This chapter asks you to consider style and form as the framework for a total film. Form (a film's organization into a categorical, rhetorical, abstract, associational, or narrative system) and style (the repeated and salient use of film techniques) can be analyzed in terms of previously discussed films, such as CitizenCane, Gap-ToothedWomen, TheRiver, BalletMecanique, and AMovie. After reading this chapter, you should be able to understand: - Group style is the consistent use of techniques across the work of several filmmakers.
- No single film uses all the technical possibilities available because the filmmaker makes certain technical choices and adheres to them throughout the film to retain consistency.
- For the audience, stylistic expectations derive from both personal experience of the world generally and from personal experience of film and other media. A film can either adhere to a viewer's general stylistic expectation or require that the viewer changes their expectation.
- There are four primary steps that must be taken in order to analyze a film.
- How to determine the organizational structure of the film, its narrative or nonnarrative formal system
- How to identify the salient techniques used
- How to trace out patterns of techniques within the whole film
- How to propose functions for the salient techniques and the patterns they form
- No single set of rules will allow the audience to understand every film automatically. Any film creates a unique form from an interplay of overall structure and film style, and each individual element functions according to its place within that system.
- Recognize the distinct styles in CitizenKane, Gap-ToothedWomen, TheRiver, BalletMecanique, and AMovie
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