Here is our finished music video for our G324 Advanced Production project.
Artist
Paramore
Song
Misery Business
Cast
Georgina Kerwin: Singer
Paul Healey: Guitarist
Alex Wood: Drums
Joanna Sibley: Narrative actress
I have applied the use of a consistent font and colour scheme across all of my ancillary products. When researching real media products in the beginning stages of my production, it was a clear convention of bands to have almost their own 'band' identity which can be easily identifiable to fans and audiences through the design of their media texts. This was a convention that I didn't want to subvert to, therefore I have applied the usage of a consistent colour scheme or a burnt yellow, grey, white, black and burnt red/burgudny. This allows my products to be easily identifiable and linked to the band. The ancillary products colour scheme is then further linked to my main task advanced production; the music video. The music video features warm hue colours similair to the colours featured in my ancillary products, further following the conventions of a consistent colour scheme often seen in real media products. This is shown by the print screens of some of the shots within the music video to the right which show the visible yellow warm tones also featured in the ancillary products. The use of consistency was identified through existing Paramore media texts such as their official music video for Misery Business as well as album artwork for the Riot! album and photography. I have demonstrated in the picture below how they have consistently used the same fonts and colour scheme which becomes the brand identity. Similarly, I have also produced this within my work, producing both ancillary and main tasks as one brand identity, linking them via the consistent use of font, colour and logo.
I have followed the conventions of using motifs within my media products which I noticed was prominent in the work of official Paramore work. A motif is a dominant theme which reccurs throughout the a specific text. This was seen in Paramore by the consistent use of the motif of 'Riot!' in their work. Similarly, I have used a motif within my ancillary products, by using a polaroid theme in my photography to add a distinguished and creative design for my teen audience. I have used the motif in my magazine advertisement to captivate my teen audience as well as using it in my DVD digi-pak which features many polaroids of shot
At the beginning of the project, we subverted conventions within the rock genre. In the first attempt of filming, the band consisted of one main female vocalist, one male guitairist and one female drummer. The roles of the individual band members subverted the traditional conventional rock band line up which almost always features a female vocalist and all male instumentalists. Through this first attempt, we decided to cast a new male drummer whom fitted the rock genre conventions. I believe that through following the conventions of the band line up commonly seen within the rock genre, it made the mise-en-scene of the music video more genre specific through the extra cast members persona and costume. The final cast of the band are as follows: Georgina Kerwin = Lead singer, Paul Healey = Guitairst and Alex Wood = Drummer.
Further following the conventions of real media texts, we applied the use of 'motifs' throughout our music video. We included a recurrent theme of split screens which allow multiple shots to be shown in one screen. Although, this follows the codes and conventions of real media texts by the use of motif, we found in research that split screens weren't a common occurence, so this could be argued that we subverted the conventions of real media texts. To portray the 'stalker' character Joanna further, we used several editing techniques to create a TV theme throughout. The timecode at the beginning resembles that of a CCTV camera as if the character is being watched, following that the shot shows Joanna watched on multi screens similair to CCTV recordings. A grain was used over the shots to futher portray an unsettling atmosphere which looked like the videos had been shot by a home camera. To tie the motif altogether, at the end of the video there is a still image of the no signal card which is displayed on TV's when no reception is being recieved. The portrayal of the narrative character; Joanna, is mainly portrayed through the use of motifs through the video, as we further added the motif of flames in the video. This enabled the audience to identify that the character is 'evil' and dangerous.