Thursday, 5 January 2012

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

As you can clearly see from this print screen which I took off of my preliminary task that me and my group clearly did not know what we were doing because we didn't have the actor in the camera in this shot as his head is completely gone and in our current film we try to make sure that the actor is the main focus of the camera at all times because a film wouldn't be too good if you couldn't see the actors head, also from the preliminary task we have learnt that we had to cut each scene better because in our preliminary task its too fast and jumpy so it doesn't look very good and too rushed but in our final film its fast but it allows enough time to get a feel for what is going on. Also since our preliminary task I have matured a lot and learnt how to manage my time a lot more effectively because when I was doing the preliminary task I wasn't taking it very serious and laughing a lot through it, but now when filming I take it serious because when messing around you  could forget key things such as getting your actor in the shot which is what happened in our preliminary task.
Also I have learnt to manage my time well in that we made sure that every week we would either get some filming done or some editing done and we planned it through like that, because if we hadn't then there would of been complete chaos I doubt we would have a finish product.  Finally I believe that the finished product in that we have produced looks a hundred times better than our preliminary task as it is fast, has some action so the audience doesn't get bored and gives you a feel of what the film is about and the sort of things that will go wrong during it.

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