Screen Production (FLTV90052)
Graduate courseworkPoints: 37.5Not available in 2024
About this subject
Overview
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In this capstone subject, students will lead a creative team in the realisation of a substantive short screen work.
Students will prepare, re-draft, analyse and finalise the screen idea they developed in Screen Story 2. Through the lens of their chosen screen production role, students will engage vital re-drafting, story analysis and story pitching skills to refine both their individual production roles and responsibilities in bringing those screen ideas to fruition.
Students will further develop organisational and technical skills in filmmaking by engaging in multiple creative and managerial production and post-production roles. This subject allows students to discover their own strengths while recognising the essential skills brought by those they collaborate with.
Students will build teams that reflect the creative and practical need of the project and take charge of the implementation of the many creative, practical, and collaborative skills learned in the course to date. This subject encourages each student to develop and extend their own skill set while understanding how they influence and affect the collaborative environment so essential to realising screen story.
The screen work should achieve full industry and university and/or best practice compliance, including effectively planning, executing, and delivering a film to budget and to schedule, indulging deep creative engagement, collaborative partnerships, artistic nuance and thematic relevance.
Students have an option to raise funds to support their capstone project. They will be expected to work respectfully with industry, community, and university stakeholders to see their projects to fruition.
Intended learning outcomes
On completion of this subject, students should be able to:
- realise a short film script or documentary treatment at an advanced level;
- make high-level production decisions and follow through on their consequences;
- undertake crew roles and responsibilities with a high level of professionalism;
- comply with industry-standard screen production processes and documentation;
- critically evaluate and reflect on individual roles in the context of a project;
- critically engage in creative conversations about ethics, aesthetics and story with lecturers, peers and industry mentors;
- lead a collaborative team through each stage of a screen production at an advanced level and execute each stage at an advanced level;
- critically evaluate and develop a screen idea through participation in script analysis sessions.
Generic skills
On completion of this subject, students should be able to:
- create and organise production and screen-based material;
- use a range of practice-led research tools and methodologies;
- undertake problem identification, formulation and solution;
- interpret and analyse;
- employ critical thinking;
- work independently and collaboratively;
- communicate effectively;
- organise and manage time;
- understand their relationship with, and responsibility to, the social, cultural and legislative environment;
- work with respect for intellectual integrity, intellectual property and for the ethics of research, scholarship and practice.
Last updated: 8 November 2024