This document appears to be a masthead layout for a publication with a headline above the logo and images on either side of descriptive text below the masthead and headline. The masthead contains the publication name above a main headline with supporting images and text below.
This document contains various sections including subtitles, a headline, images and text. It appears to provide information on a topic through a combination of text, images and different sections marked by subtitles and a headline. The document utilizes multiple media elements to convey its message across several short sections.
This document appears to be a webpage with an image as the main focus. It has a title and subtitles introducing the topic and images. The bulk of the content is multiple paragraphs of text providing details on the topic introduced by the titles and images.
This document contains images and text but provides little context or information to summarize. It has a page title and headline but no other details are given. The document appears to be missing significant content needed for a meaningful 3 sentence summary.
This document contains photos, quotes and text across multiple sections. It discusses several topics as evidenced by the varying titles and quotes. Overall it seems to provide a mix of visual and written information across its different parts.
This document contains a layout for a music magazine. It includes sections for the cover, masthead, titles, images, text articles, advertisements, and information on tours and awards. Various pages contain the main title, images, text articles, advertisements or information on gigs. The layout has 58 sections to feature content about the featured artist.
This document provides two mock-up examples for a magazine double page spread layout. The first mock-up has a headline at the top with a pull quote below and images and articles filling the rest of the pages. The second mock-up has a headline at the top with an article on the left and another on the right, below which are additional images and a pull quote.
The document is a magazine layout with 39 sections arranged in a 3x13 grid. Each section contains graphic elements like mastheads, images, titles, and text boxes. The layout features a variety of configurations including single images, double page spreads, pull quotes, and advertisements alongside editorial content.
This document appears to be a magazine layout with various images, titles, articles, and advertisements spread across multiple pages. There are sections for reviews, interviews, gig dates, posters, and listings of top albums. Images include photos, graphics, and styled text. The overall document provides a sampling of the typical content and stylistic elements found within a music/entertainment magazine.
The document discusses location choices for photography for a school magazine. The author considers a studio with green screen and lighting, London locations like Camden to portray a rock genre, and a skate park known for graffiti. The green screen studio is chosen because it allows flexibility in editing and avoids outside variables like weather or crowds while having convenient school access.
A horror film trailer pitch outlines a film where a film crew is making a horror movie in remote woods but encounters real danger. The location scout is killed while searching for a new filming site. Members of the film crew and cast are then killed one by one by three hunters who have lived in the woods for years and believe killing people is a game. The trailer will use close-ups and varied camera angles to build panic without explicitly showing deaths. The unique plot of a movie within a movie turning deadly will distinguish this horror film.
This document lists prop and costume costs for a theater production, as well as average budgets for marketing, distribution, actors, and production costs based on research. Props include fake blood, scar wax, fake tattoos, a fake knife, and torches, ranging in price from £2.50 to £6. Costumes include a vest top, glasses, and beret priced between £2 and £4. Marketing research showed an average cost of $36 million, distribution $6 million, actors' pay between $20-30 million, and production costs averaging $50 million.
Post-Production stages needed to make a horror trailer include editing together filmed clips, adding non-diegetic music, and incorporating special effects. Digital technology has accelerated the post-production process by making editing, music addition, and special effects integration quicker and easier.
This document contains various sections including subtitles, a headline, images and text. It appears to provide information on a topic through a combination of text, images and different sections marked by subtitles and a headline. The document utilizes multiple media elements to convey its message across several short sections.
This document appears to be a webpage with an image as the main focus. It has a title and subtitles introducing the topic and images. The bulk of the content is multiple paragraphs of text providing details on the topic introduced by the titles and images.
This document contains images and text but provides little context or information to summarize. It has a page title and headline but no other details are given. The document appears to be missing significant content needed for a meaningful 3 sentence summary.
This document contains photos, quotes and text across multiple sections. It discusses several topics as evidenced by the varying titles and quotes. Overall it seems to provide a mix of visual and written information across its different parts.
This document contains a layout for a music magazine. It includes sections for the cover, masthead, titles, images, text articles, advertisements, and information on tours and awards. Various pages contain the main title, images, text articles, advertisements or information on gigs. The layout has 58 sections to feature content about the featured artist.
This document provides two mock-up examples for a magazine double page spread layout. The first mock-up has a headline at the top with a pull quote below and images and articles filling the rest of the pages. The second mock-up has a headline at the top with an article on the left and another on the right, below which are additional images and a pull quote.
The document is a magazine layout with 39 sections arranged in a 3x13 grid. Each section contains graphic elements like mastheads, images, titles, and text boxes. The layout features a variety of configurations including single images, double page spreads, pull quotes, and advertisements alongside editorial content.
This document appears to be a magazine layout with various images, titles, articles, and advertisements spread across multiple pages. There are sections for reviews, interviews, gig dates, posters, and listings of top albums. Images include photos, graphics, and styled text. The overall document provides a sampling of the typical content and stylistic elements found within a music/entertainment magazine.
The document discusses location choices for photography for a school magazine. The author considers a studio with green screen and lighting, London locations like Camden to portray a rock genre, and a skate park known for graffiti. The green screen studio is chosen because it allows flexibility in editing and avoids outside variables like weather or crowds while having convenient school access.
A horror film trailer pitch outlines a film where a film crew is making a horror movie in remote woods but encounters real danger. The location scout is killed while searching for a new filming site. Members of the film crew and cast are then killed one by one by three hunters who have lived in the woods for years and believe killing people is a game. The trailer will use close-ups and varied camera angles to build panic without explicitly showing deaths. The unique plot of a movie within a movie turning deadly will distinguish this horror film.
This document lists prop and costume costs for a theater production, as well as average budgets for marketing, distribution, actors, and production costs based on research. Props include fake blood, scar wax, fake tattoos, a fake knife, and torches, ranging in price from £2.50 to £6. Costumes include a vest top, glasses, and beret priced between £2 and £4. Marketing research showed an average cost of $36 million, distribution $6 million, actors' pay between $20-30 million, and production costs averaging $50 million.
Post-Production stages needed to make a horror trailer include editing together filmed clips, adding non-diegetic music, and incorporating special effects. Digital technology has accelerated the post-production process by making editing, music addition, and special effects integration quicker and easier.
Creativity is the use of imagination to produce artistic work. Creative features used in horror trailers include using a soundtrack to add tension and suspense, as well as creating supernatural costumes or gory scenes to look realistic and scary. These creative elements are commonly found in the horror genre.
Digital technology refers to on-demand access to content through digital devices like the internet, websites, and video games. When creating a horror film trailer, various digital technologies are needed such as filming, producing, burning to disc, and creating packaging for the film. Uploading the trailer to YouTube also utilizes digital technology by making the trailer accessible worldwide.
This document summarizes the conventions used in three horror movie trailers:
A Nightmare on Elm Street uses supernatural elements, blood, gore and dramatic music to build suspense. The Women in Black also uses eerie music and manipulates the idea of innocent children to create fear, alongside darkness and the supernatural. The Haunting in Connecticut 2 employs common horror conventions like children, the supernatural and dark settings, though the beginning is atypical with non-threatening music that could confuse the target audience.
Research and planning takes into account all aspects of developing, producing, and selling a product by conducting surveys, analyzing sales reports, and ensuring the final medium has a professional feel. When creating a horror film, planning is needed from determining an interesting plot for the target audience to carefully considering the cinematography, editing, sound, and visual style to ultimately aid the marketing of the final product.
The document discusses different narrative structures and theorists. It explains linear and circular narrative structures, as well as Aristotle's and Freytag's plot structures. It then discusses several narrative theorists including Vladimir Propp who identified character roles like hero and villain, and Tzvetan Todorov who proposed narratives follow a structure of equilibrium, disequilibrium, recognition, resolution, and restoration of equilibrium. Finally, it argues Todorov's theory links well to horror narratives and that Roland Barthes' theory of enigma also applies when the protagonist must solve a puzzle to survive, as seen in films like Saw.
The document discusses genres in media. It defines genre as a way to categorize media texts based on their content and style. Some common genres mentioned are horror, romance, comedy, thriller, and sci-fi. Each genre has distinguishing characteristics that allow audiences to predict how the plot will develop. The document also discusses several theorists' perspectives on genres, including Rick Altman, Tom Ryall, Steve Neall, and Daniel Chandler. It analyzes Tom Ryall's view that genres provide a framework of rules that guide how producers create media texts and how audiences interpret them. This theory is said to be particularly relevant for understanding the horror genre.
The document discusses genre in media texts. It defines genre as a way to categorize media based on content and style. Each genre has distinguishing characteristics that allow audiences to predict how the plot will develop. There are many genres, including horror, romance, comedy, thriller, and sci-fi. These genres sometimes combine to create hybrids. Genres are used to appeal to target audiences by including expected elements. The document then examines several theorists' perspectives on genre, including their views that genres provide frameworks for production and reading with recognizable conventions. It analyzes Tom Ryall's theory that genres have predetermined structures that producers follow as being particularly applicable to the horror genre.
This document discusses audience investigation and several theories related to understanding audiences. It defines what an audience is and explains that audiences are defined by demographics like age and income, as well as psychographics like interests and beliefs. It then summarizes Sigmund Freud's theory of the uncanny, which proposes that cognitive dissonance occurs when something is both familiar and unfamiliar. Next, it discusses Laura Mulvey's feminist theory of sadistic voyeurism as it relates to the horror genre. Finally, it provides an overview of Stuart Hall's encoding/decoding model of how audiences receive and interpret media texts based on their social positions and preferred, negotiated, or oppositional readings.
The document reviews the use of media language techniques in three horror movie trailers. It analyzes the cinematography, editing, sound, and mise-en-scene in each trailer. For cinematography, it notes the frequent use of close-ups to show facial expressions and build tension. The editing is described as generally fast-paced to create suspense. Non-diegetic music and sounds are used to emphasize scary moments. Dark lighting, isolated settings, and other visual elements establish the horror genre conventions.
This document contains two images without any accompanying text to provide context. The main image shows a pug design in an eye-catching way and contains a quote, while the sub image contains an additional unspecified image. However, without any text, captions or other context, it is difficult to determine the overall purpose or key points being conveyed by this document.
The document discusses potential name ideas for a masthead about pop music such as "All About Pop", "Turn it up!", "Pop Party", and "Explosive Pop". It also lists article ideas like an exclusive on a new band, interviewing an established artist, covering a band reuniting, reviewing a concert and tour dates, profiling a day in the life of a band, looking at what former artists are doing now with interviews and gossip, and suggestions for new and best albums to buy.
The document discusses potential name ideas for a masthead about pop music such as "All About Pop", "Turn it up!", "Pop Party", and "Explosive Pop". It also lists article ideas like an exclusive on a new band, interviewing an established artist, covering a band reuniting, reviewing a concert and tour dates, profiling a day in the life of a band, looking at what former artists are doing now with interviews and gossip, and suggestions for new and best albums to buy.
Posters, internet advertising on social media sites like Facebook and Twitter, TV ads placed during shows watched by the target audience, and large billboards are proposed methods to advertise a new magazine to attract a wide range of readers through various environments like schools, workplaces, and streets.