Friday, 11 February 2011

NCFE Research into two jobs in the industry

Research into two job roles in the creative industry

Industry: Film

Job/role: film director

Film Directors are part manager, part artist. They oversee everything on a movie set and have to realize their artistic vision at the same time.
Directors work with actors, set designers, costumers, editors and lighting technicians. They deal with everyone from the makeup artists and tech workers to cinematographers and art directors.
What Directors Do
A director's work begins in pre-production, when he works on casting and the script. He oversees filming and designs every scene. He coaches actors with their performances. In post-production, he oversees the editing of the movie and cuts it together into one cohesive story.
What directors need
An eye for art and a sense of timing, sound and structure are essential. You must be able to talk anyone into anything, whether by yelling, pleading or fast-talking.
Directors and Producers
The director is different than the producer. A producer is basically an entrepreneur. He controls the financial aspects of a movie, including setting the cost of filming the movie and finding backers to pay for it. A director is often at the mercy of the producer, as without his money, the director might be unable to work.








Industry: Film

Job/role: Producer

producer's job usually involves controlling the budget, schedule and staff during a movie's production. A film director may provide all the money needed to shoot a movie or enlist the help of other investors.
Financing Films
Film producers generally use personal income to help fund a movie and may seek other producers, or benefactors, to invest in the film. Most producers are therefore solely responsible for all budgetary concerns of the films they finance.
Employment
Film producers may be hired by film studios for certain projects. Most work independently, scouting out stage plays, books and movie scripts that may work as films---particularly those that might be profitable in box office and home video sales.
Direction
A producer often hires the film's director, who oversees the day-to-day creative aspects of a movie. The two work together to stay within a film's budget and schedule and may collaborate when hiring actors and film staff. A film producer may alternately decide to direct the film.
Interaction
Some film producers have constant on-set interaction with the movie and staff, while others maintain little contact with or control over the films they fund.
Salary Range
Annual salaries for film producers are generally based on experience, a film's success and the amount of projects the producer finances each year. Film producers typically make somewhere between $30,000 and a few hundred thousand dollars a year.