Hi everybody,
I'm applying for a master in documentary film directing and I'm not so sure about my read of the requirements of the film. It should be a 3-minute film under the topic 'I see, I hear, I film'.
(1) The film shall underline a strong relationship with the surrounding reality.
(2) It shall focus on characters or places, and show a creative personal cinematic concept.
First question: do you think a portrait of my day as a business student with the dream of becoming a filmmaker, who currently is sidehustling with filmmaking on YouTube, would fit? (I have a pretty eventful and ritualised day)
Second question: I was thinking about doing a narration of the whole day, but we are only allowed to use sound from the shots - so do you think narration + original sound from the shoots could work out? (I only saw it with backgroundmusic + sound design + narration, so I'm unsure)
Thanks! Your help would me the world to me because I'm pretty unsure and this application determines the quality of my next 2 years.
Thanks again, Paul
I'm applying for a master in documentary film directing and I'm not so sure about my read of the requirements of the film. It should be a 3-minute film under the topic 'I see, I hear, I film'.
(1) The film shall underline a strong relationship with the surrounding reality.
(2) It shall focus on characters or places, and show a creative personal cinematic concept.
First question: do you think a portrait of my day as a business student with the dream of becoming a filmmaker, who currently is sidehustling with filmmaking on YouTube, would fit? (I have a pretty eventful and ritualised day)
Second question: I was thinking about doing a narration of the whole day, but we are only allowed to use sound from the shots - so do you think narration + original sound from the shoots could work out? (I only saw it with backgroundmusic + sound design + narration, so I'm unsure)
Thanks! Your help would me the world to me because I'm pretty unsure and this application determines the quality of my next 2 years.
Thanks again, Paul