Thursday 24 November 2011

Idea 1

WW2 based theme
Location: based in the air field of Folkingham
Icludes- historic equipment, war machinery, fields, tractors, hangers, silo's

The story line of this would be a pilot going to war and dies, his soul still stays at the air field, His wife/girlfriend visits it to "feel his presence" as something is telling her that he is still alive.

Costume ideas:


 The women would wear dresses just below the knee, normally with pleats in them to make them look as feminine as possible. Little gloves were popular in those days with lots of frills and buttons to do up. Fashion was a big importance in the 1930's and women dressed as women, trousers would not be worn by women during these times. Hats or head wear would be worn regularly as accessorising an outfit was important and having a full set (hat, dress and shoes) would be worn when going out on an occasion.

 The man would wear a full pilot outfit. It would need to have the ranking stripe on their blazer to show the importance and the wing badge to show they belong to a regiment. The hat and goggles are important pieces of this outfit as it gives a strong indication that the character is a pilot. The mise-en-scene would work well in this location as the idea of a pilot would fit perfectly in the field full of planes and equipment based on wars.

Location:Brief history outine.
There is a very old road leading down to the airfield. It was open in WW1 in Folkingham due to England needing as many military bases as possible. It was originally a "decoy" site. During the days there were many planes and military forces taking up the air fieldIn 1943 it was redeveloped into a bomber airfield. Then in 1959, it was turned into a missile base. When the missiles were used and taken out by the late 1960's the airfield was left weaponless.

Titles And Credits
Paranormal activity- The titles will be placed in a blood red colour to represent the idea of death which occured in the film. Paranormal is about ghost activity reflecting on our main idea of this thriller opening and we thought it would be aesthetically effective to use as our credits.

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