Blocking For Directors: Mastering Space: Description
Blocking For Directors: Mastering Space: Description
Blocking For Directors: Mastering Space: Description
Description
Shot syntax. Covering a scene. Thinking in terms of sequences. The master shot sequence.
Montage. Pacing. Jump Scares. Tension. The one-take master. Steadicam, handheld, the static
shot. Working with a dolly, working with a crane, working with a drone. Rehearsing on set. Blocking
to the light. Block-shooting. Continuity. Eye-line and screen direction, Cutting-styles. Leadership
styles.
Hands on exercises: we will block several scenes in class.
Day 1: SATURDAY
INTRODUCTION TO BLOCKING
Order from Chaos
The Call Sheet
The Purpose of Blocking: priorities
ELEMENTS OF SHOT SYNTAX
Shot Sizes, Framing Choices, Focal Lengths, Screen Direction
Master shot sequence, Shot/Reverse Shot
‘The Line’ what it is and when to break it.
Building tension. Foreshadowing. The Jump Scare.
EXERCISE A: TWO PEOPLE TALKING
EXERCISE B: THREE PEOPLE TALKING
The split look, eyelines and screen direction
DAY 2: SUNDAY
EXERCISE FEEDBACK, TIPS & TRICKS
Use of a steadicam/crane/drone
Working with cars, PMP, Trailers, Greenscreen
VFX Work
Directing styles
EXERCISE C: MULTICAM 2-CHARACTER ACTION
EXERCISE D: MULTICAM TABLE CONVERSATION
ADVANCED TOPICS
The Opening Shot
The Jump Scare
Building Tension
Original approaches: Examples
Directing Actors
Day 1 : Pre-production with Actors
What makes a great screen performance?
The Director/Actor Relationship
Actors’ tools and training
Preparing to meet actors.
What is a Character?
The Director in Casting
The Script Read
Planning Rehearsal – What to Rehearse and Why.
Rehearsal Tools
Directing The Character
Seeing the process of working with actors from casting, through rehearsal to filming scenes was
excellent. Chris’s passion for directing was un-questionable and his enthusiasm was inspiring.
Gary Simposon
Basic Cinematography
What will it cover?
Day 1: Aesthetics (Sept 29th)
Attributes of the visual image
Framing
Lighting
Lighting set-ups and variations
Three-point setup
Creating the look
Day 2: Film (Sept 30th)
Film camera
Film stock
Lenses
Filters
Contrast
Light ratios
Light meters
Day 3: Digital (Sept 31st)
Digital cameras
Comparison of film and digital cameras
HD and SD formats
Digital exposure
Digital signal
Timecode
Description
About Breaking into the Film Industry
If you want to work in the film industry as a writer, director, producer or crew, your chances of
success will succeed if you make a plan of attack for breaking into the film industry. Learn how to
identify particular areas of interest to you, and how to find and approach the people who can help
and hire you.
What will it cover?
Creating a showreel
Presenting yourself: CV’s and query letters
How to break in as a writer, a director or producer
Getting jobs in a film crew: sound, camera, art department, post-production etc.
What will you achieve?
By the end of the class, you will be able to identify key areas of focus and put together a
personalised plan for breaking into the film industry which supports your particular aspirations,
including networking and career development opportunities.
How will you be taught?
This class is taught lecture-style with opportunities for students to ask the tutor questions.
Who should attend?
Breaking into the Film Industry is suitable for anyone with aspirations of working in film, including
students, career-changers, hobbyists and those new to filmmaking.
Day 1: SATURDAY
CINEMATOGRAPHY SPEAK
Mood/ Palette/ Hard vs. Soft light
High key vs. low key.
Punchy vs. muted.
Available light, justified light, stylized light
ABOUT THE LENS
Focus, Aperture, Focal Length, Depth of Field, Sharpness
Filtration: color, diffusion, polarization
INTRODUCTION TO CINEMATOGRAPHY
Your closest collaborator
Their crew / their gear/ the time
Learning the language
ABOUT THE LIGHT
Understanding Physical qualities of light
Artistic qualities of light and how to achieve them
IMAGE ACQUISITION
Shutter speed/angle, sensitivity, gain, resolution/grain
Codecs and Color Spaces what does it all mean?
Monitoring: Read a waveform, a vectorscope, false color monitoring, peaking.
The importance of testing.
Data Management.
SPECIAL TECHNIQUES
Working with cars
Day for Night, Night for Day, Dry for Wet, Miniatures, Greenscreen, tracking, 2D vs. 3D VDX
Near future tech: 3D acquisition, VR acquisition, the light-field camera.
DAY 2: SUNDAY
Lighting Exercise: The Medium Shot
3 point lighting Key/Fill/Back
Metering
Contrast ratios
High key and low key
Atmosphere (smoke, fan)
Carving soft light
Lighting Exercise: The Close-Up
soft light vs. hard light
Rembrandt key light
hair light / kicker
same side fill
eye light
louvering
hard marks, stepping into the light
on key vs. off key
Lighting Exercise: Tabletop
lighting for texture / bokeh
controlling light
visual interest
Color grading on the DaVinci
Work with some of our shots and tweak them, showing the possibilities.