Wednesday, 23 November 2011

CINEMA CITY TRIP - ANIMAL KINGDOM

UK cinema attendance history
            1948 UK Box Office admissions = 500million
            1975 Jaws released – becomes the first summer ‘blockbuster’
            1980 UK Box Office admissions = 50m
            1984 Multiplex cinemas open (Milton Keynes)
            2008 UK Box Office admissions = 164.2m
Distributors
                        Dominate 85% of the market
            Columbia
            Walt Disney
            20th Century Fox
            Paramount
            Warner Brothers
            Universal

Independent cinemas are privately owned and profit-driven, they are non-profit making and receive public subsidy. They show films from countries such as USA, UK, France, Canada, China, Spain and Italy.

Programme Analysis
            MAINSTREAM
            CROSSOVER
            CHALLENGING
            SPECIALIST

Benefits of digital technology is the choice, quality, alternative content and spectacle.

Animal Kingdom à Australian independent movie
                                    Winner of the Sundance Award 2010
                                    Sony Pictures Classics
It was written and directed by David Michôd and had a budget of $5.2million.

Tuesday, 22 November 2011

AS Level Essay 1 Textual Analysis of ‘The Other Boleyn Girl’ and ‘Atonement’



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The two film sequences that I have chosen to analyse are Justin Chadwick’s 2008 film ‘The Other Boleyn Girl’ and Joe Wright’s 2007 film ‘Atonement’; they both follow the Drama genre, which is the reason why I chose to analyse them because they both follow the same purpose and audience but go about different means of achieving them. The Other Boleyn Girl and Atonement were both originally written as a novels in 2001 by Philippa Gregory and Ian McEwan.
<!--[if !vml]--><!--[endif]-->The sequences that I have chosen to analyse are the openings because I find that they convey the most vital information to the audience and they are immediately able to understand the tone of the film and initial judgements are made.

The Other Boleyn Girl opens with a hazy yellow field of crop and the titling is in simple white block capitals which doesn’t follow the theme of 16th-century royalty and aristocrats, in accordance the music is also calming and playful. Almost a minute into the scene, three children, aged around 6 or 7, - 2 girls and a boy – are seen running and playing in the field, they are in the centre of the shot. They do not seem to ‘have a care in the world’ as they play and fall over recklessly whilst their father discusses their futures in terms of the girls being betrothed.
All in all the scene is very mellowing for the audience and they are yet to find out the importance of the Boleyn daughters.
Joe Wright goes along a very different route with the opening of Atonement for the titling begins on a black background and white typewriter lettering, a typewriter can also be heard in the background. The scene then opens on a child’s bedroom and Briony Tallis can be seen completing her play at a desk. The music begins very soft and as just a simple piano and the clicking of the typewriter then goes on to become a fast-paced tune, which follows her anxiety and excitement at completing her play as she walks around her large house in search of her mother.
In terms of mise-en-scene, the setting is a very dated grand house and the props follow the time-period, along with the clothing.
Both films are similar in the way that they are having to focus on a specific time period and the lighting of both films is in broad daylight which makes the audience feel secure and they are able to see everything within the frames. However, the positioning of characters and objects within the frames are very different; for example, the opening sequences are not remotely similar because The Other Boleyn Girl is calm and serene whereas the typewriter noise in the background in Atonement heightens the tension and pace.
The framing and composition of The Other Boleyn Girl is also quite picturesque in the way that the director chose to have several shots of the locations before the interior is displayed in able to let the audience establish the setting and mood. This happens in two main scenes of the opening at the church at which Mary Boleyn is to be married and at the home of Henry VIII where Catherine of Aragon has just given birth to a still born child.
Both of the openings open in a happy and content environment however within the course of only 5-6 minutes, the tone drops and a great deal of empathy is felt for the characters because in The Other Boleyn Girl, Catherine of Aragon is still unable to provide her husband, Henry VIII, with an heir to the throne which has caused them grief and despair. Likewise, in Atonement, Briony has proved unsuccessful in getting the twins to understand the importance of her play, the significance of it and the pride that she feels having completed it and wanting to perform it. There is also a great sense of naïvety on her part for she does not sense the sexual tension between her older sister, Cecilia and the servant’s son, Robbie Turner. Her play is of great importance to the wider film because in the Prologue of the play she speaks of ‘spontaneous Arabella who ran away with an extrinsic fellow’, this is dramatic hindsight for it symbolises what will happen later on in the film between Cecilia and Robbie.
The Other Boleyn Girl also includes the use of dramatic hindsight for the intimacy of the siblings plays a strong part because they all remain close and protective of each other and when Anne is unable to give Henry a son, she looks toward her brother to be able to help her and it is clear that only a strong character could ask that of their brother/sister.
            The opening sequences also allow the audience to understand and interpret the relationships between siblings; The Other Boleyn Girl allows the audience to watch a close-knit relationship between the 3 siblings develop from their younger years up until Mary’s wedding day, all in the matter of a few minutes. It is also clear that Anne, Mary and their brother, George share such a close family unit that they have conversations based upon wit and banter and they do not worry about taking things too seriously at this present time for they are quite excitable.
Atonement allows the audience to see Briony’s relationships between her mother, sister and the other people that she shares her home with.
The genre of the two films is also very well established because within the opening sequences.
According to the website, http://www.filmsite.org/dramafilms.html, “drama films are serious presentations or stories with settings or life situations that portray realistic characters in conflict with either themselves, others, or forces of nature. A dramatic film shows us human beings at their best, their worst, and everything in-between.”

Overall, the two films are quite similar in the aspects that they focus on and the actors and actresses portray the characters very well in the opening sequence, so much so that the audience is drawn into each film and is able to empathise.

The Hangover Part 2 & 3

We planned to film the rest of the indoor and outdoor shots at Jake’s house however, my luck did not seem to be on my side because two days before shooting I managed to fall off my not-so-trustworthy pink moped, consequently, leaving me with a fractured nose and a face looking rather black and blue. Despite this, filming carried on minus me but not everything went to plan and we were lacking actors and actresses so we scheduled to refilm it the following weekend when everyone could actually attend. The wedding cake had already been wonderfully made by Evie and had been devoured the previous week and so this was about the only piece of filming that we would be using prior to our third stint of filming. Everything went to plan with Ben’s parents playing a bridesmaid and the bride’s father, Jake’s mum as the mother of the bride, myself as the bride (“oh dear!”) and Evie, Ben and Bill as extras within the shots with Jake being in charge of the camera. We all pitched in as Director and Producer.
All in all, we managed to complete the rest of the task in that one day and then used Jake’s microphone and Mac Laptop software to overdub the dialogue and sound for the outdoor scene with Phil and the voiceover telephone messages.
We were pleased with what we had managed to achieve given that we had a non-existent budget and had to rely on our personal resources for props and costume.
We then used the remaining week of Media Studies lessons and free-periods to edit our piece together using Adobe Premiere Pro CS4 which we all worked together on as a group rather than making two different copies from which we would choose the best. Bill and Evie were also given the task of making the title sequence for ‘The Hangover’ and establishing the background music of the film opening.
Everything seemed to be going extremely well and it was only too obvious that something needed to go wrong and so for an unknown reason, we managed to lose all of our audio from our final cutting which then required some time to rectify the error by having to cut the clips again in order to establish what we had already achieved.
THE FINAL PIECE: