Monday, 5 March 2012

Three Horror Film Ideas.




1)     One idea we came up with as a group for a horror trailer is about a group of teenage friends who take a visit to a quiet lake. However, what may seem like a harmless day out soon turns to disaster when one, so called friend takes revenge on the others after having enough of their torments. Slowly, the group decreases in numbers but no one can understand why, and who may be behind it all. The lake is a typical setting for a horror trailer as it can be a weapon in itself by using it to drown victims, and also creates a sense of fear, as no one knows what lies beneath.

2)     Our second idea involves a group of girls who have been left alone in a house for the weekend, who decide to experiment with a ouija board. Everything seems well at first, until the supernatural take over. With the curse unleashed and tormenting the group, they have to figure out how to break the curse. But is it really a ghost creating the torment, or has someone gone a step too far?

3)     Our final idea is based on a girl left alone to baby-sit a toddler on the night of Halloween. All is well when the baby falls asleep until an unexpected knock happens during witching hour. The babysitter opens the door to a mysterious character, but whilst getting the treats, the trick or treater sneaks into the house. When she realises the mysterious character has disappeared, panic strikes. But who is it?

Questionnaire and Questionnaire Analysis.

http://www.slideshare.net/ashleyhart94/questionnaire-anaylsis-11874937


1)     How old are you?

15-17        18-20        20-25        25+



2) What is your gender?

Male          Female



3) What is your occupation?



4) What is your preferred horror genre?

Slasher     Supernatural  Psychological



5) How often do you watch horror films?

Daily         Once a week      Once a month       Other



6) How much would you spend on a horror film per month?

   £0-5      £6-10     £11-15          £16+    



7) How would you prefer to watch a horror film?

Cinema    Online     DVD          TV       Other



8) What is your favourite horror film?



9) What is your favourite horror villain?



10) What is your preferred setting for a horror film?

Cemetery Isolated house               Lake House               Empty warehouse Other



11) Who would you prefer to survive?

Male          Female



12) What is the most important factor in a horror film?

Setting      Sound     Lighting      Characters     Other



13) Should the villain be seen or remain anonymous?



14) What gender should the villain be?



15) What is the most effective weapon in a horror film?

Knife    Chainsaw               Axe      Baseball Bat       Hammer        Other

The Hills Have Eyes - Horror trailer analysis.



I will be analysing the horror trailer for ‘The Hills Have Eyes’ to discuss typical paradigms that are used so to create meaning within the film that is apparent to the viewers. Typical paradigms that are used within a horror film would be weapons such as knives or bats because these are very personal weapons as the killer has to get close to the victim in order to kill or inflict pain. This creates a sexual nature to the film as the killer is inserting the weapon they are holding into the victim. An isolated location such as a house in the woods is also a typical paradigm in horror films because the victim will not be heard or seen by anyone to save them.


Prop paradigms:

An axe is a conventionally generic prop paradigm because it is a very personal weapon to use. Killers within horror films are shown using prop paradigms such as this because the penetration of the axe creates sexual connotation and gives the sense that the killer is gaining sexual pleasure from this. However, in the trailer the victims are the ones holding the axe and tossing it around in a defensive manner. Towards the end of the trailer a baseball bat is shown on top of a chest that a man is trapped in. Baseball bats normally give a completely different meaning because they are used for sports, normally a fun game for most people, whereas in this trailer, it has most likely been used as a weapon, again, another personal weapon. A gas mask is used as a way of hiding the identity of the villain so the victims are unable to know who their attacker really is. The fact it is a gas mask brings to light a hidden fear of everyone’s. This is because a gas mask relates to war which everyone fears will happen again, even if it is not in their conscious.


Setting:

Isolated locations are conventional setting paradigms for horror films because no one can hear or see you. In ‘The Hills Have Eyes’ trailer, the desert of New Mexico, a very hostile environment, is used which again represents a fear of everyone’s-not being able to find a way out and away from contact. A cave is used as another location because it is dark, making it hard for the victims to see around them and if anything or anyone is hiding. The usual fear or the dark is shown here because the audience are also unable to see what is happening, which positions the viewers as a masochistic voyeur. An abandoned house is used to show what life was like before the family that lived there obviously moved out. Mise-en-scene such as wooden racks with hanging clothes, curtains at windows and other belongings are still there but there are no people living there. For a family to get up and leave without taking their belongings suggests something is not right.


Character:

Promiscuous girls are normally the first to die in a horror film as they are shown having sex or wearing short, tight clothing, which is not very innocent like. In ‘The Hills Have Eyes’ trailer, the promiscuous girl is shown to be blonde, a common hair colour for a promiscuous girl within a horror film, and wearing a revealing bikini, which represents her as the victim. However, this challenges Carol Clover’s final girl theory because she is the only person shown at the very end of the trailer, which gives the impression that she is the final girl. The brown haired man is represented as the hero because he tries to seek help within a cave, also placing him as the victim as he is targeted by something that himself and the audience cannot work out as only a silhouette is shown running past. The family of a mother, father and their children are represented as the typical happy family. However, this is contradicted as horrendous events unravel when the unknown villains begin to take hostage of the victims. This leads the victims to begin a fight for survival, such as handling weapons like the axe previously mentioned.


Sound:

At the beginning non-diegetic sound of air raid sirens are heard making the atmosphere tense, because people know that air raid sirens are a warning that something terrible is going to happen. Diegetic sound of explosions are used suggesting that a disaster is probably going to happen as these are what explosions cause. In contrast with this, the sound changes to non-diegetic of the song ‘California dreaming’; this is very upbeat compared to the long and dreary sound of the sirens and explosions. As the events begin to occur, non-diegetic sound of fast paced string instruments are played. The feel of something coming is created through this and when it abruptly stops it creates the sense that whatever was coming is now there with the victim. The non-diegetic sound of a drum makes the sound of a heartbeat, showing a relation between the sound and the frightened characters. Industrial sounds create scream-like noises, while quick drum beats along with editing of quick camera cuts of the characters seems like gunshots and as if the characters in the cuts are the ones being targeted. By the end of the trailer, the pitch of the non-diegetic sound increases which builds tension because the audience know that at the highest point of the sound something will happen.


Editing:

The range of editing and camera shots lets the viewers piece together parts of the story so to make a little sense of what is happening. For example at the beginning of the trailer a birds eye view of a bomb dropping from above the clouds lets the viewers know that disaster will strike whatever that will hit, with a wide angle shot of the explosion and house being blown apart showing the destruction it has caused. Along with this are medium shots of a deformed baby with cuts to a newspaper article stating ‘Minors refuse to abandon their lands’ whilst showing the colours of the images being inverted. With this appearing straight after the explosions it creates a link between the two making it obvious that these deformities are the problems that have occurred from this. The camera then fades into an establishing shot of a desert with a car and trailer driving along the road with it starting in black and white then fading into colour. This presents the idea that the disasters that happened are now in the past as black and white represents an earlier time period with colour bringing the audience to the present day. The two shot of the man and gas man shows the window rolling up as if to suggest that the family are about to shut away all safety and contact with the only people in that area. As this happens an effect is used of a film reel being changed to another scene giving the idea that the events are about to change for the worse. This is shown more clearly through the quick cuts that occur next when things start to go wrong. As the pace of the trailer increases effects are used to make the family seem as if they are being watched, for instance in the two shot of the man and woman the obvious lines on a TV has been overlaid as if someone is sat in front of a TV watching them. A low angle shot of the girl holding an axe gives the sense that she has power, therefore making the audience feel vulnerable. This low angle shot is used again of the girl aiming the axe at the floor, however with quick cuts from this shot to a high angle shot of the same girl on the floor it makes it seem as if she is about to kill herself. Perhaps this is to show that she is somehow putting herself in a position where she is going to get killed anyway. At the end of the trailer an extreme close up of the girls eye and someone’s hand against her face allows the viewers to see the fear in her eyes due to them being so wide. This obvious sense of fear from her makes her seem vulnerable leaving the audience to feel worried for her, proving they are a masochistic audience.


From this analysis, it is clear that paradigms have been used successfully to create meaning that is apparent to the audience. Personal weapons are used such as axes and baseball bats, with which the axe is used to penetrate the skin creating a sexual nature to the trailer and gives the sense of rape and sexual pleasure for the villain. Sounds creates tension within the trailer because it shows representations of war through the air raid sirens, while the high pitch string instruments builds up to something horrific and frightening. Without the use of paradigms such as props, settings, sound and more to build tension, representations of horror cannot be conveyed successfully in order for the audience to understand what is happening.

Saturday, 28 January 2012

Pitch Analysis.

Media Theories.

http://www.slideshare.net/TheMelvinator/media-theories-11309749

‘Let Me In’ horror trailer analysis.



Paradigms are used to create meaning within a film, and in horror films typical paradigms such as masks and isolated house are used as a way of creating a sense of mystery. An effective example of a horror film that uses these typical paradigms is ‘Let Me In’; a film about a young girl and boy who have an unlikely friendship because the girl is supernatural.

Prop paradigms are used much less than other horror film trailers, but the ones that are used show the typical props used within a horror film. Towards the middle of the trailer the audience are presented with the killer in a mask, which looks like a black bag with only holes for the eyes and mouth. This is used as a way of concealing the killer’s identity from the audience causing a fear for his victims which passes onto the audience because they are unable to know who is attacking them. This makes the audience masochistic viewers. This also leads the audience to question his identity, proving Barthes enigma code to question things due to a sense of mystery. A metal pole in a romantic film will not connote any meaning, however, in a horror film an audience will instantly know it will be used as a weapon. An audience knows this will cause a lot of damage, which again creates a sense of fear.

The setting is very important in creating the mood of the film. A school is usually a busy place full of children creating the sense of innocence which it is portrayed to be in the trailer until mise-en-scene is used of flowers and a photo on the school fence, showing a memorial of a boy that has died. The audience are able to work out that something horrific will happen here later suggesting Barthes pleasure of text. A forest is a very isolated place, where no one will hear or see the victim when in need of help making it a dangerous place to be. However, it is shown covered in snow which almost creates a sense of innocence as white is seen as a pure and innocent colour. This contrasts with the horror that is about to happen. There are two settings that are shown to be empty at the beginning which are a railways crossing and underground foot tunnel. These are normally very public spots and reasonably busy, but her they are not, suggesting nothing major has happened yet. As tension builds up in the trailer, the audience are shown a roadside field with teenage boys in a panic. This creates a break in the before empty settings and the now busy settings; a train passing on the railway crossing and the supernatural girl sitting in the foot tunnel with a man walking into it. This lets the audience know things are beginning to happen.

Sound paradigms are used to build tension, and within a horror film string instruments are very popular. As the beginning of the trailer non-diegetic sound of string instruments have been combined with a piano to create a tense atmosphere. Gradually, the piano becomes louder, staying at a medium pitch making it sound innocent like. This is because it sounds like a child’s xylophone and of course children are the sign of innocence. It also suggests that the main boy and girl characters have an innocent relationship at this stage, meaning he doesn’t know about her supernatural powers. The piano’s pitch gets lower suggesting the innocence and happiness is dropping, which means something disastrous is going to happen. Levi Strauss’ binary opposites are shown here through sound because the audience gets the feel of innocence, which is then swapped for a much lower feeling atmosphere. Non-diegetic sound of a drum creates sounds like something is running past and towards the end it gets louder and quicker suggesting the pace of the trailer is speeding up. At times, it sounds like an irregular heartbeat, relating to how the characters are meant to feel which is frightened. This boosts the adrenaline making the audience feel slightly on edge. Diegetic sound of someone screaming in a horror film shows that someone is probably inflicting pain on someone.

The characters in the trailer are representing Propp’s theory of the eight character types. The young girl is represented as the hero as well as the villain and killer, as she says that she will help the young boy who is being bullied, but at the same time is killing people so she can stay alive. In a way, this challenges Propp’s theory of having one character for one character type. However, the masked man is shown in dark clothing all te time and mostly out during the night so he is harder to see in the dark. He is the killer in this situation wearing a mask. Within the trailer there are two victims, one, a boy in a car and a man who offers to help the young supernatural girl in the tunnel. The character types are shown throughout the trailer but also challenge them due to the young girl, with whom are normally seen as innocent, has been represented as the killer as well as the hero.

How does Shaun of the Dead subvert structuralist notions of genre?

‘Shaun of the Dead’ is a classic representation of a postmodern film, with prop paradigms such as children’s toys and location paradigms such as a London Suburban street. This would be unusual for a horror film but in this case the audience can differentiate between the usual horror film and a postmodern film such as ‘Shaun of the Dead’. The typical prop paradigm of horror films are knives which are very personal weapons because the killer has to get close to the victim in order to penetrate the skin, while in ‘Shaun of the Dead’, children’s toys are used showing the post modernity of the film, showing the subversion of structuralist notions of horror.

Prop paradigms are a key concept in a horror film such as knives and masks because knives are a personal weapon that the killer penetrates the skin with, creating a sexual nature to the killing while the mask conceals the killers identity, creating a sense of fear. However, being that ‘Shaun of the Dead’ is a postmodern film that knows the rules of a horror film but breaks them, these props are not used. For example, vinyl records are used at one point to throw at the zombies to try and kill them. This creates humour because of the lack of emergency they are portraying like a typical horror film would show. Other prop paradigms that are used include a spade and cricket bat; the spade represents gardening which is known as a calming thing to do and the cricket bat is used for a middle class sport, although in this case it is not used for a middle class activity. Innocent toys are used as weapons to fight the zombies. This subverts the structuralist notions of horror because children’s toys relate back to the child’s innocence; however, these are now used as weapons. Comedy is created again when body parts are used as weapons as these are not the typical weapon to use. When the characters are cornered by the zombies, a rifle is used as if they are in a western in a saloon. This is not appropriate for horrors because weapons used normally involve a slow death with something more personal such as a knife. Theorists such as Foucault and Lacan believed in structure and the use of appropriate props, although ‘Shaun of the Dead’ clearly challenges this theory of structure. At one point a knife is presented as if it is about to be used but is then rejected because it would deconstruct the post modernity of the film.

In structuralist horror films characters are normally given a character type such as the hero, being the strong, intelligent one. However, in ‘Shaun of the Dead’ the hero is the man who is represented as a bit dim and tells lies to get out of trouble. ‘Shaun of the Dead’ challenges the character types you would normally put with certain characters to subvert structuralist notions of horror. The zombies are portrayed as ordinary people in suits and everyday clothes doing everyday things such as walking the dog, yet there is no dog on the collar. This is quite humorous because the audience will know that the dog has been eaten. They are familiar with how zombies are portrayed to be in horror films with which they have to survive on others flesh and blood. The characters are able to get up close to the zombies without feeling fearful, whereas in typical horror films the characters will realise almost straight away that they are zombies. This creates a sense of humour because it deconstructs a structuralist notion of horror. The moment the men know something isn’t right they form a group which is the typical group in all horror films; the geek, hippy, mother, laid back, blonde and the leader. The audience will not recognise this but their subconscious will and this is shown clearly later on in the film when they meet with another group that mirrors all the people within their group, except a female as the leader. Rather than having a ‘strong’ man, a woman has been represented as the leader, challenging the stereotypical view of women as being weak and vulnerable. Conflict normally always occurs within a group and because of this the group becomes smaller and so this shows aspects of a horror film. Also, when the group threaten the geek, Liz, the blonde, becomes the hero when she settles things, showing one of Propp’s eight character types. Carol Clover’s final girl theory is shown but in some ways is challenged. Liz is the blonde girl who are normally the ones seen as promiscuous in horror films, although she ends up being the final girl that survives. It is evident that ‘Shaun of the Dead’ is criticising the way society lives because at the beginning people are shown acting like zombies-in an almost robotic way, due to being too set in our ways. At the end of the film the zombies are shown being kept as ‘human pets’ which is showing aspects of comedy because in an ordinary horror the zombies would have been destroyed as a way of survival for the humans. In typical zombie films such as ‘Dawn of the Dead’ zombies are represented as fast and extremely frightening. However, in ‘Shaun of the Dead’ zombies are not as frightening because the characters are able to walk amongst them and are easily knocked over by weapons of bats and children’s toys.

The usual structuralist settings are normally isolated houses and areas. For example, a house in the middle of a forest or a desert because it is very hostile setting, like in ‘The Texas Chainsaw Massacre’. Compared to this, the postmodern film ‘Shaun of the Dead’ has location paradigms such as a London suburban where the main characters live. This is supposedly calmer than the city, but yet is not isolated like the usual horror location where no one can hear or see you. The film is set mostly during the day which is not a very common time of day for a horror film to be set in. However, night time comes and becomes darker as events get more serious, which relates to the frightening events that are about to occur, creating a sense of tension. It is evident that Levi Strauss’ binary opposites are taking place here, as daytime relates to safety contrasting with the darkness of the evening, when no one can see what is hiding in the shadows, which links to danger. The location of safety in ‘Shaun of the Dead’ is their local pub. Pubs are normally a busy place but at this specific time it is not because most people have turned into zombies. This creates a sense of isolation as it has become an almost unfamiliar place. It is also an unlikely place to hide because of the large room, and so in a way the group are making themselves victims as they are giving themselves nowhere to hide. This creates a sense of comedy because it contrasts with typical horror films and almost makes fun out of society by representing British people as always at the pub.

Sound paradigms are used to build tension but also to create humour, showing aspects of horror and aspects of comedy. For instance, non-diegetic sound of string instruments builds tension which follows Foucault and Lacan’s theory of structuralism of using the typical non-diegetic sound in horror films. Contradicting this theory, diegetic sound shows the postmodernism of ‘Shaun of the Dead’. The song is very upbeat and has the lyrics, “I’m having such a good time”, which is ironic to the events that are occurring as they fight for survival by hitting a zombie with cues. The hitting goes with the beat of the song which makes the scene humorous as the audience know this would never happen in a typical horror film. At the same time as this, a continuity shot is used of a group of zombies outside the pub with their arms in the air whilst lights flash on and off over them. This makes it seem as if they are at a concert, creating an obvious comedy feel to the scene.

‘Shaun of the Dead’ is humorous because it is a postmodern film, where the audience see the rules of structuralism being broken. For example, the main character has blood all over his shirt and gets told, “You’ve got a bit of red on you”, creating humour because of the quantity of blood and the contrast of using the word ‘bit’. This also refers back to when his red pen leaked on his shirt and someone used the exact same phrase. More evidence for the film being postmodern is that a lot of the tension is built using sound paradigms and camera shots but is then stopped by doing things like cutting to another scene. This makes the film less scary which proves it is not completely a horror as horror films would achieve in making the audience scared.

Each element I have studied in this film including sounds paradigms, prop paradigms and further more prove that ‘Shaun of the Dead’ contains aspects of horror and mainly comedy making it a postmodern film. Some theories are shown such as Carol Clover’s final girl theory and Levi Strauss’ binary opposites. However, theorists such as Foucault and Lacan’s structuralist theory have been challenged with the use of settings such as the pub as a ‘safe’ place rather than hiding where no one will find you. Props have been used to raise humour because they are either innocent children’s toys or things such as human body parts to warn off zombies. This subverts structuralist notions of horror as these are weapons that horror films would never use. Postmodern films tend to stay away from the rules of structuralism as this film shows.