Thursday, 26 September 2013
Friday, 13 September 2013
Genre
This helps us to define what audiences enjoy.
Genre
Horror: The Conjuring
Sci-Fi: Star Trek
Romance: Romeo and Juliet
Comedy: The Worlds End
Thriller: Clockwork Orange
Animation: Toy Story
Action: Die Hard
Western: Good the Bad and the Ugly
Family: Home Alone
Drama: American Beauty
Musicals: Little Shop of Horror
Lots of films now have hybrid genres and subgenres to
keep the audience hooked and want to watch more.
How we recognise genre
Generic codes and conventions we establish what genre it
is. By the use of characters and mise-en-scene sets the scene for the audience.
Genre
|
Western
|
Gangster
|
Sci-fi
|
Horror
|
Animation
|
What
you see
|
Sand,
horses, cowboys, guns, saloons, tumble weed
|
Guns,
drugs, strip club, cigarettes
|
Futuristic
things, lasers, robots
|
Blood,
ghosts, vampires
|
Happiness,
CGI, fluffy animals
|
What
you hear
|
Horses,
wind, gun shots
|
Gun
shots, swearwords, cockney, revving of engines
|
Space
ship, lasers, hissing of doors
|
Screams,
squelching of blood, doors creaking
|
Songs
and dancing
|
Typical
characters
|
Sheriff,
cowboy, outlaw, villagers
|
Police
man, drug dealer, club owner
|
Robot,
old wise guy, secret clan
|
Boogie
man, shadows cop, children
|
Unreal
character
|
Typical
Storyline
|
Someone
is bad and is up to the law to sort it out
|
Drugs
are involved so money is wanted
|
Fight
with an alien or another planet
|
Go
to a town house
|
Opening
dilemma
Climax
Opening
|
Themes
Morals ideas
|
Revenge
|
Revenge,
law breaking
|
Saving
the world
|
Haunting
house
|
To entertain
|
Examples
|
True
grit, Unforgiving
|
Godfather,
Scarface
|
The
hunger games, gravity
|
Saw,
The shinning
|
Toy story
|
Our given genre
Thursday, 5 September 2013
Thriller
The thriller genre has a huge array of films but we can still name characteristics. Excitement, suspense and elements of mystery make a thriller. All thriller films use the environment to their advantage such as a large farmhouse being scary in ‘The Conjuring’ or a busy street like in ‘Shooter’. Violence is the most common feature in thriller films. Some thriller films are based on true stories.
Sweeney Todd Demon Barber Of Fleet Street
This is a mid shot, showing a ‘barber and his wife’ in a market place full of flowers and bright colours. This is unconventional for a thriller film, as this looks friendly and a nice place to be. We can see that the man who is pushing the pram is going to be the ‘barber’ and the lady picking up the baby out of the pram is ‘his wife’. This is made secure by the fact that the barber, who is in fact Sweeney Todd, is okay with the woman, Lucy, picking up his child in a loving way. The clothes that Sweeney is wearing would be associated with upper class people the jacket with a big collar and a neck scarf. His hair is presented well also showing wealth. Lucy is wearing a white dress with a scarf draped over her shoulders and a bonnet her hair is blond and in tight curls this makes the audience believe that this family may have had a bit of wealth. Also Sweeney looks a lot younger in this shot than at the beginning so this makes us believe that this may be a flash back.
This is a mid shot of Mrs. Lovett chopping something not knowing that Sweeney Todd has just walked into her shop. We can see from the counter that she may be handling dough or pastry because of the floured work surface. This creates suspense because we don’t know why Sweeney has gone into this shop and what relevance Mrs. Lovett has to the plot of the film. The black tattered dress she is wearing show that she may not be making too much money in her business. Another sign for this is her hair being messy and the wall behind her being full of grime and dirt. The minimal light shows that it is in a shop that people may not want to be in as the mood of it in there is a bit lonely and gloomy. The camera goes between Mrs. Lovett and Sweeney as he walks into the shop you can see that when she sees Sweeney she is exited because people avoid her as though she ‘has the plague’.
This is a close up shot of Lucy and baby Johanna looking out the window with Judge Turpin with flowers in his hand looking up at her crying. She is crying because her husband Benjamin Barker, or now it is made apparent that he is Sweeny Todd, has been arrested and sent away on a ship. This shot is in the same light as the other flashback, so we assume that, as it is in the same brightness that this is another flashback. Judge Turpin is an upper class man and we see this because he is well shaven and his clothes and hair are pristine. Before this we see what the room that ‘people say is haunted’ and it is given to the audience to piece together that that is the room around the corner of the staircase. This song is where it flips between flashbacks and present this makes the audience have to piece together the flashback from the expressions on Sweeny and Mrs. Lovett’s face, which don’t look pleasant memories.
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