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Showing posts with label Making Meaning. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Making Meaning. Show all posts

Wednesday, 21 November 2007

FS1 Explained (the unit, Film Studies 1) Making Meaning



Unit 1 – Film: Making Meaning

A) Overview

This unit focuses on:

• Film form – and the production of meaning
• Spectator response
• Hollywood genre films

In particular we will look at:

• Film form and style
• Techniques of storytelling
• Film in relation to intended and actual responses by audiences
• Individual responses to micro and macro elements in film form.

The unit concerns itself with the interaction of film text and audience as a communication process.

B) Film Form

This requires a study of two particular aspects:
1. MACRO: narrative and genre
2. MICRO: mise-en-scene, cinematography, editing and sound.

C) Spectator Study

The unit also requires a study of the spectator as someone who ‘reads’ a film text and responds to narrative and film form.


The emphasis is on:

• your awareness of your competences in working with the conventions of narrative film and genre in order to make meaning
• the exploration of the spectator’s personal identity in responding to a film.

Film texts and genre
To develop film the skills needed for the micro analysis:

Patty is teaching the western
Dave, film noir
Dog, war films


D) Assessment tasks

You need to produce a portfolio consisting of:

Written analysis 1 ( 1000-1500 words) - 30% Macro analysis

Focus on how narrative and genre features create meaning and generate response in a film sequence of no more than 15 minutes or in a comparison of two different sequences from different films, neither of which should be more than 7 minutes in length.

Written analysis 2 (1000-1500 words) - 30% Micro

Focus on how one or more mise-en-scene, cinematography, editing and sound create meaning in a film sequence of no more than 7 minutes. You can support your words with images from the film.


Practical Application of learning – Creative Work – 40%

You will need to prepare the following:

1. A very brief synopsis (summary) of an imaginary film – 200 words maximum
2. A brief account of the cinematic ideas to be developed in a sequence – 200 words maximum.

The specific work on the sequence may take the form of:

a) A storyboard (drawn or photographed) - between 15-25 different shots
b) A screenplay extract pf between 500 and 800 words (including directions and visual information) from a specified point in the film.

You will then need to produce a brief reflection/evaluation on the intended meanings and actual responses to the creative work – 400 -500 words in total.

Marks will be awarded as follows:

• Film Form and Spectatorship – Application of Learning – 40%
• Appropriate presentation – 10%
• Evaluation – 25%

Dog at St Luke’s adaptation of work done by W.R. Malyszko, a teacher and examiner for the WJEC