Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Studying films Revision for The Woman in Black. What makes a film? There are lots of important techniques used to make films interesting to watch. Meaning.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Studying films Revision for The Woman in Black. What makes a film? There are lots of important techniques used to make films interesting to watch. Meaning."— Presentation transcript:

1 Studying films Revision for The Woman in Black

2 What makes a film? There are lots of important techniques used to make films interesting to watch. Meaning is generated through the combination of various techniques.

3 Techniques Camera shots Camera angles Sound techniques Lighting Mise-en-scene

4 Camera shots Extreme close-up Close-up

5 Close Up Shot A close-up contains almost no background, but focuses on the whole of an object or a person’s face. Close-up shots are used to give detail, often of a character’s personality, and can reveal the thoughts and feelings of a character.

6 Extreme Close Up An extreme close-up focuses on part of an object or face; for example an eye. Extreme close-up shots are often used to show tension.

7 Medium Shot Shows a figure from the waist up, with some background.

8 Long Shot A long shot includes a full-length human figure and some of the surroundings. This shot shows the link between the characters and their environment.

9 Establishing Shot The scene is shown from a distance off, and the audience is able to appreciate the setting for the scene or movie.

10 Point of View (POV) shot A POV or point of view shot shows the audience the scene through the eyes of one of the characters. This gives the audience an idea of being in the scene and experiencing the action or event.

11 Camera angles High Angle shot- camera looks down on characters/ action Low Angle shot- camera looks up on characters/ action These shots are both about communicating power – who is in a position of influence? Who is weak or in an intimidating situation?

12

13

14

15

16 Eye Level Shot Communicates a balance of power.

17 Camera Movements Tracking- camera moves on tracks Panning- camera stays in one place but follows movement.

18 Mise-en-scene This is a French term meaning “put on stage” It basically means everything that you see in each scene of a film. Sets are DELIBERATELY constructed for a reason. Nothing is rarely in a scene by chance.

19 In film this means everything that appears before the camera, it literally means putting in to the scene. This could be character, setting, costume, makeup, lighting, special effects, dialogue, other sounds, space and time. It is better to examine the functions of mise-en- scene. One film may use it to create realism, others might seek different effects: comic exaggeration, supernatural terror, understated beauty, and any number of other functions.

20 Were these monkeys deliberately placed in the house?

21 Diegegis In the world of the narrative Diegetic Sound – what the characters actually hear. It might be birds chirping, or a character speaking to another.

22 Non Diegetic Sounds Sounds that the characters in the narrative cannot hear. Music  What kind of music does the audience in a film can hear?  What is the effect of different types of music? Over-narration

23 Lighting HIGH KEY Lighting = bright lights can suggest excitement, happiness, warmth… LOW KEY Lighting = dark and gloomy / low (can suggest night time, fear, evil… BACKLIT / SILHOUETTE = mystery, why can their faces not be seen? CONTRASTS Sun/ moon = day/ night = safety/ fear Good/Evil Shadows- eerie atmosphere, horror

24 How does the lighting add meaning to this film?

25 How does lighting add meaning to this film still?

26 Dialogue Accent (the accent that characters have) Dialogue (what characters say) Pace / Volume / Tone - Not just what is said, but how it is said.

27 Describe the Year 10 Student who asks: “Oi, what you doin’?” “Excuse me, but may I enquire what all this commotion is about?” “What’s happening over here?”

28 Costume What the characters wear. - A character might be wearing a top hat and bow tie. What the characters don’t wear. - What might it mean if the King was all of a sudden wearing rags?

29 What do these costumes communicate to us? Indiana Jones – The Professor

30 Indiana Jones – The Adventurer

31 Sometimes costumes can contain colour symbolism

32 Don’t fall in to generalisations though, sometimes black can mean mourning:

33 Distance How might distance indicate relationship?

34

35 Be careful with generalisations – closeness does not always mean two characters are on friendly terms.

36

37

38

39

40


Download ppt "Studying films Revision for The Woman in Black. What makes a film? There are lots of important techniques used to make films interesting to watch. Meaning."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google