Tuesday, November 10, 2015

Slumdog Millionaire Guide

Weston Taylor
Major Artists


Director - Danny Boyle

Screenplay - Simon Beaufoy

Source Material - Vikas Swarup

Main Actors:

Dev Patel - Older Jamal
Madhur Mittal - Older Salim
Freida Pinto - Older Latika
Tanay Chheda - Middle Jamal
Tanvi Ganesh Lonkar - Middle Latika
Ashutosh Lobo Gajiwala - Middle Salim
Ayush Mahesh Khedekar - Youngest Jamal
Rubiana Ali - Youngest Latika
Azharuddin Mohammed Ismail - Youngest Salim
Anil Kapoor - Prem Kumar
Irrfan Khan - Police Inspector
Images


http://images5.fanpop.com/image/photos/31100000/Slumdog-Millionaire-movies-31160146-1280-533.jpg
http://wptschedule.org/bemoretunedin/wp-content/uploads/2014/07/Slumdog-Millionaire-dev-patel-4152784-800-533.jpg
http://i.blogs.es/1f7667/slumdog-millionaire-1/original.jpg
http://screenmusings.org/SlumdogMillionaire/images/Slumdog-Millionaire-0027.jpg
Essays


http://www.rogerebert.com/
The real India, supercharged with a plot as reliable and eternal as the hills. The film's surface is so dazzling that you hardly realize how traditional it is underneath. But it's the buried structure that pulls us through the story like a big engine on a short train.
By the real India, I don't mean an unblinking documentary like Louis Malle's "Calcutta" or the recent "Born Into Brothels." I mean the real India of social levels that seem to be separated by centuries. What do people think of when they think of India? On the one hand, Mother Teresa, "Salaam Bombay!" and the wretched of the earth. On the other, the "Masterpiece Theater"-style images of "A Passage to India," "Gandhi" and "The Jewel in the Crown."
The India of Mother Teresa still exists. Because it is side-by-side with the new India, it is easily seen. People living in the streets. A woman crawling from a cardboard box. Men bathing at a fire hydrant. Men relieving themselves by the roadside. You stand on one side of the Hooghly River, a branch of the Ganges that runs through Kolkuta, and your friend tells you, "On the other bank millions of people live without a single sewer line."
On the other hand, the world's largest middle class, mostly lower-middle, but all the more admirable. The India of "Monsoon Wedding." Millionaires. Mercedes-Benzes and Audis. Traffic like Demo Derby. Luxury condos. Exploding education. A booming computer segment. A fountain of medical professionals. Some of the most exciting modern English literature. A Bollywood to rival Hollywood.
"Slumdog Millionaire" bridges these two Indias by cutting between a world of poverty and the Indian version of "Who Wants to be a Millionaire." It tells the story of an orphan from the slums of Mumbai who is born into a brutal existence. A petty thief, impostor and survivor, mired in dire poverty, he improvises his way up through the world and remembers everything he has learned.
His name is Jamel (played as a teenager by Dev Patel). He is Oliver Twist. High-spirited and defiant in the worst of times, he survives. He scrapes out a living at the Taj Mahal, which he did not know about but discovers by being thrown off a train. He pretends to be a guide, invents "facts" out of thin air, advises tourists to remove their shoes and then steals them. He finds a bit part in the Mumbai underworld, and even falls in idealized romantic love, that most elusive of conditions for a slumdog.
His life until he's 20 is told in flashbacks intercut with his appearance as a quiz show contestant. Pitched as a slumdog, he supplies the correct answer to question after question and becomes a national hero. The flashbacks show why he knows the answers. He doesn't volunteer this information. It is beaten out of him by the show's security staff. They are sure he must be cheating.
The film uses dazzling cinematography, breathless editing, driving music and headlong momentum to explode with narrative force, stirring in a romance at the same time. For Danny Boyle, it is a personal triumph. He combines the suspense of a game show with the vision and energy of "City of God" and never stops sprinting.
When I saw "Slumdog Millionaire" at Toronto, I was witnessing a phenomenon: dramatic proof that a movie is about how it tells itself. I walked out of the theater and flatly predicted it would win the Audience Award. Seven days later, it did. And that it could land a best picture Oscar nomination. We will see. It is one of those miraculous entertainments that achieves its immediate goals and keeps climbing toward a higher summit.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/
It's getting ridiculous. Danny Boyle's film Slumdog Millionaire is now so popular that it is even difficult to book a place on a "slum tour" of Mumbai. That's where concerned westerners get the opportunity to visit a glorious city of contradictions and see the real slumdogs of India. They witness the horrific conditions, the dreadful poverty and the heart-warming optimism of these wonderful little boys and girls making the most of the cards life has dealt them.
These are the film's real-life heroes, who have propelled Boyle and his team towards the prospect of phenomenal success at the Academy Awards in Los Angeles in February.
Since its release, every cliché has been rolled out for the plight of these impoverished street dwellers, which is apt. This is first and foremost a film of clichés.
As well as 10 Oscar nominations, the production has had an enviably small amount of criticism. Rave reviews in India have, of course, been tempered with a discussion about why the West should feel able to portray, let alone profit, from a film about a purported vision of a "real India". But no one person or group has the image rights over an entire nation.
There has also been a slow reaction to the film's success in the West: witness the recent predictable stories about how the children in the film were underpaid, a criticism that taps into notions of western paternalism and guilt.
There's no doubt some critics of the film have their own agenda. With heated competition for Oscar glory, and in the cynical world of marketing, it is clear that it is the competition, in the shape of other films, which stand to benefit most from the negative press.
But such concerns are to be expected with anything that gets so much limelight. Where Slumdog really fails is not in social commentary but in its own art form. Boyle directs a film that is just not convincing.
Is the British public really so unaware of how the rest of the world lives to take this as an eye-opening tale of poverty in India? The film's success suggests that they seem willing to suspend their critical faculties. The story told through an episode of the Indian Who wants to be a Millionaire? (confirming it as one of the most annoying quiz programmes of all time) becomes more implausible with every question answered.
The characters are a selection of half-drawn stereotypes, barely sketched notions of criminals and slumdogs far removed from the complexities and heartbreaks of real life. As the hero miraculously transforms from dark rascal of the slums to charming and light-skinnedchaiwalla (tea server) in a call centre, we are treated to the idea that everyone in India is a criminal, a fool, a saint or a convenient mix of all three.
Boyle simply tries to tick as many boxes as possible. He wants an Indian version of City of God, another cult product. He wants an uplifting story about the spirit of the gutsy Indian people: they live in slums but still smile and believe in love. And, most obviously, he wants to include a touch of Bollywood, that most fantastical and shallow of genres. But it's not difficult to draw a visual spectacle out of a city that prides itself on colour and noise.
Switch on a documentary, watch the news or just flick through a guidebook and the vision of a spectacular country changing rapidly and beyond the grasp of its inhabitants is evident. The main issue isn't that the film is just patronising to India, but to the audience. It is merely a pastiche of styles and ideas, although ethnicity and epic landscapes may be enough to satisfy the Academy judges.
Maybe we should be realistic: if the slum tours profit, so do the charities supporting them. So the film has done some good. But that isn't the same as it being any good.

What to watch for
  • The camera angles during “Who Wants to be a Millionaire” often show the state of the conflict between Jamal and the host.
  • The number 10 is used repeatedly throughout the film.
  • Latika always wears yellow or is in yellow light.

Friday, October 23, 2015

Chase Scene Analysis

   
The filmmakers maintain suspense and interest in this chase scene using different music. The music is exciting and suspenseful while James Bond is chasing the man. When he loses sight of Bond and begins to believe that he escaped, the music fades out to add a sense of calm. This also emphasises the vehicle crashing through the building and makes it more surprising. The music picks up when Bond is in an especially dangerous situation, like when he is hanging from the crane. It also picks up the closer Bond is to catching him and fades out more the farther he is.
     Camera angles also play a huge part in the suspense. It follows each character as they progress and shows how each change to the environment (such as the explosion) affects them. The shot goes into a worm's eye view to show how high up they are, like when they are climbing up the wire of the crane or when Bond is dangling from the crane. The shot also goes into a bird's eye view to show distances that he has to jump, like when he jumps from the crane to the roof of the building.
     The characters are accurately represented by the way they run. The man that is trying to escape uses complicated parkour and jumps over things (like when he jumps through the small window) while Bond does everything is a blunt and simple way (like when he plows through the wall or runs the vehicle through the building. The runner makes things more complicated than they need to be when he climbs up the crane and Bond simply releases it to propel himself upward. The runner is more athletic, but Bond is smarter and quick to find simple solutions to all of his problem.
     The locations add a lot of suspense to the entire scene. The construction site was filled with machines and workers that could possibly kill both of them. The area became more and more chaotic as they ran through destroying things by blowing up the gas tank, running through a building, and shooting people. They then moved to the embassy which became dangerous in a different way when everybody was trying to shoot them. They move between places that become more and more treacherous until the scene is concluded with James Bond's escape.

Wednesday, October 14, 2015

IB Group FIlm


We did a good job creating an interesting and entertaining concept.

I enjoyed helping to create and plan the story.

We should have made the sounds less choppy when we put them together and evened out the volume. We should have had music in the background of most of the scenes, because there is a lot of empty space that seems awkward with no sound. We also should have made Carl's voice sound better when he answers the math question. Carl also should have been kept in the center of the frame, or else the frame looks uneven and sloppy. His head is also chopped off on the top in some shots.

Thursday, August 27, 2015

How do film makers make meaning for the viewer?

1. How do we know if this film will meet our expectations?

From watching the trailer, the film appears to have a good balance of romance, sadness, and humor. While one of the characters appears to be in a life threatening situation, the trailer also shows happy and romantic scenes to make the movie look less depressing. Overall, The Fault In Our Stars looks well-made.

2.


3. What meaning are you getting from the clip?

Hazel knows that someday her disease will kill her, referring to herself as a "grenade" that will eventually go off and she doesn't want to hurt all of the people who love her by dying. She pushes Gus away and doesn't want him to love her no matter how much she loves him because she doesn't want to hurt him.

4. How is that meaning created?

The movie centers around her disease affecting their relationship, so it's obvious that the "grenade" refers to her dying from the disease. Hazel says that it's her responsibility to keep people away from her to protect them. She says that she likes him and likes hanging out with him but she doesn't want to hurt him.

Tuesday, March 24, 2015

Rear Window



Some of the sound effects in this scene include an alarm clock when the couple wakes up on the fire escape. You can also here children playing in the alleyway.

In this scene, Hitchcock establishes the normality and happiness of the neighborhood through the happy music and sounds of children playing. This is a place where a murder seems very unlikely and hard to believe. He establishes the character of the dancer and shows Jeff's room to explain who he is. It is clearly shown by his cast that he has a broken leg, and the camera pans to reveal the smashed camera and picture of a car crash that explain how his leg was broken. His room contains a collection of cameras and many framed photos to explain that he is a professional photographer. There is also a photo of Miss Fremont to show his interest in her.




This analysis successfully explains what makes the movie so popular and what the audience is thinking during the most intense scenes.

This movie makes the audience wonder if Jeff is right about the murder the entire time. They see the same strange events that Jeff sees, but the strangeness is then refuted by the logic of Jeff's friends. This makes the audience question Jeff's sanity. Since the camera only shows what is happening through the window, it makes the audience feel just as trapped as the main character, not being able to leave the room to get more evidence to finally prove the murder.








Audio Basics


Exciting

                                                                            Happy

Suspenseful
                                       

Tuesday, February 24, 2015

Avant Garde Film



Aspect Ratio: The proportional relationship between a film's width and height. The standard aspect ratio used in the 20th century since the invention of motion picture cameras was 4:3. Most cameras now record in 16:9 for new HDTVs.

Resolution: The sharpness of an image in relation to the number or density of pixels.

In the film, if was successful in finding music that fit well and added more character. The scenes that each member filmed individually were random until they were put together to create a third meaning. If I were to complete the film again, I would work on more seamlessly edit the scenes together.