Thursday, 29 April 2010
Costume Sketches
Further planning
This is an example of further planning of our thriller opening. We considered options such as a non-digetic voice over to begin our piece and set the scene. It will provide a short description of the town and expand to talk about the forest (the setting for our scene) and supply any other details the audience may find relevant. Also on this sheet we planned out the costumes for the characters, and a list of props and equipment we will need on the day of filming. This list comprised of
- white powder to make the victim look dead
- red lipliner and blusher to create a strangulation mark
- hiking poles
- crime scene tape *
- white sheet *
- camera and tripod
- holly's camera
- voice recording device *
* revised, and not needed. We were thinking about adding a third scene to our piece where a detective investigating the case is taking photos and examining the body and utilising the crime scene tape, white sheet to cover the body and a voice recorder. We later deemed this scene unnecessary as we felt that the two scenes we already had were enough to create an effective opening to a thriller.
Wednesday, 28 April 2010
Relocation
Here are some stills of our new location. We came across a steep hill which will provide a striking image and hopefully make for a dramatic chase sequence. The dense trees eliminate any suggestion of a time period and create an air of mystery. It seems our setting change could possibly work out for the better?
PROBLEM!
- Our victim will now be running through a forest amongst the trees before she falls over and presents the opportunity for her persuer to catch up and strangle her.
- The body will now be found by two hikers, as this fits with the setting.

Storyboard

Location scouting / walk-through
This is the alley way that leads into the field. We thought that it would look especially menacing at night, and that the main character could walk down it into the field oblivious to the murderer lurking in the shadows behind her.
Quick cuts will then be used between the victim approaching the tree...
...and the murderer, here preparing an invisible piece of rope to use as a weapon.
The cuts quicken as the victim gets closer.
The murderer appears silhouetted/half in shadow. This is when the murder will then be committed, drawing inspiration from Alfred Hitchcock's 'Psycho' whereby no explicit violence is shown but fast cuts are utilised to give an impression of panic.
We will then cut to a long shot of the field. The next scene will start with the same long shot, only at a different time of day to show the time lapse and differentiation between the scenes. Originally, we contemplated a shot where the sky is filmed overnight and then sped up so the shot lasts a few seconds to show the time passing, but the technical and logistical issues with this meant that it was an unrealistic idea.