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Filming Literature Workshop 2007 | = Filming Literature DV Workshop 2007 = |
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|| Don Quixote |||| 1605 |||| Miguel de Cervantes || | == Filming Literature Student Competition == Create a Digital Video Film in a Day Thursday 8 March 10 am. Oxford University Computing Services is organising a one-day workshop for *students* who want to enter the Filming Literature competition 2007. The course is free, and will take attendees through the basic skills of making a digital video film. At the beginning of the day we will assume you have never made a film before. By the end of the day you will have taken a script, storyboarded it, filmed it, edited it, and produced a digital copy available for web broadcast. The resulting film will be entered for the Filming Literature competition 2007, which has a winning prize of £250, and two runners up prizes. Spaces on this course are very limited so please book early! Booking should be done by groups of 2 or 3 students as you will be expected to film, edit, direct, maybe even act, etc so you will need a team of people and to select a piece of literature to film. How it works 1., Try to assemble a group of 2 to 3 students who are interested in taking part. 2., Select an out of copyright text that you wish to inspire your film from the list below. The film can be inspired by a small section of the prose or by the book as a whole. <http://wiki.oucs.ox.ac.uk/ltg-public/DVWorkshop2007> 3., Select a genre - either '''Comedy or '''Horror/Thriller 4., Group leader to contact Peter Robinson to reserve a place (peter.robinson@oucs.ox.ac.uk, marked DV Workshop) giving all the names and email details of the team and the selected text chosen and genre they'd like to film in. 5., Each group must submit a short synopsis ( maximum 5 mins) of the proposed film prior to the workshop to be accepted. On the course you will receive training, and be supplied with all the kit you need (cameras, editing machines, etc). You will film the dramatic piece and then edit it in the afternoon. By the end of the day you will be a film-maker! == List of Texts for the workshop == Most of the following texts can be obtained from the Chadwyck Healey Database, Literature Online. Use the Quick Search feature on the Literature Online site to find the full text prose. See http://lion.chadwyck.co.uk/ Previous entries for the film canbe seen online: http://www.oucs.ox.ac.uk/ltg/dv/competitions.html |
Filming Literature DV Workshop 2007
Filming Literature Student Competition
Create a Digital Video Film in a Day
Thursday 8 March 10 am.
Oxford University Computing Services is organising a one-day workshop for *students* who want to enter the Filming Literature competition 2007. The course is free, and will take attendees through the basic skills of making a digital video film. At the beginning of the day we will assume you have never made a film before. By the end of the day you will have taken a script, storyboarded it, filmed it, edited it, and produced a digital copy available for web broadcast. The resulting film will be entered for the Filming Literature competition 2007, which has a winning prize of £250, and two runners up prizes.
Spaces on this course are very limited so please book early! Booking should be done by groups of 2 or 3 students as you will be expected to film, edit, direct, maybe even act, etc so you will need a team of people and to select a piece of literature to film.
How it works
- 1., Try to assemble a group of 2 to 3 students who are interested in taking
part.
- 2., Select an out of copyright text that you wish to inspire your film from the list below. The film can be inspired by a small section of the prose or by the book as a whole.
<http://wiki.oucs.ox.ac.uk/ltg-public/DVWorkshop2007>
3., Select a genre - either Comedy or Horror/Thriller 4., Group leader to contact Peter Robinson to reserve a place
(peter.robinson@oucs.ox.ac.uk, marked DV Workshop) giving all the names and email details of the team and the selected text chosen and genre they'd like to film in.
- 5., Each group must submit a short synopsis ( maximum 5 mins) of the proposed film prior to the workshop to be accepted. On the course you will receive training, and be supplied with all the kit
you need (cameras, editing machines, etc). You will film the dramatic piece and then edit it in the afternoon.
By the end of the day you will be a film-maker!
List of Texts for the workshop
Most of the following texts can be obtained from the Chadwyck Healey Database, Literature Online. Use the Quick Search feature on the Literature Online site to find the full text prose.
See http://lion.chadwyck.co.uk/
Previous entries for the film canbe seen online: http://www.oucs.ox.ac.uk/ltg/dv/competitions.html
The Princess of Cleves |
1678 |
Madame de Lafayette |
||
Robinson Crusoe |
1719 |
Daniel Defoe |
||
Tom Jones |
1749 |
Henry Fielding |
||
Candide |
1759 |
Voltaire |
||
The Sorrows of Young Werther |
1774 |
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe |
||
Dream of the Red Chamber |
1791 |
Cao Xueqin |
||
Pride and Prejudice |
1813 |
Jane Austen |
||
Waverley |
1814 |
Sir Walter Scott |
||
Emma |
1816 |
Jane Austen |
||
Frankenstein |
1818 |
Mary Shelley |
||
The Last of the Mohicans |
1826 |
James Fenimore Cooper |
||
The Red and the Black |
1830 |
Stendhal |
||
Le Pere Goriot |
1835 |
Honore de Balzac |
||
Dead Souls |
1842 |
Nikolai Gogol |
||
The Three Musketeers |
1844 |
Alexandre Dumas |
||
Wuthering Heights |
1847 |
Emily Bronte |
||
Jane Eyre |
1847 |
Charlotte Bronte |
||
The Scarlet Letter |
1850 |
Nathaniel Hawthorne |
||
Moby-Dick |
1851 |
Herman Melville |
||
Uncle Tom's Cabin |
1852 |
Harriet Beecher Stowe |
||
Germinal |
1855 |
Emile Zola |
||
Madame Bovary |
1857 |
Gustave Flaubert |
||
Oblomov |
1859 |
Ivan Goncharov |
||
The Woman in White |
1860 |
Wilkie Collins |
||
Fathers and Sons |
1862 |
Ivan Turgenev |
||
Les Miserables |
1862 |
Victor Hugo |
||
Crime and Punishment |
1866 |
Feodor Dostoevsky |
||
War and Peace |
1869 |
Leo Tolstoy |
||
Anna Karenina |
1877 |
Leo Tolstoy |
||
The Brothers Karamazov |
1880 |
Feodor Dostoevsky |
||
The Portrait of a Lady |
1881 |
Henry James |
||
Adventures of Huckleberry Finn |
1884 |
Mark Twain |
||
Hunger |
1890 |
Knut Hamsun |
||
Tess of the D'Urbervilles |
1891 |
Thomas Hardy |
||
The Red Badge of Courage |
1895 |
Stephen Crane |
||
Dracula |
1897 |
Bram Stoker |
||
The Awakening |
1899 |
Kate Chopin |
||
Buddenbrooks |
1901 |
Thomas Mann |
||
The Hound of Baskervilles |
1902 |
Arthur Conan Doyle |
||
The Ambassadors |
1903 |
Henry James |
||
Nostromo |
1904 |
Joseph Conrad |
||
A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man |
1916 |
James Joyce |
||
Women in Love |
1920 |
D. H. Lawrence |
||
Ulysses |
1922 |
James Joyce |
||
The Magic Mountain |
1924 |
Thomas Mann |
||
A Passage to India |
1924 |
E. M. Forster |
||
The Trial |
1925 |
Franz Kafka |
||
The Sound and the Fury |
1929 |
William Faulkner |
||
Berlin Alexanderplatz |
1929 |
Alfred Doblin |
||
The Tale of Genji |
11th Century |
Murasaki Shikibu |
||
Clarissa |
1747-48 |
Samuel Richardson |
||
Tristram Shandy |
1760-67 |
Laurence Sterne |
||
The Betrothed |
1827, 1840 |
Alessandro Manzoni |
||
The Pickwick Papers |
1836-67 |
Charles Dickens |
||
Vanity Fair |
1847-48 |
William Makepeace Thackeray |
||
Bleak House |
1852-53 |
Charles Dickens |
||
Great Expectations |
1860-61 |
Charles Dickens |
||
The Last Chronicle of Barset |
1866-67 |
Anthony Trollope |
||
Middlemarch |
1871-72 |
George Eliot |
||
In Search of Lost Time |
1913-27 |
Marcel Proust |
||
Petersburg |
1916/1922 |
Andrey Bely |