Reading a Film Sequence
The inventory of the following worksheet for the most draws attention to formal concerns, to
matters grounded in the work of the text. Every text, though, is a function of at least two
contexts: the context in which it was made, the context in which it functions.
Every text speaks in a number of different ways, i.e., it recycles the givens of tradition,
engaging various forms of discourse, putting them together in a way to produce an aesthetic
entity. These texts are something like a stringing together of quotations, of reworking
conventions, of adding together a number of impulses from the world in which one lives,
appropriating various elements in a way that leads to something different, and in that sense,
new.
The work that goes into ferreting out the different voices in a text involves, among other
things, an awareness of historical situations, the assumptions and background of an artist
and his/her team, the motivation (s) behind a certain production. Beyond that, to talk about a
filmic text means that we engage in a dialogue that brings us into the scene as a participant
in an exchange: we make certain assumptions, both methodological and theoretical ones.
Even the statement "I didn't like this film" carries with it a sizable amount of implicit
assumptions.
Any thorough analysis of a film involves studying the following:
the socio-historical background to the film, economic and political factors that
conditioned its making and explain its existence;
the traditions out of which a given film arises:
cultural quotations it partakes of, the conventions it makes use of, the degree to which it
participates in specifically national patterns of expression;
the institutional positioning of a given film:
its reception in the public sphere;
the director/author's larger body of work;
the "work" of the text itself, never forgetting, though, that films issue from a larger extra-
filmic whole;
the question of a film's reception in time and how this has pre-shaped our own
expectations as well as the film's place in history;
the relation of a text to certain intertexts; these can be directly suggested by a film or
they can be creative associations suggested by the spectator.
I. Narrative
1. What is the function of this sequence within the larger narrative action: exposition,
climax, foreshadowing, transition, etc? Does the sequence encapsulate the major
oppositions at work in the film? What are the underlying issues in the sequence? What is
the selected sequence "really" about? What aspect of the story does it establish, revise,
develop? How do the visuals express it?
2. How is the story told? (linear, with flashbacks, flash-forwards, episodically?) What
"happens" on the level of the plot? How do plot and story differ, if at all?
3. Can the sequence be divided into individual segments (indicated, for instance, by shifts
of location, jumps in time, intertitles, etc.)? How many simultaneous narratives
(substories) does the sequence contain?
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4. How do the various channels of information used in film--image, speech, sound, music,
writing--interact to produce meaning? Does one of the channels dominate in this
sequence?
5. Is there a recognizable source of the narration? Voice-overor off-screen commentary?
What is the narrator's perspective?
6. Does the film acknowledge the spectator or do events transpire as if no one were
present? Do characters look into the camera or pretend it is not there? Does the film
reflect on the fact that the audience assumes the role of voyeurs to the screen
exhibition?
7. Does the film reflect on its "constructedness" by breaking the illusion of a self-sufficient
"story apparently told by nobody? "Are there intertitles, film-within-film sequences,
obtrusive and self-conscious ("unrealistic") camera movements calling attention to the
fact that the film is a construct?
8. How does the narrative position the spectator vis-a-vis the onscreen events and
characters? Are we made to respond in certain ways to certain events (say, through
music that "tells" us how to respond or distances us from the action)? How are women
portrayed? Are they primarily shown as passive objects of the male gaze? Does the
camera transfigure them (through soft-focus, framing, etc.)?
9. Does the narrative (as encapsulated in the sequence) express (indirectly) current
political views? Does the film sequence conform to, affirm, or question dominant
ideologies? Does the filmmaker (unconsciously) subvert the expression of minority or
non-conformist views by recourse to old visual cliches?
II. Staging
The filmmaker stages an event to be filmed. What is put in front of the camera? How does
the staging comment on the story? How does it visualize the main conflicts of the story?
1. Setting: On location or in the studio? "Realistic" or stylized? Historical or contemporary?
Props that take on a symbolic function? Are things like mirrors, crosses, windows, books
accentuated? Why? How do sets and props comment on the narrative?
2. Space: Cluttered or empty? Does it express a certain atmosphere? Is the design
symmetrical or asymmetrical? Balanced or unbalanced? Stylized or natural? Open form:
frame is de-emphasized, has a documentary "snapshot" quality; closed form: frame is
carefully composed, self-contained, and theatrical; the frame acts as a boundary and a
limit. Is space used as an indirect comment on a character's inner state of mind?
3. Lighting: What is illuminated, what is in the shadow? Lighting quality: hard lighting (bold
shadows) or soft (diffused illumination)? Direction: frontal lighting (flat image),
sidelighting (for dramatic effect), backlighting (only the silhouette is visible), underlighting
(from a fireplace, for example)? "Realistic" or high contrast/symbolic lighting? High
key/low key? Special lighting effects? (e. g. shadows, spotlight). Natural lighting or
studio? (Hollywood has three light sources: key light, fill light, and backlight.) How does
the lighting enhance the expressive potential of the film?
4. Acting and Choreography: What do appearance, gestures, facial expressions, voice
signify? Professional actors or non-actors? Why? Movement of characters: toward or
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away from the camera, from left to right or vice versa? Do characters interact with each
other through their gaze? Who looks at whom? Grouping of characters before the
camera; view of characters (clear or obscured [behind objects], isolated or integrated,
center or off-center, background or foreground?) How do acting and choreography
attract and guide the viewer's attention (and manipulate his/her sympathies)? How do
they create suspense, ambiguity, wrong clues, complexity, and certainties?
5. Costume and Make-Up: "Realistic" or stylized/abstract? Social and cultural coding:
what do the costumes signify (status, wealth, attitude, foreignness, etc.)?
III. Cinematography
The filmmaker controls not only what is filmed but how it is filmed: how the staged, "pro-
filmic" event is photographed and framed, how long the image lasts on the screen.
1. Photography:
Film Stock: What type of photographic film is used? (Fast film stock to achieve grainy,
contrasty look) Tinting? Over/underexposed? Black and white or color? Symbolic use of
colors? Subjective use/colors linked to certain characters? Colors as leitmotif?
Speed of Motion: "Normal" speed (24 frames per second for sound film; 16 for silent);
slow motion; accelerated motion; freeze frame; time-lapse (low shooting speed: a frame a
minute; see the sun set in seconds)?
Lens: Wide-angle; normal; telephoto lens (depth reduced)? Zoom lens?
Focus: Depth of field; shallow focus; deep focus (everything is in sharp focus)? Rack
focus (lens refocuses)? Soft focus?
Special Effects: Glass shot; superimposition; projection process?
How do such photographic manipulations of the shot function within the overall content of
the film?
2. Camera/Framing:
Angle/Level: High angle, low angle, straight-on angle; eye-level shot; oblique angle;
canted frame?
Distance: Extreme long shot, long shot, medium shot, (extreme) close-up?
Movement (Mobile Framing): Pan: horizontal "pan-orama" shot? Tilt: up or down?
Tracking (or dolly) shot: camera travels forward, backward, in various directions? Crane?
Aerial shot? How do camera movements function? What information do they provide
about the space of the image? Does the camera always follow the action? Does it
continually offer new perspectives on the characters and the objects? Subjective camera
movement? How does it relate to on-screen/offscreen space?
Type of shot: Establishing shot? Point-of-view shot? Reaction shot? Shot-counter shot?
IV. Editing
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Transition Techniques: Gradual changes: dissolve (superimpose briefly one shot over
the following; fade-in or -out (lighten or darken the image); cuts (instantaneous changes
from one shot to another); abrupt shifts and disjunctions. Does editing comment on the
relationships between characters and spaces?
Purpose of Editing: Continuity editing, thematic or dialectical montage, "invisible" cutting,
shock cutting, cross-cutting (alternates shots of two or more lines of actions going on
indifferent places).
Rhythm and Pace: flowing/jerky/disjointed/more pans than cuts? /fast-paced/slow-paced/
are there major changes in rhythm due to different editing? Shot duration?
V. Sound
Music: Is its source part of the story (="diegetic") or added on (="nondiegetic")? With
diegetic sound the source of the sound can be visible (on-screen) or unseen (off-screen).
What kind of music: classical/rock/exotic/familiar? Typical for the period depicted? Does
music comment (foreshadow or contradict) the action? Does it irritate? What is the music's
purpose in a film? How does it direct our attention within the image? How does it shape
our interpretation of the image?
Sound effects: Artificial or natural sound? On- or off-screen source? Is there subjective
sound? What does it signify?
Dialogue/silence: Stilted or artificial language? Do different characters use different kinds
of language? Slang, dialect, profanity? Allusion to other texts, quotations? Do certain
characters speak through their silences?
Voice-Over/Narration: Who is speaking and from where? Is voice-over part of the action
or (non-diegetically) outside of it? What does the narrator know and what is his/her
relationship to the action? Is s/he reliable, omniscient, unreliable?
Synchronization: Is sound matched with the image? Non-simultaneous sound? (For
instance, reminiscing narrator or when sound from the next scene begins while the
images of the last one are still on the screen. This is also called a "sound bridge".)