The mise en scene for our documentary will be mainly normal fashions and up to date things that people wear when it comes to costume. The people we interview will be wearing casual clothes that would usually be associated with someone fairly young and within latest fashion trends. This will be from high street stores, such as h and m and topshop. More mise en scene included within our documentary will include the makeup, which on girls will be fairly toned down because we plan to interview people that would be in the majority when it comes to usual teenagers in the UK. Below are photo ideas of what we would like to incorporate within our documentary when it comes to outfit ideas. We would want this to be fairly toned down. It would be in a font fairly similar to the one typed in this; nothing that draws attention away from what is being shot.
For the titles within our documentary, we won't want anything too obvious or anything that would take away attention from the documentary itself. This would include fonts such as times new roman and others that are notoriously known for bring subtle fonts of typography. Within the credits of our documentary, we will aim to include who made and distributed the film, who came up with the costumes and people who have been interviewed within the documentary. We will also include the places in which we filmed the documentary, which is Castle Quay in Banbury and me and Sophie's houses, and this could convince the people watching the documentary that we had permission for wherever we wanted to film.
Camera angles, shots. We are going to try and incorporate a large range of different camera angles and shots as this will keep the audience interested and provide an interesting range for the documentary. In our preliminary documentary we learned that they stay interesting when there is a large range of angles and lots of different shots in a short amount of time, but not so many shots that the audience lose interest because it becomes hard to keep interest. These will include: worms eye shots, long shots, establishing shots, extra long shots, high angle and low angle if we want to show a power imbalance, eye match shots and much more. This will provide a good diverse range of shots for our documentary and allow us to get the better marks for our coursework.
Editing. For our documentary, the editing being raw will be a very important thing we need to input. Since there will be a range of camera angles and shots, editing everything together to make it all look smooth will be important because this is a fairly large convention of most documentaries. We will need to edit some of the shots to be blurred in order to put some typography involving statistics over the top, and these will be either in black or white font so they stand out and grab the audience's attention. We will try, like our initial documentary, to include lots of different answers when one question has been asked. This provides a good insight into the vast diversity in which our documentary is being filmed. This means we will try and cast people for the interviews that are from a variety of backgrounds, so we can demonstrate that even though we have people all of the same age that some can be much more privileged than others. This may also help to bring in a more diverse target audience if we include people who are privileged and those who are not.
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