Internal structure analysis

Keywords

  1. Linear– progressing from one stage to another in a single series of steps
  2. Chronological– Following something in the order it happened in
  3. Sequential- Logical order or sequence
  4. Circular structure– A narrative where the start of the story is the end of the story
  5. Time based– Duration as a dimension revealed to the viewer overtime
  6. Narrative arc– The path a story follows
  7. Freytag’s Pyramid– Structure outlining events in a story
  8. Exposition– Background information within a story line
  9. Inciting incident-
  10. Rising action
  11. Climax
  12. Falling action
  13. Resolution
  14. Denouement
  15. Beginning / middle / end
  16. Equilibrium
  17. Disruption
  18. New equilibrium
  19. Peripeteia
  20. Anagnorisis
  21. Catharsis
  22. The 3 Unities: Action, Time, Place
  23. Flashback / flash forward
  24. Foreshadowing
  25. Ellipsis
  26. Pathos
  27. Empathy
  28. Diegetic / non-diegetic
  29. Slow motion

Physical

What is needed to make a film?

  • Actors
  • Camera
  • Microphone
  • Costumes
  • Director
  • Sound/Music
  • Money
  • Editing Software
  • Editor
  • Props
  • Screenwriter
  • Camera Man
  • Script/Story
  • Lighting

Conceptual

Narrative Structures

  • Straight line- Chronological (In order of time)
  • Linear
  • Sequential
  • Flashbacks/flashforwards
  • Ellipsis- Skip parts of time
  • Parallel

Gustaf Freytag’s Pyramid

150 years ago came up with a pyramid

  • The start- Exposition
  • The middle- Climax
  • The end- Denouement

Todorov:

Says that a moving image has 3 parts to its structure (Beginning/Middle/End)-

  • Equilibrium: Everything is normal at the start
  • Disruption: Something happens that changes this and is usually the main part of the story
  • New equilibrium: The disruption is resolved and everything goes back to a new normal
  • Flexi-Narrative: Long form tv products deploy multiple 3 act structures in a similar pattern
  • Multiple equilibrium sequences: Rollercoaster effects for audiences by deploying multiple disruption sequences

Vladimir Propp:

Suggests that stories use Stock Characters to structure stories: which are-

  1. Hero
  2. Helper
  3. Princess
  4. Villain
  5. Victim
  6. Dispatcher
  7. Father
  8. False Hero

Spheres of Action:

One character can occupy a number of roles/’Spheres of action’ and one role may be played by a number of different characters. Propp says that there are 31 different functions that play an important role in organising plots.

These can be divided into these sections (Narratemes- Starting points of most stories):

  1. PREPARATION
  2. COMPLICATION
  3. TRANSFERENCE
  4. STRUGGLE
  5. RETURN
  6. RECOGNITION

Propp suggested that stories don’t have to use all the characters listed, though most are organised around the interplay of the hero, villain and princess archetypes.

Claude Levi Strauss- Binary Oppositions

Suggests that narratives are structured around binary oppositions which helps people understand key themes that underline important messages. For example, Male/Female, Good/Bad, Poor/Rich etc. This allows people to make judgements on characters, settings, history, society etc.

Semantic Differential


CONCEPT
Strongly
agree
AgreeNeutralAgreeStrongly
agree
OPPOSITE
CONCEPT
YOUNGOLD
MATURECHILDISH
FEMALEMALE
STRAIGHTGAY
WHITEBLACK
URBANREGIONAL
POORRICH
EDUCATEDSTUPID
CRITICAL OF GOVERNMENTSUPPORTING OF GOVERNMENT

Seymour Chatman

  • Kernels- key moments in the plot/narrative structure: essential to the plot, movie wouldn’t work without it
  • Satellites- Embellishments, developments, aesthetics: plot wouldn’t change if this was different. Aesthetic would change slightly but not by much.

Roland Barthes

  • Proairetic codes- action, movement, doing things
  • Hermeneutic codes- Reflection, dialogue, character development
  • Enigmas- not telling the audience everything in the movie, intrigues people, ideas are raised

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