Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Final Film Presentation Essentials

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Final Film Presentation Essentials"— Presentation transcript:

1 Final Film Presentation Essentials

2 YOUR SCENE CANNOT INCLUDE INAPPROPRIATE LANGUAGE OR SUBJECT MATTER!!!!!

3 Meaningful organization – intro, body and conclusion
Essential credits (cast and crew) Brief context setting regarding film and scene Listing of topics/techniques/analyses to be covered in scene Thesis statement asserting how the scene’s cinematic style develops effect/meaning/purpose Screening of the scene Re-screening and purposeful pausing of scene/screen captures Analysis of technique and purpose regarding chosen scene

4 Psycho

5 Essentials Director: Alfred Hitchcock Screenplay: Joseph Stefano
Music: Bernard Hermann Released September 8, 1960 Appears on the National Film Registry as well as #14 on the 2007 AFI List

6 Characters in this scene
Anthony Perkins… Norman Bates Martin Balsam… Detective Arbogast

7 Summary FILM: Psycho begins when a secretary pockets the money that her employer has entrusted her to deposit in the bank. After skipping town, she pulls into the Bates Motel along a lonely stretch of highway. There she meets the seemingly quiet and shy proprietor, Norman. She is brutally murdered in her room’s shower later that night, and the viewer wonders if Norman is her killer. Or could it have been his mother??? SCENE: Following the woman’s disappearance, an investigator visits the Bates Motel to try to find more information on her whereabouts.

8 Topics to Look for While Screening
Long shots Angles Eye-line match Mise en scene

9 Thesis With attention to long shots, angles, eye-line match, and mise en scene, director Alfred Hitchcock portrays not only the ominous setting of the Bates Motel in Psycho, but also the danger that awaits anyone who dares enter. Go to clip (note-I relied on YouTube, so there is a part where the detective goes into the office (where the bird is), but that isn’t in this clip. Clip:

10 The thesis should include:
Director/Filmmaker(s) Title (underline or italicize) Techniques Effect/Meaning/Purpose – in this example, getting there, but should be stronger Thesis With attention to long shots, angles, eye-line match, and mise en scene, director Alfred Hitchcock portrays not only the ominous setting of the Bates Motel in Psycho, but also the danger that awaits anyone who dares enter.

11 ESTABLISHING SHOT: seems to be dusk/ nighttime Light diminishingdanger

12 ESTABLISHING SHOT/MISE EN SCENE:
DETECTIVE ALONE IN SURROUNDINGS COLUMNS/TREES ALMOST LIKE CAGEHE’S TRAPPED

13

14 ESTABLISHING SHOT AND MISE en SCENE
E.S. MAKES DETECTIVE LOOK SMALL IN COMPARISON TO THE BATES HOUSEHIS VULNERABILITY BUILDING COLUMNS/TREES: ENTRAPMENT, DOOM NOTE LIGHT: COMPELLING, DANGEROUS

15 DETECTIVE TO BIRD TO DETECTIVE
EYELINE MATCH: DETECTIVE TO BIRD TO DETECTIVE SUBJECTIVE POV: VIEWER EXPERIENCES/ ASSESSES SITUATION ALONG WITH DETECTIVE MISE EN SCENE with BIRD: OFTEN OMINOUS SIGN, PLUS IT’S STUFFEDCONQUEST MEDIUM SHOT: WHAT DON’T WE SEE?

16 HARSH ANGLES: LIKE GERMAN EXPRESSIONISM TO REFLECT DISORDER; LABYRINTH—IS THERE ANY ESCAPE?

17 LOW ANGLE/ESTABLISHING SHOT/MISE EN SCENE: DETECTIVE HAS ACHIEVED HIS DESTINATION, BUT DANGER LOOMS (LIGHT IN UPPER LEFT CORNERALMOST SUPERNATURAL AND HE STILL LOOKS TRAPPED

18 MEDIUM SHOT: AUDIENCE WONDERS ABOUT SURROUNDING, UNSEEN DANGER
MISE EN SCENE: STAIRS, DOORS, HALL WITH ARCHED DOORWAY: LIKE A LABYRINTHE NEAT, ORDERLY: DECEIVING? STERILE? EYELINE MATCH: VIEWER BECOMES LIKE A DETECTIVE AS WELL

19 If this were a real project…
The clip we viewed would be too short; yours needs to be about 4 to 5 minutes. If this were a complete presentation, the rest of the clip would be analyzed. If this were a complete presentation, some kind of conclusion would be included as well.


Download ppt "Final Film Presentation Essentials"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google