Wednesday 27 November 2013

Unit 8: Understanding the Film and TV Industries task 2

Job roles in films
In this I will talk about the different types of jobs in the film industry, these being Creative, Management, and Technical jobs, and will talk about 3 different job titles for each of these areas. There are many roles in Television and Film and as of that I will not talk about all of them, which is why I have decided to talk about 9 and how they are used in productions.

Technical:
The Technical roles in Television and Film are the jobs that work with all of the electrical/technical equipment. For example there is the sound engineer who works with sound editing software and sound equipment in order to boost/fix the sound levels for the production. This can be something as simple as a soundtrack to having to record new sounds to lay over the previous, which is what is commonly known as Foley sound.

·         Digital Imaging Technician (DIT): The “DIT” is responsible for the coordination of the internal workings of the digital camera. Being under the direction of the Director of photography, the DIT will make adjustments to the multitude of variables available in the cameras in order to manipulate the image. Such work has been done in films like the Matrix. When in the Matrix the image had a hint of green so simulate what it would look like to be in a simulated world. It is more effective with the green impression as the computers back in the time it was made had a lot of that in their programming.

·         Gaffer: The Gaffer is the head of the electrical department, responsible for the design and execution of the lighting plan for a production. Sometimes the Gaffer is credited as “Chief Lighting Technician”. The Best Boy (Electrical) is the chief assistant to the Gaffer. Work seen by Gaffers in productions are sometimes un-noticed. But the subtle works of the make big differences in the production. It is their responsibility to properly organise the lighting and to make sure that it sets the mood of the production. Look at the film Donnie Darko. This physiological film used a wide range of lighting which varied between the scenes. But what is most notable is the lighting used when Donnie is having some type of illusion. The light focusses on that he is seeing, for example the auras that come out of people, but also doesn’t draw too much attention away from the rest of the scene. This is what made the film so brilliant because you can be completely focussed on what Donnie is seeing, but also you take in the whole of the room which is done through the combination of good camera work and lighting placement.

·         Foley sound team: Foley sound is the non-diegetic sound that is added after filming. For example a horse riding through a street would be difficult to capture sound for so a common method used is to have someone on the team get something that sounds like a horse running across stone, 2 halves of a coconut for example, and have them create that sound to lay over the horses gallop. Foley sound is used throughout most, if not all professional productions for all different kinds of sounds. In a film or programme set in medieval times, such as Game Of Thrones, when a sword is drawn that sound is not caught on camera. What a Foley team would do is get 2 thin metal objects and scrape one against the other in a fast motion causing it to make a ring, much like a sword being drawn. The possibilities for using Foley sound are endless. It is used for door sounds, ripping flesh, cars, etc. Without Foley Film and Television productions would be far less entertaining to watch.

Management:
Management roles are a lot less practical to technical and especially less practical than creative. Within the management roles you are overseeing or supervising or supervising areas of the production. There are many different types of management roles such as the Producer who oversees the director and other creative aspects of the production. Executive producer who manages the finance. Even lesser roles such as marketer who focus on the distribution of the finished product.

·         Producer: The producer initiates, coordinates, supervises, and controls matters such as raising funding, hiring key personnel, contracting and arranging for distributors. The producer is involved throughout all phases of the process from development to completion of a project. As the Producer you are responsible for making sure everything goes smoothly. To make sure that the talent isn’t acting up in any way that could hurt the production and to ultimately make sure that the production keeps up to date.

·         Location Manager: The location manager is responsible for finding and securing locations to be used for the production and coordinating the logistics, permits and costs involved. They are also the face of the production to the community. It is important for the location manager to ensure that those who are allowing you to film in their homes, business, etc, know how long they will be, and that they may need to return. There have been productions made where people who let a crew film in their home don’t know what time they are supposed to start, when they finish and what they do to their home. This means that they may be woken up early so they can film, will be kept out of their house upon returning and possibly find holes have been made in walls for the camera, lighting and other wires.

·         Production Accountant: Production accountants are responsible for managing finances and maintaining financial records during film production. They work closely with the Producer and the production office to manage the day-to-day accounting office functions, and report on the project’s financial progress against the budgets (cost reporting). They are responsible for knowing how much a scene will cost if it requires any big special effects or props. And to make sure that they do not go over budget.

Creative:
As creative is the most practical aspect of filmmaking a lot of people wish to work on when they first think about starting a career in the film business. Areas where creative is mainly seen is in the screenwriting, although not too practical, it plays a big role in the practical work. Direction is highly creative as the Director must think of creative ways to make the production more entertaining for the viewers in ways of simple, yet unusual shots and just telling the actors where to stand and how to perform the scene.

·         Director: The Director is in charge of the creative part of the production. This means they control the content and flow of the plot, direct the actors, select what is to be shown on camera, use of lighting, and the timing and content of the films soundtrack. Directors work to find ways of making their production more interesting through their use of shots. Take the Director Gregory Dark for example. He mainly directs music videos, but when he made the film See no Evil he used techniques he developed in music video production so when the video transitioned it added a very subtle, but great effect to the film by using the environment of the sets.
·         
       Set Designer: The set designer is the draftsman, often an architect, who realizes the structures or interior spaces called for by the production designer. They are in charge of the overall look of where they are filming. The Rob Zombie, Halloween remake is a good example in one of the early scenes. When they first got permission to film in what was used as the Myres house they found that the owner was a very messy person, as a result the house was disgusting. They had to clean up the whole of the living room, kitchen and bedrooms so it would look like a home. When Michael Myres was a kid he lived in a broken home, the set had to resemble that. So they had to “un-clean” the house making for a lot of un-necessary work. If the set designer had been there from the start then it would have saved the group a lot of work.


·         Screenwriter: The screenwriter, or script writer, is responsible for researching the story, creating the narrative, writing the screenplay, and delivering it, in the required format, to the Producers. They are almost always freelancers who either pitch original ideas to Producers in the hope that they will be optioned or sold, or who are commissioned by a Producer to create a screenplay from a concept, true story, existing screen work or literary work, such as a novel or short story. They are very important to the production as without them, without a script, there is no film.

Sunday 17 November 2013

Issues to factual programming

There are many issues of factual programming in television which can make them quite difficult to make. Depending on whether or not you get permission to film in a certain place, or film someone could make or break the programme. You need to look at when making a factual programme the Accuracy and balance, impartiality, objectivity and subjectivity, opinion, bias, representation and privacy. All of these points will occur one way or another when making a factual programme.

 (A collage of the best factual programmes of 2010)

Accuracy and balance

Accuracy: (Web definition) 'The quality or state of being correct or precice'

It is important that we keep our work as accurate as possible and not to twist our stories. However most of the documentary will be interviews and we cannot tell the interviewee(s) what to say, you can ask them to be as accurate as possible. You can take the documentary "Cocaine capital of the world" for example; Stacey Dooley (the interviewer) spoke with numerous people, both police and cocaine makers, and got them to give their honest opinions on the state of their country and how cocaine has changed it. The overall response she got from both law officials and outlaws was that it has helped their country and brought families out of poverty. One of the police even said "I do not like destroying the coca plants but it is my job and is how I support my family." If a factual piece is inaccurate then it can change the whole opinion of the story and lead people astray from the point of the documentary.
 Cocaine capital of the world (1 hour length)
Balance: To keep the argument/documentary fair on bot sides.
It is important we do not stick to one side and investigate both sides of the story. The end is when we can choose a side to talk more about. Sticking with the cocaine capital of the world example, Stacey Dooley had managed to get opinions from people who were opposed to the drug and were working on stopping it. She had not set out to get bad opinions but was trying to keep it balanced so she could get the whole of the story, and it was highly shocking to see how many people who work to stop the drug, wish they were doing otherwise, by that I don't mean they wish to be making it, but they just wish that they could allow it to continue so they could keep themselves and others out of poverty. But the only way to keep themselves out of full poverty.

Impartiality

(Web meaning) An inclination to weigh both views or opinions equally.
This links in with balance where it shows you both sides of the story where the documenter doesn't voice on opinion and tries to understand both sides of the subject. An example of an un-partial documentary is "Supersize me" where he is only focused on the fattening process. He does get the workers and customer’s opinion but overall it is about how bad the food is and mainly just shows him eating and being sick. When releasing a factual film programmers have to make sure what they have contained in the documentary will cause no offence to any religious group or racial/social groups because they will get loads of complaints. For example if you were to make a documentary on the slave trade and there is content in there that could be possibly racially offensive like the use of the "N" word, then it could upset any black people who watched it. Or if you were to make one on a religion from an atheist's view point, then what said atheist says could upset the religious people that it concerns. 

Objectivity and Subjectivity

SubjectivityJudgement based on individual personal impressions and feelings and opinions rather than external facts. Or in other words, not forcing your opinion. Interviews will have different opinions from one another and as the documentary film maker you will have to balance the opinions out. You could look at the Documentary Catfish for this. They start out with wanting to make a documentary about a little girl who is very talented, then it is to expose a lie of someone lying about who they are online, but they do not go and confront them right away, they allow them the opportunity of revealing themselves for who they really are, and through this do not force their opinion, but also do at the same time, when they finally stop lying and tell them that the people they were online were not real, the group who made the documentary learnt why they did it and it changed their opinions of the people. It is difficult to decide if this would be Subjective or objective, but in my personal opinion, after they meet the people face to face they stop voicing their opinion and let them tell the story, therefore making it more of a subjective piece.

ObjectivityThe objectivity of factual programming is when interviewing the person should consider the questions they present and the facts that they state. You should be open minded and get the point across as quickly and accurately as possible. In an objective factual film you are more or less forcing your point across. Going back to "Supersize me" the documenter was forcing on his opinion of how bad fast food (Particularly McDonalds) was for you.

Opinion

When producing a documentary you should ask the interviewers to share their opinions to give more ideas which can help bring the message of the film become clearer and understandable. When asking or stating a fact make sure it is researched properly and you should research outside the subject too. This will help the audience to have a different viewpoint to the subject. This was done in Catfish when interviewing "Vince" it was placed towards the end of the documentary where he uses actual Catfish as a metaphor for "keeping you on your toes, keeping you aware" which is a big part of why the documentary was called Catfish.
(Vince explains the meaning of catfish) (best video available)

Bias

(Web definition) Inclination or prejudice for or against one person or group, especially in a way considered to be unfair.

The Australian journalist, John Pilger, has made at least three biased documentaries. First there is Killing Fields. He is supposed to be interviewing a Cambodian but the person is speaking Vietnamese in two different parts. When he did interview Cambodians, several of the translations are incorrect. Several of the scenes in the film were shot in Thailand, and not in Cambodia. He talks about locations but has the distances and directions incorrect. Second he made a documentary on UN and International Red Cross aid in the late 1970's or early 1980's. He accused the UN and the ICRC of storing weapons for the Khmer Rouge in their warehouses in Thailand. Finally he did a documentary he did of a girl who had been kidnapped from her home in the Thai countryside and sold into prostitution in Bangkok. John Pilger paid the girl’s parents to use the girl for his documentary and the girl never was a prostitute. Through these examples we can see that John Pilger wasn't interested in making a factual piece for his project, but instead went looking for stories that he thought would grant him the biggest view count, and went into them only to play off of those rumours and not to get the actual story. This is a prime example of bias Documentary.

Killing fields article: http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/beyond-the-imagination-of-mankind-cambodia-killing-426995
Killing fields full documentary (Poor quality): http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xH4kIqlGSiQ

UN and ICRC (Pilger's blog article):  http://www.thirdworldtraveler.com/Pilger_John/Cambodia_Heroes.html

Other Pilger articles: http://johnpilger.com/articles

Representation

Representation is when you are stereotyping someone or a subject by their cultural identities, events, objects or places. The Documentary "Gun Control" is a prime example. In the Documentary several groups of small production teams travel around America, mainly in the South, and get the peoples opinions about gun control. They went in there expecting to have all the southerners saying that gun control was idiotic and took away their right to bare arms. They did get a few people like this but about 3 out of every 5 people they got to answer a vox pop about the subject said that they did think it was a good thing with and in some areas people replied, "With all the local shootings lately it will help to keep people safe by taking away their guns." In their research of gun control they discovered an article about a man who placed his fully loaded shotgun in front of his house for 6 hours and it didn't shoot anyone. He the then joked that he strangled to death the kid who tried to steal it. When editing this documentary they could have had all the "Gun nuts" response to the questions asked used, but chose to show the more rational minded people to allow the United States to keep some of its dignity. But just so people knew about those opposed to the subject they added a few of their responses also.

Privacy

Just looking back on all the examples previously given, all of these documentaries have different methods of privacy. John Pilger pays people to have interviews. The people from "Gun Control" and "Supersize me" had those who they interviewed or were going to interview sign a document allowing them to use the footage. "Cocaine capital of the world" Blur out the faces, don't show or say their names, and adjust the voices of whoever they interview who work as drug dealers/makers in order to protect their identity from both Police and their suppliers/buyers/bosses, it was the only way they would agree to be interviewed. Finally in Catfish they make no attempt to hide the identities that the people are lying about online. Upon first meeting them they do not get any permission to film them, go in with a microphone first while the others wait in the car with the camera on watching the house. Then soon after they have the people on camera along with their children and home. All throughout the documentary they were working on they didn't tell the family that they were doing a piece on their talented little girl. And also didn't tell them that they had found out who they were and let them come out and tell them eventually. There are many different ways to use privacy in a factual piece, and there are still a few that are usable that I have not listed with these examples. What all documentaries require is a permit for where they are filming and whom they are filming. They could go and film someone who gave permission at the time but with little evidence of that it is possible for said person to sue, so before filming always make sure you have a written permit with the owners or interviewees signature.

Copyright

Like all productions copyright can occur at any time with the finished work. The documentary team could have used some product placement without the companies approval, or it could be something as simple as the soundtrack used. There was even a case with an untitled Documentary made by an American film student who just took someone else's documentary and added her own voice over and claimed that it was hers. 

Similarities

In this post I have talked about Accuracy, Balance, Impartiality, Objectivity, Subjectivity, Opinion, Bias, Representation and Privacy. Now a lot if not all of these issues are similar to another listed. Take Subjectivity and Impartiality for instance. A quick sum up of what these two mean are Subjectivity is where you aren't forcing your opinion, and Impartiality is having no view point. Another two that go together are Opinion and bias as they are both in a way showing your view point in the subject and making a documentary this way would be persuading your audience to think the same. Opinion and bias are also similar to Objectivity.

My Documentary

In my 3 minute wonder I will be addressing the condition known as Autism, mainly a certain type of Autism known as Asperger Syndrome (Or Aspergers). I will be speaking to a professional on the subject who has helped many others who have the syndrome, and diagnosed some with it. Also someone who has Aspergers and how they deal with it. Issues I will face in this are going to be privacy, opinion, bias and objectivity. As I am someone who has Aspergers I have a bias view point on the subject and feel that people know little about it. but however this will work for my documentary as I am trying to get more awareness about Asperger Syndrome. The Doctor who I am going to talk to will require me to have permission to film him or her, and I am planning to have it filmed in his or her office so I will need written permission for both location and person.


Sources:
http://www.slideshare.net/charlottejean/factual-programming-doctumentary
Accessed on 07/11/2013

https://www.google.co.uk/#q=cocaine%20capital%20of%20the%20world
Accessed on 07/11/2013

http://mbham-documentary.blogspot.co.uk/2012/03/factual-programming.html