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Classical Realist Texts: American Films between 1916 and 1960. Montage. Table of Contents. 1. Mise-en-scène in classical American films 2. Montage in classical American films. Montage in Classical American Films.
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Classical Realist Texts: American Films between 1916 and 1960 Montage
Table of Contents 1. Mise-en-scène in classical American films 2. Montage in classical American films
Montage in Classical American Films • As mise-en-scène, montage must help a narrative move on without distracting the attention of the viewer from it. • Smooth flow from a shot to the next shot CONTINUITY EDITING
Montage in Classical American Films Continuity editing PURPOSES • To tell a story coherently and clearly; • To map out the chain of actions in an un-distracting way
Montage in Classical American Films GRAPHIC CONTINUITY • Shot-Reverse Shot • The positions of figures, the balance of compositions, and the set designs must be kept consistent over shot-reverse shots. • The overall lighting tonality and colour schema must remain constant over shots.
Non-Continuity Editing • An example which ignores the rule of continuity editing. Ozu’s films
Montage in Classical American Films EYE-LINE MATCH • Shot A presents someone looking at something off-screen; shot B shows us what is being looked at by him/her.
Montage in Classical American Films • Eye-line match • Alfred Hitchcock’s Rear Windows (1954) • In one shot Jefferies looks through his camera and the next shot shows what he is watching.
Montage in Classical American Films 180-DEGREE RULE • Two characters (or other elements) in the same scene should always have the same left/right relationship to each other. • The axis of action (or centre line, 180º line) is assumed between two characters. Then, this axis of action determines a half-circle, or 180º area, where the camera(s) can be placed to present action.
Montage in Classical American Films • Examples of the scenes which blatantly ignore the 180-degree rule • Jean-Luc Godard, A bout de souffle (1960) • Ozu Yasujiro, Tokyo Story (1953)
Montage in Classical American Films TEMPORAL CONTINUITY: • Time, like space, is organized according to the development of the narrative. • ORDER, FREQUENCY, DURATION
Montage in Classical American Films • ORDER • Continuity editing typically presents the story events in a 1-2-3 order. • With the exception of occasional flashbacks. • Christopher Nolan’s Memento: its narrative told in a backward 3-2-1 order
Montage in Classical American Films • FREQUENCY • Classical editing also typically presents only once what happens in the story. • Non-classical montage • Sergei Eisenstein’s Battleship Potemkin (1925) • Spike Lee’s Do the Right Thing (1989)
Montage in Classical American Films • DURATION • In the classical continuity system, story duration is seldom expanded or shortened. The story time is equal to the film time. • Story time is extended in the famous Odessa Steps scene in Sergei Eisenstein’s Battleship Potemkin (1925)
Montage in Classical American Films • JUMP CUT • A device to compress (dead) time. (A man enters a large room at one end and must walk to a desk at the other end. Jump cut eliminates most of the action of traversing the long room.)
Montage in Classical American Films • Unobtrusive jump cut - a cut which does not make the viewer aware of it. • Excess dead time must smoothed over either by cutting away to another element of the scene or by changing camera angle sufficiently so that the second shot is clearly from a different camera placement. • Jump Cut
Expressive Montage • Obtrusive, jugged jump cut • An action is abruptly interrupted before it is completed or a scene begins in the middle of an action after it has already started. • Jean-Luc Godard, A bout de souffle (1960) • Lars von Trier, Dancer in the Dark (2000) • One of the avant-garde’s favourite expressive techniques. • Making artificiality evident.
Expressive Montage • CROSS CUTTING • Alternates two or more lines of actions taking place in different places simultaneously. • Cross cutting could be employed to enhance reality and truth effects, but is generally associated with more formalist editing. • Edward Yan’s Yi, Yi (A One and a Two, 2000) • Francis Ford Coppola, Godfather
Expressive Montage • David Lean as a master editor Lawrence of Arabia (1962) • Formative editing jumping thousands of miles in space over two shots
Expressive Montage • The most audacious editing 2001 Space Odyssay • Time travels million years in one editing.