Film Opening: Evaluation Blog Post - CCR #2

CCR #2:

Audience & Distribution

How does your product engage audiences, and how would it be distributed as a real media text?

Hello, my name is Ryan Jurdi, and this is my answer to CCR #2. First, let's start off with how my film opening can engage audiences. The first way my opening engages audiences is through the sport I chose. Millions of people love soccer around the world, so any fan of the sport may want to tune into the film. In addition, the first few seconds of the movie should surely grab the attention of audiences since right out the gate the viewers are met with a character ending up on the ground looking like he just got injured. This process now slowly intrigues the audience. Speaking of intriguing the audience after the roles were shown and the character walks to the bench, a new scene starts where it appears the film rewinds slightly. This engages the audience since, to the audience, the music that was just playing also seemed to have rewind/restarted. This is where the training montage comes in. Everyone loves a good training montage, and this sports film is no different. This keeps the audience engaged because now they are wondering how or when I got injured and if it will appear. Then suddenly the tragedy happens, and the audience gets to witness what the opening was building up to the entire time. To keep the audience even more hooked, the ending does not reveal if the character will be ok or not to build even more anticipation if it was a real movie. 

Regarding how my film opening would be distributed as a real media text, I think the opening will slot into a film that deals with an athlete trying to cope with injury while trying to recover from it. The ending would be about the main character finally finding a way to deal with the injury physically and mentally since an injury can drain both of those aspects.



Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Commercial Project: Research Blog Post #1- Console Competitor Brand Analysis

Music Video Project: Evaluation Blog Post #9 - CCR #1