Showing posts with label Storyboarding. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Storyboarding. Show all posts

Monday, 21 November 2016

Thursday, 10 November 2016

Momento storyboard comparison-Luke Burnip




In our groups we were tasked with making a storyboard for a scene in the film memento. After we made the storyboard we gave it to another group and they proceeded to film the scene by using our storyboard as a basis. I think it came out okay, the mock scene followed the storyboard very well and and it managed to get all of the shots we put in our storyboard. The only thing that i would change is to make the mock scene less blurry as sometimes it is hard to make out what is happening in the scene.
The point of this task was to see how clear our storyboard. If the result of it came out well then we know we are doing it right, alternatively it is a way for us to see what we are doing wrong and what we could change before our opening sequence. We can apply this into our opening sequence so our storyboard is clear and easy to follow when we are filming.

Momento storyboard - Alex Fox

This was 1 minute 58 seconds to 2 minutes 10 seconds of the opening of the moment. I feel that a good thing that there was with our storyboard was that it was well detailed and showed key events in the shots. The storyboard also showed a description f what happened in the shot and how to film it.








Thursday, 29 September 2016

Memento evaluation-Kareem Lyew-Sang








In our pair we had an attempt of making a story board for the film memento and then had another pair attempt to film make our storyboard to see how effective it was. One thing I felt went well with our storyboard is that we had a lot of detail which made it easy for the other group to interpret. Another thing I thought went well is that we included how long each scene lasts. One thing i thought we could improve is that we could of been more descriptive.

The point of this task to help improve are skills in creating storyboards so that we can apply those skills to our opening sequence storyboard. I have learn't that we we have include lots of detail when creating a storyboard not just of whats in but of whats actually happening in each scene and how it should be done. For our opening sequence we will make sure to be very descriptive in the description of each scene so it is easier for us to understand and film.



Wednesday, 28 September 2016

Storyboard- Die Hard


Learning How To Storyboard-Luke Burnip

I think that in our Die Hard storyboards we did well. The thing that I would change would be the detail of the drawings as no one in my pair was particularly detailed when it came to this aspect. I would change this by maybe taking photos to show the detail. I also think that the description was good and told what was happening well. The thing I would change would be the timing. I needed to add timings in so the scene would make sense.



In-Depth Analysis Of Thriller Opening- Luke Burnip


Monday, 26 September 2016

Practising Storyboard-Luke Burnip






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I think that the thing we did well on our storyboard was we put in a lot of detail with the writing underneath. We got the timings well so the people reading it knew how long the shots were going to last. Secondly as we only have limited visual description we have to put down what we want the subject in the storyboard to be doing. This is good as it gave the people who were making the scene more to go on and it helped them know what to do. The drawings were very good and showed a lot of what we wanted the shots to look like. This combined with the description underneath made the storyboard very good. The scene turned out very well. Apart from it being a little shaky the scene that the other group did turned out well. The only thing that I would change would be the fact that the camera was a little blurry and hard to see. Also on the storyboard we didn’t specify how long it blacks out for at the end and it seemed a little short at the end. But on the whole I thought it was very good.