EVALUATION Q1: How does your product use or challenge conventions and how does it represent social groups or issues?
I saw / I did:
Interviews are an important part of promoting your film to a wider audience. To present this question in a creative way looked at a promotional WIRED Autocomplete interview with Penn Badgley for the new season of the psychological thriller YOU:
Transcript:
We also looked at sound. So conventionally it's a combination of diegetic and non-diegetic sounds.
Horror films use instrumental strings, with a mixture of long or short drawn-out notes. This makes the audience hold their breath as it mimics the heartbeat, and increases the tension. The diegetic music heard within the film is typically related to the killings. Classical examples of this is the use of theme songs in Psycho and Halloween and Friday the 13th, so we used the notes from the iconic Friday the 13th music for our film.
There are usually sounds of slashing, stabbing, and the allusions through sound allow for less graphic deaths, as the audience's imagination is often more gruesome and effective than a films visuals. That is why we have the sound of the slashing carry over to our title as well as sounds of water drips and splatters of blood.
The first shot, the establishing shot is very important so we looked at many film examples and we found that it was most commonly a an els for exposition but we went against this convention. It was inspired by the opening of Cherry falls, we wanted to create a sense of a small town. We started by creating a shot for shot copy of the sequence. We used the hand of technique from the 1960 film psycho by Alfred Hitchhock to highlight that this story can happen to anyone and create verisimiltude of a small town through the mise-en-scene. The two most common shot types are
Dutch angles are commonly used in horror to create discomfort and connote that something is wrong with the audience, so we use that or the shot of the school.
Often, a blue tint is added to shots, denoting coldness and discomfort, and are often seen in horror, like in Bride Of Chucky. We used a combination oft he Day to Night effect as well adding a blue tint.
Another use of lighting is the lack of it, as many killings or events typically take place at night. The darkness and little lighting allows for more cryptic shots and adds to the mystery of The Killer.
So we started by looking at different fonts in horror films. For the names and titles we wanted to use relevant industry examples from recently made horror films. So we chose to collaborate with the British film institute and Film 4 since it’s a common convention for an indie company to receive funding from them. It is unconventional to see a double directing credit in the same line so we opted for one. But I looked at a few hybrid horror and rom-coms films to really get the font right and I saw that they opted for a white or sometimes even pink font like in Jennifers body rather than a bright red bloody ones.
My Conventions Vodcast from earlier in year:
My post on sound creation is here.
Todorov's 5-Part Narrative:
I saw / I did:
My rankings of how well the different social groups are presented in our film:
male gaze is the act of depicting women and the world in the visual arts and in literature from a masculine, heterosexual perspective that presents and represents women as sexual objects for the pleasure of the heterosexual male viewer.
Gender performativity posits that gender is made up of the acts that mark a person as “man” or “woman” (dress, mannerisms, ect) and it is through the repetition of those gendered acts that the illusion of a stable gender identity is created.
When there is total opposition between two characters or forces used in order to further
the plot.
In my film:
-Binary opposition of male and female characters.
-Opposition of studious and shy Laurie with promiscuous and confident Mandy
when the audience personally identifies with the characters on-screen they feel gratified and fulfilled from the product
John Berger’s "Ways of Seeing"
stated that "men act and women appear", with women being aware of their obligation of performance towards the male viewer.
Created by Allison Bechdel, a measure of female representation in films. The rules are that there are
1) two women
2) that are named
3) and talk about something other than a man.
In my film:
-Three named female characters, Marion, Laurie and Mandy
-Mandy and Laurie talk to each other about Marion missing and what Laurie is doing at the locker
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