Key
Concepts and Vocabulary
Key
Concepts
Do film directors or producers have the responsibility to create
morally acceptable films?
Who determines what is morally acceptable?
Can a film be good if it relies on racist, sexist, or anti-semitic
content?
Why do we sometimes find ourselves resisting a film’s “argument”?
How do films pull us in to their worlds?
How do films communicate their values?
How important is it for our experiences as viewers that we share
the values of a film?
What is the difference between a fiction film and a documentary?
Do the ethical responsibilities of a film director extend beyond
the honest management of the actors and film crew?
Can something as straightforward as the camera angle in a particular
shot or series of shots be immoral, even sinister?
How important is point of view as an element of both technique
and content?
What is the connection between a film’s formal techniques
(camera angle and distance, lighting, edits, etc.) and its content?
Vocabulary
- Anti-Semitism
In terms of the etymology
of the word, prejudice against people of Semitic
origins. Specifically, prejudice against Jewish people.
- Auteur
Film director. The Auteur Theory argues that directors “write”
or “author” their films insofar as the final product
bears the unique markings of the director.
- Continuity
Often the job the script supervisor, continuity ensures that
related shots look related. Continuity people attend to
camera angle, scene details, lighting, and script particulars.
- Cut
away An editing technique that moves the film, say, from
a long or distance shot to a tight or medium shot.
- Diegesis
The total invented world of a narrative. The diegesis
of Star
Wars, for instance, extends over several films.
- Diegetic
sound In the logic of a film, sounds heard by
people in the film
(gunfire,
dialogue, a door slamming, etc.).
Observational:
significant camera movement, diegetic sound, no interviews, no
text. (MTV, Triumph of the Will)
Expository: charts, statistics, narrator, interviews,
nondiegteic sound, music. (The Civil War by Ken Burns)
Interactive: Interviews, subject is confronted, voice-over,
on-screen narrator. (Fahrenheit 9/11—anything by
Michael Moore)
- Establishing
shot
At the beginning of a movie, the establishing shot provides
an orientation to place and time. The opening shot at
the beginning of Far
From Heaven, for example, establishes the geographical
setting as suburban and the chronological setting as the fifties.
- Ethical
scheme May be tacit or explicit, a film’s ethical
message in its totality.
- Ethos
The beliefs of a culture, country, group, or organization.
- Lighting
Low-key or dim, high-key, neutral, bottom/side, or
front/rear, how a scene is lit determines much of the viewer’s
understanding of the action.
- Long
shot
Shows the entire object or human figure.
- Medium
shot A camera shot taken from a medium distance.
A medium shot can establish body language and movement and is
thus similar to a long shot.
- Mise-en-scene
From the French, everything in a scene (actor,
objects, background).
- Montage
Shots or short scenes edited together for a particular effect
or message. One of the most famous montages in 20th century
film occurs toward the end of The
Godfather as Michael sponsors a bloodbath that coincides
with his participation in the christening of his nephew and
godson.
- Non-diegetic
sound Sounds that logically could not be heard
by people in the film at the time of filming. The music
in Jaws,
for example, is not heard by the shark’s victims or the
people onshore.
- Panning
When the camera pans, it moves left or right along its horizontal
axis.
- Point
of view (and point of view [POV] shot)
The perspective from which a story is told. A POV shot shows
what a character sees. In other words, the camera enables us
to see a scene as a character sees it. Mike Nichols uses
the POV shot to enormous advantage in The
Graduate.
- Racism
A belief in the superiority of one group of people.
- Scene
(and scene sequence) A scene is marked or defined
by an event in the film. The term is also used to describe
a particularly vivid film moment. A scene sequence
is a collection of scenes that comprise the beginning, middle,
and end of an action in the film.
- Sexism
A belief in the superiority of one gender.
- Tight
shot
Closely frames a human subject or object. Many tight shots
frame faces.
- Tilt
When the camera tilts, it moves up or down along
its vertical axis.
- Xenophobia
A fear (and perhaps dislike) of foreigners.
Yale
University provides an excellent resource for moving footage that
demonstrates the techniques and film elements described here at
http://classes.yale.edu/film-analysis/.
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