A blog showing the stages and developments of my coursework for AS Media Studies...
Sunday, 21 April 2013
Evaluation Question - Who would be the target audience for your media product?
I decided to do a montage of photos showing what my target audience would have in their bag. Because our target audience is men, aged between 14-35, I had to guess as I'm not a man! I did some research, and chose items which I think would be in our target audience's bag. I have also done a wordle for a little lifestyle summary as well.
As I said, I decided to write up the lifestyle summary of a member of our target audience as a Wordle, I thought it was different, and creative. It goes as follows;
'Tom, seventeen, aspiring college student, loves going to the cinema with his friends, loves grunge/rock music, plays the guitar, loves action/thriller/horror movies, hates doing homework, doesn't like doing chores, can be quite lazy, shops at River Island, Topman, trendy, wants to be in a band.'
Evaluation Question - How does your media product represent particular social groups?
'Loanshark' Main Character Vs. 'Taken' Main Character & 'Mission Impossible' Main Character...
Our film represents particular media social groups through character. I'm going to be comparing our main character with the same character role from another mainstream film. Because of the lack of opportunity to search for, and hold auditions for our main character, we decided to use a student from our sixth form, however because most students have different timetables, and other commitments, we went with Graham, as he was the best choice to go with. He looked the part, and looked exactly how we wanted our main character to look. Our target audience are males aged between 14-35, so Graham was the perfect choice being young and average looking.

Most action films tend to typecast their main characters, so for example Daniel Craig being cast as James Bond as he dashing, strong, Liam Neeson being cast as Bryan Mills in 'Taken' as he is strong and has experience in action films, and Tom Cruise being cast as Ethan Hunt in 'Mission Impossible - Ghost Protocol' as he has had experience in action films, looks dashing & is strong etc.

Finally, because he is a average, fairly poor man, he doesn't have all the fancy gadgets like Tom Cruise's character in 'Mission Possible' does. This means that he has to this on his own, with just a gun and his bear skills. This makes it that little bit more realistic, and more relatable with the audience.
Therefore, our main character represents the average man, aged between 20-30, so our target audience can relate to him, and that he can show that main characters in action movies don't have to be buff, good looking & experienced characters, and can show that just because you are not skilled, doesn't mean you can't do anything, and that anything is possible when you put your mind to it.
Evaluation Questions - In what ways does your media product use, develop, or challenge forms and conventions of real media products?
In order to explain how my media product uses, develops or challenges forms and conventions of real media products, I have decided to compare 9 shots from a title sequence of a thriller/horror opening, with 9 stills from my own title sequence.
Max Payne...
http://www.artofthetitle.com/title/max-payne
Loanshark...
Both use similar font colours - metallic, on dark backgrounds, however, ours challenges the conventions, by using transitions not commonly used in film openings in this genre, they typically use either fades, or cuts, like the ones used in the film opening of Max Payne, shown above. Fonts are different, Max Payne film opening uses more of a bold, metal looking font, our's is more slick, less action based, more thriller.



Both openings show the gun, which is the main point of the film, what the genre is centred around. In Max Payne, there is an animated gun which spins round, with the titles swirling around, in our opening, we see our main character lifting the gun, about to fire it, with the credits coming after it. Most films use this in their openings, as guns and other weapons are a symbol of action/thriller films, for example, in the opening for the movie Skyfall, there is a shot where you see a shadow of a man, holding a gun, and James Bond is centred around guns, cars and other weapons. It allows us to present the genre to the audience, and to see what could happen.


Finally, we kept to the stereotypical storyline, our film is very similar to 'Max Payne' in the sense that he has a goal, to kill the enemy. Every action film has a goal that the main character sets him or her self, our film is no different in this respect. However we have tried to portray this typical storyline in other ways, and not copy other action/thriller films with a similar story line.
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