Sunday, 1 May 2016

Evaluation


For the past few months me and three other members of my group have been working on making a documentary about cars to determine the contrast between classic and modern cars, and how each car has an affect on a persons passion for the car. So we decided a fitting name for our documentary would be 'Cars: Man's Best Friend'.




In what ways does your media product use, develop or challenge forms and conventions of real media products?


Our documentary that we created uses conventions of real documentary films as we ensured that we knew exactly what the typical conventions of a documentary film were, we did this by watching documentaries together in a group. We also chose two documentaries each to watch and write an analysis on, one being related to our theme, and one unrelated to get a feel for what general documentary conventions are, and what conventions may have been more specific to our genre of documentary, this would help us make sure to use the conventions in car documentaries more often than some of the more typical ones. The documentary convention that we all thought we needed to use was the voiceover as we thought this was one of the most used conventions in a documentary, and because of the cars topic we decided to do, it was important for the film that it stayed informative and we portrayed a sense of knowledge of the subject to the audience. Also as our focus was the passion and connection people share with their cars, it was essential that we made the audience see that the presenter/voiceover himself had that connection with his car, so that the voiceover for the rest of the film has more meaning to it. Of course that is also another convention in itself as the presenter is using the fact he shares a passion with his car to go on a journey to investigate further into other peoples experiences, which is providing a human story to go along with the exploration into the subject of cars.

Another convention we used in our film is that the footage we used was completely based on our own research and exploration, therefore the footage used was real footage that we filmed first hand, and some clips that showed the history of the motoring industry we found purely on our in depth research into the subject. We also felt we had to include a few stills of cars with a descriptive voiceover to give an informative edge to the film, this was using a documentary convention as still images help aid the authenticity of the film, as it provides an opportunity to give information on cars that we as filmmakers wouldn't have been able to obtain ourselves.



In our documentary we included a real interview that we constructed ourselves, in terms of filming it and asking the questions in person. This was obviously us trying to address a key convention in a documentary, as an interview gets you primary material in which you can present to your audience. Although we did include an interview in our film, it was difficult for us to develop the convention further because we aren't professional documentary filmmakers, so we were unable to use the convention to obtain a high quality expert on the subject, which a lot of documentaries need to authenticate the vision and thought being expressed in the documentary. Having said all that, the man we interviewed - Clive Skelhon was Head of PR & Marketing at Coventry Transport Museum, so when I say he wasn't an 'expert', I mean for the area of investigation we were trying to discover more about. He wasn't the perfect type of 'expert' for this, maybe to improve it we could have had a professional specifically involved with cars, not any means of transport. However he was the absolute best we could have possibly gotten hold of, so this was still brilliant for our documentary.




How effective is the combination of your main product and ancillary tasks?



The main product and ancillary tasks were effective together, as a large number of an audience will need to see some form of advertisement to either learn of the film or to be drawn in by the different creative ways we distributed our product, which our radio trailer and magazine spread enabled us to do; along with other extras like the film poster, magazine posters and TV trailer we created. We designed three magazine covers and the magazine spread which all had the car we used in the documentary in the design, the '1968 Beetle', which belongs to one of our group members. We had many other cars in our footage but we decided to use this car in all three magazine covers and the magazine spread, as this is the car that started the human story within our documentary, which we felt was the most important symbol to present to our audience in all of our visually constructed marketed designs.



We were also tasked with producing a radio trailer for one of the ancillaries which we took great advantage of as cars have sounds that everyone recognises and even like to listen to because of some car's incredible engines. We decided to include a car engine revving up, and as the trailer goes on it gets faster and faster, which gives the audience the feeling of a build up to something, but then suddenly all the sound cuts off and the presenter in the documentary gives information on where and when they can see the documentary, therefore the audience might be drawn into watching our main product as they feel like they want to know what the build up was leading to.

As we felt the radio trailer benefited our main media product we decided that we should create a TV trailer because it would give us that same influential effect as the radio trailer and more as this would give us a visual aspect to the advertisement which is always going to be a bonus from a radio trailer, especially since the only other visual distributed content we have are still images, which usually wouldn't be enough advertising to capture the audience's willingness to try the film out.









What have you learned from your audience feedback?


Our target audience for our documentary film has an age bracket of ages 25 and over and are predominantly males. This is broadly our target audience because all ages above 25 can share a love and passion for their cars. Some people will spend their entire lives with the same car even if it means they don't drive it anymore. Of course people under 25 can be impacted by a passion for cars as well, but we found that for people to usually develop a passionate interest in cars, they have to find the right one for them and to have owned it for a while, which for people under this age is in most cases unlikely. It is also widely known that men more often than women are passionate about cars, but again women still can have that connection as well. There are probably a lot of women that like general car documentaries, but when our topic is focused on peoples passion for cars, we believe that men will take more of an interest.



The audience feedback I have received from people that I know has been mainly positive, from family, friends and people in my class, which is a good sign for our final product. I'm not overly sure this kind of feedback is always good enough to learn something from, because people you know aren't always going to tell you if there are a lot of areas for improvement in the documentary, not only because they don't want to hurt your feelings by saying its awful, but also because they might not actually have an interest in the subject of the documentary itself, or even documentaries at all. This is why I felt that YouTube was the perfect solution to upload the documentary to, because not only are people who comment not going to know me, therefore they will be honest in their opinion, but they will also only click and comment on the video if they have an interest in car documentary films.



This is one comment from YouTube I received giving feedback which helped me learn a lot about what I did well, and what I could have improved, "Really nice way to introduce the start, summing up what you plan to do. The shot at 1:10 was high quality, very well done. Good job on the interview, it was good to see not just your opinion but the opinion of a professional. I would say that I think the ending was cut a little bit short but apart from that, a very interesting documentary." This was one of the best pieces of audience feedback I received as its completely honest as the commenter doesn't know me
personally, so I know that I did do a lot of things well, but I also could have improved the ending which I agree on to an extent, I feel the way it ended flowed nicely, however I see the point of the commenter as the documentary extract could have lasted slightly longer, so I think the correct decision to fix this would not be to add more to the end, but more in the middle because like I said I feel the ending is already good enough. 







How did you use media technologies in the construction, research, planning and evaluation stages?
The internet was an important part for a lot of stages throughout the production of our media product for all the different types of media we needed to use to either plan for our product or create distribution items post-production. For our documentary on cars, we wanted to travel to Coventry Transport Museum and potentially get an interview from an employee there. In our plan to get an interview at Coventry we sent an email to the museums email address - which we gathered from their official website - to see if we could go to the museum on a specific day (which we specified in the email) in order to borrow the time of one of their employees for an interview. Not long after they got back to us, unfortunately they said the day we specified would not be possible but they didn't rule out the possibility of getting us an interview on another day. So the next week we decided to get back in touch, only this time it was via mobile phone - again the number was located on their official website - because we wanted the fastest response possible as the date we had planned to go had already passed. The phone call was successful in establishing that we could travel to the museum and receive an interview whilst also exploring to film some extra footage.



My research into the topic mainly consisted of internet sources, for example websites giving useful information on the history of Coventry's motoring industry. This was something I felt was important to research as it is a main part of the documentary film so as a result it needed some background information. I also went to sites to learn about documentary film conventions, or YouTube for tips on what a documentary should include(which I included in the blog). I also posted information to the blog from a website, which showed filmmaker Col Spector's advice for people who are in the making of a documentary, which was helpful for the preparation of making our own film.



As for the media technologies used for the evaluation stages, we created advertisements for radio and TV using our own footage, however for the radio trailer we used the internet to find a good source for the sound of a car engine starting up and then continuously revving. Similarly, for the TV trailer we used the internet to get access to the music, which we used over the top of the footage in the trailer. We also used some images from the internet to include in our magazine covers that we produced. We had to use Skype and YouTube a lot as well, because the editing and creation of items made post-production was all produced on one group members laptop. We used Skype to send the images to each other so we could upload them to our blogs, and YouTube to enable all of us to add the video files, like the TV trailer, radio trailer and the documentary itself to our blogs. We didn't send videos through Skype because they take an awful long time to send, if they send at all, so the easier option was to upload them to YouTube, especially since blogger allows you to upload a video from YouTube.

Production - Coventry Filming


These are a couple of still images of our group filming in Coventry Transport Museum - the main area of filming for the documentary.


 
This is a photo of our group inside a taxi which we decided to film inside of (Cameraman on left) as it was an older model to what you see on the streets nowadays, which we thought tied in nicely with our old and new car model comparisons, and how they impact people in different ways.  
 
 
 
 
This is simply a photo of me filming shots for the documentary, as I was the main cameraman for the day. It also shows me using my very own video camera and monopod, and we also had a tripod with us as well.





This is the High Definition video camera we used to shoot the documentary. Its a Panasonic HDC-SD40 model, which is FULL HD 1920x1080 with an optical zoom of 16.8 x.
 The camera also had a 6.7 cm (2.7") wide screen that made the filming a lot easier as it helped us get the framing right for each shot, and we could see how the recording was going while filming it. This screen also enabled us to access the menu, where you can adjust focus, which can have a setting that blurs the background and just focuses on the subject. You can also select different effects and scene modes.


 
 
 
The video camera also has a hand strap on the side which made it a lot easier for us to film as we had some shots that made using a tripod impossible or very awkward, so this enabled us to keep the camera at a very steady level when needed to be.
 
 
 
                                   
 
 
 
 
This is a photo of the tripod we brought along with us to Coventry as part of our prepared equipment for the day of filming.                               

Planning Notes



Brief planning and ideas



Title Ideas:


  • Cars, man’s new best friend? (To express our car and dog comparison, cars being the new mans best friend)

     

  • Cars, man's best friend? (Incase we scrap the dog comparison idea)


Intro Ideas:


  • Silent country road, my car drives over the camera, camera cuts to the sky, title fades in.

  • Next shot, found footage of Henry ford Model T with voice over and enthusiastic speech on whatever we write.

  • Cuts to me as presenter with my dogs sat patiently, as I talk about them. then the camera smoothly pans to the right to see my car sat next to me as a comparison (linking to mans best friend ideology)


 
Camera Shot Ideas:


  • Film jump edit of presenter switching through his different cars, i.e. jump outside, land in car, edit it so it looks like he teleports from outside into car. (edited perfectly)

  • Out of focus, then into focus shots to integrate into the interview.

  • Slow track shots to capture sleekness of body panels.

  • Camera on front of car captures sweeping roads.

  • Camera on dash, capture 15 minute drive, compress down to 20 seconds for super fast time lapse.
 
  • General slow motion shots.



Script Ideas:


  • In this short documentary we plan on explaining some deep human psyche behind our love of cars. Find footage of man who had sex with ford car because he was in love with it

  • "The car that changed us" something similar/historical reference to beetle. Soft focus on toy beetle, focus out onto real beetle. After the focus shot, lot's of panning of the car, moving down its sleek body etc.

  • Do cars symbolize more than just a means of transport e.g. represent freedom, equality, everyone has a car – Nazi Germany Volkswagen offered a car to each person (symbolizing equality) Fashion statement, despite the possible representation of equality cars have been used as representations of status or power?

  • Context, Coventry heart of British motoring


Blog Ideas:


  • Take pictures of things we do in the group to show the work we are putting in behind the scenes. So focus group work, on set with tripods, watching documentaries together, lots of stills.



Interview Questions:


  • Do you think cars have become more than just a means of transport?
  • What are the most visited exhibit/significant car?
  • Are the majority of visits here male or female?
  • Male answer: does this suggest as the media representation this passion for cars is more of a masculine affinity
  • Female answer: does this come as a shock to you as through a certain media representation it  suggests males are more passionate about cars


What makes a car more than merely a functional item? (e.g. fridge)

Social Media Advertisements








IMDb (Internet Movie Database) is a site that lists movies, TV shows and more. and we listed our own documentary on there and gave all the information about it like the cast and director etc.




Facebook is another social media website that we used to advertise our documentary. It is one of the most used websites and is very useful to advertise on because a lot of people will view it. People who see this can also share it with their friends, which is very useful for getting our product noticed.




Twitter was another social media site we used for advertising. People who are passionate about cars will already be following people/pages that might share this type of thing. Along with Facebook a large amount of people use Twitter and therefore will see this, and it is also useful for sharing our product throughout the internet for people using other platforms to view it.

Brainstorm sheet

This is our initial ideas page which we made in class as a group








Planning - Email to Coventry


This is the email we sent to Coventry Transport Museum to see if we could film there and get an interview from a member of staff.



Planning - Storyboard


This is the storyboard that we drew up in our plans for how we wanted our documentary to play out. It is a great and essential piece of planning for any film, as it enables you to express your vision for what you want on paper, which in the making of the product, is key for it to turn out successful, especially for a documentary film as the genre is highly regarded with having a vision or purpose from the outset and throughout.