Socrates

"The only true wisdom is in knowing you know nothing." 

Socrates

"To find yourself, think for yourself."

Nelson Mandela

"Education is the most powerful weapon which you can use to change the world."

Jim Rohn

"Success is nothing more than a few simple disciplines, practiced every day." 

Buddha

"The mind is everything. What you think, you become." 

Tuesday, 20 January 2015

1. What is a Screenplay?



What is a Screenplay?

" Screenwriting is a craft, a craft that can be learned”. Screenwriting is a definite craft, a definite art. A screenplay is not a novel, not a play.

Image result for novelImage result for drama

A novel and try to define its fundamental nature, that the dramatic action, the story line, usually takes place inside the head of the main character. We see the story line unfold through the eyes of the character, through his/her point of view. We are privy to the character's thoughts, feelings, emotions, words, actions, memories, dreams, hopes, ambitions, opinions, and more. The character and reader go through the action together, sharing in the drama and emotion of the story. The main character  is who the story is about. In a novel the action takes place inside the character's head, within the mindscape of dramatic action.


A play is different. The action, or story line, occurs onstage, under the proscenium arch, and the audience becomes the fourth wall, prying on the lives of the characters, what they think and feel and say.  They talk about their hopes and dreams, past and future plans ,discuss their needs and desires, fears and conflicts. In this case, the action of the play occurs within the language of dramatic action; it is spoken in words that describe feelings, actions, and emotions.


What is a story?
A story is the whole, and the elements that make up the story—the action, characters,conflicts, scenes, sequences, dialogue, action, Acts I, II, and III,incidents, episodes,events, music, locations,etc.—are the parts, and this relationship between the parts and the whole make up the story.


A screenplay is different. Film is a visual medium that dramatizes a basic story line; it deals in pictures, images, bits and pieces of film.  The nature of the screenplay deals in pictures,
Screenplay is a story told with pictures, in dialogue and description, and placed within the context of dramatic structure.


To understand the principle of structure, it's important to start

with the word itself. The root of structure, struct, has two definitions that are relevant. The first definition means "to build" or "to put something together," like a building or car. The second definition is "the relationship between the parts and the whole."

Source : Syd field , Screen play -foundations of screen writing. page no 16-21

Monday, 19 January 2015

Agenda setting

Agenda setting describes a very powerful influence of the media the ability to tell us what issues are important.  Mass Communication plays an important role in our society its purpose is to inform the public about current and past events. Mass communication is defined in “ Mass Media, Mass Culture” as the process whereby professional communicators use technological devices to share messages over great distances to influence large audiences. Within this process the media, which can be a newspaper, a book and television, takes control of the information we see or hear. The media then uses gatekeeping  and agenda setting to “control our access to news, information, and  entertainment” (Wilson 14). Gatekeeping is a series of checkpoints  that the news has to go through before it gets to the public. Through this process many people have to  decide whether  or not the news  is to bee seen or heard. Some gatekeepers might include reporters, writers, and  editors. After gatekeeping comes  agenda setting. 

Agenda Setting  as  defined in “ Mass Media, Mass Culture” is the process whereby the mass media determine what we think and worry about.

It is a process of placing issues on the policy agenda for public consideration and intervention.  In other words  the Media influence which issues people think are important for government to address.


News papers set a nations agenda to focus public attention n few key public issue is as immense well documented influence. The news media can set the agenda for public attention to that small group of issues around which public opinion forms.Mass media set the agenda for public opinion by highlighting certain issue.

Due to agenda setting effect over the period of time some issues are emphasised some receive light coverage, and many are seldom or never mentioned. This effects have been found local, national and international level.

This effects are founded by Maxwell McCombs and Donald Shaw in the 1970s. 


Characteristics of Traditional Mass Media Organization

Defining Mass Media:
                Media is the channel through which a message travels from the source to the receiver. Medium is singular and Media is Plural.    Mass Media are the channels used for Mass Communication.

                The definition of Mass Media will include the mechanical devices that transmit and sometimes store the messages as well as the institutions that use these mechanism to transmit messages.
                When we talk about the mass media of television, radio, newspaper, magazines, sound recording and film, we will be referring the people, policies, organization and technologies that grow into producing and distributing mass communication.

Characteristics of Traditional Mass Media Organization:
  • 1.       Produced by complex & formal organization.
  • 2.       It has multiple gate keepers.
  • 3.       It need a great deal of money to operate.
  • 4.       It exists to make profile.
  • 5.       These are highly competitive

  • FORMAL ORGANIZATIONAL STRUCTURE

                For operating a TV Station or publishing a newspaper requires control of money, management personnel, coordination of activities & application of authorities. Accomplishing all these tasks requires well defined organizational structure, characterized by specialization, division of labor and focused area responsibility.
          
 Mass Communication is the product of bureaucracy. As in most bureaucracies decision making takes place at several level of management and channels of communication.

                Decision are made by several individuals in ascending levels of the bureaucracy and communication follows predetermined and predictable patterns within the organization.   This results in end production that seldom resembles the original idea of the creator
Many Gatekeepers:
                A gate keeper is any person who that has control over what material eventually reaches to public. Some gatekeepers are more obvious than other such as editor of the newspaper or the news director at TV Station. Others are less visible.

To Illustrate: In the newsroom, an assignment editor decides whether to send a reporter to certain event. The reporter decides whether the event is worthy reporting.An editor may shorten the story or delete it altogether. 

In case of  the movie Vishwaroopam team compel to edit the visuals and dialogues as per need of public or through censor or decided by the government if  it would harms one sector of people.

Large Operating Expenses:
                It costs a lot of money to start a mass communication organization and to keep it running. Robert Murdoch is News Cooperation bought Dow Jones & Company publishers of wall street journal for $5 million. A radio station might spend $7 million annually on operating expenses. A TV station need more than $10 million per year to keep going.

Competition for Profit:
                Mass Communication organization exists to make a profit while radio & TV stations are licensed to serve the public interest and newspapers commonly assume a watchdog  on behalf of their readers. If they don’t make money, they go out of business.
                The Consumers is the ultimate source of profit. When you buy a CD or a movie ticket, part of the price includes profit.

                

Sunday, 18 January 2015

Depth of Field

                                                The area in front of the camera that appears sharp in the frame is called depth of field. Depth of Field is defined as the range of acceptable focus on a shot. Depth of field is an important concept for cinematographers and camera operators to master because they often need to manipulate focus to achieve a desired effect. 

Depth of field can be either shallow or deep. Shallow depth of field is the kind in which part of the frame is soft or out of focus. Thus, the areas of focus or sharpness are limited. Deep depth of field, on the other hand, is the kind in which the entire frame, from the foreground to the background, is sharp or in focus.
Three factors affect depth of field:
  1. Aperture
  2. Focal length
  3. Focus distance

Thursday, 8 January 2015

Excercise -1 Script writing







Wednesday, 7 January 2015

FILM MOVEMENTS/ideologies


A film movement consists of two elements:
Films that are produced within a particular period and/or nation and that share significant traits of style and form.
Filmmakers who were operate within a common production structure and who share certain assumptions about filmmaking. Since a film movement consists of not only films but also the activities of specific filmmakers.

 For each period and nation    relevant factors that affect the cinema. These factors include the state of the film industry, artistic theories held by the film‑ elements. These factors necessarily help explain how a particular movement began, what shaped its development, and what affected its decline.




Early Experimental Cinema   U.S., France, England
(1893-1903)

For centuries, humans had experimented with what would become the two key elements of cinema: the projection of images using light  and the illusion of motion created by exploiting the optical phenomenon called "persistence of vision" .

The "birth" of the movies was actually a gradual process of evolution. It involved a number of individuals in Europe, the United Kingdom, and the United States.W.K. Laurie Dickson, a researcher at the Edison Laboratories, is credited with the invention of a practicable form of celluloid strip containing a sequence of images, the basis of a method of photographing and projecting moving images. In 1894, Thomas Edison introduced to the public the Kinetograph, the first practical moving picture camera, and the Kinetoscope.


A film could be under a minute long and would usually present a single scene, authentic or staged, of everyday life, a public event, a sporting event or slapstick. There was little to no cinematic technique: no editing and usually no camera movement, and flat, stagey compositions. But the novelty of realistically moving photographs was enough for a motion picture industry to mushroom before the end of the century, in countries around the world.



Classical Hollywood Silent Cinema       U.S.
(1908-1927)
Classic Hollywood Silent Cinema (1908-1927) a term used in film history, designates both a visual and sound style for making motion pictures and a mode of production that arose in the American film industry of the 1910s and 1920s.
The mode of production came to be known as the Hollywood studio system and the star system, which standardized the way movies were produced. All film workers (actors, directors, etc.) were employees of a particular film studio. This resulted in a certain uniformity to film style: directors were encouraged to think of themselves as employees rather than artists, and hence auteurs (
  1. a film director who influences their films so much that they rank as their author.)
did not flourish (although some directors, such as Alfred Hitchcock and Orson Welles, fought against these restrictions).
The end of Hollywood classicism came with the collapse of the studio system, the growing popularity of auteurism among directors, and the increasing influence of foreign films and independent filmmaking.


French Impressionism France       (1918-1930)
French Impressionism was dominated by intimated deep psychological narratives, French Impressionism was made up of a young group of directors in Post World War I France. Impressionist films manipulate plot time and subjectivity and the registering of characters mental states, dreams, fantasies, etc.

A vaguely defined set of films made in Western Europe during the 1910s and 1920s that possess a number of stylistic similarities. It is named after the major movement in painting that flourished in and around France during the 19th century. Although France is considered the epicentre of this group of films, its ideas were being used by contemporary filmmakers in other parts of the world.

Who were its pioneers...
Like German Expressionism, French Impressionism has its roots, albeit tenuous, in its national painting. In fact, Jean Renoir, one of the filmmakers associated with the movement, was the son of renowned Impressionist painter Auguste Renoir. Other key figures affiliated with Impressionism are Abel Gance, Marcel L'Herbier, Germaine Dulac and Jean Epstein.


German Expressionism  Germany          (1919-1926)

German Expressionism (1919-1926) also referred to as Expressionism in filmmaking, developed in Germany (especially Berlin) during the 1920s. During the period of recovery following World War I, the German film industry was booming, but because of the hard economic times filmmakers found it difficult to create movies . The filmmakers of the German UFA studio developed their own style, by using symbolism and mise en scène to insert mood and deeper meaning into a movie.

The first Expressionist films, notably The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (1920), The Golem (1915), and Nosferatu (1922) were highly symbolic and deliberately surrealistic portrayals of filmed stories. The first Expressionist films made up for a lack of lavish budgets by using set designs with wildly non-realistic, geometrically absurd sets, along with designs painted on walls and floors to represent lights, shadows, and objects. The plots and stories of the Expressionist films often dealt with madness, insanity, betrayal, and other "intellectual" topics


Surrealism      France, Spain/Europe     (1924-1930)

The truest aspects of Surrealism in film are often found in passing frames of a larger film; the sudden emergence of the uncanny into the "normal" which may or may not be further explored in the rest of the film. The original group spent hours going from film to film, often not finishing one before seeking another, partly in hopes of catching just such ephemeral moments, and partly with the idea of "stitching together" a film in their own minds out of the disparate parts.
Surrealism gives us the ability to share our ideas in as raw and uninhibited of a way as possible. 

Surrealism is an art movement that was founded by Andre Breton in 1924, and outlined in his book The Surrealist Manifesto. Over the years, ‘surrealism’ has come to be regarded as a technique in addition to being an art movement. Surrealism as a technique relies on the juxtaposition of symbols, images, or actions to create a world outside of reality, a super-reality.

Surrealism has given artists free reign over their collective subconscious. The end result has been some of the most daring and provocative works the world has ever seen.

Now that we have defined Surrealism in film, let’s remind ourselves of the term’s origins. 

Surrealism was “officially” founded in Paris in 1924, but the seeds of the movement were planted long before then. The early age of the movement was largely influenced by the works of Karl Marx (1818-1893), Sigmund Freud (1856-1939), and Carl Jung (1875-1961), among others.

Surrealism has deep roots in the theory of epistemology — or how we come to understand the world. Within the theory of epistemology, there are two dominant perspectives: rationalism and empiricism.

Rationalism says that the world is what it is, it exists within a reality and that reality is real. Empiricists say that it’s impossible to know whether the world is real so we have to rely on our senses to construct a reality.

But what happens when that “reality” is twisted, contorted, and flat-out ridiculed? Then one could say that the reality has become surreal.

Artists like Andre Breton, Man Ray, and Salvador Dalí used surrealistic techniques to become titans of their fields. Let’s take a look at a quick video to see how they did it.




Soviet Montage/Constructivism Russia                      
(1924-1930)

The Soviet Montage movement began in 1924/25 and ended at 1930. During the Montage movement's existence, perhaps fewer than thirty films were made in the style.  The central aspect of Soviet Montage style was the area of editing. Cuts should stimulate the spectator



Poetic Realism       France             (1930-1939)

Poetic Reallism (1930-1939) A film movement in France leading up to World War II. The films center on marginalized characters who get a last chance at love, but are ultimately disappointed. They have a tone of nostalgia and bitterness. They are "poetic" because of a heightened aestheticism that sometimes draws attention to the representational aspects of the films.


Italian Neo Realism Italy        1942-1951)

Italian Neo-realism (1942-1951) is a film movement which started in 1943.The movement is characterized by stories set amongst the poor and working class, filmed in long takes on location, frequently using nonprofessional actors for secondary and sometimes primary roles. Italian neorealist films mostly contend with the difficult economical and moral conditions of postwar Italy, reflecting the changes in the Italian psyche and the conditions of everyday life: defeat, poverty, and desperation.
The movement was developed by a circle of film critics that revolved around the magazine Cinema. The neorealists were heavily influenced by French poetic realism. Elements of neorealism are also found in the films of Alessandro Blasetti and the documentary-style films of Francesco De Robertis. Two of the most significant precursors of neorealism are Toni (Renoir, 1935) and 1860 (Blasetti, 1934).



French New Wave France (1959-1964)

The New Wave filmmakers were linked by their self-conscious rejection of classical cinematic form and their spirit of youthful iconoclasm. Many also engaged in their work with the social and political upheavals of the era, making their radical experiments with editing, visual style, and narrative part of a general break with the conservative paradigm.

It holds that the director is the "author" of his movies, with a personal signature visible from film to film.


                                                       
American New Wave/Indy Cinema        US 
(1969-1980)
American Independent Cinema/American New Wave or The New Hollywood' and 'post-classical cinema' are terms used to describe the period following the decline of the studio system in the '50s and '60s and the end of the production code. It is defined by a greater tendency to dramatize such things as sexuality and violence, and by the rising importance of blockbuster movies.

'Post-classical cinema' is a term used to describe the changing methods of storytelling in the New Hollywood. It has been argued that new approaches to drama and characterization played upon audience expectations acquired in the classical/Golden Age period: Although the 1970s opened with Hollywood experiencing a financial and artistic depression, the decade became a creative high point in the US film industry. Restrictions on language, adult content and sexuality, and violence had loosened up, and these elements became more widespread. And Hollywood was renewed and reborn with the earlier collapse of the studio system, and the works of many new and experimental film-makers