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Monday, 2 December 2013
Friday, 29 November 2013
Wednesday, 27 November 2013
Monday, 18 November 2013
Harry Hill's Version of Take on Me by A-Ha Children in Need 2013
The BBC has produced two behind the scenes videos about how this film was made. Some great shots of a Steadycam in operation and some very useful information about Rotoscoping and how the original A-Ha video was made.
Filming the Live Action
Filming the Animation
Filming the Live Action
Filming the Animation
Labels:
Animation,
Music video,
Rotoscope,
steadycam,
Stop Motion
Monday, 4 November 2013
Friday, 1 November 2013
Friday, 18 October 2013
Thursday, 17 October 2013
Thursday, 10 October 2013
Wednesday, 18 September 2013
Tuesday, 17 September 2013
Wednesday, 22 May 2013
Sunday, 12 May 2013
Tuesday, 26 March 2013
BTEC Level 3 TV Advert Research Tasks
History of TV Advertising
Genres and narrative styles in TV Adverts
Study of a deodorant and scent advert.
Case Study of Advertising Agency
Genres and narrative styles in TV Adverts
Study of a deodorant and scent advert.
Case Study of Advertising Agency
Monday, 25 March 2013
BTEC Level 3 Film Studies Tasks
LA Confidential
History of Horror
Conventions of Horror
Case Study of a Blockbuster movie
Proposal for my own Blockbuster movie
History of Horror
Conventions of Horror
Case Study of a Blockbuster movie
Proposal for my own Blockbuster movie
Tuesday, 12 February 2013
Useful analysis of 15 Million Merits
No idea whose blog this is (it does not say, how hyperreal is that?) but there is an useful analysis of 15 Million Merits as a perfect postmodern critique of either our world or the society we might become if we allow communication technology to take over our lives much more than it has so far. Probably written by a Film Studies teacher/lecturer, this blog is worth exploring as it considers some of the theories we have discussed including the Male Gaze and Marxism.
Beware, however, I would disagree with the writer that 15 Million Merits is itself a postmodern text. Granted, it uses Pastiche, particularly of shows like The X Factor, which Michael Real identifies as one of the qualities of a postmodern text. However, it does not conform to any other of the characteristics - check it against the five features that Strinati posits as characteristics of postmodern texts and not one really works.
What it does is present a dystopic vision of the world in which Baudrillard's criticism of hyperreality has become fully worked out. Narratively, the programme follows traditional, structuralist patterns containing a hero/protagonist, villains and a pop princess as well as a linear narrative sturcture, for example. Whilst Bing Madsen's speech is hailed by Judge Hope, what he is praising is, of course 'style over substance' (Strinati) or the 'medium rather than the message' (McLuhan) but that is the target of the satire. The incessant devaluation of everything to the level of soft porn is also a clear critique of shallow, postmodern media output (see the controversy over performances by Christina Aguilera and Rihanna on The X Factor here).
15 Million Merits does not promote postmodernism as a positive textual value but attacks it for its potential to devalue our sense of the real.
Beware, however, I would disagree with the writer that 15 Million Merits is itself a postmodern text. Granted, it uses Pastiche, particularly of shows like The X Factor, which Michael Real identifies as one of the qualities of a postmodern text. However, it does not conform to any other of the characteristics - check it against the five features that Strinati posits as characteristics of postmodern texts and not one really works.
What it does is present a dystopic vision of the world in which Baudrillard's criticism of hyperreality has become fully worked out. Narratively, the programme follows traditional, structuralist patterns containing a hero/protagonist, villains and a pop princess as well as a linear narrative sturcture, for example. Whilst Bing Madsen's speech is hailed by Judge Hope, what he is praising is, of course 'style over substance' (Strinati) or the 'medium rather than the message' (McLuhan) but that is the target of the satire. The incessant devaluation of everything to the level of soft porn is also a clear critique of shallow, postmodern media output (see the controversy over performances by Christina Aguilera and Rihanna on The X Factor here).
15 Million Merits does not promote postmodernism as a positive textual value but attacks it for its potential to devalue our sense of the real.
Summary of Baudrillard
Here is a useful summary of how Baudrillard is critical of the post-modern world in which simulacra - or copies without an original - have come to dominate us to the extent that we cannot accurately find reality anymore.
Thursday, 7 February 2013
The Postmodern mindset as shown by the character Egg in 'This Life' BBC 1996
'I only mean to say that theories don't work, do they?'
'So you do have a theory...'
Commissioning BBC TV Drama
Tuesday, 5 February 2013
Tuesday, 29 January 2013
Monday, 28 January 2013
Thursday, 24 January 2013
Wednesday, 23 January 2013
A selection of emagazines
Ford SMax emag - A true emagazine, not just a website
Men's Magazines GQ Magazine AskMen magazine Auto Express magazine
Women's magazines In Style website
Music emagazines Kerrang!
Gaming Magazines
Gaming emagazine hub here
Collections of eMagazines
Premiomag magazine hub
eMagazine catalogue - Indian publishing company
Men's Magazines GQ Magazine AskMen magazine Auto Express magazine
Women's magazines In Style website
Music emagazines Kerrang!
Gaming Magazines
Gaming emagazine hub here
Collections of eMagazines
Premiomag magazine hub
eMagazine catalogue - Indian publishing company
Sunday, 6 January 2013
Thursday, 3 January 2013
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