Thursday, 26 January 2012

Lord of war timeline

Target audience research

I asked people what they thought of my ideas, and I had an incredibly a huge amout of people supporting my ideas and even begging to be part of the movie, this gave me a really positive feeling that " this is it, I have got people supporting my ideas, emthusiastic actors/actresses, now its crunch time. Time to add my ideas and ideas of the people offering to work with me together and make a great piece of work".

The reason why I have targeted my movie to any age range is because my movie has people in their teens, 30's and even 60's, so I can't just target it to teens.

Outline of my movie

My movie is about an extended family of five. A family consisting of the mother, father,daughter, grandmother and aunty living in a home together.It shows my target audience how similar things are with alot of families, and how you learn to deal with it. My movie is a documentary, and I have rated it as a PG. I have rated it as a PG because there are some scenes where children will not be able to watch on their own, they will need to be supervised by an adult, eg. innapropraite language 

Where did you get your ideas from?
I got my ideas from a documentary that used to be on channel 4, called 'The Azorkos' about a nuclear family, that lived in hackney. I found the programme really interesting and thought that it would have been better if they made it into a movie, and made it into a bit of comedy.

What is the BBFC?

The British Board of Film Classification (BBFC), originally British Board of Film Censors, is a non-governmental organisation, funded by the film industry and responsible for the national classification of films within the United Kingdom. It has a statutory requirement to classify videos, DVDs and some video games under the Video Recordings Act 2010.

Examples of Movies

12A: CHRONICLE
15: 21 JUMP STREET
PG: MADAM BUTTERFLY 3D
18: NIGHT OF VENGEANCE


The chart below shows the evolution of the BBFC category system from 1913, when only the ‘U’ and ‘A’ certificates existed, to the present day.