The document discusses how a group of students created a 5 minute documentary for a class project. It summarizes some of the key conventions and techniques they used, as well as some ways they challenged conventions. They followed conventions like using the rule of thirds for interviews, archive footage to make it seem professional, and music to appeal to younger audiences. However, they challenged conventions by relying more on dialogue than narration. The interviews were important to follow conventions but also provided key information for the documentary.
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1. Q1.
IN WHAT WAYS DOES YOUR MEDIA PRODUCT
USE, DEVELOP OR CHALLENGE FORMS AND
CONVENTIONS OF REAL MEDIA PRODUCTS?
Our Task: In my advanced year of media we were
asked to arrange ourselves into groups of three
and create a 5 minute introduction of a
documentary on a subject of our choice. This also
included ancillary tasks such as to create a 30
second radio trailer and also a newspaper
advertisement to promote our documentary.
To create the documentary we had to sometimes
follow certain codes and conventions to make it
fall into the documentary genre, however certain
aspects allowed us to break away from these. in
the next few slides I will be discussing how we
have stuck with these and also decided to go
against them.
By Joseph King
3. Rule Of Thirds Shot:
We followed the convention of using the rule of thirds for
interviews as we thought this would be the best way to
structure our interviews in a professional and smart way. The
rule of thirds shot is indicative of the genre as it is commonly
used in interviews or questioning for example Louis Theroux’s
LA Stories or our very own documentary to the left.
We also decided to design our shots specifically by putting
the camera, lights, BBC sofa, editing desks within the
interviews adding to the mise en scene. This adds to the
visual interest of the documentary and also keeps with the
theme.
Narration:
In our documentary we made the decision not to include
much narration and rely more on the dialogue from our
interviews and visuals. This is different to most
documentaries as the majority seem to use narration
heavily and use it to convey information to the viewers and
therefore challenges the typical forms and conventions of
actual productions.
4. Archive Footage:
We also used archive footage obtained from You Tube of
Roger Johnson presenting and also the opening
sequence for North West Tonight. We used this to make
the documentary come across more professional and to
cover up errors in the interview, this is what most
professional documentaries do and is therefore a
convention that we followed.
Music:
A modern music selection was decided upon as we wanted
our documentary to come across as up to date. We used
new bands such as The 1975, Dog Is Dead and Foals.
BBC 3 often use this same tactic bringing a modern feel to
the documentary this is to cater for the young audience
that BBC 3 has and as our target audience research was
directed at a younger audience we decided to
follow this technique.
Music Links:
Dog is Dead – Talk Through The Night: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2ZTLJP74bLg
The 1975 – The City: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s6Y2FVD5JVw
Foals – My Number: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bAsGFnLl2u0&feature=kp
5. Interviews:
Our interviews were of great importance as we really wanted
to get at least one interview with someone that’s a regular feature
on TV as the star factor can really attract an audience. We
managed to arrange an interview with Roger Johnson who
presents the news regularly and also presents BBC breakfast. It
was also very important that the interviews relate to the topic
so therefore we had to ask the correct questions which we had
pre-prepared.
We also arranged interviews with Kevin King the floor manager of
the BBC and Phil Smith who is of the editorial position, this gave
us a nice range of interviews to choose the best bits from and put
them into our allocated five minutes.
By using interviews in our documentary we were again following
the conventions of a documentary. However you could argue it
would be impossible to make a mixed/informative documentary
without interviews as this would mean relying fully on the narrator
to relay information to the audience for the full documentary.
Therefore we had to follow this convention to make the
documentary come across to the audience as professional.