Director- The main person that keeps everyone on task and oversees everything.
Scriptwriter/Storyboard- The main person in charge of writing or drawing out the script for the video
Cameraman- The main person in charge of shooting the video and coming up with camera angles, you are working very close with the editor, assistant editor.
Editor- The main person in charge of putting the whole video together with audio, titles and end notes.
TIMELINE:
Today Oct. 22nd-Get together with your groups and start talking about ideas as a group.
Wednesday, October 23, 2013
Sunday, October 20, 2013
Movie Tuesday!
Stop Motion Movies due on Tuesday at the beginning of class! I can't wait to see the creativity and hard work that all of you have put into this project.
LET'S POP SOME POPCORN!
Tuesday, October 8, 2013
Landscape Film
DAY 1:
STOP MOTION within Nature. Using Vine as our inspiration. Let's check it out.
VINE-stop motion inspiration click here!
Guidelines for this film:
Stop Motion must be 30 seconds long.
Must be in a nature setting to follow our nature/landscape type theme.
Due Dates for this film:
Wednesday Oct. 9th-Give Mrs. Schneid Group/Solo info.
3 Ideas of what you could possibly do for your Film
Friday Oct. 11th-Your Storyboards.
Timeline is due.
Saturday Oct. 12th-Wednesday Oct. 16th- to create/set up the set/create characters if need be/
take photos/find a song or audio of some sort to go with your Stop Motion.
Thursday Oct. 17th-Friday Oct. 18th-EDIT (put everything together, audio and all)
Monday Oct. 21st-STOP MOTIONS DUE AT THE BEGINNING OF CLASS!!!!!
DAY 2:
1. STORYBOARD: Write a GOOD Storyboard!
A storyboard is a sequence of images and words drawn together on a page to form a plausible narrative.
Storyboards are routinely used in the movie making business to 'preview' a movie before a single shot is taken. Not only does a storyboard allow for a dress rehearsal of the final product but by the very fact of being posted on the wall,it elicits early feedback and encourages quick, painless editing, leading to significant savings in time and resources.
Disney was a storyboarding freak!
A storyboard is an apt metaphor for how we make sense of our own life history. Storyboarding can be used to sense emergent patterns in our own life story and to envision the life experiences that we wish to welcome into our future.
Try storyboarding the past and future events in your Life!
Disney
Storyboard Inventor: Walter Elias Disney
DAY 3:
STOP MOTION within Nature. Using Vine as our inspiration. Let's check it out.
VINE-stop motion inspiration click here!
Guidelines for this film:
Stop Motion must be 30 seconds long.
Must be in a nature setting to follow our nature/landscape type theme.
Due Dates for this film:
Wednesday Oct. 9th-Give Mrs. Schneid Group/Solo info.
3 Ideas of what you could possibly do for your Film
Friday Oct. 11th-Your Storyboards.
Timeline is due.
Saturday Oct. 12th-Wednesday Oct. 16th- to create/set up the set/create characters if need be/
take photos/find a song or audio of some sort to go with your Stop Motion.
Thursday Oct. 17th-Friday Oct. 18th-EDIT (put everything together, audio and all)
Monday Oct. 21st-STOP MOTIONS DUE AT THE BEGINNING OF CLASS!!!!!
DAY 2:
1. STORYBOARD: Write a GOOD Storyboard!
What is a STORYBOARD?
A storyboard is a sequence of images and words drawn together on a page to form a plausible narrative.Storyboards are routinely used in the movie making business to 'preview' a movie before a single shot is taken. Not only does a storyboard allow for a dress rehearsal of the final product but by the very fact of being posted on the wall,it elicits early feedback and encourages quick, painless editing, leading to significant savings in time and resources.
Disney was a storyboarding freak!
A storyboard is an apt metaphor for how we make sense of our own life history. Storyboarding can be used to sense emergent patterns in our own life story and to envision the life experiences that we wish to welcome into our future.
Try storyboarding the past and future events in your Life!
Disney
Storyboard Inventor: Walter Elias Disney
Here is what you should have in your Storyboard:
- 10 Scenes
- Picture of what is happening in each scene
- Background
- Characters and what they will be doing
- Explanation of anything that you can't show in the picture
- I should be able to see a clear story line with a beginning, middle and end. There should be a point to what you are trying to tell in the end.
Here is how Storyboards are used with Disney and other large films:
DAY 3:
Stop Motion Movies:
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