Tuesday, March 30, 2010

Stanford Theatre Trip

Cabin in the Sky (May 19-21)
Trouble in Paradise (May 15-18)
She's Done Him Wrong (April 24-27)

Thursday, March 25, 2010

Eisenstein and Hitchcock

    • MONTAGE SCENE IN BATTLESHIP POTEMPKYN
    • things coming at the camera quickly (the umbrella, the woman's face going toward her child)
    • people falling down slowly
    • the music is very intense
    • the woman is going in the opposite way.
    • violence- child being stepped on
    • close up on the belt buckle. swan. swan song?
    • jump cut
    • SHOWER SCENE IN PSYCHO
    • close up of the hand
    • shot reverse shot of the killer and the victim
    • the close up of the shower head
    • close up of the drain
    • close up of the shower curtain falling
    • close up of the her eye- it looks like she's dying
Norman Bates cleaning up the murder scene makes it a bit more suspenseful, I keep wondering if he's going to be caught in the act, or if he's just going to get away with it.
The absence of sound while the car stopped sinking was amazing, it just added suspense. Norman looked so nervous, then the car continued to sink, and everything seemed to work out fine.

Thursday, March 18, 2010

The Showdown Analysis

Analyze the film techniques Sergio Leone uses in the final shootout among Blondie, Tuco and Angel Eyes. Think of the camera angles, music, and camera movement especially. How does he reinvent this typical Western device?

quick cuts from person to person

pan

extreme close ups on faces, hands, eyes

wide angle shot

long shot

medium shot

establishing shot (before the showdown, in the graveyard, with the three men in a circle .)

birds cawing

tense music- bells, flamenco clappers, drums, cymbal


Leone's use of quick camera movements and switches between angles allowed the intensity to grow before the first shot was fired.



Monday, March 8, 2010

Film Festival Reflection

What did you think of the film Cost of a Soul? Can you connect the film to anything we've studied in class? What improvements would you make in the film?
I really loved the movie and I think that the director has a bright future. I can not believe he wrote, cast, and directed the whole film. His dedication to his work is amazing; I hope he doesn't get lazy with his craft because his work ethic is probably what made this movie so good. I noticed the lighting was pretty phenomenal in the movie. I liked that he used the lamp swinging in a few scenes (with fighting) to give the film almost a film noir feel to it. The director also chose to use the main character's affinity for saxophone in order to convey a mood. Every time the character played, the camera would move away, off to another place. It would create a montage effect, and we saw things happening elsewhere while the character played on. It was a genius use of sound. I would have changed is the main African American actor. His performance was not very convincing, and it took me out of the film. Also, the main actor's improvisation could have been a little better. But over all, I LOVED Cost of a Soul.

Tuesday, February 9, 2010

Film Project Reviews

Inglorious Basterds

3/4

I really liked their film techniques. The shots that constantly changed kept my eyes interested. The acting was good and the sound quality was a little bad, but over all it was really good!


21

4/4

The music was really fun. The voices should have been a little higher when explaining the +16 = sweet abbreviations. The acting was good. I really liked this one.