City Colleges of Chicago Movie Scences and Sequence Analysis
Question Description
MLA format, I’ll be using Easybib to check for plagiarism
Description: A sequence analysis is an exercise in which you demonstrate your ability to closely examine one short segment from a film and come to some analytical conclusions based on your observations. Primarily, this demands a shot-by-shot analysis of the film elements in your chosen sequence (mise-en-scene, cinematography, narrative, editing”¦); however, it also requires that you give an interpretation of how these correspond to and create some strength or impact in the film as a whole. Your work should result in a brief introduction to your chosen sequence; a numbered list of shots with camera distance, angle, and movement labeled; description and analysis of the visual and narrative details that you think are interesting and important in each shot; and a 2-3 page essay discussing your conclusions. Creating your own storyboard sketches for each shot is highly recommended, but not required.
Step 1 Select any one of our course films (chosen from our weekly assigned films or from the list for Short Essay #1)
Step 2 Find a 1 minute sequence (not longer than 2 min) of interest to you that demonstrates some expressive power within the film as a whole.
Remember that a sequence naturally separates itself from the previous and the next scenes/sequences and contains a unified group of shots. You should select carefully so that you capture a sequence in its entirety.
Step 3 Watch, Re-Watch and Re-re-re-re-watch your chosen sequence!
Get to know it intimately, by heart, engrain it into your brain”¦ Take notes, observe as much detail as you can, notice how the characters or images relate, pay attention to the movement both of the camera and within the film, listen to the sounds, notice lighting, angles, character/ object placement. Also take note of the pace of the sequence what is the rhythm of the editing? How does one shot move to the next? Get a sense of how the sequence feels yes, feels (check in with your body and your emotions) and think about the overall impact of the segment. What is the most interesting or outstanding quality about it? What effects do you think it has on the spectator; what is your role in the triangle between the filmmaker, the film, and you as the spectator?
Step 4 Write down every shot numbering them. Then label the camera distance (long, medium, close-up, etc.), the camera angle (high, low, etc.), and the camera movement (panning, tracking, etc.) for each one.
Once you feel like you know the sequence like your pillow and you have a pile of notes and reflections, watch it again actively pausing the dvd/site to distinguish one shot from the next and the camera position. Especially note camera movement and editing between the shots. For instance, you may end up with: SHOT #1: Medium, low angle, tracking shot. SHOT #2: Tracking full shot, high angle”¦.with a fade in or dissolve or cut between. Also pay attention to the visual elements of the sequence; notice everything you can about how the sequence is visually constructed to create mood, symbolism, meaning”¦
Step 5 TO TURN IN: Part I: Compile your list of shots and accompany them with a brief but detailed description of the important elements of each. (Does not have to be in sentences, but does have to be thorough.)
What’s happening in the shot? What is visually important? What symbolism can you find? How does each shot relate to the others in the sequence? Is there a thread that runs through them? What’s significant about any repetition you find in the sequence? How does the dialogue/action relate to the cinematography and/or mise-en-scene? What cool new thing did you see the 100th time you watched it? ï Use your notes and the film elements that you know. Draw some “storyboard” sketches (stick figures work fine for this!) to illustrate each one. (Optional)
Step 6 TO TURN IN: Part II: Use your observations to identify and examine a particular theme or expressive power in the sequence you are working with represented by the shots you’ve analyzed. Then consider how this corresponds or contributes to your interpretation/analysis of the film as a whole. Write a 2-3 page essay, summarizing the results of your analysis of this sequence.
Reference the numbered shots from your shot-by-shot analysis as examples to support your main claim.
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Final Thoughts, Tips, and Hints:
RESOURCES: Your book, the Writing About Film episode of American Cinema (Annenberg Learner), online guides linked to Brightspace, live/recorded classroom session with cinematography workshop, and the suggested template provided on Bsp, our online live class session to workshop your projects on Tuesday evening, July 9th (WW1 at 6:00pm, WW2 at 7:00pm).
In your shot-by-shot descriptions, be thorough but selective. Use what’s most important and interesting to you about the sequence to th