These assignments are designed to require an entire semester to complete.
Notes for the Instructor: This assignment asks students to ply the knowledge and tools they have acquired in analyzing the rhetoric of film and challenges them to develop and pitch (but not necessarily film) their own projects. Films can only truly make their arguments when ideas and words are translated into moving images. But before they can be shot, they must be developed and pre-visualized. Although this assignment does not ask students to actually shoot their films, they will experience the early rigors of producing a moving argument. To this end, students will produce a treatment, sample storyboards, and a script, as well as a comprehensive manifesto that articulates and defends the film’s merit. Sample pages from a well-developed storyboarding assignment can be found here.
Assignment Description: Pitch an original film and produce a treatment, sample storyboards, a script, and a description and defense of the film’s merit.
Category: Individual or group project
Goals: The goal of this assignment is to get students to think through the process of developing and pitching a film, and specifically to practice the steps required to use moving images to produce an argument. The end result will be a set of texts: a treatment of the film, a script, sample storyboards, and a manifesto articulating and defending the film’s merits.
Tasks: Every step of your film’s development must be showcased in the form of a website. The website will have at least eight pages: