Post on 15-Dec-2015
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Lecture 2:Lecture 2: Film Production, Distribution Film Production, Distribution
and Exhibition and Exhibition
Professor Michael Green
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Previous LessonPrevious Lesson• How to succeed in an
online course.
• How this course is organized.
• What we study in an introductory film course
– Form
– Content.
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This Lecture This Lecture • The Technology of
Moving Images• Film Production• Film Distribution and
Exhibition• Case Study: Jaws
(1975)
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The Technology of Moving ImagesThe Technology of Moving Images
Lesson 2: Part I
Movies, Technology and BusinessMovies, Technology and Business
• As your authors, Bordwell and Thompson, state, film requires a lot of technology: cameras, lights, sound equipment, and computers to edit and create digital images and sound.
• Film also requires companies, to make the technology, to invest money, and to distribute and exhibit movies once made.
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A Film Camera A Film Camera • Runs undeveloped film
through at 24 fps (frames per second).
• The shutter opens and a lens focuses light, bounced off what the camera will record in front of it, onto the film, creating the photographic image.
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Still Pictures MoveStill Pictures Move
• As we watch a film, we are looking at a series of still pictures.
• Movies, however, trick the human eye into seeing movement.
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Apparent MotionApparent Motion
• Film is projected at 24 fps (frames or still photos per second).
• Each of those 24 frames is shown twice,creating 48 still photos projected per second.
• Showing still images that fast makes them seem to move. An effect called Apparent motion.
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CelluloidCelluloid
• Film became possible with development of celluloid, a flexible material that could run through a camera and projector fast enough to create apparent motion.
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ProjectorProjector• Works the opposite of
a camera, sending light out through the film to put an image onto a screen.
• Film runs through projector at 24 fps, and each frame is shown twice to create apparent motion.
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The NegativeThe Negative• Is made when film is shot by the movie
camera. • Filmic images are recorded on chemical
emulsion on the film’s surface. • A copy of the negative made in a printer is
called a print. • Digital video records photographic Images
in binary codes, not in chemical emulsion with light.
SprocketsSprockets• Film is moved quickly
through the camera, printer, or projector by
• small teeth, sprockets, that grab it by the holes on its edge and move it ahead.
• The sound track is also on the edge of the film, in this image on the right side. 1212
Film GaugeFilm Gauge• Refers to the width of
film. Films shown commercially are usually 35 mm.
• The bigger the gauge, the better the image quality. Some epics such as Lawrence of Arabia were shot in 70mm.
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Example of 70mm FilmExample of 70mm Film
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Lawrence of Arabia (1962) Directed by David Lean
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Digital CinematographyDigital Cinematography
• Digital cinematography doesn’t employ film stock.
• The image is captured on an electronically charged sensor and recorded to tape or a hard drive.
• Still filmmakers must make choices about color, exposure and tonal contrast that are comparable to those offered in film.
Part II: Film ProductionPart II: Film Production
Lesson 2: Part II
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Four Phases of ProductionFour Phases of Production• Scriptwriting and funding
• Preparation for filming
• Shooting
• Assembly
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Scriptwriting and FundingScriptwriting and Funding• Two roles are central in
this phase: Screenwriter and producer
• Tasks of the producer are financial and organizational
• The chief task of the screenwriter is to prepare the screenplay or script.
The Tasks of the ProducerThe Tasks of the Producer
–Nurses the project through the scriptwriting process
–Obtains financial support
–Arranges to hire the personnel who will work on the film
–During shooting, he or she acts as the liaison between the writer or director and the company that is financing the film
–Arranges distribution, promotion and marketing
–Monitors the payback of money invested in the production
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Modes of ProductionModes of Production• Large Scale Production
– Studio Filmmaking• Warner Brothers, Paramount, Disney
• Exploitation and Independent Production– Small Companies
• Miramax, Focus Films
• Small Scale Production– Personal Filmmaking
Independent vs. StudioIndependent vs. Studio
• An independent producer unearths film projects and tries to convince production companies or distributors to finance the film.
• A producer may work for a distribution company and generate ideas for films.
• A studio may hire a producer to put together a particular package.
• Recent independent films include Winter’s Bone, Get Low, The Kids are Alright and Precious.
Kinds of ProducersKinds of Producers• Executive Producer
–Arranges financing/obtains literary property
• Line Producer–Oversees day to day
filmmaking
• Associate Producer–Acts as a liaison with
labs and technical personnel
The ScreenwriterThe Screenwriter• Writes the script, which goes through
several stages:• The Treatment
– A synopsis of the work
• Drafts of the script– Revisions
• The Shooting Script– The Final Version
Preparation for FilmingPreparation for Filming
Director Christopher Nolan rehearsing Director Christopher Nolan rehearsing Memento (2000) with Guy Pierce(2000) with Guy Pierce
PreproductionPreproduction• Producer and director set up a production office, hire a crew and cast the roles.• They prepare a daily schedule based on continuity, which is the most convenient order of production.
– Writers make screenplay revisions.– Art department draws Storyboards– Production designer creates the film’s settings.
• Set decorator/set dresser• Costume designer• Previsualization with computer graphics
StoryboardsStoryboards
Storyboards for Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom
Shooting the FilmShooting the Film
Clint Eastwood directing Blood Work (2002)
ShootingShooting
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Director’s Crew Director’s Crew • Script Supervisor
• Continuity
• First Assistant Director• Plans shooting schedule, sets up shots
• Second Assistant Director• Liaison among the first AD, the camera crew and the
electrician’s crew
• Third Assistant Director• Messenger for director and staff
• Dialogue Coach• Feeds performers their lines
• Second Unit Director• Films stunts, location footage, action scenes
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Other aspects of shootingOther aspects of shooting • Cast/Actors
– Director shapes performances
• Visual Effects Unit
• Stunts
• Animal Wranglers
• Camera Operator
• Key Grip– Supervises grips who carry and arrange equipment and props
• Gaffer– Head Electrician
• Boom Operator– Microphones
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Assembling the FilmAssembling the Film
Thelma Schoonmaker, who has edited many of Martin Scorsese’s movies
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PostproductionPostproduction• Editor
– Works with the director to make creative decisions about how the film footage can best be cut together to tell a story.
– The editor’s job can be a huge one.
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Post Production termsPost Production terms• Rough Cut
– The shots loosely strung in sequence, without sounds effects or music.
• Final Cut– The finished film, still without sound
• Outtakes– Unused shots
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SoundSound• The sound designer builds the soundtrack,
which is made up of– Dialogue– Sound effects– Music
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Distribution and ExhibitionDistribution and Exhibition
Lesson 2: Part III
Risk and RewardRisk and Reward• Companies that distribute films form the
core of economic power in the movie industry.
• They can afford the large economic risk of funding, marketing and distributing movies to viewers around the world.
• Studios rely on tent pole pictures which “support” the smaller movies that don’t succeed throughout the year.
• When successful, the profits are enormous.36
Hollywood Studios Hollywood Studios
• Six companies are the world’s largest distributors:• Warner Brothers• Paramount• Walt Disney• Sony/Columbia• Twentieth Century Fox• Universal
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Ancillary MarketsAncillary Markets• DVDs• Cable, Broadcast
Television• Movies to Airlines
and Hotels• Online/Video on
Demand• Clothes• Toys
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ProfitsProfits• Ancillary markets are where films make
most of their money, sometimes recouping the losses from a film that did poorly in theatrical release.
• Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery (1997) did moderate box office in the theater, but really found its audience on video, paving the way for theatrical sequels, which now had a built-in audience.
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ExhibitionExhibition
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Kinds of ExhibitionKinds of Exhibition• Theatrical
– Commercial movie houses– City art centers– Museums– Film Festivals
• Non-theatrical– Home video– Cable– Online– Media devices
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TelevisionTelevision
• Television keeps the theatrical market going
• In 2004 distributors earned about ten billion dollars worldwide from theatrical distribution and about 23 billion from home video.
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Production of Production of JawsJaws
Lesson 2: Part IV
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A Watershed MomentA Watershed Moment• Jaws was a watershed
moment in the history of film. Along with Star Wars, it is credited with ushering in the era of the blockbuster (which we are still in). It changed the way that films are distributed and exhibited.
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The Production of JawsThe Production of Jaws• Based on a bestseller by
Peter Benchley • Rights acquired by
producers Richard Zanuck and David Brown
• Spielberg tapped as director– His second feature film after
The Sugarland Express and the TV film Duel
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Why Jaws?Why Jaws?• Jaws is a famous production that
highlights both the problems that arise during the creative process of filmmaking as well as the innovation necessary to overcome those problems.
• Watch the first clip from The Making of Jaws documentary.
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ProblemsProblems• The film was pushed into production
early• It was a technical nightmare
– The shark almost never worked
• Slow production with a lot of pressure from the studios
• Watch the clip
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SolutionsSolutions• Although a great deal of planning goes
into movie production, much of it is also improvised on the set because it is impossible to completely plan for unforseen issues such as weather, technological failures, etc.
• Often, filmmakers figure out things as they go along.
• Watch the two clips.
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The OutcomeThe Outcome
• Jaws became the highest grossing film ever at that time.
• Proved the success of “repeater” business.• One of the first films to open “wide” on
many screens at once as opposed to being slowly “rolled out.”
• Watch the clip.
End of Lecture 2End of Lecture 2
Next Lecture: Narrative and Rashômon