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Ice Breaker

Ice Breaker. Directions: Pick up a sheet of paper located on the wooden stool. Quietly start reading. Safety Video. Objective: To gather ideas for a video that explains this class’s safety rules. Safety Rules. Before we can create… Black & White 20 rules

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Ice Breaker

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  1. Ice Breaker • Directions: Pick up a sheet of paper located on the wooden stool. Quietly start reading.

  2. Safety Video Objective: To gather ideas for a video that explains this class’s safety rules.

  3. Safety Rules • Before we can create… • Black & White • 20 rules • Follow these rules throughout the year • Connection to Design Brief

  4. What your video needs to have: • An expert or narrator of the video. • 80% or 16 of the safety rules presented. • 6 safety rules reenacted through action shots or still representations. • Up to 10 can be explained or showed through text.

  5. Brainstorm • Who is going to be your narrator? • Personality type? • Profession: Scientist? Doctor? Teacher? Student? Etc… • Will there be other characters in your video? Who? • What 16 safety rules are you going to cover? • Do any of them go well with others? • Which 6 safety rules do you want to be acted out? HOMEWORK ASSIGNMENT

  6. Ice Breaker Directions: complete the following on a blank sheet of paper. Be prepared to share your answer with your group as well as the rest of the class. • Imagine the opening scene of your safety video. • Write out exactly what you see.

  7. Draw what you see… The THUNDEROUS SOUNDS OF A MASSIVE NAVAL BARRAGE are heard. The power is astonishing. It roars through the body, blows back the hair and rattles the ears. The ROAR OF NAVAL GUNS continues but now WE SEE THEM FIRING. Huge fifteen inch guns. SWARM OF LANDING CRAFT Heads directly into a nightmare. MASSIVE EXPLOSIONS from German artillery shells and mined obstacles tear apart the beach. Hundreds of German machine guns, loaded with TRACERS, pour out a red snowstorm of bullets. THE CLIFFS at the far end, a ninety-foot drop. Topped by bunkers. Ringed by fortified machine gun nests.  A clear line-of-fire down the entire beach.

  8. When writing a script • Write visually • Use action words • He walked across the room. • He RACED across the room. • He DRAGGED across the room. • Short sentences.

  9. As a group • Each group member pick a scene in your safety video. • Write out the basic script for that scene.

  10. Storyboarding Objective: Effectively communicate your ideas & script to images and actions on paper.

  11. Storyboarding… advanced planning techniques? • Imagine the shot you want to create • Background • Characters • Motion or Action • Allows you and others to see what you are thinking… Communicate Effectively

  12. Camera Shots • Different camera angles allow the director to highlight different things. • Extremely long shots  Extreme Close Ups

  13. Extreme Long Shots • The camera is far away from the subject. • Shows the environment or setting the characters are in. • Can introduce the audience to new locations that the characters are in.

  14. Long Shots • Closer than an extreme long shot. • Generally shows the full body as well as natural space above and below them. • Shows a character as the main focus.

  15. Medium Shots • Not the full body. • Staring around the waist and knees. • Only part of the character is the focus of the shot.

  16. Close Ups • The Character from the shoulders up. • This one part is very important. • Specific Action.

  17. Extreme Close Ups • A very small part of a subject is visible. • Focuses your eyes to 1 part of the image.

  18. Zooming In, Zooming Out, and Motion • How can you draw a series of motions in one picture? YOU CAN’T! • Create the first image/view • Draw an arrow • Create the last image/view

  19. Panning & Tilting • Moving the camera side/side or up/down. • Changing the view of the camera with changing the entire scene. • Works good with conversations. • Arrows show camera movement.

  20. Tracking • Shows action in a scene, but keeps the character in the middle of the shot. • Arrow shows movement of the camera and character.

  21. Revealing • An action that starts off screen but comes into view. • Keeps the focus on the scene, not the actor.

  22. Story Board Apps • Cinemek Storyboard Composer • Apple iOS only • Shot Designer • Apple iOS • Andriod OS

  23. Today’s Assignment Directions: As a group, create the storyboard for your safety video. • Different types of shots • 2 long shots • 2 medium shots • 2 close ups • 1 extreme close up • Zoom In once & Zoom Out once • Action & Audio for each shot

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