Evaluation Question 1 Conventions - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Evaluation Question 1 Conventions

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Title: Evaluation Question 1 Conventions


1
Evaluation Question 1
  • Conventions

2
Generic Conventions of my Film
  • My film belongs to the crime/thriller genre
  • Examples of conventions of the genres I followed
    are blood and murder was featured within it,
    black and white filtering, costume follows
    convention, the twist at the end of the film
    followed thriller conventions, Props e.g. knives
    and guns from crime. I followed the conventional
    plot a lot as usually a lot of crime films are a
    straight forward who done it with a twist
    ending.
  • I went against typical conventions expected to be
    seen inside that genre by the audience by having
    an upbeat fast paced scene at the end of the film
    as the conclusion. Conventionally films arent
    meant to end with the most action packed but mine
    did.
  • I varied the generic conventions by having my
    plot follows convention of the genre however my
    style goes against genre convention a lot as
    thrillers that are set in contemporary times
    arent usually in black and white except for
    movies such as Sin City which also challenges the
    genre stereotype. We did this in the silent
    scenes and during the flashbacks to put
    voiceovers and music over them and differ them
    from the scenes where the detectives are working.

3
Comparing and Contrasting My Film
  • Comparing and contrasting my film to 3 examples
  • The Usual Suspects, Prisoners, Out of the past
  • Narrative structure It follows a twist at the
    end like The Usual Suspects where the man they
    were looking for was right under their nose the
    whole time.
  • Plot The plot of our films follows a classic who
    done it
  • Themes friendship, mystery. Much like the themes
    of Prisoners.
  • Characters Classic Good Cop/Bad cop characters
    like those in most crime dramas.
  • Setting/mise-en-scene A police station, like Out
    of the Past and The Usual Suspects
  • Cinematography/Editing (for example, types of
    shot, pace, transitions, music) Voice over in
    black and white explaining thoughts of a
    detective with music

4
BARTHES CODE
  • The Hermeneutic Code (HER)
  • The Hermeneutic Code refers to any element of the
    story that is not fully explained and hence
    becomes a mystery to the reader.
  • The full truth is often avoided, for example in
  • Snares deliberately avoiding the truth.
  • Equivocations partial or incomplete answers.
  • Jamming's openly acknowledge that there is no
    answer to a problem.
  • The purpose of the author in this is typically to
    keep the audience guessing, arresting the enigma,
    until the final scenes when all is revealed and
    all loose ends are tied off and closure is
    achieved.
  • The Proairetic Code (ACT)
  • The Proairetic Code also builds tension,
    referring to any other action or event that
    indicates something else is going to happen, and
    which hence gets the reader guessing as to what
    will happen next.
  • The Hermeneutic and Proairetic Codes work as a
    pair to develop the story's tensions and keep the
    reader interested. Barthes described them as
  • "...dependent on ... two sequential codes the
    revelation of truth and the coordination of the
    actions represented there is the same constraint
    in the gradual order of melody and in the equally
    gradual order of the narrative sequence."
  • The Semantic Code (SEM)
  • This code refers to connotation within the story
    that gives additional meaning over the basic
    denotative meaning of the word.
  • It is by the use of extended meaning that can be
    applied to words that authors can paint rich
    pictures with relatively limited text and the way
    they do this is a common indication of their
    writing skills.
  • The Symbolic Code (SYM)
  • This is very similar to the Semantic Code, but
    acts at a wider level, organizing semantic
    meanings into broader and deeper sets of meaning.
  • This is typically done in the use of antithesis,
    where new meaning arises out of opposing and
    conflict ideas.
  • The Cultural Code (REF)
  • This code refers to anything that is founded on
    some kind of canonical works that cannot be
    challenged and is assumed to be a foundation for
    truth.

5
Applying Barthes Codes
  • Applying Barthes Codes to my film
  • I created expectation by following typical
    convention that most people already recognise in
    crime dramas it wasnt a huge surprise when his
    partner turned out to be the murderer. However,
    we used shots that suggested his partner could be
    the murderer as he was always watching him and he
    was always there.
  • I built suspense through having long shots that
    focused on something suspicious, for example, in
    Scene 3 I recorded a shot from behind the
    antagonist that then focused onto the protagonist
    and back onto the antagonist. This created
    suspense as it seemed like the antagonist was
    watching over the detective and trying to cover
    his tracks. This relates to the action enigma.

6
Genre as a Concept
  • Genre is a useful concept to apply to a short
    film because it gives a basic outline for your
    film to follow and helps achieve what audiences
    expect from that genre.
  • It doesnt follow every convention with that
    genre and can be described as a crime
    drama/thriller as it takes conventions from both
    different genres such as a montage which are
    commonly seen within crime dramas and also using
    action within the final scene which is common
    within Thrillers.
  • Most people dont watch short films and when they
    do the film is too short to completely follow
    convention. It wouldnt be uncommon for a film
    set for one audience and inside one genre using
    different conventions of other genres or even
    being a hybrid film altogether.

7
Cinematography Conventions
  • In order for any film to attract its target
    audience it has to follow conventions from a
    specific stylised cinematography. This is why I
    used the basic camera conventions of
    crime/thriller such as low angled shots on the
    villain, seen in the top right image. And a high
    angled shot on the hero. This is because when
    filming I followed the convention of low angled
    shots looking up on a character representing a
    negative image, and makes the audience believe
    that the character is evil, or a villain. This is
    good for my film as the twist is that one of the
    detectives is evil, and this angle shot is a
    subliminal message towards that. I also took
    lighting into consideration when recording this
    shot as I recorded it in a dark room to further
    illustrate this characters negative connotation.
    Furthermore, I used a slightly high angled shot
    on the hero detective, this is because part of
    that theory suggests that looking down on a
    character gives them an almost angelic look that
    makes the audience believe that they are one of
    the good guys.

8
Sound Conventions
  • I recorded and added voiceovers to my film as
    they are heavily featured within the subgenre
    Noir in the overall crime genre. This
    convention helped progress the story plot and
    give my audience an insight into what the
    characters are thinking.

9
Editing Conventions
  • Editing conventions of a thriller usually focus
    on creating a suspenseful atmosphere through
    quick cuts and changing camera angles quickly to
    create disorder and to disorientate the audience
    to create tension. I did this in Scene 4 when I
    created flash cuts throughout the interview to
    make it appear to the audience rapid and fast
    throughout the scene, its similar in a way to
    the shower scene in Alfred Hitchcock's Psycho
    as its a rapid scene with lots of different
    angles thats easy for the audience to follow but
    at the same time disorientates them a little and
    make them uncomfortable through creating tension.
    The four shots on the left are all used within 8
    seconds of each other, creating a fast pace for a
    suspense built scene. I also a filter to create
    some scenes in black and white such as scene 3
    and 5. This edit of the scene follows the crime
    convention of Noir films. In order to keep my
    film fast paced I added brief cuts to black, to
    let the audience have a break from tension and
    suspense in the film, like at the end of Scene 4,
    the fastest pace scene within my film and at the
    start of Scene 2.

10
Mise En Scene Conventions
  • Costume was important in my film as we needed to
    make sure the detectives both looked professional
    but at the same time, one of the detectives
    looked like he was slacking and the other looked
    like he was more of a Try hard detective. This
    was important as it helped to separate and
    distinguish the different personas of the
    characters. Without following this convention I
    feel as though my audience might have had a hard
    time giving the detectives different
    personalities as the film is only 5 minutes long
    and it isnt a very long time to develop and
    present a character with an in-depth personality.
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