Madi Alger's A2 Media Blog
Tuesday, 7 April 2015
Evaluation question 2: How effective is the combination of your product and ancillary texts?
A film distributor’s job is to market and distribute the
film worldwide, whether this be by DVD’s, online or in cinemas. Obviously their
goal is to reach out to the largest audience possible, so they will often use
as many media platforms as possible. Some of these platforms include:
TV and cinema ads; short-full length trailers can be played
in between shows on TV or before another film at the cinema, each have their
own benefits. TV ads can be seen by an audience of million if placed on the
right channel at the right time, however with the rise of services such as Sky
Plus which allows the audience to record programmes, it also gives them the
opportunity to skip over these adverts. Cinema adverts usually have a smaller
audience however if they are placed before a film of the same genre they can
directly target the films target audience.
Outdoor ads; these include billboards, posters, ads on the
side of busses etc. These can also be seen by a large audience but it is not
dependant on timing like TV and cinema ads.
Online ads; these have the potential to be huge or ‘viral’.
They are a lot cheaper to produce than other forms of advertisement, reach to
just a large if not larger audience and can be interactive (which audiences
love).
The way a film is marketed is dependent on the audiences
demographics. This is why audience research is incredibly important for a
distributor to perform. If you don’t know much about your target audience, you
may potentially be wasting a lot of money. For example, if you primary audience
is those above the age of 60 and you put all of you advertisement online, it is
unlikely to be seen by them. It is important to find out what type of media
your target audience consumes the most so you can learn where to focus your
advertisements.
For an example of a successful advertisement campaign, look
at my previous work regarding The Woman in Black.
It is essential for a films advertisement campaign to have a
theme which continues throughout all advertisement platforms such as a
song/sound, text style, colour theme or image etc. so that it can be easily
recognisable.
Our marketing campaign:
We decided on giving our film an age certificate of 15.
Whilst our target audience is in the 17 to 25 age bracket, the film does not
contain enough gore, extremely strong language and/or scenes of a sexual nature
to warrant it having an 18 certificate.
Our trailer and my poster have two main similarities, them
being the tagline and the mannequin itself. The tagline ‘They are watching’ is
a quote pulled from the trailer ‘They were always there waiting, watching’. I
chose this line in particular because the mannequin is looming over my model
ominously, watching him. I, of course, could not have created the poster
without the mannequin as they are the key aspect of the film. Another
similarity is the colour scheme. Red lighting is used a lot during the trailer
in the action scenes as red is synonymous with the horror genre as it connotes
blood.
If a film manages to get featured on the front cover of a
magazine then is will greatly improve it’s promotion. The audience sees it as
if it’s being promoted by the magazine, and if they are avid readers of the
magazine they may be suggested to go and see it just because the magazine
recommends it. This would of course still work if the film is just mentioned on
the inside of a magazine, but the front cover is likely to be seen by a lot of passers-by,
even if they don’t buy it. My cover relates to our trailer and my poster
because of the setting (woods being heavily prevalent in the trailer) and the
colour scheme (white text used on the trailer with a little red thrown in).
Wednesday, 1 April 2015
Tuesday, 31 March 2015
Monday, 30 March 2015
Friday, 20 March 2015
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