Film theory

12
Cinematographic Principle and the Ideogram Mary Lordi, Joshua Haimann, Steph Olson, Mike Amaya, Steve Garcia, Aliesia Daley

Transcript of Film theory

Cinematographic

Principle and the

Ideogram

Mary Lordi, Joshua Haimann, Steph Olson,

Mike Amaya, Steve Garcia, Aliesia Daley

➔combining multiple shots to create a single meaning.

➔“Montage is conflict”➔Examples of conflict:1.close shots & long shots2.lightness and darkness3.events and duration

Intellectual Montage

● Japanese Cinema has no concept of a

montage

● Cinematography is, first and foremost,

montage

Cinema

Hieroglyphs

“Copulation of two hieroglyphs is to be

regarded not as their sum, but as their product;

a value of another dimension, another degree.”

● Separately relates to an object

● Combination refers to a concept

Examples

● Dog + a mouth = “to bark”

● A mouth + a child = “to scream”

● A mouth + a bird = “to sing”

● A knife + a heart = “sorrow”

Haiku- montage phrases or short lists

The haiku is a concentrated impressionist sketch:

5-7-5 format

A lonely crow

On leafless bough,

One autumn eve.

BASHO

Tanka

- Tanka is a Japanese five-line poem.

- Literally means "short song"

- Example:

- "Nature means no harm

Though she brings us warnings

Quiet and with care

She does lavish us time

And would rather stay friends."

Tanka and Montage- The lines are montage

phrases

- The combination of two or

three details of a material

yields a perfectly finished

representation of another kind:

psychological.

Cinrmatogrphic Conflicts

- Montage is conflict

- Conflict of...

- Graphic Directions - Masses

- Scales - Depths

- Volumes

Unexpected Conflicts

- Conflicts between an object and its dimension

- Distorted lenses

- Conflicts between an event and its dimension

- Slow motion/Stop motion