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Genre Blog: Thriller- Scaring Your Socks Off
Welcome back! The next genre we decided to work on was thrillers. The thriller genre is one of gripping suspense, unpredictability, and uncertainty, which, unlike horror, focuses on the less gory aspects of scaring an audience. Using the same method as before, we'll take a look into what makes up a thriller and determine whether or not we can use its conventions in a work of our own. Camera Angles, Movement, and Shots: In the thriller genre, the director's primary intent is to unnerve the audience without resorting to gore to do so, granted, while this may mean that they sometimes resort to cheap jump scares to creep out the audience, I would say that their use of camera angles and shots is also quite effective in getting the audience on edge. Eye-level shots are the most used within the thriller genre and can be seen during normal conversations or when a subject looks off-screen in fear of an unspecified threat. I believe that the ...
Genre Blog: Comedy- Gags and Gimmicks
Hi! The final genre we will be exploring is comedy. Comedy is arguably the most difficult genre to get down, because something is either funny or it's not, which is entirely up to the audience to decide. However, there are some tried and true techniques used for directors of the genre that seem to carry across it as a whole because they are so effective. To understand these filming choices, we'll need to examine the basic concepts of filming with regard to this specific genre. Camera Angles, Movement, and Shots: In the comedy genre as a whole, there seems to be this running idea that shots should be more close-up and in your face, so to speak, in order to direct the scene’s focus onto a specific subject. This is why close-ups and extreme close-ups are commonly seen as part of the genre, approaching uncomfortably close distances with the subjects and essentially invading their space. This is taken to an extreme in a number of diffe...
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