Mise-en-scene is very important; this is because it refers toeverything we see in front of the camera or within the frame. This includes people so the interviewee & maybe theinterviewer, costumes, props, sets or locations. So in aninterview you will want to have the interviewee on the camera,you will position them to the side of your frame, this is tocreate theillusion of space, sothen youcan have abackgroundpromotingand newalbum orfilm,nevertheless
Robert Welland


you could just have a scenic location.Framing & Compositionuses ‘The Rule of Thirds’this guideline proposes thatan image should beimagined as divided intonine equal parts by twoequally-spaced horizontallines and two equally-spaced vertical lines.Filming people, it iscommon to line the body upwith a vertical line, andhaving the person's eyes inline with a horizontal one. If filming a moving subject, the samepattern is often followed, with the majority of the extra roombeing in front of the person (the way they are moving). Thistechnique claims that aligning a subject with these pointscreates more tension, energy and interest in the compositionthan simply centering the subject would.Which ones would you use fordifferent set ups?If the interview is indoors, I will use full three-point lighting and
Robert Welland

I will follow the rule of thirds so that it creates the illusion of space, if the interview is for promotion purposes, then formise-en-scene I would have a poster to the right or left of theperson on camera, (the picture above, is a example).Interviews outdoors I would not use a lot of lighting, if not anythis is because the natural light would do a fine job of lightingthe face, but you might need a little fill light to take anyshadows away from the face. Because the interview isoutdoors let the audience see that, so use the rule of thirds buthas a nice scenic background.
Robert Welland