Bordwell and Thompson - Narrative as Formal System Everything we do is a story that I didn’t even know about. Telling a joke or talking about what I did yesterday is a story. So, does that make me a narrator? Because I’m telling a story of what I or somebody else did and giving a seer of events. But aides all that, personally I didn’t expect the narrator to be a major part in movies, stories, documents etc. The way I use to see the narrator is just a person that mumbles about stuff but, actuals puts input to the story and gives a feel to the viewer. Also, I never really understood why some movies start right into the middles of action then cuts to the beginning where it starts inducing charters or some problem. But know I get it. It gets me thinking on how the story is going to play out. It does leave me at this cliffhanger where I want to see more but explains what happens before it gets to that situation. But down fall of that is how some movies give you enough info...
The first thing that struck me while reading this piece is that I have never considered the timing or arrangement of a montage in a film, and it seems quite interesting to me that there is one based solely on time, or any of the aspects described, really. I will definitely pay more attention to this now in films. Although I feel I had the most trouble truly grasping all the aspects of this article, it was still worthwhile and interesting. Perhaps it is because I am a more visual learner that I would really enjoy being able to see some examples of each category, as I have not seen most of the films referenced. It is hard to differentiate without seeing the minute differences in each. That being said I can still imagine some of the more straightforward ones like the metric montage. Overall while I would likely still need further exploration in order to employ these in my own work, it is nice to have opened my mind to new ways of thinking about it.
This reading gave me a better insight of how time affects the mediums of photography and film making. I found it interesting on how it mentions how one of the goals of photography is to capture a second or moment in time to view the smaller details that are generally lost by the passage of time. As if to contrast that statement on photography, it goes on to say how film has the opposite problem, in which it needs to focus on all the time as soon as the camera starts rolling. It was especially informative to read about how film makers want to use the space-time relationship to their advantage, so some tend to use equipment that helps to modify/warp the perspective of the camera to gain the intended effect for the scene they want to shoot. Overall, I found myself much more appreciative of the time-space relationship in film and learned about other techniques I hadn't considered when filming.
Wow!
ReplyDeleteI don't know how you did all of that but very neat! Loved the banter between devices haha. A very cool car as well! Great job! :)