Thursday, November 25, 2010

StoryBoards.


For my first storyboard, I decided to choose the little girl who in my case, looks as if she is lost and looking for her parents.  I basically began my story with 2 parents holding a picture of their missing child.  Then using the scene-scene method, I moved forward in time and showed the police out in the woods looking for the missing girl.  Then I used the picture on the Comm165 site of the little girl, as if the police had found her in a new scene.  Then i topped it all off with a happy family who had just found their missing child.  This first storyboard was interesting, because I couldn't really figure out a story for this little girl, until i came up with the fact that she may be lost.  From Schriver's Model, I used scene-scene for both my storyboards as a matter of fact.  I actually didn't have this planned, but both my stories skip between time frames, and scenes for each individual frame.  This does take out details from the story, but also makes this simple to understand and interpret.  



For my second storyboard, I chose to use the kids covering themselves, so they don't get hit by a soccer ball photo, and the man praying.  I figured I could tie these together easily, especially if I make the man praying the kids soccer coach.  Here I also used scene-scene as i mentioned before, because it starts at the penalty kick, then it shows the kids bracing themselves, or playing defense.  Although this is almost a slow motion storyboard, it does skip from scene to scene.  After the kids are shown, the storyboard goes to a clip of the coach praying the penalty kicker misses, and then the next frame shows the opposing team score.  It's actually sort of a sad storyboard, because all the characters in it actually lose this soccer game in the end.  

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