Start by leaving feedback for those that worked in your group, then branch out once you are more confident.
Please remember that people might be nervous about having their work viewed, so be CONSIDERATE of others' feelings, think carefully before writing and evaluate work OBJECTIVELY.
You don't have to comment on all of the following. These points are here to help you make your comments relevant to the evaluation questions so your feedback can be used:
1. How have you USED, DEVELOPED or CHALLENGED existing codes and conventions?
- Mise en scene
- Locations, props, costumes, lighting: are they similar to those used in the real product?
- Editing
- Does pace of editing match the beat of the music?
- Is there a cutaway shot? Does it effectively illustrate what is being spoken about by another character?
- Eyelines match? Can the audience tell who is speaking to each other and where they are positioned in the scene?
- Are edits sharp? Does dialogue flow?
- Sound
- do the score and lyrics make events in the trailer clearer?
- Is all dialogue clear?
- Does non- diegetic sound match or change the tone of the trailer?
- Camerawork
- Variety of shot distances and heights used?
- Depth of field used effectively? (items/characters at different distances)
- BCUs to create tension and show character's emotions
- Any camera movement? Tracking, panning, zooms.
2. How effective is the COMBINATION of your MAIN and ANCILLARY products?
- Do trailer, front cover and poster all show the same:
- Branding (name, fonts, layout)
- Institution (e.g. E4)
- Narrative- main storyline should be on the cover and in the soap to create consistent representations for the audience to engage with
- Mode of address
- Character performances and position in ancillaries: do stars in the same storyline anchor each other?
- Costume: do costumes convey stereotypes or character traits effectively?
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