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Thursday 9 December 2010

Synopsis Edit

After going over the storyboard we have decided to change some bits of the synopsis as we have came up with better ideas for the short intro sequence. The overall brief of it is : A girl is going through a corridor slowly and all she has to light the room up is a lighter, while walking the lighter goes out and takes a few seconds to relight and continues through the corridor. She enters a room and see's some sort of creature in the corner. At this point we see the point of view of the creature and then from it's point of view it starts running up to the girl and goes into a chase scene. We do not see the creatures face of the girls face as this gives mystery and questioning to who is the girl and what is that thing chasing her. It goes into a dramatic chase scene  where we still don't see the girls face or the creature and she there trying to use the lighter to see where she going and eventually she gets into a room and locks herself in where luckily there is a key in the door. You hear banging on the door as the creature tries getting in and the girl backs away from the door and slides herself against the back wall of the room. The camera slowly goes up her legs till it goes to the girls face where she is weeping and scared. Make up will be fake blood, smeared lipstick and basically the girl looks a mess. The girl screams and it ends with the title coming up the title of the film intro will be called 'alone in the dark' we are thinking of using some sort of fade in effect for the title as it gives more of a effect of the film and gives little ideas of what kind of film it is.

1 comment:

  1. There are serious problems with this blog. You are nowhere near your target grade and a lot of your entries are basic. The Juno analysis is missing, the Dexter work not finished or very, very slight. There is only one film analysed for your genre specific research and that is minimal and wouldn't get a pass grade. The audience profile mistakes low budget as appealing to lower classified audiences and there is no analysis of the limited audience feedback you've received.

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