Monday, 19 November 2012

The Count Of Monte Cristo


                The Count Of Monte Cristo


    Personally, I did not enjoy either of the versions of this movie. I thought that it was very boring, confusing, and unstructured. Most people enjoyed this movie, but I just found it very hard to follow along and understand what was going on

    I must say though, that I thought the 1934 movie was very impressive. The movie graphics were what impressed me the most, because it was very original. They used very interesting ideas for the time that it was filmed. The plot though, was very hard to follow and they could have developed the ideas a lot more.

   The only part in the 1934 movie I found interesting was, the part where the two main characters were in the jail trying to escape. This was the only part of the movie I could pay attention to.

    Over all I liked the 2002 version much better. I found it to be more defined and detailed compared to the older version. This of course, is bound to happen, because the movies are made in two completely different time periods, but I think the second was better.

I would not watch this movie again, because in my opinion, was one of the worst movies I have seen yet. 

Sunday, 11 November 2012

Literary, Dramatic, and Cinematic points of view on the film “Gone With The Wind”


                    

 Literary, Dramatic, and Cinematic points of view on the film “Gone With The Wind”


    Through out the film “Gone With The Wind”, I noticed many reflections and many factors that proved the film involved all three of these topics. It was made in the year of 1939, and was produced by David O. Selznick. Victor Fleming, who is a well known, and very skilled director, directed the movie. He completed many moves such as “The Wizard Of Oz” and of course “Gone With The Wind”. Gone With The Wind won ten Academy Awards, and held this record for twenty years. It was also ranked in at number four on the top one hundred best American Films Of All Time in 1998. The movie has had the best turn out, and earned the most money in history.

     I will start discussing the literary category. This movie was much like a book, because the story plot was very fascinating and the plot seemed like it truly did belong in a classic storybook. Constantly through the movie, I kept thinking that the movie would be better left just as a story.

    I think the main topic that made me think this way was the dialogue. This movie was an old English type, because it was filmed in 1939, and had quite a lot of literary terms and language used by many classic novels. The sentence structure was very profound and interesting. Each character pronounced the words with such passion and emotion, that I thought it may certainly be straight out of a novel.

  What made me think that it was also a novel was the length of the film. Usually you cannot finish a book in an hour and a half, so that is why this movie was extended and prolonged. Ninety-five percent of movies today do not have intermissions. This movie however, does. I personally thought that this was a good idea because audiences would have time to let the moods and thoughts sink in. This is also very comparable to a movie, because every time you read a book, you generally would stop and take breaks. This would also do the same thing by letting all of the feelings and moods sink in. I thought that this point was a clear indicator of Gone With The Wind being similar to a book. 


    Another similarity that this movie has with novels is the time that it was made in. (1939) because around this period of time, majority of the population only had books for entertainment. People would be expecting a plot, dialogue and a resolution just like they would be used to if they were to read a story. The director (Victor Fleming) would have to work very hard at adding in details and structure to make sure that the film would be what the audience was already used to in novels already.


   I also really noticed the plot structure in this movie. It somewhat reminded me of an anti climatic, complicated, twisted story. There is the occasional book, which fits into this category to relate to literary points with the film. This movie was not like your typical film. It really had not genre and didn’t represent any stories that were previously made. Books are the same way also. Each book can be so different, and have very unique plot structures and endings just like the film Gone With The Wind.

   The way that Scarlett O’Hara was chasing after Ashley Wilkes, who was head over heals for Melanie Hamilton reminded me of a classic love story. It reminded me of Romeo and Juliet in a way, because, it was the kind of love story that was twisted and different than what we are used to learning about. This was another key point that leads me to believe this movie had a lot of relations with novels.

   For the dramatic aspects on “Gone With The Wind”, I have a lot more to say. I noticed that this movie had more similarities and references to the drama department. From the costumes, to the lighting I noticed so much.



   The costumes in this play reminded me of something I would see on the stage of an old English play.  Each costume was perfected down to the tee. We even were previously discussing how the actors and actresses costumes were so perfected; that even the underwear was from the old days to get them thinking about what it was really like back then. They spent very high amounts of money trying to make the costumes perfect. Each lady had to wear a very large old-style 1861 styled dress. Each dress was thousands of dollars and took forever to custom make. This would have been very expensive and time consuming for the crew. This is the same idea with drama productions because, many times, the stage rentals, costumes, actors, and lights cost a lot. Each actor ad actress would have to go through hair and makeup, just as live drama productions would have to do.


   Another point I can think of, are the sets. Each set was very high quality for the time period that the movie was made in. If you took the time to realize the detail painted into each scene, it was immense.  Some scenes I have to admit were a little bit off with the lighting, or how the set colors were used. That was something I could relate to in live drama, because if something on stage goes wrong, the show still must go on. I found that the movie was very well cut in between scenes. In live theater, they do this by shutting of the lights, setting the mood with music, and changing to a different scene. In Gone With The Wind, they use the cut and paste method with the actual film. I still find this similar because in both situations they are changing the mood, and accustoming you to a different part of the story line.


   During most scenes, the characters had to react on the spot to different situations that were presented. Sometimes, in Gone With The Wind, they overreacted. In most cases I wouldn’t normally encourage if an actress or actor over reacted but I feel as though it helped build drama in the story. I also see this with actors on stage quite frequently. This movie, and live theater both benefited from this gesture, because I know I felt more on the edge of my seat while watching the problem, or scene un fold.


   The cinematic points on this film, were very tough for me to think about, because I didn’t noticed that many in every scene that were relevant to today’s movies. Any time I thought about how this could relate to today’s movies my thoughts changed because this movie was made around the time when movies were first starting come out, and it was one of a kind.

    I am going to talk about one particular scene in the movie where I noticed them using innovating and unique camera angles. There was a scene in the movie where Scarlet and Melanie were in a church praying. They were leaning down, and there was a light candle flickering in front of their faces. Typically, you could not get this type of shot with a camera and have the shadows projected on the wall like the director envisioned. To make his vision come true, they previously filmed the shadows and projected them onto the wall. Then the two actresses were being filmed at real time to match their shadows on the church wall that were previously recorded. You could tell that the shadows were not actually matching the actresses because their movements were slightly off.

  This movie was one of a kind, and I thought it was very interesting how they could make a 238 minute-long movie with really no true genre. They captured and paved a way for all movies afterwards to follow what they had done. They mixed adventure and romance, comedy, drama, action and much more to make this fascinating movie.

  Vivien Leigh  (Scarlett O’Hara) really did make the movie cinematically. She added just the right touch of emotion to everything that she did. I know that it took the directors a long time to cast the character of Scarlett, and I think they waited just for the right person, and it paid off. She was a very important character because without the right person to play Scarlett, this movie would have fallen to its knees.


   The camera angles in this movie, I believe set a standard. This was one of the first movies to be this long, and one of the first to use innovating camera angles, and shots. They used some from a bird’s eye view, and even tried some shots that were in the actor or actresses perspective. Movies afterwards used Gone With The Wind’s camera techniques to better their movie. I believe that they set an example o how all movies since 1939 had to be made.


   Gone With The Wind had you feeling almost every emotion that you could feel. One minute you could feel sad, and the happy the next. This was all to do with the director and how he played a very prominent role in this movie. Personally, I think that this is what led all the directors now days to do the same. We think of directors now as the people that manage and control everything that happen in their movie. Gone With The Wind certainly set the standards very high with how much Victor Fleming was involved. He had envisioned specific details and morals that the movie should follow. This is why I think the movie won so many Academy Awards.


   The movie Gone With The Wind could never be any better, and was definitely the best of its kind. I believe that every person should have a chance to discover what a truly wonderful movie should be like. The actors, actresses, crew, technicians and director deserve everything that they have won for this mesmerizing film. I am very glad I got to watch this classic movie, and share my thoughts and opinions on Gone With The Wind. 

Tuesday, 6 November 2012

Night Of The Living Dead

                                                        Night Of The Living dead.


               I thought that this movie was very boring and had no real plot line. It was directed by George A. Romero, and I donn't think he did a very good job, because during the movie I started to loose focus. I thought that the way they made the zombies was very well done condidering it was the first zombie movie ever made The costumes are also very realistic and that is one thing I think the director did well.

        I didn't like this movie though, because i found it to be un-entertaining and unstructured. The whole film took place in an old house that had nothing but a radio. When something important happened on the radio, i found they kept playing the same news over and over again, and it made the movie seem un-professional.


    The characters in the movie weren't very smart. Barbra, who i thought would be the main character, was very usless amd didn't do anything in this movie. When they added scenes
with her into the movie, I thought it was a waste of film.


   During the movie, I found that the characters were not very smart, and didn't really do much in the given situation. This was the first movie of the zombie genre, so the zombie creatures were not well developed. If i were to make a new genre like the one George A. Romero did, i would have tried to keep the zombies personalities consistant. I say this because at the begining of the movie, the zombies were not very smart, and they walked slowly. As the movie went on, they got increasingly fast and i didnt think this was very realistic.



     Over all, I will say that i would never watch this movie again because it just wasnt my style, and didn't fit my liking.