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Río Gallegos, Santa Cruz, Argentina

jueves, 29 de marzo de 2012

Bollywood Musical

Bollywood films are mostly musicals, and are expected to contain catchy music in the form of song-and-dance numbers woven into the script. A film's success often depends on the quality of such musical numbers. Indeed, a film's music is often released before the movie itself and helps increase the audience.
Indian audiences expect full value for their money, with a good entertainer generally referred to as paisa vasool, (literally, "money's worth"). Songs and dances, love triangles, comedy and dare-devil thrills are all mixed up in a three-hour-long extravaganza with an intermission. Such movies are called masala films, after the Hindi word for a spice mixture. Like masalas, these movies are a mixture of many things such as action, comedy, romance and so on. Most films have heroes who are able to fight off villains all by themselves.
Melodrama and romance are common ingredients to Bollywood films. Pictured Achhut Kanya (1936)

Bollywood plots have tended to be melodramatic. They frequently employ formulaic ingredients such as star-crossed lovers and angry parents, love triangles, family ties, sacrifice, corrupt politicians, kidnappers, conniving villains, courtesans with hearts of gold, long-lost relatives and siblings separated by fate, dramatic reversals of fortune, and convenient coincidences.
There have always been Indian films with more artistic aims and more sophisticated stories, both inside and outside the Bollywood tradition (see Parallel Cinema). They often lost out at the box office to movies with more mass appeal. Bollywood conventions are changing, however. A large Indian diaspora in English speaking countries, and increased Western influence at home, have nudged Bollywood films closer to Hollywood models.

Bollywood dancers

lunes, 19 de marzo de 2012

Film Pitch

              
Film Title: “Black Friday”

Writer: Manuel Denegri

Logline: The story of a boy that he has bad luck the whole day.

Intended audience demographic: Fourteen year-old people.

Suggested time slot: The whole day (morning, daytime, late night, etc.)

Episode length: Maximum of 5 minutes.

Genre: Black comedy.

What are we going to do: A short film of 5 minutes about a boy that wakes up one day of school and he has all the day bad luck (we are going to film all the bad experiences that he suffers that day) and when night he wakes up and realize it’s a dream so he looks to the clock and he was being late to school so he stands up and all the things that happened in the dream will really happen.

Where are we going to film: In St. George’s College and Honorio’s house.

Why are we doing this film: For an IB project of Film Studies.

What do we need: All the necessary things for making the film, for example cameras, lights, software and computer for edit.

lunes, 5 de marzo de 2012

Production Journal 1

The first class we divided into groups until we get into a group of 3 (Manuel Denegri, Honorio Oleksuk and me, Giuliana Brun).
Then we organized the rolls of each of us: Manuel is the writer and director, Honorio is the editor, and I'm the camarographer.
We started discussing the genre of our clip and we decided horror-drama.
The problem we had to afford was the theme of the clip. First we decided to do a kidnap of a rich girl but Honorio didn't like it, so then he proposed an idea of a murder of a boy after a soccer match but me and Manuel didn't like it and we continued thinking until Manuel had an idea about doing the film about a boy that has bad luck a day since he wakes up until he goes to sleep.