This is obvious when marking student responses to a film studied in class, even at the senior level, only to find that they virtually summarise the story and some obvious methods used to communicate this.
Since I am working on a number of film texts at the moment, I think I will take this opportunity to examine some of the best strategies I have developed over the decades and give some of the excellent sites that are available for teaching film in depth.
“As
students view a film, we want them to pay special attention to those areas of
the film we consider important and to draw conclusions from their experience
with the film. Only then does a passive
viewer become active; for by thinking about the film’s content, the student is
interacting with the film.”
-Resch and Schnicker
Analysing film is as complex a process as used with any other text, and so it is important to be familiar with the meta-language of film. The layered building blocks of examining the audio/visual and two dimensional equivalent to words, must be understood if we are to effectively 'read' a film. We might think that students are so familiar with film that details are already intuitively known, but I have found that cinematic representation codes must be understood by teachers as a pre-requisite for teaching film. The following diagram found many years ago that clearly outlines these codes.
Narrative codes
|
The way in which the story is put together, and how the sequence you
are analysing moves the story along.
|
Technical codes
|
How the images are put together - lighting, camera angles, shot composition, editing, any special effects
|
Representational codes
|
The thinking behind the images - how settings (location, colour),
characters, costumes, props etc (the re-presentation of reality) create
meaning
|
Audio codes
|
The way in which sound adds to the images through dialogue, music and
sound effects.
|
That is enough of a rant today. I will give some more ideas and strategies for teaching film if people are interested. I must find that blogging is fun but only if you get some feedback to see how useful teachers find the information or ideas that are presented. As such, I would appreciate knowing what teachers would like to tap into for future blogs.
Might just go and watch 'Road to Perdition' again in the next few days. Every viewing throws up something new and magical about the work of Sam Mendes. It is a wonderful film to use for senior film study in the Preliminary HSC course.
Barbara