Friday, 25 October 2013
Lock, Stock and Two Smocking Barrels Review
Of the rare chance of release a good british gangster film that isn't about football fighting, well Guy Richie has done it going for a Taratinoid spin of the British gangster movie, this fresh spin on the genre has work by bringing comedy as well as gangsters. Guy Richie being known for his british gangster films, he really knows how to write a funny film but also bring the feel of London gangster with it, with his wacky characters and side stories
Scarface
Scarface Analysis
For this task we had too
watch Scarface (1983) directed by Brian De Palma and starring Al Pacino as
Scarface, this film is set in 1980 Miami and Al Pacino plays a determined Cuban
immigrant for gets a taste of drug cartel and the high life while succumbing to
greed.
In this film it starts off
with showing actually footage of back when Cuban’s got sent off too America
with classic type of an eighties style around it, then after the introduction
of the film they introduce the main character Tony Montana who is straight away
betrayed as someone who has some wit too him and is a strong character from
this you know he is the main character. You get too know him a bit from the
police interviewing him so where is has come from and what type of lifestyle he
is looking for and then he mentioned he dreamed to come too America he known
one day he would this is an element the writer (Oliver Stone) uses called the
American Dream which he uses in most of his films as he is a very big American
Patriot towards his script writing for his country.
From then on it sets up the
theme of the American Dream for this film and this is something that grabs and
keeps the audiences attention throughout this three hour film, is wanting to
find out firstly what his dream is and will he get it by adding in
crime/gangsters into it this is something that grabs the audience even further.
How they add in that this is a gangster genre is through Tony they idolise him
as most directors do in gangster films shows what type of lifestyle they have,
the obvious is the violence they do use isn’t a huge amount until right at the
end where they build up little bits of strong violence and then save the huge
use of violence and action in ending. The whole film is set around one drug
thou and that is cocaine, drugs being another convention for a gangster film
but the main thing throughout this film that is a key convention of a gangster
film which is used very strongly is money, too a point in the film he has so
much money the bank don’t know how they are going to take it and help rinses it
for Tony this is something that is shown I think to get the audience (people
who want to inspire to be something and get money). This is shown through also
the documentary we watched on disc two of Scarface the film inspired a lot of
rap and RnB musicians that Tony came up from nothing from a slum for Cubans and
then ends up with his American Dream but with a very strong cost. They were
talking about him as a sort of idol, someone they look too when they were
trying to make there dream in music come true and to be honest he is very
easily idolised in the film because he does see a goal and he stops at nothing
too get it and it’s a message a lot of people would look at and make them think
they should go for the dream, even thou Tony’s dream involves death and drugs
both the director and writer both find it easy to try and relate the audience
and Tony together.
In Scarface just like any
other gangster film they have a leading male aka Tony Montana aka Scarface (Al
Pacino) and they have a leading lady aka Elvira Hancock (Michelle Pfeiffer) and
both betrayed in very different ways. Firstly Tony is shown as a typical male
back in Miami in the eighties and gangster films in a general, if you had money
and power you get the lady but also is shown as a strong character while Elvira
is shown as a settler who ever can provide her with money, power and safety she
will go too and has no power over who she with even after Tony murdered her
boyfriend/partner Frank Lopez (Robert Loggia) she doesn’t question him Tony or
even cry over Franks death not a single emotion was given Tony just turns too
her and says “Get you clothes your coming with me now” like he has taken over
the property of her she doesn’t hit him and say no she grabs her clothes and
goes with him and even goes off too marry him, only when she see’s what Tony is
becoming and treating her she stands up for herself but it takes so much for
her to leave Tony, while it took so little for her to marry him.
I once heard this film being
described of being on cocaine itself and yes it’s a very over the top film but
the three hour climax leaves you with the final showdown in which Tony has lost
everything which made him have power and respect (he loses his wife, his best
friend/partner/sister/and his business/business partner) and it leads too his
downfall as in every gangster film they all have there downfall and his was
greed and the greed was built up throughout the film more and more by adding
more and more power and money towards Tony and that was his downfall. In Tony
downfall you get left with the very famous final showdown with the famous one
liner words “Say Hello To My Little Friend” which anyone they had even heard of
Scarface will know that one famous line which is the begging of the final
showdown, unlimited action and the end of Tony Montana’s legacy.
After the final showdown is
over and Tony is dead lying in his fountain of his own blood the camera shows
above the fountain too where he has a model of the world and around it in red
glowing lights says “The World Is Yours” this is also shown as the begging of
him becoming killing Frank and is shown after he goes to collect one of his
prizes (Elvira) this shows that the world is now his and showing it on a blimp
is showing he has reached the top now, while when it is shown in red after his
death is showing he has the world but now his dream is dead and is contrasted
with the blood in the fountains water.
Scarface is known to be a
very iconic film in the gangster genre not just because of its famous one
liners and famous scenes and not even because of Al Pacino’s amazing
performance as the famous “Tony Montana” aka “Scarface” but because of how iconic
the message/meaning of the film is too people showing someone with nothing sets
out too change that and get his dream while also showing people not too be take
by the greed.
By Bradley Westall
Monday, 21 October 2013
Scarface Poster and Trailer
Scarface Poster and Trailer
The film Scarface (1983) has both a trailer and poster for it both with different styles but still getting the message across that it is a gangster film and mentions the American dream (power and money) I feel is one of the key things the advertiser for this film is trying to get across, I also feel the key thing also would be it's going to be violent by showing a lot of shooting at people in the film and even blood round "Tony's" shirt (three minutes and five seconds in) and then the poster would be this by showing "Tony" with a gun (that he is someone serious) and then in the trailer you it shows people trying to kill him and him acting back with no fear.
Both the trailer and poster both make it very clear that "Tony" is the main character and the trailer does it in a way to idolises him too be someone that saw what he wanted and let no one get in his way and as the trailer shows "The Worlds Is Yours" is a perfect way to sum up the trailer in one and "Tony" as what type of character he is going to be. I feel the way the represent the character and idolises him in both the trailer and poster is something that would target the audience, showing a man with nothing going out there and getting something he wanted the message of that is very strong and i feel would appeal too a lot of people that have a dream/believe in the American dream.
Both the trailer and the poster have a sort of set narrative but as the poster doesnt have the same amount of information that
the trailer offers, you wouldn't be able to get the same that the trailer does as the trailer shows you the main character is a person named "Tony Mantania" who has come from Cuba and now is in American and he has a dream and thats the American Dream and he is going to reach it by any means. This is showed in the trailer through the violence/guns/money you know from this its going to be something that is aimed at eighteen plus and how they show Tony in both the poster and trailer you know this is aimed at males as it shows a guy getting on with work and getting somewhere which a lot of men would see as something they do as well.
Tuesday, 8 October 2013
Thursday, 3 October 2013
Watchmen Dubbed Over (Sound Effects)
For this task in the sound workshop we had to chose a scene and mute all sound and only put in the sound effect nothing else was needed. For this scene i chose the opening scene too "Watchmen" which I thought would be a good chose of a scene as it has a number of different sound effects for a fight scene and smashing of stuff so this is one of the reasons I chose this scene.
This is the scene I chose to add my own sound effects into but I only chose up too the part where the door was kicked open to the part of the scene where a meat clever is dropped on the floor. For the meat clever I couldn't get a good enough sound to match it but overall the other sounds from the door being kicked open and the fighting I felt really belonged in the scene and went well with the scene and I felt like nothing was out of sync.
Here is the Original video and full length one.
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