Sunday 22 February 2009

Whisky Street


This extract would be suitable for the medium of film for several reasons. Firstly it suggests to me several very visual ideas such as the central character/narrator who has lost everything 'documents, passport, licence...' and even the will to live when he tells us 'there was nowhere left to run, no way out...'. He is a character who with proper casting, my young target demographic could connect with and I feel I could make a film which would engage them in his dilemmas which we read about in the extract when he tells us about the revolver in his coat pocket.


Secondly the location of Whisky street with its vividly described colours and noises (garish purple bruises and sirens) would be ideal in the medium of film and could be created to stunning effect with green screen technology in the same style as Frank Miller's Sin City. This again would help target my student demographic.


There are other compelling reasons for making this text into a film including the fact that screen adaptations of novels have usually always been succesful in cinema. Also because I feel this film/text lends itself to two very succesful genres in cinema, namely Horror and Thriller. This intertextual mix would be appealing to the demographic in the same way as Fincher's Seven has been. The horror elements are suggested by the genre markers such as the terrible place - Whisky St and the 'ghostly footsteps' and of course the night-time setting. On the other hand the man faced with a situation he does not understand suggests one of the key markers of the Thriller. It might be possible to introduce a double crossing female into my film thus giving the movie a Film Noir aspect.


I see this film attracting a young student demographic 15- 25 who are the most common cinema goers and who are keen on the thriller/horror mix. The film I intend to make would undoubtedly be a multiplex movie with action and enigmas which would seek to please its target audience with visceral and cognitive pleasures. It being a multiplex movie there would be a need for a good sized budget, a 15 certificate and perhaps an A list star to generate the kind of profits expected from multiplex screenings.


The film would as I have said, rely somewhat on a major star to bring alive the narrator of the text. Discussions with my Casting Director would centre on Josh Hartnett as one possibility or Mark Ruffalo (pictured above) or Colin Farrell. The casting of any one of these established actors with their distinctive features would help the mise en scene of the battered and troubled narrator and his life on Whisky street. A blonde Ann Hathaway or Jessica Alba would broaden the draw of the film for its audience and would also be considered in casting. Of course their availability and willingness to undertake the progress plus their fee would have to be taken into consideration.


The description of Whisky Street in the extract is so evocative and precise with its 'dark sheets of rain' that the only sensible option in terms of location would be the use of a soundstage with green screen and post production CGI to recreate it. My locations manager and producers would be looking for a studio with these facilities in order to maximise complete control over the colours and types of rainfall and the camera work needed to visualise the moment in the text which describes the gun. the text also mentions a good deal of foley (even the noise of the gun chamber is mentioned) so my Sound Editor would benefit from a controlled environment in which to record these fx.


My Cinematograher and I would need to have lengthy discussions about the look of my film. As I have suggested horror combined with film noir there is a need to film with a view to using a lot of shadows and light (as Hitchcock did with Psycho or like the noir films of Nicholas Ray). Therefore the possibility of shooting in grainy b/w should be discussed or even de-saturated colour. I would of course be looking for 35mm standard which would be pleasurable to my audience as would be the b/w.


The music for the film most try to create for the young demographic the mood and feeling of Whisky Street and the troubled narrator. This being the case I would discuss with my Music Director the need for a dark electronic, original score and even the possibility of a signature piece of music which help the audience understand the darkness of the street. Craig Armstrong or Thomas Newman (who has worked closely with Sam Mendes on Jarhead and Revolutionary Road) are two composers capable of sonically conveying the darkness of Whisky street with 'its filth and grease...'


I would like to explore now some of the Technical and Cultural Codes for the opening shots of this movie.


Without doubt the location is one of the stars of the movie and integral to its success with the target audience. It has to be gritty and powerful and memorable to the audience. Therefore my first shot will need to be a panning wide of the street using green screen as indicated above. The right to left pan in moderate speed will attept to convey the darkness and danger of the street to the the audience presenting them with a pleasurable sense of fear and anticipation. The shot will be at eye level possibly the view of a pedestrian. Sheets of rain will seem almost white against the purple sky with other aspects of mise en scene present such as demolished houses, burnt out cars, neon lit clubs etc. This combined with the signature music mentioned above will anchor for the audience the sheer presence of this location and its dangers.


The second shot will be a continuaion of the pan which will grind to a halt at our narrator slumped in the tunnel wearing a large shapeless coat in dark colours suggesting he is powerless and hopeless. The pan will then zoom to a midshot of our anti hero as he contemplates his future, the rain driving into his face. The fx of rain and sirens and shouts will then be heightened for the audience anchoring a sense of his inner torment and need for escape. the signature music will then rise to a crescendo as he fumbles for his old rusted gun in the shadowy low key lighting.


Shot three will be a choker close up of the gun ( a special set up will be needed here as the audience is taken into one of the chambers and can see the bullet there) the noise of the chamber can be heard. This shot will be angled down on thebullet anchoring the sense that it will be fired soon.


Shot four will zoom out from the man and tilt slightly upwards in the direction of the tunnel entrance. The mise en scene here will be of a tunnel like the opening of hell, dark and foreboding with the foley of 'ghostly' noises approaching. Here the signature music will switch dramatically to a horror chord anchoring for the audience along with the dark shadowy lighting with expressionistic colourings, the sense of danger to the anti-hero narrator. Sound editing will be crucial in the creation of the otherness.

Tuesday 17 February 2009

Revolutionary Road the novel is better!



I thoroughly enjoyed the Richard Yates' novel so I was looking forward to the film. It was a fairly good film but put against other Oscar contenders such as Benjamin Button and Slumdog Millionaire, it felt pretty ordinary. One of the things I noticed was how few people were in the film! Although the central parts were convincing you couldn't help but think that what they were worried about (loss of their dream and ideals) wasn't worth getting really worked up about. Oh and the amount of smoking was unreal as was the amount of time pouring drinks!

Sunday 15 February 2009

Rachel Getting Married Pictures, Images and Photos
Jonathan Demme really made a gripping movie here!