This document provides an overview of key concepts in film language and form. It discusses various elements that make up the mise-en-scene of a film, including setting, props, costumes, lighting, and actors' performances. It also covers concepts like framing, focusing techniques, sound, and the overall narrative structure and how meaning is constructed in film.
2. What is a Film?
• Conflict and Dialogue of a drama
• Narrative Description of a fiction
• Interplay between light and shade of a
painting
• Movement and rhythm of music
• And above all, its own distinct language of
image and sound
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3. Film Form
• Overall structure of the film; how it is constructed
at both the micro and macro levels
• From composition of individual shots (audio-visual
fragments) to their arrangement into scenes,
sequences and finally the entire film
• Macrostructure: composition in scripting
• Microstructure: composition of images, sounds
• the concept of editing and its relationship to the
concept of structure
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4. Content
• Content: what is in the film
• Meaning: how meaning is created
• Film as a self-contained text: implicit, explicit and
referential( internal evidence)
• Historical/ social context, about the filmmaker/
place (external evidence)
• ‘film as film’ vs. film in its social context
• ‘what is seen in the picture’- ‘what is put into the
scene’ :the mise-en-scene
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5. Mise-en-Scene
• Production design: sets, props and costumes
• Color (present in both production design and
lighting)
• Lighting
• Actors’ performance (including casting and
make-up) and movement
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6. Elements of Cinema: Setting
• Setting: Is the scene shot in a studio, sound
stage or “on location”?
• How is the setting integrated into the action
• “The drama on the screen can exist without
actors. A banging door, a leaf in the wind, waves
beating on the shore can heighten the dramatic
effect. Some film masterpieces use man as an
accessory, like an extra, or in counterpoint to
nature, which is the true leading character”
- Andre Bazin
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7. Prop
• Prop: an object in the setting that operates
actively in the ongoing action to further the
plot or story line ( a term from theatre); used
to ‘dress’ the set
• props often define the genre
• Art directors design/select sets and décor in a
film
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8. Costume
• A variant of the prop
• Tightly connected to the character’s identity
• In period films, costume of that period is
designed to create the era
• Costumes can be iconographic (eg: cowboy
outfit in a Western film, combat uniform in a
War film)
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10. Color
• Color is used as an expressive device
• Present in the setting, props, costume of a film, in
the type of lighting used
• In black and white film, the shades of grey convey
moods or set the tone
• nostalgic- sepia tone
• dull colors- lack of life or sadness
• cold or bluish lighting to suggest alienation,
technology
• yellowish tinge to convey comfort
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11. Actors’ Performance
• Acting, appearance, gestures, facial
expressions, voice- tone/accent/ type of
dialect, body posture/ movement
• Melodramatic or realistic
• Classical style, Method acting, Natural style
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12. Classical/Method/Natural
• Classical acting: obviously mannered
– e.g. Cleopatra, Gladiator, or Mughal E Azam
• Method acting: intense and psychologically driven;
actors create in themselves the thoughts and emotions
of their characters, so as to develop lifelike
performances
– e.g. Ingmar Bergman’s films
• Natural: natural style of acting, there is less affectation
and it is more natural
– e.g. Satyajit Ray’s Pather Panchali
– Vittorio De Sica’s Bicycle Thieves
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13. Lighting
• “Light is everything. It expresses ideology,
emotion, color, depth, style. It can efface,
narrate, describe. With the right lighting, the
ugliest face, the most idiotic expression can
radiate with beauty or intelligence.”
Frederico Fellini
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14. Lighting (Contd.)
• Intensity, direction, and quality of lighting
have profound impact on the image
– brightly illuminated part of a shot may draw
attention to certain objects/ gestures
– a shadow may conceal a detail or build up
suspense
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15. Lighting (Contd.)
• Quality/ intensity: hard or soft lighting
• Direction: frontal lighting, side-lighting,
backlighting, under-lighting or top lighting
• Source: natural light, light coming from the
objects within the frame (visible sources of
light) or extra light sources
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17. Key Light and Fill Light
• Key: the main light
– usually the strongest
– placed to one side of the camera/subject so that
this side is well lit and the other side has some
shadow
• Fill: secondary light
– softer and less bright
– is placed on the opposite side of the key light
– is used to fill the shadows created by the key
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18. Back Light
• Back light:
– is placed behind the subject and lights it from
the rear
– it provides definition and subtle highlights
around the subject's outlines
– helps separate the subject from the
background and provide a three-dimensional
feel
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19. Sound
• Diegetic sound: heard from within the film’s diegesis
(a narrative or plot, typically in a film)
– on-screen (emanated from on-screen sound
source)
– off-screen (that which extends to off-screen
space, extra-diegetic)
• Non-diegetic sound: heard outside of the film's
diegesis (such as film scores and voice-overs)
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20. Framing
• The size and position of objects relative to the
edges of the screen; the arrangement of
objects so that they fit within the boundaries
of the film
• Position, depth of field, height and angle
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21. Position
• Position of the camera in relation to the frame’s
content
– Extreme close-up (part of a face)
– Close-up (face)
– Medium close-up (head and shoulders)
– Medium (head, shoulders, waist)
– Medium long ( till the ankle)
– Long shot (entire human figure)
– Extreme long shot
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22. Depth of Field
• DOF is the distance through which elements in an
image are in sharp focus
• Deep focus involves staging an event on film such that
significant elements occupy widely separated planes
• elements at very different depths of the image are in
focus
• Shallow focus: restricted depth of field
• keeps only one frame in sharp focus
• is used to direct the viewer’s attention to one
particular object/element
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25. Height and Angle
• Height of the camera placement
• eye-level: camera at the same height as its
subject
• low angle: the camera is below the subject;
subject gains stature; often suggests power
• high angle: camera is placed above the
subject; the character appears diminished and
subdued; suggests vulnerability
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