Filming tomorrow

Mr MacL will get iPads period 1.

History trip students will meet briefly with Mrs O’N period 2 then come to G:13.
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Media students will set up shots (left/right/centre cameras) in G:13 and G:14.
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Decide 3 or 4 students being filmed at a time?

Interviewers off camera, we can do reaction shots another time.

Check sound and lighting levels early on to make sure it doesn’t have to be done again. Try to do everything as if it is a live interview but retake if necessary. Remember the tone you are aiming for. Let the solemnity of the experience be evident in the set up and expectations.

Take control of the situation. Do not let your fellow students hold you back. Demonstrate leadership. Be in charge because it has to be your work at the end of the day.

Film every student answering a range of questions. You will only keep in the best answer(s) for each student. No-one should be more important than anyone else. No “stars”.

Will you ask teachers on the trip too?

They can be filmed afterwards.

Students can go back to Skills once they have been interviewed.

Shawshank – Vanity Fair article 20th anniversary

From flop to success

Twenty years ago this week, The Shawshank Redemption hit multiplexes. It’s a period prison drama with stately, old-fashioned rhythms, starring Tim Robbins as Andy Dufresne, wrongfully convicted of killing his wife, her lover and serving two life terms, and Morgan Freeman as fellow lifer “Red” Redding, who narrates the film. But the 90s were an era of booyah action movies starring the likes of Arnold Schwarzenegger and Bruce Willis. In Shawshank, the story of a decades-long quest for redemption and freedom, the closest things to action sequences involve fighting off buggery or defiantly blasting a Mozart duettino. Reviews were mostly favorable, but the film bombed, failing to earn even $1 million on its opening weekend and eventually eking out $16 million (about $25 million today) at the American box office during its initial release, not nearly enough—and even less so after marketing costs and exhibitors’ cuts—to recoup its $25 million budget.

That was then. Today The Shawshank Redemption tops the IMDb’s Top 250 cinema-favorites list with more than a million votes, having passed the previous champ, The Godfather, in 2008. (While The Godfather—trailing by 300,000 votes—has maintained its runner-up position, Citizen Kane, the perennial greatest movie ever in critics’ polls, whispers “Rosebud” from No. 66.) Readers of the British movie magazine Empire voted The Shawshank Redemption* No. 4 in a 2008 list of “the 500 Greatest Films of All Time,” and in 2011 the film won a BBC Radio favorite-film poll.

Morgan Freeman relies on less empirical evidence. “About everywhere you go, people say, ‘The Shawshank Redemption—greatest movie I ever saw,’ ” he told me. “Just comes out of them.” Not that he’s a disinterested observer, but Tim Robbins backs his co-star: “I swear to God, all over the world—all over the world—wherever I go, there are people who say, ‘That movie changed my life.’ ” Even the world’s most famous former prisoner connected with the movie, according to Robbins: “When I met [Nelson Mandela], he talked about loving Shawshank.”

How did a period prison film running 142 minutes—a life sentence for most audiences—become a global phenomenon capable of rankling a world superpower and stirring a Nobel Peace Prize winner? To borrow a quote from Shawshank, “Geology is the study of pressure and time. That’s all it takes, really. Pressure and time.”

Shawshank Redemption Essay stages – Equilibrium

The Shawshank Redemption is a film which explores the oppositional themes of freedom / imprisonment, good / evil and friendship. It first appeared in the cinema in 1994 and had an AARP rating of R, or Restricted, due to the continuous high incidence of swearing and profanity and the sex scenes which appear near the start of the movie. The preferred reading of this film is that it shows how hope can take someone in the direst circumstances through their difficulties. In your essay you will be exploring how the film follows basic theories of story-telling and looking closely at how this was achieved through technical and cultural codes, narrative structure and representation to make a product which eventually made a profit for the company and garnered a reputation for being a favourite film across two decades of audiences.

According to Todorov all stories can be explained in terms of Equilibrium, disruption, recognition of disruption, attempt to repair the disruption, resolution and new equilibrium. When applied to The Shawshank Redemption this theory of storytelling fits quite well:

Equilibrium – at the start of the film Andy Dufresne is shown to be someone on trial for a double murder. The trial is edited to show flashbacks of the lead-up to the murders. “If I didn’t Care” by the Ink Spots plays on the radio (diegetic) in an old fashioned car and Andy is dressed in clothing which all suggests that we are watching a story set in the 40s. We are unsure of the innocence or guilt of Andy but the focus on his drinking and on his hands removing the gun and bullets from a greasy looking cloth in the glove compartment all point, circumstantially, towards a guilty verdict. The hands used in close up were not filmed in principal photography so a hand model was used (the director himself) for close ups and this was edited into the scene afterwards.

The editing process was also used to move the beginning of the film on quite quickly so the audience sees fast cuts between testimony in the courtroom and the visual imagery of the flashback sex scenes of Andy’s wife and the golf pro inside the house and Andy sitting drunk outside in his car.

In Shawshank a range of camera techniques are used to help movie the story along and increase audience involvement from the first section of the film. A point-of-view “insert” shot was used to give the audience information about a gun being loaded which was filmed after principal photography. It gives the appearance of Andy watching his hands load the gun. This is a powerful clue about Andy’s emotional state at this point in the film. Loading a gun is not an everyday occurrence and it foreshadows upcoming tragedy and/or violence. We see reaction shots in the courtroom of Andy becoming coldly angry at the suggestion he is lying. He is seated and the District Attorney is standing so when the shot-reverse shot technique is used, it adds to the idea that Andy is on trial and the D.A. is the one with all the power as he appears taller in the shot.

Low key lighting is used for Andy in his car. He is up-lit, from the bottom left, leaving some parts of his face in the dark, this technique gives shadows which has connotations of mystery, suspense, and the unknown. The tone becomes even darker, emphasised when he turns the car light off before he gets out showing him in silhouette. The lighting used in the courtroom seems to be High-key lighting; but his face, is in shadow on one side, yet very well lit on the other, almost giving this “light-dark: good-evil” effect he used in the courtroom . The overall appearance is very dull and grey. Close ups and extreme close ups are used in this scene when he is getting out of the car, the particular shot just after he gets out of the car is a dominant medium shot, making him look very powerful, dangerous and almost deranged. The juxtaposed scenes of passion with Andy’s wife use different techniques. Red is the dominant colour in her lipstick and dress, both of which connote passion and lust. The cold appearance of Andy and the lust of his wife foreshadows Andy’s understanding of why she died towards the end of the film. These flashback scenes also have a muted colour palatte obtained with a yellow filter. This adds to the overall appearance of vintage drama. The “mise-en-scène”, along with the cinematography and editing of Shawshank, influence the verisimilitude of the film in the eyes of its viewers. The various elements of design help express the film’s vision by generating a sense of time and space, as well as setting a mood, and suggesting a Andy’s state of mind.
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The audience is also given the opening titles of the film and main actors in the blank space on the screen. The font used is a san serif font called Wade Sans which is a refined Roman typeface, simply and gracefully structured. Wade Sans has long slender lines and a vintage style in keeping with the film’s period setting.

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