Thursday 18 December 2014

Draft


How does the opening of CSI: One Hit Wonder attract the audience?

In the CSI episode One Hit Wonder there is a Peeping Tom who is spying on girls and then he sexually assaults a girl in the opening and then starts to rape women later on in the episode.

The audience’s expectations of CSI are similar as all episodes begin in a similar fashion because they use all the typical conventions of the horror/Thriller genre this makes the audience build up their expectations and anticipation of who might be the victim or who will be the killer in the current episode.

In the opening of One Hit Wonder it starts in a high long shot view of Las Vegas to imply that anybody in that area could be a victim then it uses a quick fade to white then to another shot of the city to unnerve the audience. The diegetic sounds are used such as the police sirens to symbolise fear or a threat in the city.

The episode then graphic matches the city to a table with bottles on it this makes the audience think that the city is trapped in a way as the buildings are inside the bottles and this means that the city can be moved at someone’s own will.

Quickly, there is a fade to black and a fade up, this shows you a room with a red towel which represents violence then it shows you a pair of trainers and the single pair means that there is one person in the apartment. This shows that this person is vulnerable and open to an attack. The camera then pans through the rom the director uses this to suggest that someone else is there; the sound is also used to create an eerie atonal sound. The audience would then think that the woman in the apartment is the victim or something will happen.

There is then a dissolve then the camera tracks towards the bed, the angle of the camera is looking down on the women making her look Vulnerable and weak and as if someone is looking down on her, the mise-en-scene adds to the scene because of the darkness in the room making her more vulnerable in the dark because she can’t see, the shot then fades to black implying that it is over.

The shot fades up to a close up of the young women; this is used to make the audience want to see the surroundings as they will be curious to the surroundings because the noises add to this as you can hear the sound of a door unlock and then a patio door or window sliding open. You then see her wake up and she slowly turns her head around, the camera angle is high making her look vulnerable, you can hear a low string sound which suggests that something is there or something is wrong. Then you see her go down the stairs and as she walks down them you see the bars form the shadow of the window this suggests she is trapped, you then see the woman is dressed in her underwear to show that she is sexually attractive, young and vulnerable making her an easy target. You see the door is shut implying that everything is fine and or the person inside has left the apartment.

There is a draught turning over the pages of a magazine this suggests there is an intrusion in the room, she then looks at the fan and the director cuts to a high angle shot through the fan making it seem as if someone is watching her through bars suggesting she is trapped. She then turns to look at the fan switch and there are marks on the switch suggesting that someone has turned the fan on as a crescendo happening as well.

There is then a cut back to the woman in a medium shot in the middle of the frame, this will make her seem alone and vulnerable because no one else is there to help her. The director then cuts to a shot from under the table looking up at her looking at the table then uses a focus pull to the glass which has been spilt and a crescendo builds up toward the glass suggesting someone who is not the women has done this and to build up the tension. There is then cut to her framed next to the door showing her reaction which is scared she shows this by pulling her hands up to her head and gasps.

The director then jump cuts/zooms toward the door handle and as this is happening you can hear screaming in a crescendo as we get closer to the door handle another jump cut happens and special effects shot to go through the woman’s lock to her neighbours key hole and then another special effect shot happens though the neighbours key hole this puts the audience  on edge and continues into her bedroom where a man is harassing her, the man is holding her down on the bed in an unreal blue light then see the man jumping off of the bed and you see his shoe, this makes the audience wonder who the man is as you have evidence to who it might be because of his shoe sole.

   

 

 

Tuesday 21 October 2014

Clips of the Wilhelm Scream By Scott Wright



The Wilhelm scream is a film and television stock sound effect that has been used in more than 200 movies, beginning in 1951 for the film Distant Drums when in a scene from the film, soldiers are wading through a swamp in the Everglades, and one of them is bitten and dragged underwater by an alligator.. The scream is often used when someone is shot, falls from a great height, or is thrown from an explosion. The sound is named after Private Wilhelm, a character in The Charge at Feather River, a 1953 western in which the character gets shot. The video above has good examples of the Wilhelm scream.

Wednesday 8 October 2014

Sinister - Official Trailer 2012



Sinister is a good example of these edits.

Editing



 
Editing
Editing helps construct the narrative. We are so used to editing we barely notice it. Editing is usually ''invisible''. Editing can be used to condense long, boring activities in to quick  bursts of visual information. A simple edit is called a cut it is called this because it cuts to different parts of film getting of bits you don't need. In the assassination scene in North by Northwest from Roger Thornhill getting in the taxi and to the scene where he is looking down from the UN building there are 26 cuts, this is there so you can focus on the reactions of people. The pace of editing can be used to create excitement and tension for example in the shower scene of Psycho when Marion is being stabbed the pace is fast but as she dies the pace gets slower.
 
Types of editing
  • Dissolve: dissolve is when a scene dissolves into another scene.
  • Fade out/in: fading is when one scene fades to a complete black then another fades in.
  • Wipes: Wiping is where one scene wipes across another scene revealing/ replacing the next one this can happen from any direction
  • Iris:  An iris replaces the last scene by appearing from the centre like an iris of the eye
  • Jump cuts: Jump cuts are when two scenes that feature common elements right after one another so something stays the same but the rest changes. This is used for disorienting or comedy effects.    
  
The cuts in North by Northwest
 
The ''Sinister'' trailer is a good example of these editing types. 

Tuesday 7 October 2014

Basic Camea Shots



Extreme Long Shot



Long Shot


Medium Close Up

Extreme Close Up
 
Close Up


Medium Long Shot
Medium Shot

Mise-en-Scène

Mise-en-Scène is everything in a frame of a film/TV series etc. E.g. Lighting, costume, colour, facial expression and composition. 

In the Jaws opening scene all of this is there it can suggest things such as being in fire
(for lighting) suggests a haven so if you leave the fire you are isolated from the area which makes it seem like something is going to happen. such as the couple in the first scene they are away from the fire and then start to go to the sea to swim which isolates them even more. There is a broken fence that they run by and the bars of the fence suggests cage, which means trapped. Sound is used for the music, conversations, running and the waves but when that is all left behind it will make the audience think something's going to happen.    
 

How are Generic elements and camera angles used to create suspense in the attic scene of the Exorcist?


  • One element is the music, there is none. This is used to create suspense because you are looking for what she is.
  • Camera angle, it is filmed from behind her as if someone or thing is looking at her from behind objects and above to suggest she is weak.
  • The empty rat traps say it wasn't the rats.
  • The stereotypical vulnerable, isolated young women alone in the attic in her nightie.
  • The candle light flickering off of objects to make it harder to see.
  • When Carl came up into the attic the suspense dropped because brought light and more sound to the scene. 
  • It's in the middle of the night and dark.
  • The title The Exorcist suggests something will happen.
  •  

    Pokémon Giratina & The Sky Warrior

    Pokémon Giratina & The Sky Warrior
    We were told to post a image of a poster that is our favourite film so... this is my favourite film because it is Pokémon and has my favourite Pokémon Giratina. He is basically the devil! he was banished to a world called the Distortion World by Arceus, the creator of all Pokémon(God).