Friday, May 27, 2011

Narrative techniques



Technique

Description
Effect
Example from a film
1. Exposition

Fills in the back of the characters and their situations
Shows interest in the characters and want to see what happens next
At the beginning when it is shown when Andy’s mother is watching all the films she has about how has Andy grown and it shows him playing with all his toys.

2. Dangling cause

Information or actions that leads to no effect of resolution until much later in the film
- You can retain your interest so you watch the film until the end

- Allows the story to be told in different levels

Potato’s head eye. As he misses one of his eyes and afterwards with it they discover that in reality Andy’s intention wasn’t to throw them away.

3. Obstacle

Stands in the way of the characters reaching their goal
- Makes it more interesting/dramatic
- With no obstacle nothing interest will happen / leave social norms

Lotso he was a bear which was the leader of all the toys in the kindergarten.

4. Deadline

A time limit placed on a protagonist to accomplish a goal
- Increases tension

- Makes film more goal orientated
The day in which Andy goes to college.

5. Dialogue hook 

Creates a link between two consecutive scenes
- Allows the scenes to have a continuity
- To have sense between scenes
Andy’s mother’s car going to the kindergarten from her house, and the hook is her car arriving to the kindergarten.

Thursday, May 26, 2011

Festival de cannels


About the festival:
         Founded in 1946
         Takes place around 11 to 22 May each year.
         It greet artists and professionals from around the world
          The enthusiasm of the press at the announcement of the selection on April 14th, the arrival of the greatest filmmakers, actors and other film artists, the massive return of professionals, film-buffs, and a vibrant Film Market
          The president is Jacob Gilles
         The first edition of the Festival was originally set to be held in Cannes in 1939 under the presidency of Louis Lumière.  However, it was not until over a year after the war ended that it finally took place, on 20 September 1946.

          It rapidly gained international reputation

          Awarded for the first time in 1955 to the film Marty directed by Delbert Mann , it was awarded to the best film In Competition until then
         Producers are the ones who have a higher number of attendance

          Before 1972, the films that competed in the selection were chosen by their country of origin. From 1972 onwards, however, the Festival asserted its independence by choosing the films that would feature in the Official Selection for itself.

         In 1932 was the first competitive international film festival in Venice

         Sell films on basis or their artistic qualities, to represent each country and to show different traditions or different point of views the different countries have.

How many films are in the competition:
  • The official selection – the main event of the festival 
  • There are 20 films competing for the palme D’or 
  • There are 10 films competing for the Short Film Palme d’Or.

Judges:
  • President of the Jury – feature film Robert de Niro
  • President of the jury – Cinefoundation and short films Michel Gondry
  • President of the jury – golden camera Joon Ho Bong
  • President of the jury – un certain regard Emir Kusturica

Prices:
  • Competition
  • Palme d'Or - Golden Palm
  • Grand Prix - Grand Prize of the Festival
  • Prix du Jury - Jury Prize
  • Palme d'Or du court métrage - Best Short Film
  • Prix d'interprétation féminine - Best Actress
  • Prix d'interprétation masculine - Best Actor
  • Prix de la mise en scène - Best Director
  • Prix du scénario - Best Screenplay
  • Other Sections
  • Prix Un Certain Regard - Young talent, innovative and audacious works
  • Cinéfondation prizes - Student films
  • Caméra d'Or - Best first feature film
  • Given by Independent Entities
  • Prix de la FIPRESCI - International Federation of Film Critics Prize
  • Prix Vulcain - Awarded to a technical artist by the CST
  • International Critics' Week Prizes
  • Prize of the Ecumenical Jury
  • Palm Dog, for best canine performance.[7]
  • Queer Palm, for LGBT-related films.[8


Feature film

  • Palme d'Or
  • Grand Prix
  • Award for Best Director
  • Award for Best Screenplay
  • Award for Best Actress
  • Award for Best Actor Ex-aequo
  • Jury Prize
  • SHORT FILMS
  • Palme d'Or - Short Film
  • Jury Prize - Short Film

Narrative structure - Cronology


Part 1: (Beginning)
Cinderella moves to her stepmother’s house as her mother dies.
They treat her like a maid.
She was suffering
Evil stepsisters.
The prince needs a princess so they make a dance

Part 2: (Middle-Liminal)
Cinderella isn’t allowed to go to the dance
She cries for this and the fairy god mother appears and gives her a dress and a car to go to the dance.
She can stay beyond 12 because afterwards the magic dies.
She forgets about time and she runs home 1 minute early and she forgets her glass shoe.
The prince stays with the glass shoe.
Liminal point: from being a maid poor girl to a beautiful princess, and then from a princess to a maid again at the deadline established by the fairy godmother.

Part 3: (Ending)
The prince says that he will only marry the princess he met in the dance and which he has the glass shoe.
He tries the shoe to all the girls in the dance. The stepsisters try the shoe and it doesn’t fit, afterwards Cinderella tries it and it fits.
Cinderella marries the prince.
Happy ending <3

Classic structure for the way a story is told on a film?
Beginning, middle, end.

What is the traditional system by which the main events in a film are ordered?
Chronological order

What other terms can we use to describe the pattern or order?
Linear fashion


Narrative chronology:

How are events ordered in the early scenes of “Psycho”?
Hotel – problem established (cause): she don’t have money to marry
Office à has the money and she has to take it to the bank
Her house à she didn’t went to the bank and she is steeling the money (effect)

Are all films ordered in this way?
Not necessarily all movies. Sometimes the movies are done as flashbacks, although they always have a beginning, middle and end.

Examples:
Momentum
Slam dog millionaire
Kill Bill
Thirteen
English patient
Titanic
Pulp fiction

Why do you think a director would choose the approach to the ordering of events?
Do it predictable.
Create interest, tension.
To get some of the exiting things to increase their importance.
To put questions in the audience’s mind to create predictions, suspense, and a wide variety of feelings.


Pulp fiction:
Director: Quentin Tarantino
Actor: John Travolta
Second biggest movie done by the director
1994

What is the chronology in Pulp Fiction (1994)
Fabula is the chronological structure in which the film is constructed

Cronology order
4.A)
2. A)
5.
1
6.
2b
3
4b

Is this purely random? Draw a timeline

How does the change in the chronological order of events affect the film’s cause/effect logic?
There is a breaking between cause and effect. In some scenes we see just causes and in others just effect, normally is cause and then effect. It doesn’t follows a chronological effect.

Effect in the audience?
Engagement
Curiosity
Interest
Don’t understand
Confusing

The narrative ordering of a film pilot (not its chronology) is known as the sujet (the ordering of the telling of the story)

Fabula and sujet

- So the fabula is the raw material of a story in chronological order
- The sujet is the way a story is then organized by the director on film

So how would you describe the sujet of Pulp Fiction?
Unusual, complex, pattern?

What impact does the complexity of its sujet have on the audience?

Thursday, May 5, 2011

Production Journal 2


Today we filmed the whole interview. We managed to record the entire interview at one activity period. We chose to follow shoot as planned, considering the questions we made the past activity. We started filming the establishing shot, and then we filmed the rest of the interview. We had to film from two different cameras two have more camera angles and make the film more interesting as each camera focuses a different person, this creates interest and audience attention. Our problem was that we stay without battery from one of our cameras so we needed to use one of Sr. Calderon’s camera two shoot. For previous filming we have to make sure our cameras have full battery so that this problem doesn’t repeats, so both shoots are from the same quality and it is easier at the time of editing the shots.

Production Journal 1


We have to do an interview in groups of 4. In my group I got the filming part as I will be in charge in filming the whole interview from one camera angle. During the film activity we went to the library to write the script while the other group was filming their interview. The interview has to be about cinema experience, we have to include favorite and worst movies, favorite actors and scenes.
The following week we started filming. First we had to put the lights depending on the light color we wanted and also being careful of the shades lights created. When the light was as we wanted we took the establishing shot of the two people we were filming. Afterwards the interview started and I filmed a close up of the interviewee’s face while the other camera did the same for the interviewer. The point of filming from two different angles is to make the interview more interesting and fun at the time when we end editing and we join the two different camera angles to that both films make one at the end.

Some of the questions we did for the interview where the following:
-         First cinema experience?
-         First actor/actress you admire/worship
-         Last film you cried in?
-         Last film you saw in the cinema?
-         Favorite recent film?
-         Favorite actress or actor?
-         Either Adam Sandler or Zach Galifianakis?
-         Either Sci-Fi or Rom-Com? 

Monday, May 2, 2011

Micro properties of film structure - Psycho

Micro properties of film structure
  • Difference between formalism and realism
  • Mise en scene, mise en shot
  • Colour in film
  • Continually editing
  • Montage versus long take
  • Fast and slow motion
  • Deep focus
  • Camara angles
  • Diagetic & non diagetic sound(soundtracks)


Now for the macro we will look at narrative (what is the story, what is happening how it developes) and narration (how the story is told to us)
Narrative:
-          refers to WHAT happens or what is depicted in films(as wells as novels)
-          refers to actions
Good film director in narrative: Steven Spielberg
Narration:
-          HOW that narrative is presented to the film spectator
-          It is the mechanism that controls how the spectator gains information about those actions, events and characters.
-          Eg. Amelie, fight club, Ridley Scotts Bladerunner



Narrative structure:
What is narrative structure based on?
-          Narrative logic à how it passes from scene to scene
-          Cause and effect – NOT random events. This is what drives the narrative.
-         Narrative logic in action: Event A a man is shot A points a gun in an off-screen direction and fires. In shot B another man is shown collapsing to the ground. Because of the way the shots are edited the spectator reads the event in shot A as the cause of the event in shot B because the editing the look connected.
What drives narrative?
- Cause and effect: one event causes another to happen

The cause and effect logic all relates all directly to Thornill. In other words, narrative development also has to be seen in relation to the characters itself, who motivate the cause-effect logic. The forward momentum North By Northwest is driven by the needs and wishes of Thornill. The film is about him providing his innocence.

Structure of narrative
-          Narrative is also much more than just a series of cause-effect events
-          The overall narrative structure of a film comprises, in the cast majority of cases, a beginning, a middle, and an end.
-          More technically after Tzvetan Todorv:
o         A state of equilibrium: in North by Northwest: Thorinill meeting his friend for a drink(and anticipating a trip to the theater with his mother). Being mistaken by another man by a sign he does to another person.

The liminal period:
-          The middle part of a film generally the most dynamic.
-          It is sometimes referred to as the liminal period
-          This is when narrative transgresses normal social events, before the equilibrium restored.
-          In the north by northwest it is only after Vandamm has been arrests the Thornill can return to normality


Psycho (Saul Bass) 1960
Scene 1:
Girl in bed, in hotel with her boyfriend. They don’t have much money, he is divorced and he has to give money to her wife constantly. He is broke that’s why they cant get married. They are in a hotel which paid by the hour, its lunchtime. He wants her to take afternoon off but she cant so she stands up, get dressed and goes away. She says im late, that’s what link us with the scene one and scene 2.

Scene 2:
Mary enters an office, she works there and sits in her desk. The theme of the story is going to be about money and marry as the co worker is talking about her getting married. Two men enter the offices who are the boss and Mr Cassity, he is giving his daughter (her baby) which says he loves her and he gives her 40thousand money. The boss says that it is dangerous to leave the money in the office because it is a lot of money so they should put it in the bank. The money is handed to Mary so she takes it to the bank, so she takes the money as they trust her, and she says she will go to the bank and afterwards asks to take the day off because she has a headache. The scene ends by her going off the office with the money.

Scence 3:
Mary’s house. Mary is getting dressed, she is packing her things (lots of things showing she will be very days far away), the money is in her bag, sound of tension, body language of tension (worried and determined face). She is putting the money in her bad, grabs her suitcase and goes away. Ends, with her leaving her house.

*In psycho, initial events occur more or less independently to the main characters. Marion is quickly killed off- and the film continues without her. Her boyfriend never reappears meaningfully.
Complete contrast with North by Northwest (1959)

Questions of Psycho:
Effect if we go straight to scene 3:
We would se a woman in the room packing a bag with an envelope, we wouldn’t understand that the envelope has so much money, from who is it. It would make us think that the woman is a victim, there is reason why she is like that and why she is packing everything..

In what ways is scene 3 an effect of scences 1 and 2?
Scene 3 is what is happening due to what she has done in scene two due to her problems in scene 1.

What is the significance of showing the money in the scene immediately after Marion and Sam talk about getting married?
It shows us the important of money and establishes the theme and how something that she needs so much is just in her hands.

Why don’t we see Sam leave the hotel and going to the airport or Lowery and Cassidy eating lunch?
Because it focus that Marion is the main character and it is something we suppose as science change and it shows how time has passed.

What other events are we NOT shown? Why?
She hasn’t gone to the bank, because she still has the money which shows she is steeling the money as it is at her house.

Contrast in money in scene 3 when it focus in the moneys envelope to show the importance of money, maybe by being no a perfect envelope shows that it has been steeled as it is damaged and it doesn’t has a name or direction. The contrast of the white envelope also shows the importance, and being so white might show purity or marriage.

Motif of film? Cause and effect
-