Moving Images, Understanding Media

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1
x Preface

impact of moving images. In his book Th inking in Pictures, director John
Sayles says “Narrative fi lm, what we ordinarily think of as ‘the movies,’ is
a combination of literary, theatrical, and purely cinematic elements.” His
analytical breakdown of motion pictures off ers a useful organizational strategy
for any discussion of movies. When completing Analysis work, consider this
structure of three areas to organize thoughts, reactions, and analyses.


  • Cinematic—All of the factors particular to the cinema, including:


° Cinematography: visual elements, composition, movement,

light, color

° Editing

° Sound design (all dialogue recording, eff ects, music)


  • Literary—Elements experienced in the study of literature, such as:


° Story and plot

° Dialogue and written elements

° Th eme


  • Th eatrical—Factors associated with the theater, particularly:


° Acting and performance

° Blocking—in theater, blocking is the positioning and moving

of actors around the set, and this term can be applied to
motion pictures in terms of “staging” or working from sets.
However, it is important to see this as becoming cinematic
when it is directly interpreted by the vantage point of the
camera and the visual choices inherent in cinematography.
Keep in mind that these categories can be useful to organize analyses and
discussion, but in many ways they can overlap and become blurred. For example,
when discussing typical storytelling devices such as symbol, metaphor, or irony
(which many would list under “literary”), they can stem from purely visual or
musical sources. So, you should consider these titles to help with analytical
work, while the overall goal is to develop an understanding of the distinct
expressive and creative capacities and messages of motion pictures.

Writing

In each chapter, you will complete creative writing assignments to develop
screenwriting material and skills. Th ere is a writing exercise at the end of each
chapter, and there is a selection of additional assignments in the Instructor
Resources package. Th ese can be used to generate narrative ideas or other
storytelling material or to produce alternative scripts. Th e writing you generate
for any of the assignments can be used for production exercises, and you
will have the opportunity to produce scripts that you draft for group work
or independent projects.

Projects

Th e third end-of-chapter component is the motion picture project. As with
Analysis and Writing, along with the Project at the end of each chapter there

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