Film Slides
Film Slides
Film Slides
Statement of Inquiry:
Film is an art form which uses the talents of multiple creative professionals
All these cinema posters are films from the Golden Age of Hollywood
The film tells the story of a Jewish hairdresser (Chaplin) who happens to look like a famous dictator. Chaplin is asked to
take his place. At the film’s conclusion, he rejects his position as emperor and gives an impassioned speech that has
become one of the most famous in film history.
2. Can we still learn from this speech today? Is it still relevant? Is it more relevant today?
2. Can we still learn from this speech today? Is it still relevant? Is it more relevant today?
Take notes.
Why were audiences getting tired of Hollywood films by the end of World War II?
Cameron has made a racist film: "Avatar" has a "nauseatingly patronising" racist subtext, says Will Heaven at the Daily
Telegraph. With their "Maasai-style" clothing and "dreadlocked" hair, the Na’vi aliens are a "childish pastiche of the ethnic"
who must rely on the "principled white man" — protagonist Jake Sully — to "lead them out of danger." How did this famously
"left-wing director" make a film with such an "ugly mindset?"
It’s more well-meaning than that: Avatar may not be racist but it is undeniably a "fantasy about race," says Annalee Newitz on
I09.com. Jake Sully's efforts to save the Na’vi aliens is just a "sci-fi rehash of an old white guilt fantasy" that dates back to
"genocide" Europeans perpetrated against Native Americans. But well-meaning characters like Sully are just "a sneaky way of
turning every story about people of color into a story about being white." And directors should resist that impulse.
Cameron’s not racist…but Hollywood is: While Cameron throws around "racial power dynamics" in an "unsettling" way, says
Remington at The Moving Image, the fault comes from higher than that. You can imagine studio executives saying Jake’s
character is necessary "for the audience to connect with," rather than having the world saved by one of these alien "blue
people." The only problem with that is all Hollywood leading roles end up as white male characters — "unless your name is
Will Smith."
Short Film as a Social Commentary
Watch the Disney Pixar short film Purl:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B6uuIHpFkuo
Questions:
How is Purl made to seem vulnerable?
How does Purl physically change? How could that be a symbol of society?
What is the moral of this film?
Watch the following advert by British supermarket Sainsbury’s, based on a true story.
1914 | Sainsbury's Ad | Christmas 2014 - YouTube
- Camera angle
- Symbols
- Music
- Basic plot structure.
Do you think most
advertisements follow the plot
structure of Freitag’s pyramid?
‘S’ stands for ‘shot’. What do you
think the other letters
stand for?
Which
types of
shots are
these?
Answers
TASK
Present it to the
class, pointing out
its use of plot
structure and
perspective (angle
and shot).
Watch the film ‘Small Talk’.
For much of the time, the speaker talks about three sequences in Stanley
Kubrick's film The Shining (1980): here's one of the trailers
All three scenes involve the camera following a child on his tricycle, pedaling
around the empty hotel. However, HOW the different sequences are filmed,
and how differently so from each other, may have an important effect on
how audiences perceive the mood of the scene.
Form vs Content
TASK
In pairs or individually,
answer the following questions in the task discussion space. You can use the links to
start the video at the relevant time.
• 1. What is the difference between the two shots of the trains in terms of the
potential effect on the viewer? (7' to 7'14")
• 2. What makes the first scene feel creepy, according to the speaker? (7'15" to
13'40")
• 3. What makes the second and third scenes of the boy pedaling
around MORE creepy? (13'40" to 15'07)
Formal analysis
Watch the opening 19’ 25” of Juno (Jason Reitman, 2007)
(Available on Disney+)
Formal analysis For example, the simple awareness that Juno’s opening shot [1] is the first
image of the movie informs the analyst of the moment’s most basic and
explicit intent: to convey setting (contemporary middle-class suburbia) and
time of day (dawn).
Formal analysis – Reading deeper
How may this frame convey the character’s state of mind, as she is overwhelmed by the
prospect of her own teenage pregnancy?
Share your thoughts before reading the analysis in the following slide.
Consider this analysis. Does it work?
Juno is at the far left of the frame and is tiny in relationship to
the rest of the wide-angle composition. In fact, we may be well
into the four-second shot before we even spot her.
Her vulnerability is conveyed by the fact that she is dwarfed by
her surroundings.
Even when the scene cuts to a closer viewpoint in the second shot,
she, as the subject of a movie composition, is much smaller in frame
than we are used to seeing, especially in the first shots used to
introduce a protagonist.
Do you still(?) agree?
The fact that she is standing in a front yard contemplating an empty
stuffed chair from a safe distance, as if the inanimate object might
attack at any moment, adds to our implicit impression of Juno as
alienated or off-balance.
Symbols
These shots also present the recurring theme
(or motif) of the empty chair that frames—
and in some ways defines—the story.
In this opening scene, accompanied by Juno’s
voice-over explanation “It started with a
chair,” the empty, displaced object represents
Juno’s status and emotional state, and
foreshadows the unconventional setting for
the sexual act that got her into this mess.
By the story’s conclusion, when Juno
announces “It ended with a chair,” the
motif—in the form of an adoptive mother’s
rocking chair—has been transformed, like
Juno herself, to embody hope and potential.
Analysing a scene
Rewatch the waiting room sequence (18:47 to 20:20)
How many individual camera shots are there?
Then read the analysis in the following slides; notice the comments on
• content,
• form, and
• intention.
Analysis from Barsam & Monahan. (2010). Looking at Movies. An introduction to film
(3rd Ed). New York. W. W. Norton & Company, Inc.
The waiting-room sequence’s opening
shot dollies in (the camera moves
slowly toward the subject), which
gradually enlarges Juno in frame,
increasing her visual significance as
she fills out the clinic admittance form
on the clipboard in her hand.
Our appreciation of Juno’s situation is enhanced by the way editing connects her
reactions to the altered sights and sounds around her, as well as by her implied
isolation—she appears to be the only one who notices the increasingly boisterous
symphony of fingernails. Of course, Juno’s not entirely alone—the audience is with
her. At this point in the sequence, the audience has begun to associate the waiting-
room fingernails with Su-Chin’s attempt to humanize Juno’s condition.
Juno’s head jerks as yet another, even more
invasive sound enters the fray. We cut to
another close-up point-of-view shot, this
time of a young man scratching his arm. At
this point, another pattern is broken,
initiating the scene’s formal and dramatic
climax. Up until now, the sequence
alternated between shots of Juno and shots
of the fingernails as they caught her
attention. Each juxtaposition caused us to
identify with both Juno’s reaction and her
point of view.
This pattern is itself broken in several
ways by the scene’s final shot. We’ve
grown accustomed to seeing Juno look
around every time we see her, but this
time, she stares blankly ahead, immersed
in thought. A cacophony of fingernail
sounds rings in her (and our) ears as the
camera glides toward her for three and a
half very long seconds—a duration six
times longer than any of the previous nine
shots. These pattern shifts signal the
scene’s climax, which is further
emphasized by the moving camera’s
enlargement of Juno’s figure, a visual
action that cinematic language has trained
viewers to associate with a subject’s
moment of realization or decision.
But the shot doesn’t show us
Juno acting on that decision.
We don’t see her cover her
ears, throw down her
clipboard, or jump up from the
waitingroom banquette.
Instead, we are ripped
prematurely from this final
waiting-room image and are
plunged into a shot that drops
us into a different space and at
least several moments ahead in
time—back to Su-Chin chanting
in the parking lot.
Before we can get our
bearings, the camera has
pivoted right to reveal Juno
bursting out of the clinic door
in the background. She races
past Su-Chin without a word.
This jarring She does not have to say
spatial, temporal, anything. Cinematic
and visual shift language— film form—has
helps us feel already told us what she
decided and why.
Juno’s own
instability at this
crucial narrative
moment.
Summative task 1:
You will watch a movie sequence and complete an analysis sheet where
you will:
1) describe the shots in terms of content and form and
2) discuss the possible reasons and intended effects for these film-
making decisions.
Summative task 2:
In groups,
• Choose a scene in one of the short stories we read in Unit 1.
• Sketch a storyboard with the different shots you would have.
• Present your storyboard to the class clearly identifying for each shot:
• Content
• Form
• Intentionality