Class: Art of Film I

Class: Art of Film I

Sunday, February 27, 2011

Online Film Analysis

Clip A:
What I thought was the most relevant and came up the most in the clip was the axis of Action, specifically around the round card table. I felt that it followed the rule because I didn’t feel like the people were out of place. The lighting at the table is hard because the light seems to come from one centralized place. This part of the clip also has a deep focus because to help create the setting of a casino they had “dancers” in the background while the characters were in the foreground. I could instantly tell that Brad Pitt was the “leader” at the table because when he was on the screen he was shot at a low angle giving the audience the idea that he has authority. Most, if not all of the editing was cuts. In regard to dimensions, when Brad Pitt is drinking at the end of the scene in the back room he finishes drinking at the bar outside which I believe is graphic relation. 
Clip B:
In this clip the sound started out diegetic. It had the gun shot, people talking, the carousel music, people screaming, then when the fight breaks out on the carousel and the man offers to fix the carousel music starts to change and makes the audience feel the suspense of the outcome of the fight and wonder how the man is going to crawl under the carousel. This montage reminded me of the Kuleshov effect and the Bourne Ultimatum scene because the closer and closer we got to the outcome the faster the cuts would go by and the cuts went from the long shot of the crowd a medium shot of the men fighting to a close up of the woman screaming and it creates an understanding of everything that is going on while at the same time feeling a little jumpy. The perspective of the fighting on the carousel was zoom lens because the background would move and the camera itself didn’t. This also was a deep focus because you could see the bystanders in the background and the fighting in the middle ground and in the foreground you can see the horses hoof coming in and out of the frame. I thought it was interesting that Hitchcock didn’t use a high angle until the end of the clip when we already knew that the carousel was coming to a stop. 
Clip D:
The whole clip was a long take. When the axis of action changed the audience can see the movement as the steady cam followed various different people, the axis changed quite a few times throughout the scene and it fit very well into the long shot. There was music which was non-diegetic, it helped create the sense that the studio building was busy and bustling along with a feeling of suspense making me wonder why we are seeing all these different things. Also there was diegetic sound on top of the non-diegetic sound because the characters were talking. There is a deep focus for the entire clip as it is at a medium/long shot, not showing us the whole picture the whole time but seeing more than just the waist up in some parts. We can see what the setting is based off of the depth of the shots even though we are drawn to what the camera is following. 
Clip E:
In this clip the axis of action is followed well during the characters conversation. The shot is between a close up and medium shot, there is a negative space on either side of both characters which makes the room feel empty and makes the characters seem farther apart. The sound starts as diegetic with the harpsichord playing and their talking but then when he starts to imagine the opera he wrote the sound turns to non-diegetic as we start to hear a woman singing and cuts to the opera scene that he is thinking of. The woman singing is now diegetic since the scene changed and we see briefly a deep focus of the director in the foreground, the woman in the middle ground and the stage in the background. Then the clip cuts back to the room with the harpsichord and the sound is non-diegetic again since the audience can still hear the opera but can no longer see it. Then again it changes once the character stops reveling in his thoughts of the opera and is back to diegetic with the two of them talking again. 

Thursday, February 17, 2011

Best Picture Nominee



Pre Writing
1.      True Grit:
·         Graphic fight scenes
·         Seems  to fit the Western category well
·         Make-up can do wonders.. That little girl in real life is so much prettier
2.      The Social Network:
·         Should have been called “FACEBOOK” or something with that in   the title
·         Interesting story
·         I don’t like Justin Timberlake’s character, but I like him
3.      Toy Story 3:
·         Hilarious but sad at the same time
·         Great movie for the whole family
·         Lotso Hug and Bear/ Trixie the dinosaur
4.      The Kings Speech:
·         Great story
·         Amazing setting/ scenery
·         I wish he didn’t have to stutter, but it’s funny when he swears silently to himself
5.      Winter’s Bone:
·         I didn’t need to see her cutting of her dads hands with a chainsaw
·         The actress for Ree did well at portraying her character
·         I wish I could go and help her with taking care of her younger siblings
6.    Inception
·         Confusing/ I didn’t understand what was or wasn’t a dream
·         The story between Cobb and Mal was really sad  
·         I liked that Ellen Page and Cillian Murphy were recognizable actors but then I kept picturing them in their other roles   

Ranking:
1.    Toy Story 3
I love little kid movies because they tend to have less violence and gore. I have always liked Disney movies especially. Toy Story 3 made me feel like I was younger again, not saying that I feel old, but I feel like everyone wants to be younger than they are. I don’t remember any major flaws in the movie. I think that the movie over all is one of my all time favorite movies, disregarding the limitations of the movies for this assignment. However, compared to the other movies in this assignment I believe it is best because I think that people of all ages genuinely like it even if they don’t admit it. In my opinion it is bound to be a classic, I’m not completely what is classified as a classic movie though. Toy Story 3 has can be interpreted to have so many different messages such as: trusting one another, respecting others, never giving up, sharing, caring, loving, and so many more. I love the “feel good” types of movies and that is why this outranks all the others, it is the only movie that I consider to be relatable to all ages and have a variety of good messages and lessons that anyone can use where ever they are in life.
2.    The Kings Speech
I really enjoyed The Kings Speech, I had wanted to go see it in theaters but I didn’t have time and I am glad we could see it! I didn’t expect it to be as funny as it was at times. I liked the balance of how there were very serious and sometimes stressful things and yet there was still the light hearted and happy times. Personally this balance made me feel like when I am stressed about something, like King George was stressed about his speech, I can always persevere and get through it, that it isn’t the end of the world or my life if something isn’t perfect. I have a hard time accepting that fact but I liked how I interpreted that idea from the events in the movie. Since this movie was about a real person I liked it even more. I like to assume that any movie I go to is something that is really happening somewhere. Sometimes this gets me into some troubling nightmares and I tend to be scared when I’m in a situation where I relate it to a movie scene that I have seen before. (I can’t do anything at night because of the Scream movies). I really liked Geoffrey Rush in this movie, he played his character well and the scenes I remember most are with him. However, I wasn’t able to take seriously the characters that were played by people who were in Harry Potter, I always have an issue if a person plays a very distinctive character in one movie and then in the next movie they are in I expect them to act similarly. (I find it funny that in Harry Potter Cedric Diggory dies who is played by Robert Pattinson and then he comes back as a Vampire which is undead being)    
3.    The Social Network
I didn’t like this movie very much; I didn’t think that it had a very good plot line or a good reason to be made. It is so high on my list because there was not a lot of graphic scenes and because I like Justin Timberlake, but I didn’t like his character in this movie. It is higher than the other three because I didn’t completely understand them and I don’t think I appreciate these movies, or any movie as much as I should, which is part of the reason I wanted to take this Art of Film class. I don’t understand why the mark Zuckerberg character is so socially awkward. I don’t know anything about the real Zuckerberg but I feel like he isn’t this socially awkward and I wish it wasn’t so exaggerated. The cinematography was wonderful however. I felt that the majority of the time the setting, the mood and the actions by the characters all made what the director and others within the movies making process were trying to aim for.
4.    Inception
The story was very intriguing but I had a hard time staying focused and with the movie, but I really liked Inception, maybe I should have placed it higher than The Social Network but I didn’t see this movie until after I wrote the previous paragraph. The editing and imagery of the movie was so intense and beautiful all at the same time. I loved how within each of the different levels of dreams that people go into the setting and feel would change since it is each different persons dream. I still wonder what parts were and was not a dream, but as I have been told it is purposely made in a way to make you think and challenge your previous thoughts. I still think that I have appropriately placed this in my ranking categories because there was a lot of action and fighting, which in my opinion is better than some of the gruesome things in True Grit and Winter’s Bone.
5.    True Grit
I love the story of how this little girl goes to avenge her fathers’ killer; I would like to think that I have enough spunk and enthusiasm to do the same if I were in her position.  I felt so terrible at the end of the movie seeing that she lost her arm because of the snake bite and I wanted to know more about her relationship with the Texas Ranger after they left him up in the mountains. I didn’t like the abuse that the women went through and I didn’t like the fig fight scene when the guys fingers are cut off, it made me want to stop watching the movie all together. I liked it better than Winters Bone because I could easily see the point and I felt like I could relate more to her than Ree in Winters Bone. I didn’t feel the same connect that I didn’t in the other movies I ranked higher. I have a tendency to judge movies based off of a few scenes that greatly impact me and I could love the movie but say I don’t like it because of one scene that bothered me.
6.    Winter Bone
Winters Bone was a very interesting movie and I liked to see a side that movies haven’t always depicted, the less fortunate and those who are struggling. I felt like the whole movie was shot in the same place and that the lighting rarely changed.  I wanted there to be something more unexpected to happen. I didn’t want to see them chainsaw off the hands of her father, that was unexpected, but I wanted the plot to thicken more. I felt that the plot never reached a climax or had a rise or fall but it somehow go to a good/ happy point in the end. I chose this last because of all of the other mentioned reasons. I can see that the acting was very well done and the story did have interest but I had the hardest time relating and that is one of the things that I believe can capture the audience and really change their perspective.