Overall, I am happy with the final piece. I understand now how relieved and proud a director must be when they watch their pieces. I hope I have achieved what I set out to do in encouraging audiences to question their perception of disability and disability in film. I hope I have made a trailer which will make people talk and take the taboo away from wheelchairs.
Finally, after six weeks of paperwork, risk assessments and filming, Breaking the Habit is out for public display. I'm glad that it's over and done with and I can finally see the final cut. I have uploaded the trailer onto my personal youtube account, and I have added it to my Breaking the Habit blog page and the Breaking the Habit Facebook page. This means it will be highly accessible to a diverse range of audience, and my Youtube subscribers. I have a company called Pause and Engage, a mentor facility, promoting it on their Twitter page, as well as AWC on Facebook.
Overall, I am happy with the final piece. I understand now how relieved and proud a director must be when they watch their pieces. I hope I have achieved what I set out to do in encouraging audiences to question their perception of disability and disability in film. I hope I have made a trailer which will make people talk and take the taboo away from wheelchairs.
0 Comments
Today I have been editing my trailer and I will finish the edit on Wednesday. I have tried to make it unique and special. I have looked up a variety of different trailers for research and a lot of action films use quick, flashing clips of action with the title coming up at the end. Because my film will be a horror film, I have used clips that are fairly long and fade out slowly, so that the tension builds and it feels more foreboding. My music is loud, and then suddenly quiet, and then builds again to keep the audience guessing at what is going to happen next.
|
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |