TGJ4ME

Course Overview
Room: 242
IB Film is a group 6 subject with the International
Baccalaureate curriculum. The course began as a mainstream
IB subject in September 2008. It can be studied at either
Standard or Higher Level. There are three curriculum areas:
textual analysis, film theory and history and creative process.
There is no final written examination.
Part 1- Textual Analysis
Students will learn how to comment on the following elements
of film and on the relationships between them: construction
according to narrative or other formal organizing principles•
representation of characters and issues • camera angles,
shots and movement • editing and sequencing •
lighting, shade and colour • sound • location
and set design • features determining genre •
target audience • historical, economic, and sociocultural
factor:
What can we say about issues and target audience? What do
you notice about the colour or the sound? What about camera
shots and movements?
Film making is a very deliberate process, and little appears
on screen by chance. What concerns us above all else is to
understand what the director is trying to achieve in using
the range of techniques that he has chosen to use.
Part 2 - Film Theory and History
Film theory and history. Students will be encouraged to ask
such questions as: • Who made this? • Why? •
What can we tell about the film-maker(s)? • For who
was it made? How does it address its audience? What is the
nature of our engagement with film? • What tradition
is it in (for example, American gangster film, science fiction
film)? Again, can you answer these questions in respect to
Saving Private Ryan?
Part 3 - Creative Process
Stages in film making process include initial planning (finding
and researching the idea), and technical planning (storyboarding,
shot selection, production scheduling etc.) moving on to the
physical production (determining locations, acquiring costumes
and props, photography, etc.) concluding with post-production
(editing, addition of music titles etc.) See films made by
IB Film students.
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