Link to download storyboard is here
Monday, 29 September 2014
Tuesday, 23 September 2014
Pre-production Requirements
For the pre-production element you are required to submit either:
a) A storyboard for your Exploitation Film (Trailer or Opening Sequence) 8-10 Pages
or
b) 3 posters promoting your Exploitation Film. Make sure your posters are to industry standard and adhere to the composition conventions below.
a) A storyboard for your Exploitation Film (Trailer or Opening Sequence) 8-10 Pages
or
b) 3 posters promoting your Exploitation Film. Make sure your posters are to industry standard and adhere to the composition conventions below.
Independent Study Week 3: Viewing Tasks.
Copy and answer the following questions whilst watching the films, Write your findings in your Independent Study book for next week.
Case Study Worksheet:
2. What is the sub-genre of the case
study?
Visual Codes:
3. What are the genre conventions shown in
the case study?
Costume:
Lighting:
Actors:
Make-up:
Props:
Settings:
|
4. What is
the purpose of the costume?
5. What is
the purpose of the choice of actors/characters?
6. What is
the purpose of the use of settings?
Representation:
7. How is
gender represented in the case study?
Monday, 22 September 2014
Independent Study Pack 2.1
You are expected to annotate 4 different film posters from 4 different genres. Comment on:
- Mise-en-scene (CLAMPS)
- Layout
- How does it appeal to the audience?
If you are aiming at C or below you should analyse two different dvd covers and comment on
Friday, 12 September 2014
What is exploitation cinema?
What is an Exploitation Film?
To celebrate our Film of the Week, Serial School, we’re taking a look at the phenomenon of exploitation films, how they have manifested themselves in the horror genre, and whether they are relevant in today’s society.
To begin, let’s look at what an exploitation film actually is. Typically very low budget, these types of films would often be seen to ‘exploit’ a trend, niche or controversy – such as sex, violence, or drug use. Often screened in seedy drive ins, or small independent theatres, genre fans would gather to watch some of the trashiest films ever created. The exploitation genre, closely tied with grindhouse, has it’s roots as far back on cinematic history as the 1920s, but was fully realised in the late sixties and seventies; mainly as a result of relaxation of censorship rules. Exploitation is very loosely defined, and has more to do with a viewer’s perception of the film than with the film’s actual content. Titillating material and artistic content often coexist, as demonstrated by the fact that art films that failed to pass the Hays Code were often shown in the same grindhouses as exploitation films. Indeed, many films which may at one point been considered exploitation are now considered culturally significant; the most notable examples being Night of the Living Dead or Tod Browning’s Freaks. As such, modern film critics have examined the cultural influences which have effected whether a film is classified as exploitation – noting that ifEyes without a Face had been made in American it would have been viewed as a low budget horror, while if Carnival of Souls had been been in France it would be considered an art film.
Exploitation films have often exploited news events in the short-term public consciousness that a major film studio may avoid because of the time required to produce a major film. Child Bride, for example, tackled the issue of older men marrying very young women in the Ozarks. Other issues, such as drug use in films like Reefer Madness, attracted audiences that major film studios would usually avoid in order to keep their respectable, mainstream reputations. But exploitation and horror specifically have been closely linked for many years, taking the form of many subgenres.
Cannibal films are one of these most notable subgenres: graphic, gory movies mostly made in the 70s and 80s, usually by Italian and Spanish moviemakers. Focused mainly on cannibalism by tribes deep in the South American rainforests the movies often depicted violence perpetrated against Westerners. The main draw of cannibal films was the allure of exotic locales and graphic gore involving humans and animals. The best-known film of this genre is the controversial 1980 Cannibal Holocaust.
The trend of vigilante exploitation films also lead to the establishment of the revenge horror movie – in particular the rape revenge genre with the most famous example being I Spit on your Grave. This genre contains films in which a person is raped, left for dead, recovers and then exacts a graphic revenge on the perpetrators, with the emphasis being placed not only on the violence but the transformation of the central character.
More minor branches of this style can be seen in horror throughout history, and have survived into more modern horror. It could be argued that ‘mockbusters’, such as the films made by Asylum Studios fit the description of exploiting a current trend. The concept began in Italy, with unlicended films designed to cash in on Romero’s zombie movies, and has more recently surfaced in films like Transmorphersand Atlantic Rim.
Let’s take a look at some of the various types of exploitation films:
CGIsploitation
Films that use large amounts of low-budget computer generated special effects. A majority of these movies are produced and distributed by New Concorde and The Asylum. These films are commonly aired on the Syfy Channel.
Gothsploitation
Nunsploitation
films featuring nuns in dangerous or erotic situations, such as The Devils, Killer Nun, School of the Holy Beast, Sinful Nuns of Saint Valentines, and Nude Nuns with Big Guns.
Sharksploitation films
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