Editing analysis, Psycho
Editing
presents the relationship between shots and the process by which they are
combined to the audience creating a frame of emotion, and to create a realism
about the film. It is essential to the creation of narrative and to the
establishment of narrative time. The relationship between shots may
be graphic and/or rhythmic.
Film-makers and editors may work with various goals in mind.
Traditionally, commercial cinema prefers the continuity system, or the
creation of a logical, continuous narrative which allows the audience to
suspend disbelief easily and comfortably. Alternatively, film-makers may
use editing to encourage our intellectual participation or to call
attention to their work in a reflexive manner.
The clip below, takes place as the woman in the scene, takes a
shower and is brutally murdered after being stabbed several times in the chest.
As her blood is washed away down the drain the camera slowly zooms onto the
drain. This is an example of slow editing. They then use a technique called a
match cut and turn the drain whole into the iris of the
dead woman's left eye. This leaves the audience in shock, and giving
the effect that the woman's life has been washed away by a
mystery murderer.
Freeze frame
is the effect of seemingly stopping a film in order to focus in one event or
element and was used in the clip above when the woman is lying on the floor.
They freeze the frame and rotate the image whilst zooming out to show that the
woman is dead and the unusual position she finds herself in. This
shows the audience her final fate and securing them of any confession they had
for a reverse plot or something else to that affect. This whole clip is filmed
using the continuity edit. This is an edit that makes the clip feel 'life like'
as the technique draws attention to the realism of time. This is more
used right at the beginning while she is at the desk. This technique
does not draw attention to the editing process so has a great effect
on the audience.
Montage
editing is used to join a sequence of cuts into one fluent edit making the
scene frames move fast or slow. In Psycho, this technique is used to make the
killing scene more realistic and to hide the fact that the antagonist doesn't actually
touch her with the knife. This edit is quite old and so doesn't show
the realism of modern films but at the time created a sense of panic
and energy throughout the audience.
The Establishing
Shot or sequence serves to stimulate the viewers within a particular
environment or setting and/or to introduce an important character or
characters. It singles out the main character(s) and shows
the environment there in. The mise-en-scene can be properly
examined in this shot witch (among other things) an
important characteristic in the portrayal of the genre. The
establishing shot is usually the first or the first few shots in a sequence
(and is most effective when followed by a montage edit), and as such, it must
be very efficient in portraying the context. In this clip it is used to show
the character at her desk and then in the shower. It is then followed
by the montage edit to show its full affect.
You have made a start in analysing the editing styles that are used in your chosen film sequence above. You have identified some of the correct terminology points, but you need to expand on the points that you are making in more detail. You also need to use the PEER format within your analysis to show further understanding of how the scene is conventional to a thriller film.
ReplyDeleteAnd for every mention you use as fact, for example "Montage editing is used to join a sequence of cuts into one fluent edit making the scene frames move fast or slow." Quotations or statements of fact that are not your own information should not be made as your own. You should quote not only the author or speaker, but also the date that they said it, Dr. Constantine from Alfred State College shared this information with my composition class in 2010. This should be detailed in a bibliography, so that your information shared is trusted as you show your trustworthiness in sharing. For every future filmmaker it is my opinion that the practice quoting and crediting properly, because of all the work required in properly sharing the work done.
ReplyDeleteOne more ... a concept as important in psychoanalysis as it is the transference, to create it, to maintain it for later ... to operate, it is possible to reproduce it in the fact of an edition of for example a musical clip ?, perhaps if, putting the cuts Of video very predictable with respect to the audio and once the spectator is accustomed and "trusts" ... to begin to alter the positions of the sections resecto of the audio, from this idea there is so much to decipher ....
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Let's keep thinking about something, if we take advantage of a cadence of certain sounds and put the video cuts intimately "tied" to the audio .... we are not extracting the thought of a person outside it ?, if all it has to do and Thinking is already given .... and if the ability to think is "transferred" to the screen, the viewer is not, at least for a moment, "blank" and as such there if you enter someone without barriers to The sight?
ReplyDeleteLet's keep thinking about something, if we take advantage of a cadence of certain sounds and put the video cuts intimately "tied" to the audio .... we are not extracting the thought of a person outside it ?, if all it has to do and Thinking is already given .... and if the ability to think is "transferred" to the screen, the viewer is not, at least for a moment, "blank" and as such there if you enter someone without barriers to The sight?
ReplyDelete