as film induction presentation

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Key terms in Film Studies

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Introduction to Film StudiesIntroduction to Film Studies

Key Terms

Basic DefinitionsBasic Definitions

Narrative is the telling of the story - it involves more than just the story itself

Genre is the kind of film – SciFi, Action Adventure, RomCom...

NarrativeNarrative

Thinking about narrative means thinking about...● Plot (What happens)● Setting (In time and place – when and where)● Characters (Who's involved)● Point of view and sympathy/empathy (Who do we

identify with? Who's story do we follow?● Time (Flashbacks? Time lapses? Real time?)● Themes and Representations (What's it all about?)

GenreGenre

Genre means different things in different contexts● Cinema is a genre● Fictional films are a genre● Horror, SciFi, Westerns, Gangster films, Musicals...

all genres● Slasher horror, monster horror, supernatural horror..

all subgenres...● I could go on

Generic ConventionsGeneric Conventions

Conventions are “The unwritten rules of genre”● Iconographic conventions – Westerns have horses,

six guns, wide brimmed hats...● Mise en Scene conventions – they take place in

dusty streets, rough saloons, deserted towns, isolated railway lines...

● Sound conventions – we hear sparse music, slide guitars, gunshots, horses hooves...

Making MeaningMaking Meaning

● Denotation – what something is – a dictionary definition. Red is a colour on the spectrum with a wavelength of 700 nanometers

● Connotation – all of the different things that something might mean – Red means danger, passion, blood, fire, lust, stop, warmth, love...

Most film analysis is about understanding and identifying connotations.

Cinematic TermsCinematic Terms

● Cinematography● Editing● Diagetic and Non-Diagatic Sound● Mise en Scene● Iconography● Performance

CinematographyCinematography

The work of the camera. As photography is to a picture (or photo), so cinematography is to a film.

● The type of shot – Extreme Close Up, High Angle Shot, 2-Shot, Establishing Shot, Master Shot

● The camera movement – Pan, Tilt, Track, Cant● Light and Shadow● Colour and texture

EditingEditing

The movement from shot to shot, generally achieved in post-production.

● Types of edit – Cut, Fade, Dissolve, Circle Fade, Wipe

● Editing and storytelling● Editing and manipulating time and space● Parallel Editing● Seamless Editing● Montage

SoundSound

You know what sound means. However...● Diagetic sound is made within the world of the film

(the 'diagesis') – dialogue, traffic, gunshots, aliens in their flying saucers, music on the radio or at a concert...If you were there in the film, you would hear it.

● Non-Diagetic sound is voiceover, background music and that's about it. It makes meaning for the audience but you wouldn't hear it if you were there in the film.

Mise en SceneMise en Scene

● What's on the screen. Everything you see.● Locations – real ones or sets – realistic or

fantasy/sci-fi● People – and their clothes, props, their arrangement

on the screen, their movement● Colours, shapes, light and shadow

IconographyIconography

Significant images – things with lots of connotations

● An icon was originally an image of a god● Different genres have distinctive iconography – guns

and cars in gangster films, metal men and space ships in sci-fi

● Icons are images loaded with meaning – short cuts to getting messages across

PerformancePerformance

What the actor does● How do actors create character?● How much do they 'act' to make meaning?● Or is meaning made by the situations they are in?● Does it matter that the actor does their own stunts?

Sings the songs? Dances the dance routines?

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