Week 10 – Task 26 – Recap on TV drama terms – final home learning task

We will be revisiting how to analyse TV drama next week and looking at using a variety of terms you have already come across in a textual analysis.

You need to revisit the terms from Mise En Scene, Camera, Editing and Sound to ensure that you understand the majority of them and can recognise their use and appearance in the moving image i.e the TV drama clip.

Here is the glossary.  It will also be on classroom if you want your own copy. Remember to make a folder for TV drama in google so that you can keep all your resources there.

Make sure you read it, see if you can remember a good number of them and then we can start to use them in a more focused way next week.

If you still have outstanding posts then make sure you complete them before next week and also collate as much as you can onto your Music Industry page to create a one stop shop for revision and reference when we come back to it later this year.

Well done for tackling Sound on your own.

See you on Monday – we are so looking forward to getting back to face to face teaching.

 

 

Editing in TV Drama

The four pillars of textual analysis.

The four areas which you need to understand to complete a textual analysis of a sequence from TV or Film, collectively called ‘micro features’, are:

  • Camera
  • Mise-en-Scene
  • Editing
  • Sound

You are also going to making a music video soon and editing is an important skill to learn to communicate meaning and help construct a sense of time, place and story:

Slideshow on Editing:

Practice Sequence

Identify and analyse the editing techniques in this sequence:

template for completion is attached here or in classroom.

Glossary of Editing Terms

Here is a handout on editing terms and definitions.

Lesson 2 – Essay MES, CAMERA and EDITING

Using the template in classroom, you will watch the sequence a couple of times and look for how camera and MES are also used to make meaning. You will then submit @ 2 TEAS for each MF (so 6 TEAS in total) before the submission date published.