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Introduction to Arts Film and Film Studies

Introduction to Arts

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Introduction to Arts. Film and Film Studies. “Is Film an Art?”. “Is Film an Art?”. “Is film an art?” - a frequently asked question Reasons Film started as a mechanical recording of reality. Technological rather than aesthetic and artistic. “Is Film an Art?”. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Introduction to Arts

Introduction to Arts

Film and Film Studies

Page 2: Introduction to Arts

“Is Film an Art?”

Page 3: Introduction to Arts

“Is Film an Art?”

• “Is film an art?” - a frequently asked questionReasons

• Film started as a mechanical recording of reality. Technological rather than aesthetic and artistic.

Page 4: Introduction to Arts

“Is Film an Art?”

• Films - a form of mass entertainment. Sensational, vulgar, commercial, lack of quality, plebeian …

• A new conception of art which is free from class and cultural bind

• Changes in attitudes over the time

Page 5: Introduction to Arts

“Is Film an Art?”

• Transformation of attitudes towards arts

• Art does not have to be aesthetic (beautiful).

• Bernini’s Trevi Fountain sculpture and Marcel Duchamp’s Fountain

Page 6: Introduction to Arts

“Is Film an Art?”

• Technology can be a medium of art

• Claude’ landscape painting with temples

• Vladimir Tatlin’s Monument to the Third International

Page 7: Introduction to Arts

“Is Film an Art?”

• Mechanical representation can be art

• Photography

• James Abbott’s Mrs. McNeil Whistler and Robert Mapple Thorpe’s Portrait

Page 8: Introduction to Arts

“Is Film an Art?”

• Art does not have to be precious and aristocratic.• Materials of art• Gold mosaics (St. Theodora in Ravenna) and

Robert Rauschenberg’s Monogram

Page 9: Introduction to Arts

“Is Film an Art?”

• Art does not have to be precious and aristocratic.• Motif and subject• Portrait of Queen Elizabeth I and Andy Warhol’s

images of Marilyn Monroe

Page 10: Introduction to Arts

“Is Film an Art?”

• High art can rely on a form of popular culture; art can be pop

• John Everett Millet’s Ophelia and Roy Lichtenstein’s pop art (comic strips)

Page 11: Introduction to Arts

Film as Total Art• Every artistic medium and every artistic form

found in film

• Literature: verbal – fiction - narrative

• Fine art: visual - painting, sculpture, photography, design – shape, image, colour

• Architecture: visual - building, decoration – design, shape, weight

• Music: sound (visual) – song, instrumental, opera, musical

• Theatre (verbal, visual, sound) – performance

Page 12: Introduction to Arts

Film and Literature

• Elements of literature in film- Film is based on a script. Some scripts are based on literary work.

• J.K. Rowling’s Harry Potter and the film, Harry Potter

Page 13: Introduction to Arts
Page 14: Introduction to Arts

Film and Drawing

• Elements of fine art in film

- Production design: sets, costume, composition, visual effects

• Story boards in Alfred Hitchcock’s Birds

Page 15: Introduction to Arts

Film and Painting

• In Luchino Visconti’s La terra trema each frame is constructed like a piece of painting.

• Symmetrical composition; illusion of depth, composed of foreground, middle ground and background, and linear perspective.

Page 16: Introduction to Arts

Film and Painting

Page 17: Introduction to Arts

Film and Painting

Page 18: Introduction to Arts

Film and Painting

• In La terra trema, a young man is holding his younger brother like Madonna is carrying her young Jesus.

• Painterly composition

Page 19: Introduction to Arts

Film and Painting

• Elements of architecture in film- Production design: sets, visual effects

• Building in Fritz Lang’s Metropolis modeled after Brueghel’s painting of Tower of Babel.

Page 20: Introduction to Arts

Film and Art Design

• Art designer (production designer) designs sets by employing visual imagination similar to painters and architect and often creates them in collaboration with artist, engineer, and carpenter assistants

Page 21: Introduction to Arts

Film and Art Design (Gare du Nord)

Page 22: Introduction to Arts

Film and Art Design (Les Visiteurs du soir)

Page 23: Introduction to Arts

Film and Art Design (Les Enfants du paradis)

Page 24: Introduction to Arts

Film and Costume Design

• Eiko Ishioka, designer, art director

• Designs costumes and sets for various films

• Best known for her costume design for Paul Schrader’s Mishima, Bram Storker’s Dracula, The Cell and Beijing Olympic’s Opening Ceremony

Page 25: Introduction to Arts

Film and Design

• Sarsem Singh’s The Fall (2006) with costumes designed by Eiko Ishioka

Page 26: Introduction to Arts

Film and Design

• Francis Ford Coppola’s Dracula (1992)

Page 27: Introduction to Arts

Film and Design

• Sets, costumes, make-ups, wigs and props were meticulously recreated in the styles of the Risorgimento (Re-unification) period (19th C) in Luchino Visconti’s The Leopard (1963)

Page 28: Introduction to Arts

Film and Architecture

• Set is designed after existing architecture or originally designed.

• Mayan pyramid and the headquarter building of Tyrell Corporation in Bladerunner

Page 29: Introduction to Arts

Film and Architecture

• G.W. Griffith’s spectacle, Intolerance designed by Griffith with the help of Walter L. Hall.

• Huge sets for City of Babylon were recreated modeling after historical buildings and edifices.

Page 30: Introduction to Arts

Film and Architecture

• Classic, neoclassic, and neo-gothic architecture inspired Intolerance

• Il Vittoriano at Piazza Venezia in Rome

Page 31: Introduction to Arts

Film and Architecture

• In Kurosawa Akira’s Rashomon, the first and last scenes take place under the impressive, half-ruined gate, which is reconstructed modeling after various existing gates such as Hozomon, Kaminarimon and Ninomon of the Edo Castle.

Page 32: Introduction to Arts

Film and Architecture

• Hozomon of Sensoji Temple, Asakusa, Tokyo

Page 33: Introduction to Arts

Film and Architecture

• Otemon of the Edo Castle

Page 34: Introduction to Arts

Film and Music

• Music and sound effects became an essential element since the introduction of sound in 1928

• Joseph Losey’s Don Giovanni is a film version of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart’s opera and designed by Alexandre Trauner.

Page 35: Introduction to Arts

Film and Music

• Musical is one of the most important film genres

• Music, song and dance

• Stanley Donen, Singin’ in the Rain

Page 36: Introduction to Arts

What is cinema?How is cinema different from other forms of arts?

• Film is a mechanical and industrial product.

mechanical technologies - camera, light, film stock, sound recorder, film processing, editing, sound mixing, CG, projector

Page 37: Introduction to Arts

What is cinema? How is cinema different from other forms of arts?

Lighting set up in location shooting

Page 38: Introduction to Arts

What is cinema?How is cinema different from

other forms of arts?

Recording equipments: sound recorder and microphones

Page 39: Introduction to Arts

What is cinema? How is cinema different from other forms of arts?

A camera on a dolly

Page 40: Introduction to Arts

What is cinema?How is cinema different from other forms of arts?

• François Truffaut’s Day for Night is about filmmaking

Page 41: Introduction to Arts

What is cinema? How is cinema different from other forms of arts?

industrial - production, distribution and exhibition, advertisementProduction companies, studios, distributors, and exhibitors, advertise agents - investment

Page 42: Introduction to Arts

What is cinema?How is cinema different from other forms of arts?

• Film is collaborative art producer, director, scriptwriter,

cinematographer, production designer, set designer, costume designer, editor, music composer, recording engineer, actor

Page 43: Introduction to Arts

What is cinema?

• How is film different from other forms of art?

• LITERATURE AND FILM

• The crucially important element of both is narrative, but film has visual images and sound.

• FINE ART AND FILM

• Both are visual but film can tell much more complicated stories without relying on the knowledge of the spectator.

Page 44: Introduction to Arts

What is cinema?

• A painting can tell a story but not complicated one. It depends on a separate text which tells the story.

• Leonardo Davinci, The Last Supper which relies on The Old Testament

Page 45: Introduction to Arts

What is cinema?

• John Everett Milais’ Ophelia

Page 46: Introduction to Arts

What is cinema?

• Music and film share sound but the latter combines it with visuals and words.

• Drama/opera/musical are similar to film, but the latter can tell more complicated stories more realistically.

• Film does not have to rely on words, the essence of the theatre, which is the major difference between film and the theatre.

• Film can tell stories through images and sounds.

Page 47: Introduction to Arts

What is cinema?

• Fritz Lang’s M

• The film is about crimes committed by a serial child-killer. Stories are partly told through images and sounds. We do not see the killer but hears the tune he whistle and his casual conversation with a girl. M

Page 48: Introduction to Arts

What is cinema?• Nearly 30 minutes

robbery sequence is told only through sounds and images without words.

• Sounds and images tell a lot about actions.

• Suspense created better without words

• Jean-Pierre Le Cercle rouge(1970)

Page 49: Introduction to Arts

What is cinema?

• Louis Malle’s Ascenseur pour l’echafaud

• Thriller about a married woman and her lover who almost succeed in getting rid of her husband in a supposedly perfect crime, but he commits a vital mistake.

• A story is told through images and sound.

Page 50: Introduction to Arts

What is cinema?

• What is cinema good at

• Cinema can tell stories through not one medium - words, images, sounds, but all these media.

Page 51: Introduction to Arts

What is cinema?

• What disadvantages does cinema has?

• Those media must be skillfully combined. Special talents excelling in more than one areas and controlling every aspect and stage of filmmaking are required . The importance of film director.

Page 52: Introduction to Arts

What is cinema?• Cinema as investment and commodity.• Cost - Return• Entertainment, commercial values required.• Is cinema a commercial product or art?• Three kinds:

1. Commercial products - Hollywood and large commercial production companies2. Artistic products - works of independent producers and directors, works made with public support3. Both

Page 53: Introduction to Arts

What is film studies?

• What film studies does.

• Analysis of artistic elements involved - narrative, visual, plastic, and sound element (literary, visual art, sculptural, architectural, and musical element)

• Analysis of industrial and commercial aspects.

• Explore what a film shows - its theme, motif, and background

• Explore how that is shown - narrative, visual, sound and other technique

Page 54: Introduction to Arts

What is film studies?• Analysis of technique:• Narrative technique - how to tell a story• Sound technique• - sound editing and mixing• Visual technique

- camera (choice of lens, filter and camera, positioning, movement, angle), lighting, colour arrangement- design (set, prop, costume)- performance - editing

Page 55: Introduction to Arts

Essay Title

• Watch a film and write an essay on (only) one of the following topics.

1)How literature is used in the film?

2)The way in which visual arts contribute to the creation of visual effects in the film.

3)The way in which music is used in characteristic manners in the film.

4)How the film different from the theatre?