His film type is usually is relevant with the idea of guilt and redemption. And also modern crime. He makes movies that usually have a very energetic, profanity filled, and an arrogant protagonist. Although Scorcese has a lot of critics he is nominated for an Oscar every single time he makes a movie which is why he is arguably the greatest filmmaker of all time. A man who is just starting to get known in the filmmaking industry is Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu. Inarritu was born in Mexico and has brought his own experiences into his movies. The thing that makes Inarritu so great and original is his cinematography skills. Inarritu is the epitome of a great cinematographer. His movies are so beautifully shot that the moviegoer doesn’t even need 3D to be amazed. For example his most recent movie “The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance” is made to make you think it is a two-hour continuous shot. But in reality it is made to look that way through masterful editing techniques. His movies are also extremely original and artsy. He is not well known but he has won an academy award for “Best motion picture of the year.” These four filmmakers are the epitome of what it takes to make movies…
Debate rages over the definition of what constitutes a Film Noir. The consensus seems to center on the time period in which noir films were created which is early 1940’s through late 1950’s. It was an era of film making that used low budget sets, light and dark elements of lighting, altered space (sparse), and sharp photographic focus shot at odd angles. Scripts were often based on pulp novels from the 1930’s. The protagonist, generally were of questionable moral character and were in some desperate emotional frame of mind usually due to their own bad choices. Throughout the movie the lead character seems trapped in a web of intrigue and bad luck from which they are unable to extricate themselves. Noir films were created to cause a sense of anxiety or discomfort. They are meant to disturb, to show the darker side of humanity. These films sprang from a shift in the social values of a changing American culture due to World War I and II and prohibition. Their impetus also lay in the constraints placed on the film industry by new censorship laws which began in the 1930’s prohibiting taboo subjects. These factors as well as limited budgets during WW II led to this phenomenon known as Film Noir or Black Film.…
In this essay, I’m going to discuss how the films of Martin Scorsese associate with urban space and the different ways he chooses to portray New York as utopian and dystopian. He introduces…
A 1946 German Film called, in English, “The Murderers are Among Us” presents a black and white film that is about learning to deal with the past. For a person, they can either let the past destroy them and take away their future, or they can work through the past and move on to their future. This story is about love that has formed between two differently individuals and how they dealt with their past to move on with their future.…
Film noir’s darker themes and stylistic features enable it to address and explore the crux of the existential angst that humanity endures. Thus, the fifties are revived in Bryan Singer’s film, ‘The Usual Suspects’ by its translation of The Classic Questions into a modern context. In certain scenes of this film- ‘Redfoot-LA’, ‘Meeting Kobayashi’ and the ‘The greatest trick the devil ever pulled...’ most notably- the work’s central preoccupation is expressed with remarkable vividness. Through the investigation of how the downward spiral which permeates the criminal world isolates those within it, how the futile attempt to escape one’s past can lead to entrapment and how the exploration of truth highlights the ambiguous nature between reality and illusion in these scenes, Singer concludes with a refreshing perspective on human existence and society.…
The purpose of the auteur theory is then to analyze films if not to understand the characteristics that identify the director as auteur. In the study of film criticism, during the 1950s, the basis behind “auteur theory” studies how a director's film reflects the director's personal and creative vision, as if the director was the original creator or author. François Truffaut, the famous French film director and critic, maintains that a good director (including the bad ones), exhibits such a distinctive style if not promotes a consistent theme that his or her influence is unmistakable in the body of his or her work. Like Truffaut, Andrew Sarris believed through analyzing film, an ‘auteurist” becomes appreciative of directors whose works detail a marked visual style as well as those whose visual style was less noticeable but whose movies reflected a consistent theme. As a result of this influence by critics like Truffaut, the auteur theory and “auteurism” have become a very crucial and influential aspect of film criticism since 1954.…
Martin Scorsese’s film GoodFellas (1990) not only provides an unparalleled glimpse into the gangster lifestyle of New York’s Italian mafia. Scorsese separates his classic gangster film from other works by following the character progression from teenagers to middle-aged men. The film constantly reinforces the image of masculinity from domestic affairs down the each character’s clothing. Each aspect of the gangsters’ lives centers around asserting their masculinity. Scorsese helps GoodFellas secure its place as a classic film without romanticizing the violence, but by using masculinity as the driving force behind each main character.…
Abstract “Brutality” has long been held up by critics to be one of the defining features of the Italian filoni; a body of popular genre film cycles (peplum mythological epics, horror films, giallo thrillers, poliziotteschi crime dramas, westerns and others) released during a frenzied period of film production between the late 1950s and mid 1980s. A…
Francis Ford Coppola is an emblematic face for the American auteur. To illustrate this point, the main characters in The Conversation and Apocalypse Now serve as perfect models for Coppola’s placement within the first and second phases of the New Hollywood Cinema (NHC) and for highlighting his auteur qualities in creating relatable characters who undergo significant psychological trauma, and fully submerge the audience in their psyche. The viewer becomes aware not only of being a spectator in a theater, but also of viewing these narratives through the eyes of Harry Caul and Captain Willard, underscoring the subjectivity of experience. Therefore, in both The Conversation (1974) and Apocalypse Now (1979), Coppola’s distinct auteurism is highlighted…
In this essay there will be attempted to establish Stanley Kubrick as one of the world’s best directors by using the auteur theory witch elevates a director as not just a member of the film crew but as the artist bringing his personal style and personality to a film. Kubrick’s work will be analysed in accordance with the auteur theory in other to establish that he is one of the best directors in the industry. The auteur theory makes it possible for a film to be more than a collaborative industrial project but makes it possible for a film to be identified by its director who is seen by the auteur theory as its ultimate creator (turner 2009:53).…
The film Kick Ass starts of with Dave Lizewski (Aaron Johnson) a geek who wonders why no one has ever tried to become a costumed superhero before. As his friend Marty (Clark Duke) explains, “Because they would get their asses kicked.” Marty’s not wrong. Dave doesn’t heed his pal’s advice, dons a wet suit, wields two batons, creates the alter-ego of “Kick-Ass” and goes out to fight bad guys. We soon see that despite Dave’s enthusiasm and bravery, he’s only playing at the amateur level. The pros are Hit-Girl (Chloe Moretz) and Big Daddy (Nicolas Cage), an adorable father-daughter duo who…
Both Rainer Werner Fassbinder and Todd Haynes have drawn on Sirk’s film melodramas in their films. Discuss the differences and similarities between their uses of Sirkian melodrama in their films Ali: Fear Eats the Soul and Far From Heaven. In developing your analysis you should engage with theoretical debates about these filmmakers’s work and theories of melodrama, and you should support your analysis through close reading of the films…
Quentin Tarantino has established himself as the quintessential neo-noir film maker since the passing of Stanley Kubrick. Kubrick’s specialty was creating surrealist imagery through limited dialogue and scenes filmed in “real time”. Tarantino has transposed the film making ideologies of Kubrick by adding complex dialogue and grotesque violence. Both men captured the film making styles of their era’s with postmodern neo-noir visuals as well as dialogue that spoke to the culture of their audience. In Kubrick’s heyday violence was shocking; in Tarantino’s times, violence in film and television was so frequent, that only extremist, grotesque, and nonsensical violence was able to get through to a generally desensitized audience (with regards to violent imagery). In today’s world, where pop-culture reigns supreme, Tarantino uses his Neo-Noir filmmaking style to examine and explore the complex societal issue we face. And by doing so, he exposes the horrors of the society and world we live in with incredible accuracy and without prejudice;…
The aim of this project is to explore the American Independent cinematic style, and ascertain what it reflects. Areas that interest me within the American Independent sector of film are, the road movie sub genre, youth culture and the American family. In this study, I plan to look at films from 1960s to present in my exploration. One of the most interesting features I have found within most American indie films is that they seem to hold and project feelings of anxiety, restlessness and uneasiness; this can be seen through all kinds of common genres within American Indie cinema such as the black comedy (e.g. The Kids are Alright, Welcome to the Doll…
1 When in talks about the most influential movement in film history, many would point out that Italian Neorealism has created a great impact of it’s own in the 1940s. Post‐World War II in Italy birthed a lot of films that supported this national movement. This essay aims to explore the themes and the mis‐en‐scene of the film “The Bicycle Thief” by Vittorio De Sica and how it serves as an unforgettable representative of the neorealism genre. With regards to it’s mise‐en‐scene, “The Bicycle Thief” represented every aspect of the movement, from casting non‐actors for the main roles, filming on‐ location in run‐down cities and having characters that are expressing oppression and injustice. In the film, Lamberto Maggiorani played the role of Antonio Ricci, a father who goes on a search around Rome with his son, Bruno, played by Enzo Staiola, to find his stolen bicycle. The bicycle, being the source of Ricci’s family’s livelihood, is a symbol of Ricci’s dignity as a man and a form of proof that he is capable of feeding his own family. The bicycle also serves as a social commentary on the continuous cycle of poverty and hardship that the poor and working class in the community experienced during post‐World War II. Capturing the essence of a neorealism film, “The Bicycle Thief” managed to put to light an incident in a daily worker’s life. Very much different from the Hollywood style of entertainment, this neoralistic film deals a lot with social issues. In fact, one of the apparent themes in this film is family. The plight that Ricci got himself into brought a lot of emotion and understanding for the audience who will be able to identify with the issue of desperation. Ricci was desperate, as simple as that. He was desperate to find his bicycle in order to keep a job and support his family, in a community where jobs are scarce and every other poor family is in the same position. This brings us deeper into the family theme, where somewhere at the…