powerpoint presentation: what is a movie?
Download
Report
Transcript powerpoint presentation: what is a movie?
Here are some main points from Barsam’s
opening chapters.
You already know some things about movies, but
Your knowledge is mostly instinctive
You probably view movies primarily as
entertainment
Learning more about movies is likely to surprise
you.
These are the two key elements of any
narrative form, including film.
FORM: the means through which a subject is
expressed.
CONTENT: the subject of an artwork
The Wizard of Oz?
Courage Under Fire?
What expectations do you have of the
following forms?
Romance
Mystery
Thriller
Fantasy
Children’s film
Instructional exercise video
Patterns are elements that are repeated so
that their meaning is expanded and
intensified.
Movies manipulate space and time in unique
ways.
Movies depend on light.
Movies create the illusion of movement.
Erwin Panofsky:
“the movies give time to space and space to time”
by creating the illusion of movement and the
illusion of the passage of time
The audience remains fixed while the screen
images move in a variety of directions
Film creates the illusion of time passing faster
or slower
Literally means ‘light’ ‘writing’
Began from 1800-1840; proceeded through
Camera obscura
Silhouettes
Glass negatives
Series photography (Edweard Muybridge)
Slow – intermediate - fast speed
Film stock “speed” or “exposure index”
indicates the degree to which the film is
sensitive to light
“Fast” film stock is used in low-light
situations or to capture rapid motion that
would otherwise just be a blur
Film comes in analog and digital formats.
Traditional film is still used to shoot most
movies.
Increasingly, digital film is being used in both
still and motion-picture photograph
Barsam does not devote a lot of discussion to
digital film technology, as it is still relatively
new.
Gauge equals width of the film
8 mm to IMAX (210mm) in width
Small-budget or intimate films are generally shot
in smaller gauge stock (16-35 mm)
Big-budget or blockbuster films are generally shot
on wider gauge stock (70 mm widescreen or IMAX
210mm)
This website provides examples of a variety
of optical illusions, such as motion aftereffect.
http://www.michaelbach.de/ot/mot_adapt/inde
x.html
Persistence of vision (our eyes’ tendency to
“hold over” gapped images)
Phi phenomenon (the illusion of movement
between adjacent events)
Critical flicker fusion helps create this
Apparent motion (our eyes’ tendency to
connect disparate images into a single
smooth motion)
. . .at the movies, when you watch a
character use a computer monitor, and the
monitor seems constantly to flicker. Yet
when you look at your own computer
monitor, it doesn’t seem to flicker at all.
Realism is the creation of scenarios that seem
plausible
Anti-realism is the creation of scenarios that
seem implausible (or defy the laws of
physics)
Verisimilitude is the illusion that a one- or
two-dimensional surface is three-dimensional
and actually real
A.
Plausible (realism)
B.
Implausible (anti-realism)
C.
Three-dimensional or real (verisimilar)
Their 1895 film, “Exiting the Factory,” to
which sound has been added, utilizes fixed
cameras and tries to capture an everyday
event. Here’s the You Tube link:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4nj0vEO4
Q6s
Action
Biography
Comedy
Fantasy
Film noir
Gangster
Horror
Melodrama
Musical
Mystery
Romance
Science fiction
Thriller
War
Western
Which genres does Courage Under Fire belong
to? How does it experiment with conventions
of those genres?
. . .when filmmakers alter generic
conventions
Often they do this to meet the expectations
of a changing society
What has happened to the western genre in
the past two decades?
Factual
Instructional
Documentary
Propaganda
Sometimes, as with fictional films, these subgenres overlap or are impossible to
distinguish or determine.
How can we determine what is a
documentary, what is factual, and what is
propaganda?
Animation is created through manipulating
artificial characters – drawings, figures, etc. –
to provide the illusion of movement and life.
Puppet animation
Clay animation (ClayMation)
Pixilation
Traditional cartoons (like a celluloid flip-book)
Avant-garde films: style becomes subject
These films are often designed to shock or
amaze viewers
They can be deliberately anti-realistic
Stream-of-consciousness is an avant-garde
technique
Films are created not by individuals, but by
large teams of individuals working on special
issues: photography, acting, sound,
direction, editing, special effects, etc.
Traditionally the director is credited with the
overall vision of a particular film. This view of
film is called auteur theory (author theory).