Saturday 24 November 2012

Montage

Montages are used in many different kinds of films - music videos, movies, and television programmes are just a few examples. They are used to express thoughts and ideas in a visual way, and often result in powerful and emotional sequences. Montages such as the one used in the opening of "This is England" are very striking. This particular montage does a brilliant job of creating a unique take on England and the famous moments - positive and negative - that are often associated with it.


The montage theory arose from Lev Kuleshov's work, which contained the a+b=c definition of montage. Lev Kuleshov found that having one image follow another image can produce a thought. His experiments supply us with some examples of this - he found that a picture of a silent, open mouth followed by a picture of a bird flying through the sky would make people think of the mouth singing. Also, when this image of a mouth was followed by a picture of food, people pictured a hungry mouth. The consumer sees the two pictures and combines them to create a result. These experiments were the basis for the development of the montage. A montage triangle can reflect the Kuleshov effect, as it is now usually called. Using the examples that I aforementioned, a montage triangle can be constructed with the image of the mouth at the top, and the images of the food and flying bird below it. This montage triangle results in two equations:

A montage triangle, which
shows the Kuleshov effect
Mouth+Bird=Singing

Mouth+Food=Hungry

A significant part of the art of montage is editing - the timing of the editing is particularly important. Rhythmic and metric editing are used for many reasons, such as to create as much tension as possible in a dramatic scene. Timing the beat of a soundtrack to the action can emphasize the emotions that are felt by the viewer. This would make the film become more interesting and absorbing. 

In addition, I think that seeing a montage where the beat of the soundtrack and the action are timed well is something people enjoy seeing. This makes the consumer want to watch the film more.

Sergei Eisenstein made The Battleship Potemkin (below), which contains an infamous montage. Eisenstein established five types of montage, which are:



Intellectual: Where the shots are put together in a way that creates an intellectual meaning based on the way they combine together.

Rhythmic: This contains cutting the shots together based on continuity, which creates visual continuity between each edit.

Metric: Where images are shown in a way that follows the beat and rhythm of the soundtrack. The focus is on the timing of the editing and what it conveys, rather than the connotations of the shots themselves.

Tonal: The focus is on the meaning of each shot - not how it is edited together. The timing of the editing and the continuity of the shots is less important.

Overtonal: A combination of rhythmic, metric, and tonal montage. The combination of these three different methods is used to construct more complicated and intricate forms of montage.

He said: "The idea of film-making as construction and montage as the putting together of parts of a machine (a machine for signifying, rather as Le Corbusier conceived of houses as machines for living in) had a strong appeal in modernist circles in the early years of the Russian Revolution."

Eisenstein is saying that montage is similar to combining many different parts of a machine to create a whole that conveys a certain meaning or emotion. Montages control what the viewer's response will be; they are used to make the viewer feel a certain emotion or picture something. 

In our music video, we may use montages at some points to create different effects - we may even combine a montage with other effects, such as lyric cards. A music video is, itself, a form of montage - a major part of music videos is conveying meaning through images and artistic editing.

Monday 12 November 2012

The Mood Board for Our Music Video

One of the first things we did in the process of planning our music video was to construct a mood board that would supply us with inspiration for the following subjects:

General Information about The Colours
The Band
The Costume
The Similar Bands
The Genre
The Lyrics

This mood board was a vital part of our planning process - if we ever needed inspiration, we could look at it and we would come up with great ideas quickly.

The Mood Board











The Making of the Mood Board








Sunday 11 November 2012

Shooting Session #6

Our sixth shooting session was very short - it consists of a handful of shots of the main character (the boy) going through lyric cards in a similar fashion to the music video for Subterranean Homesick Blues by Bob Dylan. We have used a cultural signifier to strengthen the intertextual link - the industrial area in the music video for Subterranean Homesick Blues is a cultural signifier of the industrial area in which the music video was made. In our music video, the cultural signifier is a red postbox - a classic, iconic item that is strongly associated with contemporary Britain. 

The main problem we found in our shoot was that the lyric cards were simply too small - we need to re-shoot some of these shoots with A3 lyric cards rather than A4 so that you can see the text on the lyric cards in longer shots. This would enable us to create a more faithful reproduction of Bob Dylan's music video for Subterranean Homesick Blues. However, cutting the long shots together with the close-up shots we filmed would also create a satisfying use of lyric cards in our music video.