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Our demographic obviously caters towards a male-oriented post-apocalyptic fanbase, but it can

also be a psychograph for E to C1 class people due to the poverty or classism aspect being
presented in Law Spurn. However, I feel as if it’s also made for a more ironic audience since we
didn’t necessarily take our own film seriously, and the use of editing gave a sort of “style over
substance” vibe to our product.
We made our product engage with the audience by having them take part in the production of it,
sending off surveys to people to add a layer of democracy to our choices during our film making.
These things include their thoughts on our recce and soundtrack, their personal ideas for what
post-apocalyptic films should be and democratically deciding between choices that would
actually impact the creation of Law Spurn. This level of interactivity gave our crew useful
feedback and we worked on making improvements based off of it.
A final point is that adding subtitles to it adds accessibility, audiences being easily able to read
the dialogue and know which character is which, as well as small on text appearances to quickly
give exposition to who the character is or what is happening in case the audiences get too
confused from our narrative.

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