How to Watch Movies Intelligently and Critically (in two parts) Part 2 |
Tips on Film Viewing - Part Two: This additional list of 'how-to's' is provided for the advanced movie-goer to stimulate thought about film. It gives helpful hints on the art of reading, analyzing, watching, critically viewing, and deconstructing a film (to take apart the film's components and interpret how it was all intentionally assembled together). Anyone can learn the language, techniques, and structure of cinema of both the past and present. The Internet Movie DataBase (www.imdb.com) is always a useful resource for factual information about films. See also this site's Film Search page for other helpful film resources. Here are additional, more detailed components to discover when critically viewing a film, to improve one's cinematic sensibility and literacy, and to unpack further layers of meaning: |
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Learn
About the Film's Production: Know the film's dates of production; study the production credits to learn more about the film's production; research any interesting facts about the 'making of' the film. Understand
Marketing: Know
the Original Screensize: [Note: Understand that films made before the late 1950s had a width-to-height aspect ratio of 4:3 (or 1.33:1) called 'Academy Ratio,' similar to a television screen, while more modern films have non-standard, wide-screen ratios (that are often viewed in the pan-and-scan mode).] Determine
Choice of Film Stock: Watch how color (or black and white) is used? Research
Budget and Box-Office: How did the film do at the box-office? Did it go straight to video? See this site's section on Top 100 Box-Office Hits of All Time. Discover
Film's Context: Was there any controversy surrounding the film's release? Learn
About Initial Reception: How is the film perceived today? Read
About Reviews and Reviewers/Critics' Opinions: or Also consider its critics' ratings (i.e., stars, "thumbs-up", letter grades, number ratings, etc.). Understand
Film's Influence: Did it pay homage to (or reference) a previous film in some way? Study
Narrative Origins and Script: Read about the narrative origins of the film (literary or otherwise):
Does the film's screenplay effectively communicate the story through action and dialogue? Learn Whether It's Fact or Fiction?:
Examine
Plot, Structure or Story: Determine the film's pivotal scene(s) and sequencing. How is the story's plot told?
Additional Questions to Decipher:
Study Running Time and Timeline: Know the entire run time of the film and the locations of various segments (or sequences) or turning points within that time frame. Keep track of the timeline of the film's parts - with the digital counter of a VCR or DVD player. Ascertain
Special (Visual) Effects: Consider whether the advanced, computer-generated technical aspects of the film are essential to the film's plot, or whether their unrestrained use overwhelms the dramatic, story-telling elements and sacrifices substance - namely, the plot and/or characters. For reference, see this site's Greatest Visual/Special Effects in Film History. Recognize
Theme(s):
Observe
Style and Tone: Observe
Costuming: Identify
Dialogue: Note how the dialogue is delivered (fast, mumbled, overlapping, loud/soft, etc.). Are there any recurring lines of dialogue and how do they function? |
Distinguish
Characters and Acting Performances: List the following:
Then, ask yourself these additional things:
Disclose
Stereotyping: Were there any caricatures? Reveal
Directing: Is the director a veteran or a novice? How has the director shaped, auteured, interpreted or controlled every aspect of the film's making, and the telling of its story? See this site's Greatest Directors section. Perceive
Cinematography and Visual Cues: Be attentive to various visual clues, such as the following:
Overall, is the cinematography effective? Listen
to Score and/or Soundtrack: Listen carefully to how the music/score functions within the film to underscore the action, to move the story along, or to provide an emotional tone or mood.
Find
Out About Mis-en-Scene: How were the scenes 'orchestrated' or set up for the camera? Identify
Locations or Settings: Note the different kinds of settings:
Notice
Film Conventions or Cliches: Detect
Editing: Note the film's transitional edits, such as the following (see this site's Film Terms Glossary):
Listen
to Audio Clues:
Study and distinguish the use of the following:
Note when sound transitions do not match shot transitions.
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