One of the things a film production company uses to market a film is genre.
A film genre is made up of a repertoire of elements. That repertoire could include particular iconography, lighting, sound, or actors and directors associated with the genre. This list of features is known as a ‘repertoire’ because any given film within a genre may not use all of the possible elements, but it will use some.
NCIS
A useful acronym to remember what you need to look for when analysing the genre of a film is NCIS:
N = narrative (storyline)
C = character (people/character types)
I = iconography (what we can see)
S = setting (where it takes place)
These four aspects will provide enough evidence to identify the genre (or a hybrid of genres if the film fits more than one category).
Afternoon lesson / Homework
- Make sure your blog is up-to-date with your finished Assignment 1 magazine cover.
- Choose three film trailers, embed the clips from YouTube and write an analysis of what genre each film is in and why. Use NCIS to help you.
Example:
Taken (2008)
Genre
Thriller
Narrative
The storyline is clearly shown to be a father willing to go to any lengths to rescue his kidnapped daughter. This is a tense, dramatic narrative that fits the thriller genre well.
Character
The characters are typical of a Hollywood thriller - the main hero: strong, brave and willing to do anything to rescue his daughter. The daughter is a classic 'damsel in distress', a female character requiring saving by a male hero. There are stereotypical villains - in this case Albanian, another typical aspect of a Hollywood thriller.
Iconography
There is plenty of iconography typical of the thriller genre: a car chase, gunshots, violence, technology, running and jumping from a bridge, explosions and smashing glass. All of these are typical of the action or thriller genres - in connection with the narrative, we can confidently say this is a thriller.
Setting
Although the trailer is only two minutes long, it has a safe American location for the daughter's birthday party and then a glamorous foreign location (Paris) for the rest of the narrative. Within Paris, there are clearly action sequences on roads, off bridges and in other settings that suggest action and drama.
Anything you don't finish in the lesson is homework.
Due: Next Tuesday
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