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Published bySteven Shields Modified over 9 years ago
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Basic types of sound Realistic sound – derived from actual sources (footsteps, voices, cars, etc.) Synthetic sound – invented and have no counterpart in real life (light sabers in Star Wars, for example)
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Types of Sound (more specific) 1) Dialogue – characters speaking - Voice over narration – monologue that accompanies images that may or may not be delivered by someone on screen - Character Speech - Consistent with characters - Hamlet (1996) vs. Dazed and Confused (1993)
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Types of Sound (more specific) 2) Sound Effects - Falls into one of two categories: - Effects design – creative manipulation of sound sources (layering sounds in instead of a direct, live recording - Foley technique – direct recording of live sound effects that are performed in synchronization with the picture after filming is complete
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Types of Sound (more specific) 3) Movie Music - Has always been a part of film, dating back to silent film era, however not original music was used - used to follow action on screen and to illustrate a character’s emotions
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Codes of Sound Design 1) The Sound Hierarchy - Dialogue – most important - Music – 2 nd - Sound Effects – third Robert Altman’s Nashville (1975) plays with this hierarchy
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Codes of Sound Design 2) Sound Perspective - Sound that embodies the properties of the physical spaces seen on screen - use of sound to convey information about physical space - often, but not always, correlates with visual perspective (long shot = sound farther away from audience)
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Codes of Sound Design 3) Synchronous and Nonsynchronous Sound - Synchronous – matched with a clear source on screen - Non – does not match with any source
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Codes of Sound Design 4) Sound Bridge - dialogue or sound effects are laid across, or bridge, two or more shots or scenes - shift of synchronous and non-synchronous in a way that establishes unities of action and time across the edit Alternative Sound Bridge - Switch to non-synchronous occurs before the cut, rather than after it - The Graduate (1967)
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Codes of Sound Design 5) Off-screen Sound Space - the area just beyond the frame of the line whose existence is defined through sound - non-synchronous - Blade Runner (1982)
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Codes of Sound Design 6) Sound Montage - editing of sounds into highly intricate and complex patterns that create meaning and emotion - Apocalypse Now (1979)
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Movie Music FUNCTIONS OF MOVIE MUSIC: 1) Setting the scene (using authentic instruments particular to a certain locale) 2) Adding emotional meaning 3) Background filler 4) Creating continuity (use of a leitmotif, a musical label that is assigned to a character, a place, an idea, or an emotion) 5) Emphasizing climaxes
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Contemporary Movie Music The debate rages over the use of contemporary pop music vs. traditional symphonic soundtrack Forrest Gump (1994) and Natural Born Killers (1994) vs. The Dark Knight (2008) and Star Trek (2009). Robin Hood: Prince of Theives (1991) – “Everything I Do…”
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