The Hunger Games- Catching Fire is the second film in the hotly anticipated Hunger Games series, based on the multimillion selling series of books. The books themselves made over 36.5 million dollars in the US alone. The first film in the trilogy made a 5-day total of $173,707,733 which has now been topped by the second film which is $186,356,317, probably because the first film was so successful, then everyone who went to see it told their friends to see the next one. The first Hunger Games was successful because the books already had an enormous cult following which reflected in the film sales.
Thursday, November 28, 2013
Tuesday, November 26, 2013
Aims & Context of BROCA
'BROCA'-film/video production
Sci-fi, avant-garde short
Target audience of quiet children over 10, quiet, arty teenagers (probably girls), adults interested in arty films
Use abstract synthesiser sound inspired by Tarkovsy, Herzog, Kubrick
Explore film issues such as isolation, medial negligence, neglect of children, breakdowns in communication & apply work on creating meaning almost solely through visuals & abstract sound
Try out techniques from Tarkovsky, Kubrick in directing
Use non-verbal communication & mime (see Marcel Marceau)
Sci-fi, avant-garde short
Target audience of quiet children over 10, quiet, arty teenagers (probably girls), adults interested in arty films
Use abstract synthesiser sound inspired by Tarkovsy, Herzog, Kubrick
Explore film issues such as isolation, medial negligence, neglect of children, breakdowns in communication & apply work on creating meaning almost solely through visuals & abstract sound
Try out techniques from Tarkovsky, Kubrick in directing
Use non-verbal communication & mime (see Marcel Marceau)
Thursday, November 21, 2013
Caligari Scene Analysis
Das
Kabinet Des Doktor Caligari-Kidnap & chases scene analysis
The kidnap & chase scene of Das Kabinet Des Doktor Caligari is set
at night, suggested by the inter-title “Night Again” & the blue tint. The
night-time setting ups the sense of danger for me, as I know that a convention
of the horror genre is that bad things happen in the dark. Being a low-budget
German Expressionist horror film, the entire film was filmed in a studio on
simplistic painted black & white sets, which give an interesting
mise-en-scene full of hidden meanings & a startling contrast between black
& white with little grey in between. The low budget, & subsequently
poor quality of equipment, meant that the filmmakers had little access to
lighting equipment. They made do with putting their expressionist artistry to
good use by painting the shadows required onto the sets in thick black paint.
The contrast between black & white symbolizes the stark space between
‘good’ & ‘evil’ in this allegorical world.
The first shot in this scene is a long shot
where the mise-en-scene is showing Francis (Friedrich Feher), the protagonist, climbing
down a staircase or walkway with the fictional town of Holstenwall in the
background. His performance is tentative; he keeps looking from side to side as
he walks. There have been so many murders in the narrative lately so he has to
watch his back. Watching, I also know of
the imminent danger awaiting the main characters, which causes feelings of
dread. He looks round the corner, is satisfied that coast is clear & he
disappears around the corner.
We then cut to a long shot of the fairground,
as Francis appears round the corner, still apprehensive. The circus tents create
a distorted mise-en-scene & disorienting backdrop that echoes both the
insanity of the situation that poor Francis is finding himself in & also
the real insanity creating the entire delusion in his mind.
Francis becomes a dark shape against the
angular background as he scuttles tentatively from one tent to another,
checking each time to ensure no assailants lie behind any corners. He is
paranoid & I sympathize with this paranoia & this is reflected in the bizarrely
leaning buildings around him show that his life & mind are dangerously
close to falling apart around him.
Throughout the film, stark contrast between
black & white are drawn up to show otherness & the lack of middle
ground in the old-fashioned town of Holstenwall, in the insular mind of Francis
himself & in the wider world of post-war Germany. Francis is being proactive;
he is actually trying to solve the crimes committed by Cesare by investigating.
He is acting to affect the situation, he is trying to change his situation, and
thus he wears black.
In the next shot, we see the caravan Dr.
Caligari shares with his beloved sleeping slave. The caravan is leaning sharply
to the side, almost as if it could tip over at any moment (like Francis’ mind)
& the white façade cocoons the evil within.
Francis sneaks up to the window (which we
subsequently cut to a close up shot of) as Francis gingerly looks inside. We
then get to see what Francis sees (eye-line shot) inside. We are shown the
dozing Dr. Caligari as he guards what Francis thinks is a sleeping Cesare (but
is actually a dummy as the real Cesare is creeping into Jane’s room). The bars
of the window frame the faces of the Doctor & his slave-dummy. The centre
bar separates the two faces, showing the mounting separation between the two
characters; Caligari thinks he is still totally in control of his beloved
slave, but in reality his hold is more easily broken than he’d like to think.
As is a convention of horror films, the obsessive love of a beautiful woman is
the downfall of man; Caligari loses his dearest servant to a woman & Cesare
loses his life to her. This symbolism
dates back to time immemorial, when early tales such as the tale of The Fall in
Judaeo-Christian mythology, where the first woman cause the first man to lose
paradise.
The window bars also show dominance in the
relationship between Caligari & Cesare as Caligari is placed above Cesare.
He is in control but the separation down the middle shows that his slave is
beginning to develop his own autonomy, albeit a distorted view of freedom that
is tragically cut short. It is also interesting to note that the camera is
looking down through the window (a high angle), perhaps showing the power
Francis feels as he takes the investigation into his own hands & takes
control of his own destiny. The next shot comes from behind Francis as he looks
through the window into the darkness. He gasps & we can feel his relief,
which, in the next shot, we find out to be badly judged, as all is not well. As
he feels relief at Cesare’s supposed stillness, the real Cesare is outside his
girlfriend’s house, about to make every boyfriend’s worst nightmare a reality
(at least in the world of the flashback/delusion in Francis’ head).
The next shot is mostly black, showing only
the pretty, delicate head of the sleeping Jane, but then we iris-out to see her
full bedroom in all its Expressionistic glory. The mise-en-scene screams of
secret danger & the false security provided by wealth & social
normality. There are sharp points hanging over the window where Cesare will
soon be standing & huge, dark spaces either side of Jane’s bed, which
highlight her angelic sleeping appearance. She lies as if she is a young
teenage girl who is lost in romantic infatuation with the man she loves.
Whether the man in her dreams is Cesare or Francis is never quite revealed. I
personally prefer to think that she is dreaming of Cesare as her reaction to
him earlier in the film betrayed her confusion. Caligari presents Cesare to her
in his cabinet & he turns slowly to lock eyes with her. She stares into his
eyes then suddenly looks very shocked & runs away. As Cesare was not doing
anything scary or dangerous at this point, I can only speculate that Jane’s
reaction of fear was down to a fear of her own attraction to the somnambulist,
as opposed to the somnambulist himself.
Thursday, November 14, 2013
Our first creative project reflective analysis
The genre of our group project was horror. We made sure it complied with genre conventions by turning the lights off to make low-key lighting, having the principle character as a vulnerable female (in the same vein as Halloween, Happy Birthday to Me & Black Christmas), having a shadowy antagonist with no discernible face, making use of shadows on walls (like in Nosferatu), minimalistic dialogue to add tension & jerky camera-work to show the disorienting & twisted nature of the antagonist's brain.
The first shot is a travelling shot down some stairs from the point of view of the antagonist. He walks down the stairs then stops at the door, where the camera tilts upwards & we are able to see through the porthole. Through this porthole, we can see the female protagonist as she sits at a table, trying to write.
The next shot was taken in the corner of the room & pans around the room to show how empty the room is, giving the female protagonist a sense of isolation. At one point while the camera pans past some roof beams in the shape of a cross on its side, which shows that goodness has been overturned by evil in this sequence. The next shot shows the protagonist twirling a pen in her hand as she tries to think of something to write. This is a mid-shot. Suddenly, she gets a sense that something is happening, which causes her to drop the pen. The next shot shows her going under the table to retrieve it as she crawls towards the camera, which shows the danger she is in as she is in a very claustrophobic space. The next shot is a long shot of the door swinging open with nobody behind it. This is often used in the horror genre, as the audience would expect a person to be behind the door but instead there is nothing, which shows the supernatural aspect of the antagonist. The next shot shows the protagonist looking scared of the unknown threat. She crawls out from under the table & the camera follows her. The next shot shows her standing nervously, looking around for her assailant, as he walks past her & casts a shadow on the wall behind her. She calls out & walks past the camera, revealing the shadowy figure of the antagonist, his face obscured by darkness. The camera zooms in on him, showing his power & importance.
The first shot is a travelling shot down some stairs from the point of view of the antagonist. He walks down the stairs then stops at the door, where the camera tilts upwards & we are able to see through the porthole. Through this porthole, we can see the female protagonist as she sits at a table, trying to write.
The next shot was taken in the corner of the room & pans around the room to show how empty the room is, giving the female protagonist a sense of isolation. At one point while the camera pans past some roof beams in the shape of a cross on its side, which shows that goodness has been overturned by evil in this sequence. The next shot shows the protagonist twirling a pen in her hand as she tries to think of something to write. This is a mid-shot. Suddenly, she gets a sense that something is happening, which causes her to drop the pen. The next shot shows her going under the table to retrieve it as she crawls towards the camera, which shows the danger she is in as she is in a very claustrophobic space. The next shot is a long shot of the door swinging open with nobody behind it. This is often used in the horror genre, as the audience would expect a person to be behind the door but instead there is nothing, which shows the supernatural aspect of the antagonist. The next shot shows the protagonist looking scared of the unknown threat. She crawls out from under the table & the camera follows her. The next shot shows her standing nervously, looking around for her assailant, as he walks past her & casts a shadow on the wall behind her. She calls out & walks past the camera, revealing the shadowy figure of the antagonist, his face obscured by darkness. The camera zooms in on him, showing his power & importance.
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