March 27th-31st Weekly Work Log

Session Number 8
Week Numbernot sure
Total Estimated Hours Contributed this Week: 5 hours
What was your overall goal for this week? Finish FP Reel and Write Up



Work Tasks 

Date Task Description Time Spent Was this a Best Practice? 
MondayOn Vacation but talked with Emma to have her help export Good Cop Bad Cop Film30 minutes 
TuesdayOn Vacation but worked on FP60 minutes 
WednesdayOn Vacation but worked on FP60 minutes 
Thursday On Vacation and worked on putting FP clips together40 minutes 
 FridayOn Vacation and finished and uploaded FP clips and finished FP write up90 minutes 



Personal Comments (Optional) 

Are there any other comments you would like to include? If so, please enter them here: 

March 20th-25th Weekly Work Log

Session Number 7
Week Numbernot sure
Total Estimated Hours Contributed this Week: 230 minutes
What was your overall goal for this week? Finish Editing One Film

Work Tasks 

Date Task Description Time Spent Was this a Best Practice? 
MondayFilmed and started to label video clips50 minutes 
TuesdayStarted editing Alligator film50 minutes 
WednesdayEdit Alligator Film30 minutes 
Thursday Edited the Alligator Film50 minutes 
 FridayFinished Editing Alligator Film 50 minutes 

Personal Comments (Optional) 

Are there any other comments you would like to include? If so, please enter them here: 

March 13th-17th Weekly Work Log

Session Number 6
Week Numbernot sure
Total Estimated Hours Contributed this Week: 240 minutes
What was your overall goal for this week? Complete 1 film

Work Tasks 

Date Task Description Time Spent Was this a Best Practice? 
MondayListened to Film Pitches50 minutes 
TuesdayBrainstormed Film Ideas40 minutes 
WednesdayFilmed30 minutes 
Thursday Filmed40 minutes 
 FridayFilmed60 minutes 

Personal Comments (Optional) 

Are there any other comments you would like to include? If so, please enter them here: 

Preparing a Film Pitch TEMPLATE

  • TITLE THIS BLOG POST: ‘Someone or Thing Fighting Someone of Thing for Someone or Thing Pitch’
  • FILL IN ALL SECTIONS BELOW 
  • DELETE ALL OF MR. LE DUC’s Italic INSTRUCTIONS AFTER COMPLETING THEM

LOGLINE

  • A woman discovers her whole life is actually a reality TV show.

PROTAGONIST

  • Protagonist explained
  • Tell us a little about this person
  • More description is better, really ‘paint a picture’ of them

PROTANGIONST CORE WOUND / MOTIVATION 

  • Identify the core motivation / wound / want for the Protagonist

GENRE

  • Identify Genre(s) and / or Style(s)
  • List other films in this genre that inspire or are influencing your film element choices

PLOT DESCRIPTION

  • Write a paragraph describing the beginning, middle, and end of the story arc 
    • Does the Protagonist achieve their goal?

TREATMENT

  • Complete a paragraph describing the protagonist’s world
  • This description helps the team build a better, more believable world
  • You may include wardrobe, family, friends, food choices, habits, hang-ups, etc.

INFLUENCES and EXAMPLES

  • List directors or other filmmakers FROM YOUR CHOSEN GENRE you are using for research and inspiration
  • List scenes FROM YOUR CHOSEN GENRE you are using for research and inspiration
  • Embed video clips of scenes that may influence or inspire stylistic choices in your film

IB Text Analysis: Girl Walks Home Alone at Night

“Director/Conductor” by La Chachalaca Fotografía is licensed under CC BY-NC 2.0

Summary

A guide to planning, researching, and creating your IB Film Text Analysis

  • Follow the directions for each step below
  • Include for your notes, where required

2022-23 Films (Pick ONLY One for your TA)

https://youtube.com/watch?v=6dUCq2LAnsU%3Ffeature%3Doembed
https://youtube.com/watch?v=PIUqozzyW2k%3Ffeature%3Doembed
https://youtube.com/watch?v=YuOnfQd-aTw%3Ffeature%3Doembed

Past Sample Student Work

Across The Universe

Pan’s Labyrinth

Handmaid’s Tale

Guidance for Your Work

The TA is an exam. Failure to turn in the work within the 4 weeks, unless the teacher requests extenuating circumstances directly from the IB, should be considered a fail.” – IB Film

13.5 Hours To Complete

  • Please track how long it took you for each stage

Step 1 – Preparation: Spend 2 Hours

Total Time: 1.5

Step 2 – Pick a Film, Watch It, and Write Notes: Spend 4.5 Hours

Total Time: 3.5

The goal of IB Film is to expose students to films from all over the world and to increase their critical and practical understanding of film as a creative art form and reflection of its time period, society, and political and cultural environment. As a result, this class requires the viewing of a wide variety of films. In some cases, these films may carry an R rating, or, in the case of films made before 1968 and some foreign films, will have no rating at all. Please be assured that all the films selected for this course have a high degree of artistic merit and that many have won numerous awards and are considered part of the film canon. However, if you object to any film shown that does carry an “R” rating, you will always have the opportunity to request that an alternative film be assigned, and/or be excused from class and not view the film.

  1. Watch the trailers and pick ONE of these films  (10 minutes)
  2. Review Drew’s TA Guide Sheet (he scored very high!) (10 minutes)
  3. First Viewing: Watch the film and record your reactions (2 hours)
    • Take notes (below in this post)
      • How does the film (various scenes) affect you?
      • Remember every scene is like a mini-movie
      • Pay attention to which scene best represents the film, for you
  4. Second Viewing: Notice the cinematography, mise en scene, actor movement, wardrobe, sound (diegetic, non-diegetic, music, etc.) choices (2 hours)
    • Review the Big List of Film Terms for cinematic elements, mise en scene (what’s represented on screen), and sound
    • Write notes (below in this post)

Step 3 – Choose Your Extract, Watch It, Write Notes, and Research: 2.5 hours

Total Time:

  1. Open your TA Bibliography Google Doc (In Your IB Google Drive Folder – Mr. Le Duc created)
    • You will add your MLA sources as you research
  2. Choose your 5-minute extract (scene)
  3. Re-watch this scene numerous times and write notes in the Task Analysis Guide (below) (15 minutes)
  4. Research to support your notes (1 hour)
    • Cultural context Evidence: Textual analysis and sources
      • Answer these questions:
        • To what extent do you demonstrate an understanding of the cultural context of the film text?
        • To what extent do you support your understanding of the cultural context with research from appropriate and relevant sources?
    • Add to your notes in the Task Analysis Guide
  5. Re-watch your scene numerous times and add to your notes (15 minutes)
  6. Research to support your notes (1 hour)
    • Re-read Criterion B Film Elements Rubric
      • Evidence: Textual analysis and sources
        • To what extent do you evaluate how the extract makes use of film elements to convey meaning in the chosen film?
        • To what extent do you support your observations with the appropriate use of relevant film vocabulary?
    • Write notes (below in this post)

Step 4 – Compose A Rough Draft using The Text Analysis Guide: 2 hours

Total Time:

  1. Watch Mr. Le Duc’s Convert a Table into Text with Editpad.org tutorial and do the following: (5 minutes)
    1. Copy and paste the two columns of your Text Analysis Guide notes (below) into editpad.org
      • This will convert your two-column table layout into a regular text document
    2. Copy and paste from editpad.org into your Google Docs TA Paper Template
  2. Thoroughly re-read and examine your work with the Text Analysis Rubric (PDF) (10 minutes)
  3. Compose your rough draft (1.75 hours)
    • Weave in your research the following
    • WHAT: Your observation about a film element in the 5-minute scene
    • WHY: Relate the film element to the shot or scene’s emotional or narrative importance
    • HOW: Explain how the film element works in the context of this scene
    • SO WHAT: Justify it with the cultural context, as needed

Text Analysis Guide (For your 5 Minute Scene)

TASK COMPONENTS (INQUIRY)NOTES
The extract may be up to five minutes in length and must be a single, continuous sequence of the film
Time of 5-minute clipPLACE 5 MINUTE TIME INTERVAL HERE…
PART 1 –  The film, your scene, why it is of interest, and how your scene relates to the whole film.
Brief Summary of ExpositionWriter, Director, Producer, studio, year released Main characters, conflict, identify the genre. Identify the aspect ratio.
Context of Extract in Film – briefly describe the sceneAt what times does your scene occur, how it begins, and how it ends. Do not describe it further. The judges have seen the movie.
The Rationale for Selection – relation to the entire movieWhy is it interesting and why does this scene best illustrate the themes of the whole movie?
PART 2 – Remember to integrate the Director’s intent with each of the following areas in this section
Narrative
Script – Not just dialogue but in terms of being the spine of the storyExplain how this scene advances the plot. How do the events of this scene clarify/complicate matters? How does this scene affect/cause future events? What new information is revealed or suggested about a character? Is there anything deliberately withheld? Anything unusual in the dialogue? Word choice? Delivery? Accents? Repetition?
Cinema Photography
a) Camerawork – describe shots in specific termsShot size: ELS, LS (stage), full shot, MS, CU, ECU. Camera angles: bird’s eye, high angle, eye level, low angle or Dutch (oblique), camera movement: pan, tilt, dolly or tracking, handheld, Steadycam, or moving crane. Invisible V conspicuous. Are tracking shots motivated by character movement?
b) CompositionOpen/closed composition, aspect ratio, rule of thirds, Kubrick single-point perspective.
c) Depth of FieldConsider foreground, mid, ground, and background. Deep focus is associated with wide-angle lenses. Could be flat. Narrow ranges of focus may be the result of telephoto lenses.
Mise-en-scene – The overall look and feel of a movie
a) Position of characters and objectsIdentify the dominant, does movement guide our focus, character proxemics patterns (intimate,  personal, social, and public distances). How does the director add meaning to these choices? Is one character encroaching on another’s space? Watch for space being used to portray relationships/changes in relationships. Watch for windows, doors, parallel lines that frame people or objects.  Entrapment. Look for actor placement. Front – actor facing camera, greatest intimacy. One-Quarter Turn – very popular. Profile – character lost in the moment, a bit more distant than the previous two. Three Quarters Turn – useful to convey anti, socialness, Back of Head, most anonymous shot.  Creates a mystery or feeling of alienation.
b) LightingLow or high key. How does the director use light to focus our attention? Key, fill, and backlighting. What is the source of lighting in the context of the scene?
c) Color schemeHow does the director use color and what is the director’s intent for doing so? Look for color symbolism or color associated with characters. Color to suggest a mood. Color as foreshadowing. Contrasting colors ( the monolith v white room)
d) Set/location/propsSet design. Studio or on, location, describe props, scenery, what was the Director ́s intent for using them? How dense is visual information? Stark, moderate, or highly detailed?
e) Costume, hair, make upPeriod, class, gender (emphasize or diminish), age-appropriate, silhouette (close-fitting or baggy), fabric (plain, sheer, rough, delicate), accessories. Color is very important in relation to character.
f) Acting/body languageActing style, body language, blocking, period, or contemporary. Individualized (Joker), Stylization. Look for subtext (character says one thing but means something else). Consider typecasting as a shortcut to characterization.
Sound – watch scene w/o pictureLive sound, sound effects, and music. Sound can be diegetic, meaning characters would hear it, or non, diegetic, meaning that characters would not hear it, such as narration or music over the credits. Explore the relationship between diegetic and non, diegetic sound when appropriate.
MusicIs the music telling you what to feel?  Music can be used as a counterpoint to the action.
EditingEllipsis (time compression) and cross-cutting, fades, dissolves (fades between scenes), wipes,  matching cuts, straight cuts, dialogue overlap, and sound bridges. Consider how long each shot lasts.
Part 3: Analyzing the Film as a Product
Sociocultural ContextIn what way was this movie a product of its time? What does the audience learn about the culture or historical context of the film?
Target AudienceTeens/adults or male/female age group, college education art crowd, liberal, conservative, Christian
Generic Expectationshttp://www.filmsite.org/filmgenres.html also research  http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/Tropes
ThemesMan V Man, or one of the others, is this film an allegory?
Motifs/SymbolsWhat specific devices support your definition of the theme? Look for recurring elements.
Film CriticismBoth contemporary and current. Use brief quotes from two different sources. Record the details:  reviewers’ names and publication names/dates
TASK COMPONENTS (ACTION)
Compose Paper
Part 4: Sources
Source 1
Source 2
Source 3
Source 4
Source 5
Source 6
Source 7
Source 8
Source 9
Source 10
TASK COMPONENTS (REFLECTION)
Revision 1Proofreader:
Revision 2Proofreader:
Revision 3Mr. Le Duc

Step 5 – Get Draft Peer Reviewed: 30 Minutes

Total Time:

  1. Get it peer-reviewed with the TA Worksheet (PDF) (30 minutes)
    • Peer Reviewer: Look for evidence of each section of the document
    • Look for WHAT, WHY, HOW for each statement in the paper
      • There should be at least one WHY or HOW for every WHAT statement
    • Look for cited research to support statements, where it makes sense
    • Write comments to help the author
      • Add them as “Add Comments” on the side, so you do not add to the word count of the document

Step 6 – Revise: 1 Hour

Total Time:

  1. Revise your draft (1 hour)

Step 7 – Get Feedback from Mr. Le Duc and Revise: 30 Minutes

Total Time:

  1. Get feedback from Mr. Le Duc
  2. Make final revisions and check format (30 Minutes)

Step 8 – Finalize Paper: 15 Minutes

Total Time:

  1. Clear Title of the Film & Timecode (5-minute film extract)
  2. Sans serif 12 point font
  3. In-text citations
  4. Less than 1,750 words maximum

Step 9 – Finalize Bibliography and Check Format: 15 Minutes

Total Time:

  1. Update your TA Bibliography Google Doc (In Your IB Google Drive Folder)
    • Finish and check the format of your MLA sources as you research

Step 10 – Upload to Turnitin.com: 10 Minutes

Total Time:

  1. Upload your TA paper (from Your IB Google Drive Folder)
  2. Upload your TA Bibliography Google Doc (from Your IB Google Drive Folder)

External Assessment Criteria SL and HL

Peer Review Checklist

Breaking News! Collaborative Production Project

SUMMARY

Role

Screenwriter

Intention (SMART Goal)

By February 24, I will show evidence of

PRE-PRODUCTION – Screenwriter Journal

Summary

I’m using screenwriting beats that end in therefore or but to raise the tension and storytelling elements.

Cinematic Storytelling elements (Cinematic Storytelling by Jennifer Van Sijll)

26. Expanding Time through Pacing- used to slow down time and make the protagonist anxious.

34. Visual Foreshadowing- a visual symbol planted early that suggests an action that will take place later in the film. The periwinkle envelope.

87. Props (Externalizing Character)- Sophie goes to the lake early in the film and jumps in the water. In the end, Sophie gets killed and thrown into the water. the same splashing sounds.

93. Contrast of Wardrobe- The killer wears all black and the victims wear white or other light colors to show the contrast in the wardrobe between all the characters.

https://www.celtx.com/auth/public/resource/yaqldsyn

Leader(s) in the Field / Exemplary Work(s)

Spike Lee. He wrote the films Do the Right Thing, He Got Game, She’s Gotta Have It, Jungle Fever, and Mo Better Blues. 

Michael Kennedy. He wrote Freaky and Bordertown. He specializes in writing horror movies. I will be looking at his writing and seeing what I can incorporate into my group film.

Training Source(s)

Project Timeline

From December 9th to February 24th.

Proposed Budget

??

PRODUCTION – ACTION

The (FILM, SOUND, or GAME Creation)

Skills Commentary

POST-PRODUCTION – REFLECTION

21st Century Skills

Ways of Thinking (Creativity, Innovation, Critical Thinking, Problem Solving)

Ways of Working (Communication & Collaboration)

Tools for Working (Info & Media Literacy)

Ways of Living in the World (Life & Career)

Reactions to the Final Version

Self-Evaluation of Final Version

Grammar and Spelling

Editor

Film Analysis: Do The Right Thing

'Do the Right Thing'
‘Do the Right Thing’” by moviesinla is licensed under CC BY-NC 2.0.

Summary

  • IN ONE TO TWO SENTENCES, DESCRIBE WHAT FILM YOU ANALYZED FOR THIS PROJECT AND WHY YOU CHOSE IT
  • DELETE ALL OF MR. LE DUC’s ALL UPPERCASE INSTRUCTIONS ABOVE

Film Analysis

Film TitlePLACE YOUR RESPONSES IN THIS COLUMN (DELETE THIS MESSAGE BEFORE YOU WRITE)
Year1989
DirectorSpike Lee
CountryUSA
GenreComedy/Drama
If you could work on this film (change it), what would you change and why?

Film information can be found at imdb.com

As you view films, consider how the cuts, camera angles, shots, and movement work to create particular meanings. Think about how they establish space, privilege certain characters, suggest relationships, and emphasize themes. In addition to shot distances, angles, editing, and camera movement, note details of the narrative, setting, characters, lighting, props, costume, tone, and sound.

Ask yourself the following questions:

TOPICYOUR NOTES
1. Who is the protagonist?Mookie
2. Who is the antagonist?Sal and police?
3. What is the conflict?Radio Raheem goes to Sal’s pizza shop to get pizza and walks in with his music playing. Sal tells him to turn it down or no pizza but he doesn’t listen. This results in Sal smashing the boombox and then Sal and Radio Raheem get into a fight. The cops get called and break up the fight but also take Radio Raheem and choke him to death.
4. What is the theme or central, unifying concept? (summarize in one or two words)Racism
5. How is the story told (linear, non-linear, with flashbacksflash-forwards, at regular intervals)linear? regular intervals?
6. What “happens” in the plot (Brief description)?
7. How does the film influence particular reactions on the part of viewers (sound, editing,
characterization, camera movement, etc.)? Why does the film encourage such
reactions?
8. Is the setting realistic or stylized? What atmosphere does the setting suggest? Do particular objects or settings serve symbolic functions?
9. How are the characters costumed and made up? What does their clothing or makeup reveal about their social standing, ethnicity, nationality, gender, or age? How do costume and makeup convey character?
10. How does the lighting design shape our perception of character, space, or mood?
11. How do camera angles and camera movements shape our view of characters or spaces? What do you see cinematically?
12. What is the music’s purpose in the film? How does it direct our attention within the image? How does it shape our interpretation of the image? What stands out about the music?
13. How might industrial, social, and economic factors have influenced the film? Describe how this film influences or connects to a culture?
14. Give an example of what a film critic had to say about this film. Use credible sources and cite sources.Example: “The Shawshank Redemption Movie Review (1994) | Roger Ebert.” All Content. N.p., n.d. Web. 24 June 2015.
15. Select one scene no longer than 5 minutes that represents well the whole film and shows relevant cinematic elements. Write a one-sentence description of the scene and record the time of the scene.Example: from 1:05:00 to 1:10:00.Explain why you chose this scene.PLACE THE TIME STAMP FROM THE SCENE HERE… Example: 01:48:50 – 01:54:00 ish (last 5 minutes of film)
16. In the selected scenewrite a sentence for each of the elements below to justify why this scene best represents the film:
a. Screenwriting:aggressive-loud and cursing, funny, bickering between Mookie and Sal, calm, radio station saying election coming up and to vote, quotes at the end of the film from Martin Luther King Jr. and Malcolm X talking about how violence isn’t part of the solution vs. violence could be used as part of the solution (juxtaposition).
b. Sound Design:cans being stepped on in beginning, people talking in the background calling for Mookie as he walks away
c. Camera Movements/Angles:Mookie is on the left side looking right, and Sal is on the right side looking left. Both are in the center of the shot though. eye level single shots with characters, then low angle 2-shot looking up when Mookie gives money back as they are resolving conflict, back to eye level again, close up of picking up money, camera following Mookie from the front walking and panning out. Behind Mookie is the neighborhood and behind Sal is the mural of multiple cultures.
d. Light Setup:shining on the characters faces-representing mid to late daytime. in 2-shot Mookie has bright direct light on his whole body, whereas Sal doesn’t have much light on him at all. At the end of the clip, as Mookie is walking away, Sal and his shop are in a shadow and Mookie was in bright daylight.
e. Soundtrack/Score:calm classical jazz (saxophone) during the argument, and calm classical (harps/violins) after the argument.
18. What’s the socio-cultural context of this film?

This worksheet was developed with ideas from many IB Film teachers, thus should remain in the Creative Commons

Mr. Le Duc’s Film Analysis Resources

IB Comparative Study Worksheet: TEMPLATE

“Film scripts for sale in Soho! #newyork #newyorkcity #nyc #movies” by Nat Ireland is licensed under CC BY-NC 2.0

Summary

A guide to planning, researching, and creating your Film Comparative Study

  • Follow the directions for each step below
  • Include for your work where it is required

Student Work

Guidance for Your Work

https://youtube.com/watch?v=5GVyf2UDWsc%3Ffeature%3Doembed
https://youtube.com/watch?v=F24rKFVlB2Q%3Ffeature%3Doembed

“Simple formative analysis of film elements, no matter how precise or insightful, won’t cut it which is why the research question needs to be crafted in such a way that it provides scope for theoretical and socio-historic exploration. It’s basically an EE in disguise but focusing on two very different textual sources.”

Steps and Tasks

  1. Brainstorm possible films for the task. You must select TWO films from contrasting cultural contexts.
  2. Brainstorm and justify at least three different areas of FILM FOCUS for your two chosen films.
  3. Brainstorm and justify at least two different CULTURAL CONTEXTS for your two chosen films.
  4. Consolidate your ideas and develop at least three different RESEARCH QUESTION topics for your study.
  5. Finalize your choices and select your RESEARCH QUESTION. Choose two films for comparison.
  6. Develop the main arguments you will make about your topic.
  7. Collect evidence from the films that support your argument.
  8. Research secondary sources for information that supports your argument.
  9. Write your Narration and plan the audio-visual components of your video essay.
  10. Recordassemble, and edit your Comparative Study Video Essay.
  11. Create a Works Cited document (separately) once your Comparative Study is finished.

Comparative Study Task Components

For this assessment task, each student identifiesselects, and researches each of the following task components.

  1. TASK 1: One area of film focus.
  2. TASK 2: Two films for comparison from within the chosen area of film focus, one of which originates from a contrasting time (historical) or space (geographical) to the personal context of the student, and the other film identified for comparison must arise from a contrasting cultural context to the first film. Students are required to select films they have not previously studied in depth. The selected films cannot come from the prescribed list of film texts provided for the textual analysis assessment task and, once selected, the films cannot be used by the student in any other assessment task for the DP film course or the extended essay.
  3. TASK 3: A clearly defined topic for a recorded multimedia comparative study, which links both the selected films and the identified area of film focus. Each student should invest time in researchingdeveloping, and honing their topic (which in most cases is likely to be expressed in the form of a research question) to ensure it is clear, focused and concise, in order to provide them with the maximum potential for success in this task. The topic should seek to enrich the student’s understanding of the chosen area of film focus and should avoid a plot-driven approach to the comparison.

The assessment criteria for this task requires students to provide a strong justification for the choice of task components as part of the recorded multimedia comparative study. This includes the student’s justification for how films arise from contrasting cultural contexts.

1. FILM Choices List

  • Set a timer
  • How much time did you spend:  ? 
Which films are you considering for your final Comparative Study? List as many as you wish below as part of an initial brainstorm. Remember that you must select ​​TWO​​ films from contrasting cultural contexts for this task.e.g. CITIZEN KANEYear, Country, and Director of the film.e.g. 1941, USA, Dir: Orson Welles
New York, New York (historical)1977-USA-
La La Land (historical)2016-USA-
Titanic (historical)1997-USA-James Cameron
Gone With the Wind (historical)1939-USA-Victor Fleming
Pearl Harbor
Iron Man

2. Areas of FILM FOCUS

Film Focus Possibility – identify the broad focus area and then add specifics (e.g. “THEORY – Auteur theory” or “GENRE – Horror”). Develop at least THREE options…you can create more by adding more rows.Justification for this Film Focus. Be as specific as possible.

3. Chosen CULTURAL CONTEXT

  • Set a timer
  • How much time did you spend:  ? 

For this assessment task, “cultural context” involves consideration of some of the following factors, some of which may be blended (such as socioeconomic factors).

  • Economic, Geographical, Historical, Institutional, Political, Social, Technological
Identify at least TWO Cultural Context possibilities for your chosen films.Justification for this Cultural Context. Be as specific as possible.

4. RESEARCH QUESTION Possibilities

  • Set a timer
  • How much time did you spend:  ? 

Consolidate your thoughts above and develop at least ​THREE​​ different research question possibilities. More are possible by adding additional rows to the table below. FYI these will be shared with the full class for discussion of strengths and weaknesses.

Your Chosen Area of Film FocusTopic for Comparative Study (written as a research question)

5. Final Decisions

  • Set a timer
  • How much time did you spend:  ? 

Using your topic options in the table above, select ​ONE​​ to be your final topic for this Comparative Study task. NOTE: There are examples from the IB of what this should look like below this table.

Your Chosen Area of Film FocusFilm 1Film 2Contrasting Cultural ContextTopic for Comparative Study practice task (written as a research question)

6. Developing Your Topic

  • Set a timer
  • How much time did you spend:  ? 
Develop 3-5 main arguments that can be made about your topic based on your research question and chosen film focus.Brainstorm how you could support these arguments within your video essay.

7. Selecting Supporting Evidence (Primary)

  • Set a timer
  • How much time did you spend:  ? 
Identify at least 15 scenes from your chosen films that will help support the arguments you have outlined above. Screen clip a frame from each scene below.Write notes about how this scene helps support your argument. (These notes will help form your voice-over narration.)

*Add more rows as needed.

8. Selecting Supporting Evidence (Secondary)

  • Set a timer
  • How much time did you spend:  ? 
Identify at least 3-5 secondary sources (articles, books, websites, video essays, etc.) which provide information that help support your arguments being made. In this column include the specific source citations.Summarize the detailed information from the secondary source that you can use in this column. (You can copy+paste if they are from online sources.)

*Add more rows as needed.

9. Writing Your Narration

  • Set a timer
  • How much time did you spend on the first draft: ? 
  • How much time did you spend on the final draft: ? 

Using the information, scene choices, and external sources you have compiled in steps 6-8, you will now write your voiceover narration and match it up to your chosen visual examples.

Length (</= 10 Minutes)

  • For the final Comparative Study, your narration should be no longer than 10 minutes in length.

Remember that you need to:

  • COMPARE and CONTRAST your two chosen film using the arguments and evidence you identified in parts 6-8, above
  • Begin your narration with a detailed justification for the chosen cultural contrast
  • Use an equal balance of the two selected films.
  • Write in a third-person voice to construct your argument (similar in tone to your Extended Essay and other
    comparative analytical work you have written in Film class).
  • Identify where any WRITTEN TEXT will appear on the screen and highlight this (to reference during the
    creation/editing stage)
Which Visual Evidence/Scenes line up to this part of the narration?Voiceover Narration Ideas

Formatting Guidelines

Screenshot from Celtx.com

10. Assembling the Comparative Study

  • Set a timer
  • How much time did you spend:  ? 

Now you will collect all media resources needed for the task and construct your video essay.

REQUIRED STEPS

  • Import the digital copy of your chosen films into editing software
  • Identify and extract chosen scenes and clips
  • Place and edit clips into a rough timeline for your video essay
  • Record audio narration (both partners should participate in narrating this practice task)
    into an audio file using recording equipment (Zoom recorders, iPhone, DSLR Rode video
    mic, etc.)
  • Import your recorded narration audio file into your project timeline
  • Assemble, edit and fine-tune clips and narration until your video essay takes shape
  • Create and add any required textual information in the timeline (including black slate at the start)
  • Audio mixing of narration and movie clips (adjust levels so that narration and movie sounds complement each other)
  • Export the final video essay movie file
    • Upload Unlisted draft to YouTube for peer review

11. Create Works Cited

  • Set a timer
  • How much time did you spend:  ? 
  • Create Works Cited document separately (Google Doc)

Examples of Possible Task Components

Area of film focusFilm 1Film 2A possible topic for comparative study
Film movement: German ExpressionismThe Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (1920)Edward Scissorhands (1990)How and with what effect are specific film elements of German expressionism used within a chosen contemporary film?
Film movement: French New WaveBreathless (1960)Badlands (1973)The influence of the French New Wave on New Hollywood’s use of innovative film elements in its representation of youth and violence.
Film genre and film style: Black comedyNo. 3 (1997)The Big Lebowski (1998)To what extent do “black comedy” films differ according to cultural context?
Film theory: Soviet MontageBattleship Potemkin (1925)Koyaanisqatsi (1982)To what extent are specific features of Soviet montage theory faithfully employed in a contemporary experimental film?

External Assessment Criteria SL and HL

Peer Review Checklist

TASK COMPONENTS (ACTION)Notes / Suggestions
__Assemble Findings
__Develop a personal and critically reflective perspective
__Identify and gather appropriate audio-visual material to support the study
SCREENPLAY
__Justify the chosen topic and selected films
__Make sure that the text is in a formal academic register (can be in the 1st person)
__The balance between visual and spoken elements
__Make clear reference to your sources as on-screen citations (text on-screen)
__Make sure the primary weight of evidence for the study from the two chosen films
__Make sure each film is given equal consideration
__Make sure film language information is communicated clearly throughout (avoid “to be” verbs – make statements like “blah is this.”)
__Make sure information is communicated logically rooted in film language
__Have another student highlight the WHAT WHY HOW in your draft screenplay
VIDEO ESSAY
__Recorded voice and edited commentary numerous times until happy with the material
__Make sure your name and the school’s name ARE NOT IN THE ESSAY
__Make sure to have 10-second title card with:1. Area of film focus2. Titles of the two films for comparison3. The chosen topic
__Include breaks in your recorded commentary to enable other audio-visual material included in the study to be clearly heard (if needed)
__Make sure film clip length matches points being made
__Make sure still images have citations on-screen if you have them
__Make sure text on-screen is legible and spelled correctly
__Make sure information is communicated audibly (levels are good for all sound)
__Make sure information is communicated visually appropriate manner
__Make sure background music is from Creative Commons and is cited
__Make sure edits are clean
__Make sure the presentation is 10 minutes maximum, including title card and credits
__Make sure two films are listed in sources

Production Project – Session 6

SUMMARY

Role

Editor

Intention (SMART Goal)

By October 20th, as part of team 6, I will have provided evidence of character, want and need, plot, structure, and conflict and resolution by using the website ‘5 Elements Of A Great Screenplay’.

PRE-PRODUCTION – INQUIRY

Leader(s) in the Field / Exemplary Work(s)

Training Source(s)

Project Timeline

Proposed Budget

PRODUCTION – ACTION

The (FILM, SOUND, or GAME Creation)

Skills Commentary

POST-PRODUCTION – REFLECTION

21st Century Skills

Ways of Thinking (Creativity, Innovation, Critical Thinking, Problem Solving)

Ways of Working (Communication & Collaboration)

Tools for Working (Info & Media Literacy)

Ways of Living in the World (Life & Career)

Reactions to the Final Version

Self-Evaluation of Final Version

Grammar and Spelling

Editor

Citizen Kane Research

The Battle Over Citizen Kane

  • “Boy Genius”
  • RKO studios gave him a great contract with lots of freedom
  • “He was careless”
  • Acclaimed as greatest talking picture film
  • Movie was almost destroyed before people could see it by a powerful man who was going to buy it
  • Douglas Fairbanks Jr.
  • William Randolph Hearst
  • Hearst had a women collapse in streets and another person jumped off of a ferry just to see how long it would take for people to save them
  • Went after his enemies, attacked the southern pacific railroad, printed railway conductor names with “s” as money signs.
  • Welles and Hearst were very similar
  • Career was built on controversy
  • Welles was declared to be a genius at age of 3
  • “Didn’t have a childhood, he was in boarding school, was a child prodigy”
  • Arrived in New York in late teens, was going to revolutionize theater
  • 24 when started Citizen Kane, and it came out when he was 25
  • 4 men attacked him outside theater
  • Was in demand on radio, voice of the shadow and many other voices
  • Brought in lots of money through radio
  • Would go in an ambulance from his studio to the radio station (NBC).
  • “Exuded so much power, so much authority.”
  • Hearst was surprised he couldn’t buy to win his election for Congress
  • Hearst’s paper called twice to put a bullet in president William McKinley and someone ended up doing it
  • Hearst was visionary builder
  • Ran for governor and president but lost so he formed his own party, no one really liked him anymore
  • “Love on my terms, thats the only love anyone knows.”
  • “Welles didn’t think, he just did.”
  • “He courted danger, that was always an element of success.”
  • Welles made up radio shows as he went
  • Hearst built a connection with Marian Davies who was only 18
  • Hearst is close to bankruptcy
  • Marian Davies was a gold digger but fell in love with Hearst and she sold jewelry making 2 million dollars and gave it to Hearst since he was going bankrupt
  • Welles contract demanded 2 films

Docudrama RKO 281

  • “Boy wonder has arrived”
  • At 18 goes to New York
  • Takes to air way
  • Write, direct, and star in his own projects
  • “Life’s rich pageant” is what movies are about
  • Mank (Herman) hadn’t worked for 4 years and was an alcoholic
  • Welles hired Mank
  • Hearst pays a newspaper writer to stay quite about when he killed a man

Orson Welles Interview on Citizen Kane

  • Studio tried to stop the filming because they wanted power
  • Intended to be a social document attack on inquisitive society
  • Attack on property and corruption
  • Got a good contract because he didn’t really want to make a film
  • He didn’t want money he wanted authority
  • Got confidence from ignorance, when you know something about a profession you’re more timid
  • Pulled off lots of technical moves because he didn’t even know they were hard
  • Tried sentimental tricks to attempt of genuine humanity
  • Denied the “cutting room” aka the editing room, meaning some shots got cut out of the final film