Wednesday, 4 May 2011

Film Industry, key concepts:

Synergy
  • Often as much money can be made from the related products marketed alongside a major new film as the film itself.
  • Usually not produced by film studios themselves but franchised out.
  • The planning, marketing & coordination of release dates along with tie ins & spin offs are crucial aspects of modern media activity. For example, Sherlock Holmes, a British made film, that had a game available on the social networking site facebook, before the film was put on general release, raising awareness of the product.
  • EG Harry Potter world, this is called syngery & is crucial to media institutions success.
How could the British Film Industry create more profit for itself? - Produce films that can be more easily franchised out. Use of synergy, create more profit from the film and put back into the film industry. Digital and the development of new technology can help because video games can be made etc, social networking website, online advertising, developing the brand, name making it more accessible and popular - successful.

Diversification
  • When companies diversify into different realms, sometimes by taking over or merging with other companies
  • Horizontal intergration, when companies expand sideways, eg, Sherlock Holmes game to promote film. British Film Industry tends to be more horizontal intergration more about collaboration. The King's Speech, all different companies worked together.
  • Vertical intergration, when a company takes over all the production & distribution, eg murdochs news international owning sky, times, sun etc. Fixed, permamnent - long term. One company owns lots of other companies. American institutions tend to be more vertically intergrated. Large, world famous studios etc.
Audiences
  • Demographics react differently to the same products.
  • Early studies of audiences tended to focus on passive, non discerning, mindless viewers accepting what is fed to them.
  • Now we realise audience theory is more complex than this.
  • Audiences are capable of a high degree of self determination.
  • Audiences are now active, their own experiences, their own expectations of product.
  • For Example, 'The Boat That Rocked' - different demographics will interpret it in an active way. People who were there at the time, could enjoy the film on a nostalgic level, will interpret it compared to how they remember it, in the 60's and so on. Other audiences such as younger audience, alternative audience, would not have been there etc.
  • The King's Speech, to an alternative audience could interpret it as a historical documentation of events, so they will have different expectations.
  • Consumed in different ways.
Theorists - Chomsky
  • Noam Chomsky is a theorist who contends that the real product is the audience itself.
  • he says that media institutions should be seen as businesses who are engaged in driving audiences to the real drivers of media activities, the advertisers.
  • He claims that programmes and films are made to deliver audiences into the advertisers hands.
  • with product placement as well as adverts becoming more ubiquitous this theory gains mor ecredibility.
  • http://www.chomsky.info./
  • All about making money and delivering audiences into the hands of the advertisers.
  • The media is one big institution, all driven my idea of making a profit. 
  • Could get more profit by increasing product placement (quite an American thing to do)
Theorist - Stuart Hall
  • Indentifies three main perspectives from which audiences can read texts.
  • preferred or dominant readings - those that are closest to those intended by the producers.
  • negotiated readings - female watching a male protagonist.
  • Oppositional or resistnat readings - audiences own life experiences are at odds with the text. Eg, crime drama watched by prisoners.
  • Hall's essay challenged all three components of the mass communications model. It is argued that meaning is not simply fixed or determined by the sender; the message is never transparent; and the audience is not a passive recipient of meaning.
  • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stuart_Hall_ (cultural theorist)
Theorist - David Gauntlett
  • Gauntlett developed the theory of web 2.0 first devised by Tom o'Reilly in 2004
  • in 2008 Gauntlett proposed the Make and Connect agenda', an attempt to rethink audience studies in the context of media users as producers as well as comsumers or media material.
  • this agues that there is a shift from a 'sit back and be told culture' to a 'making and doing culture' and that harnessing creativity in both Web 2.0 and in other everyday creative activities will play a role in tackling environmental problems.
  • these ideas are developed further in 'Making is Connecting'
  • hhtp://theory.org.uk/david/
  • he argues that the traditional form of media studies teaching and research fails to recognise the changing media landscape in which the categories of 'audiences' and 'producers'
  • Technology has enabled audiences to become more active - should be involved in the creativity, should the film institutions address this.

Friday, 25 March 2011

UK FILM INDUSTRY: INSTITUTIONS


Institutions

What is an Institution?
An institution is any structure of order and cooperation in a given society. They are identified with social purpose and stability. There are media institutions in radio, television, Internet, film and newspapers collectively referred to as the ‘mass media’.

Film Institutions
Film institutions can be production companies such as Working Title Films, distribution companies or both. Film institutions today are seen and consumed as a brand. For example, there are now major film studios, which most people will recognise. A major film studio is a film production and distribution company. Today there is ‘The Big Six’.

·      WARNER BROTHERS PICTURES
·      PARAMOUNT PICTURES
·      20TH CENTURY FOX
·      WALT DISNEY PICTURES/TOUCHSTONE PICTURES
·      COLUMBIA PICTURES
·      UNIVERSAL PICTURES

UK FILM INSTITUTIONS
- In the UK The British Film institution is a government-funded institution that’s purpose is to encourage the development of the arts of film and television and moving image through the United Kingdom.
- Another UK film institution is Working Title Films. Working Title Films is a production company set up in London in 1983. There first major success was Four Weddings and A Funeral – which became the highest grossing British film in cinema history at the time, with a worldwide box office in excess of £245.7million. The film also received four BAFTA wins at the 1995 BAFTA Awards. Beating films such as Forrest Gump which in comparison were expected to be front runners as they had a much larger budget of $55 and were distributed by Paramount Pictures compared to the $4.4 million budget of Four Weddings And A Funeral and their distribution being by Rank Film Distributors, a small London based company.

Wednesday, 23 March 2011

Documentary Plan

Changes in film production
benefits of digital technology
institutions
means of distribution and exhibition.


Black and white, the first movie, introduction text
film people in black and white and then fade into colour
timeline, films and new cameras, digital technology releases

Monday, 21 March 2011

Digital Innovation and Distribution: The Disappearance of Alice Creed

How do institutions use digital technology to provide film?
Make a list of how your case study: The Disappearance of Alice Creed used online and offline marketing to promote their film.


  • For this project, CinemaNX partnered with the digital agency Brand-movers, the social agency Punktilio, Vue Cinemas, and Facebook, and Twitter and other social networking sites extensively.
'Making the user a marketeer'
  • Worked with digital agencies - Brandmovers, CinemaNX developed an application to be housed in facebook, with communication tools that would allow it to be shared on Twitter and other social networking sites.
  • An application was created and users signed up for it at http://apps.facebook.com/alicecreedmovie (although the activity is over, it is still currently available to interact with) and were presented with a choice to select their region and then the cinema they would like o see host the premiere of Alice Creed.
  • The online app allowed the marketing team behind 'The Disappearance of Alice Creed' to collate user data from the sign up as well as generate locality trends for the map view on the application home page. Users were invited to share their choice with their friends to earn activity points. 
  • Each week the group with the highest number of activity points collected that week was able to access exclusive content, and the cinema with the most activity points accured would gain access to this content before anyone else for a period of 24 hours.
  • Exclusive content for users included a live 30- minute web chat with the film's director, J. Blakeson (recorded and edited for other users to view after the winning cinema's exclusive period had elapsed), along with original storyboards and exclusive stills. cinemaNX also created two unique pieces of film content featuring the film's star, Gemma Arterton, which 

Monday, 7 March 2011

The King's Speech: Facts

  • The King's Speech was nominated for 12 Academy Awards/OSCARS and won 4, Best Picture, Best Directing, Best Actor in a leading Role and Best Original (Written) Screenplay.

The King's Speech

Guardian Article

The King's Speech:

  • Distributor was Momentum Pictures
  • opening weekend, £3.52m, considering the opening grosses of Slumdog Millionaire (£1.83m), Calender Girls (£1.88m), Atonement (£1.63m) and Pride and Prejudice (£2.53m)
  • highest grossing British film (opening)
  • funded by six different companies
Successful films:

  • Marathon publicity, 
  • strong critical support, 
  • bold positioning from the distribution company
  • (deciding the release date)
The King's Speech (various articles)

Government Summary 2002

Issues in the British Film Industry

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