15 January 2014

Background Music Ideas?

These are the ideas for music I can use for the background of my opening for Questioner:
  • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hLBu4s3Q68Y- Cover of Beatles Help
  • https://www.youtube.com/audiolibrary- Various Downloadable Royalty Free Music 
I have chosen to use the cover of the Beatles Help by Castles In Air. The lyrics of Help are very relevant to the narrative about "when i was young" "I never needed anybody's help in anyway" "but now those days are gone I'm not so self assure". These lyrics closely relate to the main character and his current feelings and emotion which help to portray this to the audience. 
Also that the song is by The Beatles you immediately recognise it even though its a cover. Its also a popular song from the time period of around 1972 when the main character is seen in the opening.
This is the email that I sent to the Castles In Air band asking to use their song:
I am still waiting for a reply, although feel that if they disagree with the use of the song then they would have replied showing there opinion and ignored the email due to them not being concerned. 

6 January 2014

Props

This is the video where you can see the props I will use and I am explaining why:
This is my prop list:
Prop List
Prop:                        Where:
Lego Toy- Scene 1- stairs/character
Spinning Top Toy- Scene 2- on cabinet
Money Box- Scene 2- on cabinet
Toy Car- Scene 2- on cabinet
Jewellery Box- Scene 2- on cabinet
Card- Scene 2- on cabinet/box
Old Photo- Scene 2- window
Box- Scene 2- on turn table
Turn Table- Scene 2- next to window
Books- Scene 2- next to bed
Light- Scene 2- next to bed
Various Photos- Scene 2- on bed
Candles- Scene 2- on bed & window
Potpourri- Scene 2- on bed
Stuffed Toys- Scene 2- on/next to bed
IMPROVED PROP LIST FOR FINAL CUT:
Prop:                        Where:
Football- Scene 1- outside/being played with by the character (CIRCLE THEME)
Pencils & paper- Scene 1- being used to draw with possibly circles.
Model toy- Scene 1- in the dining room and being made by the character.
Spinning Top Toy- Scene 2- on cabinet
Money Box- Scene 2- on cabinet
Toy Car- Scene 2- on cabinet
Jewellery Box- Scene 2- on cabinet
Card- Scene 2- on cabinet/box
Old Photo- Scene 2- window
Box- Scene 2- on turn table
Turn Table- Scene 2- next to window
Books- Scene 2- next to bed
Light- Scene 2- next to bed
Various Photos- Scene 2- on bed
Candles- Scene 2- on bed & window
Potpourri- Scene 2- on bed
Stuffed Toys- Scene 2- on/next to bed

*underlined props are the newly added ones after improvements have been made to the rough cut.

4 January 2014

Plan/Storyboard

This is my plan/mind map for my opening for Questioner. I have planned the camera angles, scenes and editing effects which are shown in the image of my paper plan below:

This is my time plan:

Todorov Narrative Model:
This is the Todorov model for Questioner:
Equilibrium- The equilibrium is when the main character hasn't started questioning everything and considers himself to be normal. Everything in his life is happy and we see him at the start of the film playing with the wooden table pins game and his dog and shows enjoyment with what he is doing. This gives the clear idea to the audience that the main character (because we do not know his name yet) is very happy and that we start with a clear equilibrium.
Disequilibrium- This is when the main character starts asking questions and thinking of so many thinks that he questions in his daily life. After this first disrupt it leads to more and more especially in his school life because of his unusual habitats and annoying questions. We first see the characters question very early on in the film where he is told to go to bed. He replies with "why?" which leads us to believe he is a bit rude for talking back but after this first questions its like he becomes addicted to asking questions and finds so many questions he needs answering. We see the increasing amount of questions in the next scene and get a hint of how is Grandmother (Valerie Hope) is starting to become annoyed although remains calm and makes answers as quickly as he can ask questions. This contrast between the characters works well and helps him to understand and makes her best to help him with the problems he will face. The other disequilibriums will be throughout the rest of the film when he has problems with bullying from his school and students because of his unusualness and his habits that make him out to be weird. 
New Equilibrium- The new equilibrium will be at the very end when we see that Lewis had finally grown up to reach his goal of success and beating his challenges. We see that his annoying habit of questioning everything has turned out good and helped him to be successful in a well-paid job that needs someone who spots different issues and solves them as part of NASA. We see that he is very happy and loves working with people who see his habit as a talent in helping NASA find more life in space. We also see that he has a family and he couldn't be happier.

This is the storyboard for the opening 2 minutes for my feature film Questioner:
The storyboards include the angles, sounds, effects, transitions and titles that will be used over the clips plus the effects that will be added in editing.

Questioner Script

This is the script for my two minute opening for my film Questioner. It has all speech, narration and camera angles/movements. THE SCRIPT IS EMBEDDED BELOW:


This script was updated on Monday 13th January to have the improvements made after the evaluation of issues in the rough cut.

Character Profiling/Biography & Actors

Character Profiling/Biography
Lewis Webster (younger & older)- Lewis Webster is the main character in the film. His character is very confused and has so many questions about everything in the world and his questioning takes over his life but also gets worse as he gets older. We first meet him in the opening of the film where he is a 10-12 and through the film he grows up to the age of 50. The 50 year old version is narrating the beginning to set the scene and give an insight into who the character is.
Lewis Webster is very interested in the World but can't stop thinking and questioning everything in it. He can't justify why there are things and this becomes worse as he gets older. The opening is a flashback from his childhood where he asks his first question and when it all began. Through his life he meets problems like bullying because of his un-normal habit which does lead to a happy and successful ending all due to this questioning annoyance/habit.
Age- 10-12 (growing up through the film to see him at the end at the age of around 50)
Nationality- British
Residency- Lives with his parents in a 3 bedroom house with 1 mile of his Grandparents, that shows why they are so close and family is very close by. He lives with his Mum, Dad and brother Jack. They live in a market town in Norfolk.
Gender- Male
Personality- Slightly timid and must always have something to do. This includes physical activities as well as work but also thinking. He enjoys concerning on a topic and can concentrate on single things for long periods of time. Outgoing but enjoys spending some time alone to concentrate on his own thoughts.
Friends & Family- He has a large family that spreads across the world, mostly within the UK but some distant family in Australia. His family is very close and is always happy and always stay in communication. He doesn't have many friends, only 2-4 but they are fairly friendly. The enjoy spending time tougher at school but are distant outside of school. Lewis has the least input with his friends as he feels like an outsider and foreign. This is due to him thinking he's different.
Likes & Dislikes- Likes having something to do and concentrate on, so dislikes being inactive and not having something to do. Boredom is his biggest hatred. Dislikes very large groups of people.
General Appearance- A young person with youthful happiness and appearance. Always smiling.
Where are they in the opening- They are around their Grandparents house. He is staying around as the Grandmother enjoys having family visit/stay. The different locations are both inside and outside the house.
Who are they with in the opening- The only other person we see in the opening is the main characters Grandmother Valerie. This characters profile is below.

Valerie Hope- Valerie Hope is the grandmother to Lewis Webster and very much enjoys spending time with her family and wants to make the most of her time with family. She doesn't like not being listened to and ignored. If people do not follow her influence and rules then she will become annoyed. She is always kind and loving and finds nothing more important than her family both past and present. This character shows the main importance of family and care/appreciation for family.
Age- 72
Nationality- British
Residency- She lives in a 4 bedroom house in the countryside. She lives with her husband John and share 1 room in the house. The other rooms were those of past children and now used as spare rooms when family come around. The house is very normal and located just a mile away from a market town in Norfolk.
Gender- Female
Personality- Approachable, kind and shows authority. The character clearly sticks to rules as in the opening they are strict about the main character going to bed on time. This shows a firm upbringing because 40 years ago its likely that family were more strict.
Friends & Family- Family is very important to her and stays in constant contact with all family by calling them on the phone or sending personal letters. She always wants to be in contact with family and see them as much as possible. The family is very large and she sometimes finds it difficult to see them as often as she wishes. She has some local friends of the same age group who like to meet and talk about their families with each other.
Likes & Dislikes- Likes being with family and enjoys time/going out with family. Especially with a large group. Also socialising and communicating with all friends and family. Dislikes being ignored and told what to do, especially dislikes people not following her orders.
General Appearance- An elderly character with slightly curly hair. Must be grey hair. Shows the age clearly although not to old to be unrealistically a 10-12 year olds grandmother.
Where are they in the opening- She is in her house in the countryside. (see residency for more details).
Who are they with in the opening- She is with her Grandson in the opening because we see her only telling the main character to go to bed and also when he is in bed she is saying goodnight.

Vladimir Propp:
Protagonist- Lewis Webster. Lewis leads the narrative, and is growing up with his difficulties and new annoying habit of questioning everything. His overall quest is to grow up and be successful.
Antagonist- The bully's/school. When growing up Lewis faces difficulties by being bullied and not accepted at school. We see his school life and the problems he faces. There will be various different people from his school who get in the way of the protagonist Lewis.
Heroine- This will be the reward for Lewis making his way through school and progressing with his challenges. His questioning habit means that eventually he becomes successful and his life becomes very good and marries a wife and has a family.
Donor & Mentor- This is Valerie Hope. We meet her in the opening when Lewis starts to question everything. She is the grandmother of Lewis and helps him with his problems and encourages him to keep progressing in school to reach his goal. She gives hope and advice.
Father- These will be mainly the parents of Lewis. Jane and George Webster will be the authoritative figures in Lewis's life and show him the path to his success.
Helper- The helpers are the friends and family of Lewis. The help him through his school life and how to make the most of his life to achieve his goal.

Actors & Why
Lewis Website (younger) is going to be played by Charlie Hope. Charlie Hope is the ideal actor for this role even though he is aged 12 but looks younger. This youthful appearance helps to show the innocent and inexperienced attitude. He is a normal height and fits very well to my first idea of how the character would look and act.

Lewis Webster (older) is narrated by David Andrews and if the whole film is to be made then would be played also by David Andrews but in the opening of the film we only hear the narration over the scenes of the younger Lewis Webster (played by Charlie Hope). David Andrews was chosen for the voice of the older Lewis Webster as he has a clear voice but has the slight similarities in appearance but age differences like how the hair colour has changed overtime from blond to darker, which is not uncommon.

Valerie Hope is playing herself. The actor slightly shaped the character as there was no specific appearance that was planned although the actor should be naturally older and be a grandparent to keep the character as believable and authentic as possible.

Rough Cut & Improvements

The rough cut of my 2 minute opening is below:
The rough cut is only a ROUGH CUT and has been used to just put and cut the clips tougher and make sure I have the right clips and the footage is useable. In the rough cut I have tried some music but mainly the rough cut is to find issues and thinks to improve on.
From the rough cut I have found these issues:
  • The first scene isn't believable enough due to the actor being a bit giggly and that the prop is not really something a 10-12 year old would play with and not for that amount of time.
  • The costume of the main character is not right. The time period should be around 50 years ago as its a flash back from the older character who is in the current time period of 2013/14 so the costume of this character isn't as believable and convincing. One of the main problems is that you can see the character has a Nike logo on his jumper but also the other parts if the costume isn't of that time period.
  • Some of the video isn't very clear as it isn't perfectly in focus and due to the poor lighting.
The improvements I am going to make are:
  • Re-film this first scene to correct the mistakes of the costume and slight unbelievable acting.
  • Add a filter to this opening to make it more like the how film and TV would be like in the time period I'm aiming for. This will probably be a sepia filter.
  • Change the first scene to have different activities that are interrupted with old black and white pictures of family to emphasise they family environment and life. The activities will be better and more accurate to what a 10-12 year old would do. The new activities will be playing with/kicking a football, scoring a goal and celebrating by spinning in circles and running around, drawing especially circles and making a model of something like a plane. These scenes are more relevant to the characters age and also have been used to show the theme of circles and spinning in circles because the young boy starts questioning everything and feels like he's going in circles and confused. 
Below is a video where I am talking about the issues in my first rough cut and the improvements I will make:

Location Research Video

This is my video where I am looking at the selection of my locations for my two scenes in my opening two minutes. I have mentioned the positives and negatives off all locations with reference to the lighting, possible camera angles and mise en scene of the location. There are also pictures of the locations and small clips of the location i have chosen.
Watch it below:
Or CLICK HERE

Audience Research & My Feedback

This is the audience research myself and Sophie Martin have completed. Below are the responses from other members of Wymondham High Sixth Form. The video clips have been cut and edited so they answer specific questions instead of a whole video that answers them all at once. This makes it easier to understand the answers and compare them to other peoples answers.
My response with points that I have found interesting from the research but also an explanation of ideas I might use in my 2 minute opening based on the audience research.
I have found that generally people enjoy a mix of genres and the majority enjoy comedy. Also people find that they don't want to much to happen in opening but the responses are broad and some people only want to see some characters and the plot but others want to learn nothing and just see something like nature etc and hear some narration. Its agreed that everyone want to see the titles and characters/production teams names. Please watch the video above that gives more details and explanations of the audience research.

My Final Idea Video

Below is the video where I am explaining in full my final idea:

Target Audience and Screening Venue

Target Audience For My Film
My film would have a mixed target audience as anybody could watch it as there is no explicit language or scenes, meaning there wouldn't be a restricted viewing age. My main target audience would probably be aged 18-60+ and can be any gender because its not age or gender specific.  I feel that the film would probably appeal more to the 50-70 age range because its narrative is about memories and has the childhood images and lifestyle/upbringing from this age range when they were the age of the main character when we see them as a 10-12 year old at the beginning of the film.
Screening Venue
My film would be screened at normal cinemas as its a regular film that would be viewed by anyone in any cinema. There would be no selective types of screens e.g. 3D but could be distributed to selective types of cinemas like large groups of cinemas like Odeon etc or independent cinemas. Because the film is will be exported as a video file is will be very likely to be screened on a projector and will make it useful to the cinemas because it can be screened easier and in the best resolution but also conveniently to the audience and cinema.

12 December 2013

Stop Motion

Jan Svankmajer (1971) - Jabberwocky
Directed by Jan Svankmajer, this surrealist live-action adaptation of Lewis Carroll's poem The Jabberwocky is, for the most part, centered around the travels of a surprisingly mobile wardrobe. After a brief trip the forest, the wardrobe's doors open to reveal a strange Victorian playroom supervised by an older, bearded man with glasses inside of a photographic portrait. As the wardrobe "grows" a variety of strange looking jars, the toys inside come to life just as maggot-infested shrubbery furiously begins to sprout across the room. This sets the premise for a variety of odd scenes involving a cat, a tea party, dismembered dolls, and a continuous effort to deface the portrait amidst a reading of The Jabberwocky.
I feel the stop motion by Jan Svankmajer are both fascinating and repellent, and Jabberwocky, one of his finest works, is no exception. Svankmajer is not a creator whose goal is to provide comfort; having lived through a repressive communist regime, his work is filled with anger, irony, melancholy, and darkness. Yet it also has its share of humor and even, on occasion, optimism; more importantly, Svankmajer has genuine brilliance, both as a craftsman and an artist, and this is especially true in Jabberwocky. What this short film means is subject to debate, as are the best surrealist works, but meaning is secondary to the associations that each viewer brings to it.
The stop motion is, as usual, excellent and the imagination behind it is stunning. Walking wardrobes, dolls eating dolls, sailor suits riding rocking horses -- Svankmajer plays with these images in a way that makes them unforgettable. Jabberwocky is thrilling and disturbing, a surrealist treat.

Aardman (Wallace & Gromit) (1993) - The Wrong Trousers
The Wrong Trousers is the second short film to feature the stop motion antics of eccentric inventor Wallace and his dog Gromit, the wrong Trousers sees the pair become unwitting accomplices to a jewel theft. The trouble begins when, struggling to make ends meet, Wallace decides to require to let in boarder. At first, Wallace and his new tenant get on famously; so, the penguin forces Gromit out of his room and into the doghouse. However, the bird isn’t what he seems: Gromit discovers that the penguin is really the famous thief Feathers McGraw. Feathers has his eye on Wallace's latest invention- a pair of mechanical trousers that can be programmed to mechanically walk on their own. Believing the device will assist him steal a world-famous diamond at the nearby museum. When Feathers attaches Wallace to the trousers, Gromit must find a way to prevent the malicious penguin and save his friend.

This Oscar-winner for "Best Animated Short" works both as a humorous parody of film noir and as an exciting, action-packed adventure in its own right. It combines skillful visual design and excellent animation with ingenious and humorous storytelling.
I enjoy watching animation and feel its makes unbelieveable things come to life, this is a great way of bringing out the imagination of your audiance and making unbelievable things unforgettable. This is my online prezi about stop motion and the techniques/how its developed over time:


Jaws Opening Analysis


The music at the beginning is iconographic. The audience are introduced to a sound motif, which is alarming and ominous to the audience as it is only played when the shark is nearby or on scene. It is a crescendo/ staccato sound which is iconic to Jaws, its used to create tension and a scary atmosphere.

The characters in the beginning are established around a fire situated on the beach. Drinking, smoking and playing music. The characters actions are one of a hippy nature, which indicates their young and carefree personalities. Usually in a film, these kind of teenagers are the ones to be targeted on as victims in the film and happen to be disposed of one by one. So the audience are introduced to a stereotypical but familiar environment but are already bracing themselves for an act of violence/shock, especially when the girl and boy are running away together far from the safety of the group. The audience will initially question the need for safety towards the young teenagers, as one they are under the influence of drugs and alcohol and two the girl is running away naked therefore she is asking for some sort of confrontation.

There is a cross cut between the lady being killed and the man who is drunk on the beach. The film also consists of jump cuts, graphic match and fades. The editing styles mean that it adds to the tension and drama.
 
Shot types: at the beginning the camera pans along the characters. This creates a great establishing scene amongst the youngsters. The director is trying to create an atmosphere one of a predator picking its prey. The shots consist of various close ups, great for the audience to analyse and establish the surroundings and characters. The film contains a shot reverse shot, which engages the audience into the film as they feel that they are involved through the use of psychological camera positioning.The most effective shot of that scene is the worms eye view which is established as if it’s the point of view of the shark. The female character is positioned as a venerable object therefore the audience knows that something is going to happen between the binary oppositions.The opening sequence also consists of a few long shots.

The titles open with Jaws with a black screen. There's a studio logo – which is a sense of institution. Typography of Jaws/Credits. Red – connotes danger and blood which foreshadows what is going to happen later on in the film. I like this use of titles because its very simple but effective. In my film I will use the simple design but instead of colour I will make my title animate to connote a feeling. For mine the first letter of the title will spin to connote the confusion and sense of spinning in circles to show the characters current problems/feelings.


The Jaws opening sequence underlines two types of narrative theory's which is an important element of a successful film opening :One of the elements is Barthes's five codes theory- Enigma code. The musical motif at the beginning makes the audience feel threatened and also curious, as to what is going to happen next as the audience already are feeling in suspense. The second element of the narrative theory is the popular and vastly used, Binary Oppositions. This theory is founded by Levi-Strauss. In this case, Jaws, have the binary oppositions of good vs.. evil and human vs. sharks.

Editing Styles In Psycho

Editing and Sound in Alfred Hitchcock’s - Psycho 

We know that Hitchcock’s purpose within the very renowned shower scene (shown in the YouTube video above) in psycho was to shock the audience with not solely the event of the murder itself however additionally the brutality of Mary’s murder. He dramatically switches the pace of the scene from the slow entrance of the dark figure to the short cuts of the murder.
Hitchcock exaggerated the utilization of cutting was an intentional relation to the cutting of poor Mary. In any case, the slow entrance and fast cuts remains a really effective cinematic jolt to an audience. The noise of the shower drowns out any sound. The door is then slowly and carefully closed and we see the shadow of a woman fall across the shower curtain. Mary's back is turned to the curtain. The white brightness of the bathroom is almost bright however also we plain with the whitewash walls. Suddenly we have a tendency to see the hand reach up, grasp the shower curtain, and rips it aside.
Then it cuts to Mary as she turns in response to the feel and sound of the shower curtain being torn aside, a glance of pure horror erupts in her face and a low terrible groan begins to rise up out of her throat. A hand comes into the shot. The hand holds a huge knife. The flint of the blade shatters the screen to an almost total, silver blankness.
The dynamical is an effect of a knife slashing, as if tearing at the actual screen, ripping the film. Over it the slashing gulps of screaming then we hear silence, which is interrupted with the dreadful thump as Mary's body falls in the tub.
A reverse angle is used as the blank whiteness, the blur of the shower water, the hand pulling the shower curtain back the audience then catches one flicker of a glimpse of the killer. A woman, her face contorted with madness, her head wild with hair, as if she were wearing a wig. Then the audience sees only the curtain, closed across the bathtub, and listen to the rush of the shower water, above the shower-bar we see the bathroom door open once more and once a moment we hear the sound of the front door slamming.

The use of the POV shot
The murder scenes in psycho shows how the film situates the spectator through point-of-view shots and direct address, first, how the murder of the protagonist inscribes licentious sexual behaviour onto her body, and, second, how we could inscribe gender onto a body because of misperceptions. When a shot's framing prompts us to see it as a character's vision, it's known as a point- of-view (POV) shot. Camera movement are often a powerful cue that we are watching a POV shot as a result of the camera eye acts as a surrogate for our eye and our attention. The point-of-view shot is vital because it allows the spectator to see with that character through a system of cuts or glances. In different words, as a result of the POV shot most frequently cuts between the character and his or her view, the shot constructs the spectator's awareness of space. For example, the first shot below from psycho shows the protagonist, Marion Crane, rummaging through her motel room window. The second shot shows Norman's house behind the motel, which Marion was looking at. The third shot cuts back to Marion to close the cinematic statement: subject of the gaze / object of the gaze / subject of the gaze. A second style of editing is direct address, the instance that the character looks directly into the camera and acknowledges the presence of the spectator. Direct address editing performs two functions. First, it establishes identification with the spectator by creating eye contact. Second, it objectifies the spectator. In different words, the editing causes suspense or anxiety as a result of the character seems to have discovered that he or she is being watched. For example, the shots below show Marion and Norman looking directly into the camera with nearly the same expression, as if implicating the spectator in the action: into Marion's crime of stealing money from her employer (which is why she escapes from Phoenix and ends up at the Bates Motel), and into Norman's mother's homicidal tendencies.

Conclusion
To conclude in this scene from “Psycho” editing is used to the producers advantage and is used to make suspense and inevitability. At the start the pace of the editing is the same it has a very steady cut rhythm making the viewer as an audience feel like its normal it makes us feel relaxed, as with editing a suspense scene you want to pace yourself slow then have a build up then a unleash this method was used effectively within the scene from “Psycho”. The editing of a scene will help portray feeling and emotion. The editing during this clip helps make the audience feel suspense and tension, we can see the editor use “Shot-Reverse Shot” when it goes from the women to the killers POV the pace of that section is quick and is over very quickly it might be emphasising the viewers heart pounding with the quick edits. The sound also can help to evoke audience reaction. During this scene it starts very quiet we can only hear diegetic sounds like the footsteps, pulling of the curtain, the sound of the water touch the floor of the shower. It additionally reflects the editors work as well, At the climax when the murder starts stabbing quick cuts and loud music are used to frighten to break the suspense that had been created with the silence and slow paced editing. The sound becomes non-diegetic and extremely loud both the volume and the juxtaposition of diegetic to non-diegetic breaks the tension and creates a daunting moment. Once the stabbing happens the editor chooses to linger in what has just happen holding shots for much longer by doing this one might suggest that the editing reflects the life of the woman and as she is dying slowly the cuts are holding for longer.

Use Of Sound & Camera Angles In The Woman In Black


"The Woman in Black" is a horror movie about the ghost of woman who haunts the town where she died, dressed in black, hence the name "The Woman in Black". The opening scene follows all the conventions of a horror movie.

At first we are only shown close up shots of what are regarded as victorian children's toys. These type of toys are considered creepy as they are very delicate. The dolls that were shown are considered really creepy and scary by many people and find them haunting. Using these props along with the music creates a light but dark feel to the scene. After we are shown three victorian girls who are playing with the toys (a Three Shot).

The girls are looking at the direction of the camera, we the audience are not aware of what they are looking at for it is not shown in the frame, they are staring at the audiance which adds to the unordinary and scary tension. Suddenly they turn and look at the window. The camera focuses on the window suggestion to us the audience what's about to happen as we should work it out knowing it's a horror movie but we are still not sure if what we think will happen happens.

The following shots are just close ups of the girl's shoes showing them walking in a certain direction whilst crushing their toys. From this we know somethings not right. Then the we are shown the faces of the girls which are just expressionless and seem as if they are being controlled. They reach the window seal open the window and jump out. A scream is used. However we are still in the room and the camera zooms out from the window showing the rest of the room. Suddenly we see a ghostly figure in black but it's out of focus.

The opening sequence fits perfectly and does what it's supposed to do, bringing curiosity into the minds of the audience.

The use of music in the opening scene creates a very mystic atmosphere as it is a piece composed of classical instruments that if played in a certain way can sound very demented and dark. These instruments are usually used in this genre as they are very good at creating an on the edge feel within the audience creating suspense which is good within a horror movie as it's easier to scare people this way

11 December 2013

Touch Of Evil Opening Camera Angle Analysis


In the opening of Touch of Evil there is a immediate close up shot of the bomb device. Following this close up, the scene progresses, as the use of the crane shot seems to progress and follow the action in the particular frame of the scene. The camera angels are varied because the camera movements and camera angles are varied to give the sense of suspense within the scene.

The use of a close up shot of a person setting the bomb could connote how something tragic is about to happen and gives an insight into the expectations of the narrative as a whole. After the activation, the use of a tracking shot is evident, as the camera seems to follow the assassin planting the bomb in the car boot, which could be an enigma code, as the audience could wonder why the assassin is planting the bomb and who he intends to assassinate. This means the audience are interacting in the films narrative by questioning what s happening.

Although he is the villain, the audience are encouraged to identify with him in the form of tracking shots, as we are seemingly following him and realise his motives and intentions, for example setting a bomb, and planting it. Shortly after this, a crane shot is used to show how the car is significant in the result of the scene. And the audience start to contradict the outcome and future of the carnage.

Immediately, the scene cuts to an establishing shot of the town, the use of a high angle shot is used to show how other charters are unaware of what is about to happen. By using these shots, we are encouraged to identify with the villain, as we are seemingly observing the plan in action.

The use of long shots and medium shots are used to show how the car is being positioned intentionally in a public place within the town, in order to target the people to which the bomb was intended for.

Interestingly, the use of the main subject matter of the car, seems to be left out of view and is zoomed out. To a certain extent, mystery is created, however the audience seem to acknowledge the fact that the car is going to be significant, and could know the consequences and result of the narrative, the car will explode, killing the targeted people and will create a terrible situation.