Friday, 13 April 2018
Sunday, 8 April 2018
Question 1 B/C/D
1B) HOW DID YOU USE, DEVELOP OR CHALLENGE GENRE
CONVENTIONS IN YOUR MUSIC VIDEO?
The
genre for my music video is Indie-Pop-Rock, similar to that of ‘Two Door Cinema
Club’. One of the main conventions of my genre is the performance aspect. This
includes, playing of instruments and lip-syncing, and in my video I have both
of these. I had solo guitar playing for the main character as well as the three
all playing as the band as it was what I found was common for other performance
based videos, furthermore I also used lip-sync with the character directly
addressing and therefore breaking the fourth wall to make it seem more personal
and engage the audience. Another way in which my music video conforms is through
the cinematography; lens flares and slow motion are big parts of my music
video, they are what convey the emotion throughout. When the music gets slower
and goes through the disequilibrium there is a lot of slow-motion to show time
slowing down for the character, it represents the confusion in his head. The
lens flares however shows the alternative to this, it represents clarity and
happiness he is feeling at the time, and that’s why there a no lens flares
later on in the video, to show that that happiness has disappeared. This links
nicely to another common conventions for music videos within my genre –
aesthetics, specifically the locations that appear in the videos. An example of
this is the video for ‘Left Hand Free’ by Alt-J, filmed in and around a state
in America by a big lake and stream, simple easy locations that are
aesthetically pleasing. That’s why I chose to film at the UEA and the local
park, because of their aesthetical appeal, particularly the UEA due to its
impressive contemporary architecture. Furthermore, it was important that when
filming it was a bright blue sky to help represent the happiness and upbeat
style of the genre, also for aesthetic and continuity reasons because as I
found out, grey skies don’t make for nice shots but also it looks slightly
weird when the colour of the sky keeps changing throughout the video because
there is only so much you can edit and change using filters.
Another video that has a similar youthfulness to
mine is ‘The Suburbs’ by Arcade Fire; it features young boys riding around on
bikes, the bikes being the Proairetic code, similar to mine. This shows how my
video overall is supportive of the common conventions within its genre as I thought
it would lose the feel of the video to challenge them.
1C) HOW DID YOUR PRINT PRODUCTIONS USE, DEVELOP OR CHALLENGE CONVENTIONS OF MEDIA LANGUAGE AND GENRE?
To start with I used a site called DaFont.com to search for fonts that I would like to use on my print productions, I settles on a sans serif font called ‘Bebas’ because it was a strong, bold font and fitted with the contemporary image that the band give off. I chose to have the font colour as white because I felt it represented the freshness and purity of the genre but also conforms to the minimalist approach of some big name bands within the genre such as Kodaline. Another way in which Kodaline express themselves through the use of media language is through the use of photography on their album covers (as seen on the right). The imagery nearly always is environmental due the calm aurora it exudes to the audience.
In addition to this the brutalist architecture that the UEA has helps convey the youthfulness of the genre and makes for a more aesthetically pleasing image. As you can see from my print production on the left, I tried to re create the naturist point of view with the picture and then also have the purity and crispness of the white text because it really stands out to the audience. In addition to this, you can see the way that the architecture in my cover really attracts the gaze of an audience because of its uniqueness. Furthermore, I decided that I was going to make a logo out of the name of the band as I feel it adds authenticity to the cover but also, similarly to bands like Kodaline it makes them more unique in comparison to competitors within the genre.
1D) NARRATOLOGICAL ANALYSIS OF YOUR VIDEO
For my genre, the narrative isn't as important as most, the genre largely relies upon cinematography of the scenic shots. However, my music video has a liner narrative, I decided upon this type of structure due to the clarity of it and also to comply within the conventions of my genre. Furthermore, Todorov’s 3-act structure is a useful tool to analyse my video with, at the start it sets the tone of the character happy cycling in the sun but quickly the disequilibrium stage arrives and the character goes through the break up over the phone and then finally at the very end the new equilibrium is set of the character becoming single. The closure of my video acts as an oxymoron to the audience because whilst it does bring satisfaction with the disequilibrium being solved, the denouement brings sadness because he is now alone.
Another way in which you can analyse my video is through the use of codes. Roland Barthes codes act as narrative devices to videos. Symbolic, Proairetic and Enigma are the three codes. Symbolic, obviously means something that represents something else. Proairetic code is something that drives a story onwards and an Enigma code is something that asks a question to the audience, creates mystery. For example, in my music video, the bike acts a Proairetic device because it is what connects each part of the locations to each other, at the start he is biking to start the story, in the middle he bikes to new location where he experiences the disequilibrium and then finally bikes just before the resolution stage, this nareme serves the function of moving the narrative on.
Wednesday, 4 April 2018
Monday, 2 April 2018
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