Monday 27 June 2016

La Haine - Analysis

La Haine is a purposely made black and white crime, drama film created in 1995 film Directed and Written by Mathieu Kassovitz. It had a budget of €2.5 million.
The film deals with many different themes as it is set over a period of 24 hours and follows 3 main protagonists after a riot within France. Its main themes are poverty, minority groups, racism, violence, respect and power.
Throughout the whole film, there are moments of a black screen with the time on it. this shows the audience that the time frame the film takes place in is a whole 24 hour cycle.

La Haine was actually filmed in colour, but was edited to black and white when in the post production stages of the film. This was because the director thought it would not do as well if it was released in colour. The black and white effect creates the atmosphere of social realism as the audience can focus on the issues that the film gets across, instead of them focusing on the vibrancy and beautiful aspects that France has to offer.

Starting with power, the characters live in an estate, that is looked down upon and no respected by anyone outside of it, so they believe that violence is one of the best ways to gain the respect they want. 
Vinz has no respect for the police and people with authority. He is lead by hate and is obsessed with gaining a higher status than his other friends. This is why he has a gun and has it with him a lot, to give him status and power. The cinematography for this film shows who has power within each scene. Throughout the film, the status of authority goes in the order of Hubert, Vinz, then Said. This is shown through the cinematography, by the character who has the most authority in the scene, having more height in the shot or being closer to the camera. An example of this is a scene when the three characters are sitting on some concrete blocks, and Hubert is closest to the camera, then Vinz is behind him, and Said behind Vinz. This then changed when Vinz had an idea of what to do, when the camer moved from Hubert to a close up of Vinz.

The framing of shots was very important to the director. He uses it to show authority and the importance of specific items, such as the gun, and when it is in a scene, it is the centre of the frame, and all of the characters and scene is set around it, showing how important it is to the characters.

The police are represented in a bad way during the film, but may be accurate for the time and place where it was set. They are seen as agressive in many of the scenes. Within the last scene Vinz is accidentally shot by the police officer. This shows the audience how stupid and careless the police can be. They may have thought the characters from the estate are a lower class, therefore do not matter as much as them. 


French films usually show Paris from a very different point of view. Paris is usually seen with all its landmarks, looking very posh and beautiful just like a postcard. But in this film it is seen from a ‘normal' point of view, from the eye of the people that live there. When the protagonists travel to Paris, all we see is the Eiffel Tower from a long distance. One of them even tries to click his fingers to switch off the lights but is told that it ‘only works in the movies’. Even though this is a movie, it doesn't work, which suggests how this film represents real life.

Tuesday 21 June 2016

Maleficent - Film (Week 30)

Crew:
Director - Robert Stromberg
Writer - Linda Woolverton (Screenplay
Producer - Joe Roth
Music - James Newton Howard
Cinematography - Dean Semler

Cast:
Maleficent - Angelina Jolie
Aurora - Elle Fanning
Stefan - Sharlto Copley
Flittie - Lesley Manville
Knotgrass - Imelda Staunton

Genre:
Action
Adventure
Family

Themes:
Betrayal
Hate
Revenge
Forgiveness

Running Time:
97 minutes

Year:
2014

Production Company:
Roth Films
Walt Disney Picture

Budget:
$180 million

Box Office
$758 million

Themes:
The theme of betrayal and hatred are key to this film because when Maleficent falls in love, she then gets betrayed and the man that she fell in love with used that to get her wings. She then uses her hatred for him and his betrayal and takes it out on the Kings daughter Aurora, so she can feel what its like.
She then notices how Aurora feels betrayed when Maleficent tells her that is was she who cursed Aurora. We then see that they both feel the same betrayed as they both but trust into something and nothing good came out of it.


Saturday 30 April 2016

Friend Request - Film (Week 28)

Crew:
Director - Simon Verhoeven
Producer - Quirin Burg & Max Wiedemann
Writer - Matthew Ballen & Phillip Koch & Simon Verhoeven 
Cinematographer - Jo Heim
Music - Gary Go

Cast:
Laura - Alycia Debnam-Carey
Tyler - William Moseley
Koby - Connor Paolo
Marina - Liesl Ahlers
Olivia - Britt Morgan

Genre:
Horror
Thriller

Themes:
Friendship
Fear
Death
Loneliness

Year:
2016

Running Time:
92 minutes

Budget:
N/A
Box Office:
N/A

Production Company:
Wiedemann & Berg Filmproduktion
Seven Pictures

Narrative:
When a college student unfriends a mysterious girl online, she finds herself fighting a demonic presence that wants to make her lonely by killing her closest friends.
The film has a circular and non-linear narrative to it. At the start of the film, the audience do not know what is going on, then there is a flashback so the story is explained. The end of the film turns into a circular narrative. This brings a very good twist and ending to the story, and personally i felt very satisfied with the ending. 

Analysis:
The music and sound effects within this film fits all the conventions of a horror films. The silence during eerie scene within the film was very intense and raw. The sudden crescendo of music when there is a jump scare makes the moment much more frightening for the audience because just moments before, there was practically no sound at all. The silence pulled the audience in, knowing something will happen, and because there was silence in the film, the audience join in and become silent too. 



Sunday 24 April 2016

Hush - Film (Week 27)

Crew:
Director - Mike Flanagan
Producer - Jason Blum & Trevor Macy
Writer - Mike Flanagan & Kate Siegel
Cinematographer - James Kniest
Music - The Newton Brothers

Cast:
Man - John Gallagher Jr.
Maddie - Kate Siegel
John - Michael Trucco
Sarah - Samantha Sloyan

Genre:
Horror
Thriller

Themes:
Determination
Fear
Courage
Problem Solving

Running Time:
81 minutes

Year:
2016

Budget:
$70,000

Box Office:

Production Company:
Intrepid Pictures
Blumhouse Productions

Narrative:
A deaf woman is stalked by a psychotic killer in her secluded home.

Analysis: 
Performance is what makes this film what it is. Because there is not much dialog within the film, the actors have to use their body language and physical acting to get the emotions and story across to the audience. It is much harder for actors to get emotions across without using dialog and also make it believable. The close up shots of the protagonists face help the audience understand what emotions she is showing, and makes them feel more closer to her ad they can understand her through body language instead of dialog.

Wednesday 20 April 2016

Captain America - Film (Week 26)

Crew:
Director - Anthony Russo & Joe Russo
Producer - Kevin Feige
Writer - Stephan McFeely & Chris Markus
Cinematographer - Trent Opaloch
Music - Henry Jackman

Cast:
Captain America - Chris Evans
Nick Fury - Samuel L Jackson
Black Widow - Scarlett Johansson
Winter Soldier - Sebastian Stan
Falcon - Anthony Mackie

Genre:
Action, Sci-Fi, Adventure

Themes:
Trust, Right & Wrong, Friends

Year:
2014

Running Time:
136 minutes

Budget:
$170 million

Box Office:
$714 million

Production Company:
Marvel Entertainment, Marvel Studios

Narrative:
Steve Rogers (Captain America) struggles to live within within the modern world. He teams up with Black Widow and Falcon to battle a new threat from his past - The Winter Soldier.

Analysis:
Music - Music was essential to this film because without it, the atmosphere and emotions the audience should be feeling wouldn't be there. Up beat music during the violent scene created adrenaline for the audience

Sunday 10 April 2016

Batman v Superman - Film (Week 25)

Crew:
Director - Zach Snyder 
Writer - Chris Terrio
Producer - Deborah Snyder & Charles Roven 
Music - Hans Zimmer & Junkie XL
Cinematographer - Larry Fong

Cast:
Batman - Ben Affleck 
Superman - Harry Cavill 
Lex Luther - Jessie Eisenberg
Wonder Woman - Gal Gadot 
Lois - Amy Adams

Genre:
Action, Adventure, Fantasy

Themes:
Responsibility, Peace, Justice, Right & Wrong.

Year:
2016

Running Time:
151 minutes 

Budget:
$250 million

Box Office:
$720 million 

Production Company:
Warner Bros. 
DC Entertainment Inc. 

Narrative:
Fearing the actions of Superman are being left unchecked, Batman takes on the Man of Steel, while the world wrestles with what kind of hero it really needs.

Analysis:
Cinematography - The cinematography within this film is very unique and unlike anything i have ever seen. During the fight scenes, especially with Batman, there would be no change of camera shots. There was one long shot that travelled around the area following batman while he was fighting many people. This was very unique as it felt real and raw because the choreography would have to be superb for them to get it right within one shooting. 

Responsibility - This is one of the main themes within the film, because both of the heroes have much power, especially superman, who has a responsibility to keep the world a safe place because he has the power to destroy it. The public/government have mixed feelings over Superman because he is so powerful, some see him as a threat and some see him as a hero.

Wednesday 23 March 2016

10 Cloverfield Lane - Film (Week 24)

Crew:
Directer - Dan Trachtenberg
Writer - Josh Campbell & Matthew Stuecken
Producer - J.J. Abrams & Lindsey Weber
Music - Bear McCreary
Cinematography - Jeff Cutter

Cast
Howard - John Goodman
Michelle - Mary Elizabeth Winstead
Emmett - John Gallagher Jr
Woman - Suzanne Cryer
Ben (Voice) - Bradley Cooper

Genre:
Drama, Horror, Mystery

Theme:
Trust, Abuse, Determination, Fear, Death, Uncertainty.

Year:
2016

Running Time:
103 minutes

Budget:
$5 million

Box Office:
$38 million (Current)

Production Company:
Paramount Pictures, Bad Robot

Narrative:
After getting into a car accident, Michelle ends up in a bunker with two strangers, who tell her there has been a chemical attack on the country

Sound: 
Sound is very unique within this films. There is lots of diagetic and non diagetic sound within the movie, including music to help build tensions and the atmosphere. At one point within the film, all the sound gets drained, and there is a ringing over the top. This was from the point of view of Michelle. It makes the audience react in the same way she did, because they are feeling and hearing what she is.