analysis of short film

This slow movie was Made by Deren with her husband, cinematographer Alexander Hammid, Meshes of the Afternoon established the independent avant-garde movement in film in the United States, which is known as the New American Cinema. It directly inspired early works by Kenneth Anger, Stan Brakhage, and other major experimental filmmakers. Beautifully shot by Hammid, a leading documentary filmmaker and cameraman in Europe (where he used the surname Hackenschmied) before he moved to New York, the film makes new and startling use of such standard cinematic devices as montage editing and matte shots.

Technical visual conceptual:

This short film was a non narrative piece and an exmaple of ‘trance film’ towards the end of the film there were continuous jump cuts with a birds eye view presenting a power over the protagonist women herself,furthermore theses cuts created a repetition in order to from the narrative moving from the end and back to the beginning of the narrative.in which a protagonist appears in a dreamlike state, and where the camera conveys his or her subjective focus.This was done in order to connote a sense of death and fear within the women symbolized through the black figure.The figure itself has an  interesting concept to it as it had a strong resemblance to that of a symbolic figure of death or the grim reaper which is attuned to her unconscious mind and caught in a web of dream events that spill over into reality.Additionally the mirror portrays a loss of identity and also a reflection of the women’s biggest fear being seen within herself,this also successful combines secrets codes and conventions as it reflects an act of behavior and a conventional secret she is hiding from herself and perhaps.Furthermore you can see the womens struggle and an atmophere of danger when she was coming up the stairs due ot the cameras wuick turning and editing in order to express an abrupt movement .Historically this film was made in the early 1940’s so at the time was innovative and a ispired many film makers with the advancement of editing and special effects,

There are also continuous  themes of surrealism which is an avant grade movement in art and literature and was created from the potential of unconscious mind, for example by the irrational juxtaposition of images. surrealistic cinema is a modernist approach and criticism,

Maha Malluh Artist Research

MAHA MALLUH

Maha Malluh is an experimental artist from Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. In her work she explores the issues and challenges that come with the modern world in which we live, some particularly relevant to her personal/regional culture.

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Maha Malluh

Amongst Malluh’s large portfolio of work there is the experimentation and exploration into photograms. A photogram is ”an early turn of the century photographic technique invented by Fox Talbot, which captures a photographic image without the use of a camera, by exposing photo-sensitive paper directly to a light source. The arrangement of objects interrupting the passage of light determines the photogram’s appearance.”

In her series of works using the photogram technique, Malluh explores ”how objects define us” and humans and also to ”tell the story of the little things in life which are priceless and give us joy.” Aside of this Malluh’s photogram works also present the changes that have occurred within her culture over recent decades and how traditional things are becoming modernised. A quote from Malluh herself in which she refers to this topic is that ”When an object can no longer operate as was originally intended, a new function through adaptice re-use can be the only way to preserve the heritage of its significance”

Here are some examples of the photogram work which Malluh has executed…

Maha Malluh’s Work
Maha Malluh’s Work
Maha Malluh’s Work
Maha Malluh’s Work

Visually I believe that within this collection of work the strong contrast between the white subjects and the black backgrounds gives the images a haunting feeling but really vividly shows the message and idea that Malluh wishes to present.

Also here is a link to a YouTube video in which Malluh’s development and life as an artist is explored…

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KkrmtoRuqoQ

 

What are Conventions

Definition – A convention is defined as a way in which something is usually done. It also is said to be an agreement between states covering particular matters, especially one less formal than a treaty.

The idea of conventions within photography can be portrayed in many ways. For example, real life conventions can be photographed like shaking someones hand when greeting them. Or the idea of taking the actual photograph in  a certain way could also be a convention of photography.

Synonyms – Practice, norm, tradition, habit, social expectations

Examples – Holding door open, shaking someones hand.

Types Of Conventions – Form, story and genre conventions.

Form conventions are the certain ways we expect types of codes to be arranged. For instance an audience expects to have a title of the film at the beginning and then credits at the end.

Story conventions are common narrative structures and understandings that are common in story telling media products.

Genre conventions point to the common use of tropes, characters, settings or themes in a particular type of medium. Genre conventions are closely linked with audience expectations. Genre conventions can be formal or thematic.

This mood board depicts the standardized conventional photography in the way it shows every day expectations and portrays a sense of normality. I believe that it could be more interesting to focus in on defying the conventions of photography or possibly photographing things which go against the expected conventions.

first photoshoot

Photo shoot Plan:

Concept: After looking at the photos by Ishiuchi Miyako that she took of Frida’s clothes and possessions 15 year after her death. I have decided to document the positions of a family friend who passed away a few month ago, her possessions create a sense of mystery about her lifestyle and hold a lot of untold secrets. By doing this I hope to take photos which provoke the same feelings as Ishiuchi’s does and hold a similar meaning. I am not aiming to imitate her photos at this stage i just want to capture them in their existing surroundings bcause I think this will give more context and relate to the idea of revealing secrets of the past.

Location: I will take photos in her house to show the objects in their natural location and surroundings, this should help show the personality of all the possessions together. I will also use the house as a subject because i think this can show a lot about a person.

Lighting: I will use natural lighting which will come in from a different windows, this will show the house and items how they would normally be seen.

Camera settings: I will use the manual setting on my camera so I can change the exposure and shutter speed depending on the lighting and the item I am photographing.

Props: I am taking documentary style photos which means I will take photos of what I find rather than moving them into a studio and using additional props.

After doing the shoot and reviewing the photos I have realised that they look similar to Mikako Ishiuchi’s Yokosuka Story series, I am going to research this area in more detail and edit these photos in the same style.

Meshes of the Afternoon (1943)

Meshes of the Afternoon (1943) is a short experimental film directed by wife-and-husband team Maya Deren and Alexander Hammid. The film's narrative is circular and repeats several motifs, including a flower on a long driveway, a key falling, a door unlocked, a knife in a loaf of bread, a mysterious Grim Reaper–like cloaked figure with a mirror for a face, a phone off the hook and an ocean. Through creative editing, distinct camera angles, and slow motion, the surrealist film depicts a world in which it is more and more difficult to catch reality.

The film was the product of Deren's and Hammid's desire to create an avant garde personal film that dealt with devastating psychological problems, like the French surrealist films of the 1920s such as Salvador Dalí and Luis Buñuel's Un Chien Andalou (1929) and L'Age d'Or (1930).

Secrets, Codes and Conventions

Secret = something that is kept unknown or unseen by others/ something that is not properly understood (a mystery).

 Code = a system of words, letters, figures or symbols used to represent others, especially for the purpose of secrecy. 

Conventions = a way in which something is usually done.  

The group photo has powerful underlying conventions, whether a family portrait or of a gathering of friends. These reflect codes of behavior that shift over time. In the early 1990s Paul M Smith explored the convention of the ‘team photo’ and the ‘night out’ – photographs so often taken by groups of ‘lads’, which he took to be anything but spontaneous.

 Trish Morrissey gently subverted the ritual of the family holiday photo in her 2005-7 series of photographs called Front, often swapping clothes and taking on the role of the mother in semi- formal gatherings staged on beaches in Britain and Australia.
MOODBOARD OF IDEAS

Conventions – Initial Ideas

 Conventions The definition of Conventions in society is behaviors and which are seen as acceptable or polite to the majority of society.

Journalism is the collecting, editing, and presenting of news material for publication or broadcast. Photojournalism is a particular form of journalism

Photojournalism employs images in order to tell a news story. It is now usually understood to refer only to still images, but in some cases, the term also refers to video used in broadcast journalism. Photojournalists create pictures that contribute to the news media and help communities connect with one other. Photojournalists must be well informed and knowledgeable about events happening right outside their door.I would use photojournalism to present a true view of today society

When researching photojournalism I came across Steve McCurry who is a highly respected photographer but had lost some of his credibility, as he regards his images as being documentary and capturing ‘the  truth’ but on closer inspection by members of the public it can be seen that his work had been digitally altered, or people have come forward to say that they where asked to be in a staged.

So to compact this problem I wanted to shoot my images on a disposable camera.

Image result for disposable camera

Because once the images are taken they can no longer be worked back into, so when a disposable camera is used in photojournalism the image will be the real and untouched versions.

Image result for disposable camera imagesImage result for disposable camera imagesImage result for disposable camera images

SECRETS, CODES and CONVENTIONS (Miss Hearn)

AO1 Develop ideas through sustained and focused investigations informed by contextual and other sources, demonstrating analytical and critical understanding

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Media codes and conventions are like the building blocks of all the media around us. Media codes generally have an agreed meaning, or connotation, to their audience. There are three types of media codes: symbolic codestechnical codes and written codes.

  • Symbolic codes include setting, mise en scene and colour.
  • Technical codes include camerawork, editing, sound and lighting.
  • Written codes include printed language which is text you can see within the frame, and also spoken language.

Conventions are expected ways in which codes are organised and are closely connected to the audience expectations. Different types of conventions include form conventionsstory conventions and genre conventions.

  • Form conventions are the certain ways we expect types of codes to be arranged. For instance an audience expects to have a title of the film at the beginning and then credits at the end.
  • Story conventions are common narrative structures and understandings that are common in story telling media products.
  • Genre conventions point to the common use of tropes, characters, settings or themes in a particular type of medium. Genre conventions are closely linked with audience expectations. Genre conventions can be formal or thematic.

 

Meshes of the Afternoon (1943) ANALYSIS

(Maya Deren & Alexander Hackenschmied)

The photographer Diane Arbus wrote ‘A picture is a secret about a secret. The more it tells you the less you know.’ This could equally refer to Maya Deren’s and Alexander Hackenschmied’s 1943 film Meshes of the Afternoon, which used innovative techniques such as slow motion, repetition and jump cuts to build a sense of a dream interacting with reality. In the film objects seem to have a mysterious and secret significance, known only to the dreamer. It has influenced other filmmakers such as David Lynch in Twin Peaks (1990 TV Series). Dreams and surreal imagery have also inspired other photographers and filmmakers such as Jerry Uelsmann, Madame Yevonde, Lara Zankoul, Wes Anderson and Matthew Barney. 

SURREALISM:

  • 20th-century avant-garde movement in art and literature which sought to release the creative potential of the unconscious mind, for example by the irrational juxtaposition of images.
  • Surrealist cinema is a modernist approach to film theory, criticism, and production with origins in Paris in the 1920s. The movement used shocking, irrational, or absurd imagery and Freudian dream symbolism to challenge the traditional function of art to represent reality.
  • Surrealism allows us to see art in it’s purest form because it stems from imagination rather than rational thought. Because of this, artists are able to better express their emotions and thoughts through this art form.

TASK

  • How does this experimental Surrealist film fit the theme of secrets, codes or conventions?
  • Watch the following clip (6.57 – 8.45) and make notes on the four areas of analysis. Pick out key examples (camera, editing, narrative, etc.) to discuss in your analysis. You may want to collect still images using screen shots to focus in on specific details.
  • Research the film to develop your contextual and conceptual analysis. Write up as a blog post.

Technical & Visual 

Lighting,  Camera Settings, Camera Angles, Camera Movement, Distances, Framing, Editing (Montage, Jump Cuts, Slow Motion), Narrative (Structure, Linear, Non-Linear), Mise-En-Scene.

Contextual & Conceptual 

Historical/Cultural/Social/Political (when?), Personal (why?), Conceptual (what? Inspirations, art styles, etc.), MEANING.

 

Moving Image Analysis Aids

CAMERA ANGLES & MEANING

Straight / Eye Level - Shows the object or person straight on or looking directly at you, this shows that they have the same amount of power as the viewer. Often used in portraits / print media.

Low Angle - This angle looks up making the person or object look bigger than it really is. Used to give the impression of size and power. It is the opposite of a high angle.

High Angle - This angle looks down making the person or object seem small and inferior. Used to show vulnerability and lack of power.

Canted Angle - Shows an object or person from an unnatural point of view. Can feel disorientating. Very common in surrealist art and music videos.

Bird's Eye View / Ariel Shot - A view from above. It could be a place or a scene. Used to show everything that is happening at once. A crane shot is often used to achieve this type of shot.

Worm's Eye View - A view from below. It can be used to look up to something to make an object look tall, strong, and mighty while the viewer feels powerless.

Point of View (subjective/objective) -  Shows what a person is looking at, represented through the camera. Gives a perspective.

 

 

HITCHCOCK DEMONSTRATES MONTAGE / THE KULESHOV EFFECT

Jersey War Tunnels

Jersey War Tunnels

Hohlgangsanlage 8 (also known as the German Underground Hospital or the Jersey War Tunnels) was a partially completed underground hospital complex in St. Lawrence, Jersey, built by German occupying forces during the occupation of Jersey during World War II. After Hitler’s October 1941 order to fortify the Channel Islands, work began on a string of fortifications all around Jersey.  Ho8 was intended to be a vast network of underground tunnels that would allow the German occupying infantry to withstand Allied air raids and bombardment. Over 1 km  of tunnels were completed. After the liberation of the Channel Islands, the complex was converted into a museum detailing the occupation and remains a visitor attraction.

One tunnel made 6,000 years ago as part of a Neolithic ritual site, the other made 65 years ago to protect the German war machine from allied bombardment. It took nearly three and a half years to build, with the work being carried out by forced and slave labourers who were brought to the Island from all over Europe. It was originally intended to be a barracks and ammunition store for the occupying forces. Many of the workers were Polish, French, Russian or Republican Spaniards. Conditions were terrible, although Russian and Ukrainians were treated the worst, with cases of malnutrition, death by exhaustion and disease among them becoming common.

In late 1943, with the threat of an Allied invasion of Europe becoming clear, Ho8 was to be converted into a casualty clearing station and emergency hospital. The tunnels were blasted out with gunpowder and handtools, and then covered with concrete. The hospital was dug into a slope, so that it would drain naturally and had 500 beds for patients.

Despite the huge preparations and fortifications made to the Channel Islands, none were ever utilised. The occupying forces in the Channel Islands surrendered on 9 May 1945 (one day after the rest of the German forces surrendered). Ho8 fell into disuse, with British soldiers and souvenir hunters stripping the tunnels of equipment.

The War Tunnels tell the compelling story of life in Jersey under occupation and feature a series of  galleries looking at the diverse experiences of all those who live through it, whether Jersey, British or German

Source of pictures: www.jerseywartunnels.com

In 1940, news of the fall of France to German forces created a sudden crisis for Islanders, should they stay or go. Many men of military age had already left, and most of those whose families were not in Jersey felt the need to return to England. Others also decided it would be advisable to leave. Whole families had to rapidly prepare to walk away from house and home, leaving behind their happy life – and not imagining it would be for five long years.

“Queues for tickets stretched for long distances, and hurried arrangements for leaving were made. Choosing what to take was not easy, as only one suitcase each was allowed. We could only pack essential clothing, so my sister and I were dressed in extra layers of clothing, despite the warm weather. We were each allowed to choose just one book and one toy to take with us.”- Ann Bright (7 years old at the time)

In 1942, the German turned up at this time-crossing site and damaged it by digging an underground bunker, now transformed into a memorial dedicated to the thousands of men, women and children transported to the Channel Islands as forced workers during the second world war.

Memories inscribed on plaques are chilling: “I have never forgotten the sound that came out of the huts. When people are starving, the pitch of their voices rises. The sound was like lots of birds in an aviary.”