Movies and Meaning- Pearson New International Edition
Page 7
CAMERA POSITION, GESTURE, AND EXPRESSION By varying the camera-to-subject distance, the filmmaker can manipulate the viewer’s emotional involvement with the material in complex ways. What the camera sees is what the spectator sees. As the camera moves closer to a character, viewers are brought into the character’s personal space in ways that can be very expressive and emotional.
People express emotion and intention in ways that go beyond the words they
speak. Posture, gesture, facial expression, eye contact, and vocal inflection express feelings and help to define relationships. These signals vary by culture, but all members of a society learn how to read the expressions and gestures of other people as a way of inferring what they are thinking or feeling. By varying camera placement, filmmakers can call attention to significant expressions and gestures and thereby help viewers understand the meaning of the relationships and situations depicted on screen.
When a filmmaker cuts to a close-up, the director can emphasize and clarify a character’s reaction, as well as bring viewers into the action and the personal emotional space of the character. Depending on how the viewer feels about that character, this can give rise to either positive emotions (e.g., compassion, empathy) or negative ones (e.g., fear, anxiety).
23
Film Structure
In George Cukor’s A Star Is Born (1954), James Mason plays a tragic Hollywood actor, Norman Maine. With his acting career destroyed, the alcoholic Maine collapses into despair and considers suicide. He begins to cry. The camera draws in to a medium close-up, and director Cukor keeps the shot on screen for a surprisingly long time. Cukor said, “To see that man break down was very moving. All the credit for that goes to James [Mason]. He did it all himself. What I did was to let him do it and let it go on and on, let the camera stay on him for an eternity.” The shot is designed to elicit the viewer’s empathy by revealing an intimate glimpse of a man’s private hell.
Facial expressions do not have to be realistic to express emotion or intention. Close-ups of Gollum (Andy Serkis) in The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King (2004) emphasize his semi-human character, rendered with visual effects. These effects transform normal human reality but also correspond with real facial cues. The bulging eyes and open mouth accurately convey the character’s anger, but they do so with exaggeration.
A STAR IS BORN
(WARNER BROS.,
1954)
Changing facial ex-
pressions in a single,
extended shot from
A Star Is Born convey
the despair of Norman
Maine (actor James
Mason). As a photo-
graphic medium, the
cinema is especially
powerful in its ability to
capture and emphasize
the smallest details of
human facial expression
as signs of emotion.
The face is one of cin-
ema’s most profound
channels for emotional
expression. Frame
enlargements.
24
Film Structure
THE LORD OF THE RINGS: THE RETURN OF THE KING (NEW LINE, 2004)
Unreal faces in fantasy films still can have a special expressive power. Gollum’s bulging eyes and snarling mouth accurately convey his greed for the ring and his anger at those who stand in his way, but the emotions are conveyed with some exaggeration. Frame enlargement.
The application of digital tools in filmmaking has made great progress in little over a decade, with digital artists learning to represent a great variety of images and lighting conditions. Breakthroughs in the representation of water, for example, made possible the convincing digital oceans in Finding Nemo (2003) and The Perfect Storm (2000). (Compare the tidal wave in that film with the one in The Abyss (1989), a decade earlier.) But the emotional richness and complexity of facial expression have not yet been among these breakthroughs. The facial reactions of digital characters in Madagascar (2005), Shrek 2 (2004), or The Incredibles (2004) are conveyed very effectively as caricature rather than in a photorealist style.
THE POLAR EXPRESS (WARNER BROS., 2004)
To date, most digitally created faces have involved cartoon or nonhuman characters because their expressions can be rendered in broader terms. For this film, motion capture techniques converted the performances of live actors (such as Tom Hanks, pictured here) into cartoon figures. The results were disappointing. The faces look stiff and do not show the range of expression of a real person. Frame enlargement.
25
Film Structure
Case Study CHARLIE CHAPLIN
Few filmmakers understood the emotional implications
of camera position better than Charles Chaplin. Chaplin
used a formula to guide his camera placements: long
shot for comedy, close-up for tragedy. He understood
that the long shot was best suited for comedy because
it allowed viewers to see the relationship between
Charlie the tramp and his environment, particularly
when he was causing chaos and confusion, as he might
when tackling a waiter carrying a tray of food or step-
ping on a board with a brick on one end, causing it
to catapult onto the head of a policeman. Laughter
depended on seeing these relationships and having
sufficient emotional distance from the character. The
long shot helped provide viewers with that emotional
CITY LIGHTS (UNITED ARTISTS, 1931)
distance. By contrast, Chaplin knew that the close-up,
by emphasizing a character’s emotional reaction, could
Chaplin’s sublime expression in the final image
of City Lights . Chaplin intuitively understood the
invite tears rather than laughter. Aiming for the heart-
emotional implications of camera position, and
strings of his audience, he used his close-ups sparingly
he reserved the close-up for special moments of
so that they would have exceptional dramatic intensity.
pathos and sentiment. His extraordinary face,
The ending of City Lights (1931) illustrates this quite
the tentative gesture of his hand, the rose it
well. Charlie has been courting a blind flower girl who
clutches—these emphasize his romantic yearn-
believes that he is a millionaire. Charlie happily plays
ing and his pained embarrassment at being
along. At the end of the film, the flower girl regains her
revealed as a tramp and not a millionaire. Frame
enlargement.
eyesight, chances upon Charlie, the disreputable tramp,
and realizes with disappointment who he is. At this mo-
ment, Chaplin shows Charlie’s extraordinary expression
and spatial intimacy with a terrifying or dangerous
in close-up, a mixture of hope, love, fear, embarrass-
character, as in The Exorcist (1973).
ment, and humiliation. This is one of the most perfect
The effects of camera position, then, are context-
close-ups in film history. It emphasizes the complex feel-
dependent, a matter of how a given position is related to
ings between the characters, magnifies the emotions on
the dramatic or emotional content of a shot or scene. By
screen, and intensifies them for the film’s viewers.
using camera position, filmmakers can enhance or inhibit
This scene elicits positive emotions from viewers.
the viewer’s emotional involvement with a character or
Obviously, though, many films and genres, like horror,
situation and can elicit both positive and negative emo-
appeal to viewers by eliciti
ng such negative emotions
tions. Good filmmakers are intelligent in their choice of
as fear, disgust, and anxiety. Within the safe confines of
camera position, understanding when to cut in to close-
a fictional film world, these negative emotions can be
up and when to pull back to long shot. Each position
pleasurable to experience. In this context, a strategi-
gives the viewer a unique perspective on the action, and
cally placed close-up can be disturbing and frightening
filmmakers understand that the effects of these positions
if it brings the viewer into a relationship of proximity
can be enhanced by a careful choice of camera angle. ■
Camera Angle
The camera’s angle of view typically varies from shot to shot. Camera angles are classified as variations of three essential positions: low, medium (or eye-level), and high.
Low- and high-angle positions are usually defined relative to what the camera is filming. A low-angle shot in Spider-Man 2 (2004) shows Peter Parker (Tobey Maguire) 26
Film Structure
throwing away his Spider-Man costume,
having decided to stop being a superhero.
The low-angle framing emphasizes the se-
riousness and drama of this moment.
Filmmakers use camera angles for
a variety of expressive purposes. These
include conveying information about a
character’s view of the world and ac-
companying emotions. In Citizen Kane ,
director Orson Welles uses camera angle
to evoke young Charlie Kane’s boyhood
feelings of bewilderment and powerless-
ness in his new foster home. Charlie’s
imposing guardian gives him a sled for a
THE EXORCIST (WARNER BROS., 1973)
Christmas present. To magnify Charlie’s
Facial close-ups can be a very powerful way of eliciting nega-
feelings of helplessness, Welles shoots the
tive emotion from viewers. When the possessed Regan (Linda
man towering above him, from the boy’s
Blair) stares into the camera, as here, it is difficult to avoid
flinching. The camera’s proximity to a dangerous or frighten-
point of view, using an extremely low cam-
ing character can generate in viewers a sense of being threat-
era angle that forces viewers to look up to
ened. Frame enlargement.
this figure, much as Charlie has to do.
Camera angle also can complicate emotional responses by playing against the visual relationships viewers want to have with characters, as Hitchcock does in his use of high angles during moments of extreme emotional crisis. In Psycho (1960), he used one of these extremely high angles as a way of solving a dramatic and narrative problem and of working at cross-purposes with the viewer’s desired response. A first-time viewer believes that the psychopathic killer in the film is the deranged mother of motel owner Norman Bates. In the film’s climax, Norman is revealed as the killer. The mother has been dead for many years, and Norman has kept her alive in his mind, keeping her body in the house, even dressing up like her and speaking in her voice. Hitchcock’s narrative problem was to keep the audience from realizing midway through the film—when Norman moves her body from the upstairs bedroom to the basement—that the mother was dead.
DR. STRANGELOVE
(COLUMBIA PICTURES,
1964)
The psychotic General Jack
Ripper (Sterling Hayden)
launches a nuclear war be-
cause he feels his “precious
bodily fluids” are being
drained by communist spies.
The low camera angle em-
phasizes Ripper’s looming
presence and his madness.
The oversized cigar points to
his sexual anxieties. Frame
enlargement.
27
Film Structure
PSYCHO (PARAMOUNT
PICTURES, 1960)
Hitchcock solves a narrative prob-
lem in Psycho by using this high
camera angle. The bizarre, distort-
ing perspective conceals the fact
that Norman’s mother is dead as
he carries her down to the fruit
cellar. Frame enlargement.
Hitchcock attached his camera to the ceiling and filmed from directly overhead as Norman carries the corpse down to the cellar. The extremely high angle, coupled with the jostling movement as Norman goes down the stairs, prevents the audience from realizing he is carrying a corpse. The viewer is even fooled into thinking that the mother is kicking in protest.
ETERNAL SUNSHINE OF THE SPOTLESS MIND (FOCUS FEATURES, 2004)
Camera angle can visualize point of view, even one that cannot literally exist. When Clementine (Kate Winslet) and Joel (Jim Carrey) lie on a frozen pond and look at the stars, the camera looks down on the characters as if from the heavens. The stars cannot be gaz-ing at the characters, but the camera angle creates an effect that suggests something like this idea. The angle adds a moment of visual poetry. Frame enlargement.
28
Film Structure
Hitchcock’s use of the high angle in this scene is an ingenious solution to his narrative problem. It introduces a bizarre, distorting perspective into the scene that plays against the viewer’s desired visual relationship with the characters.
Because of the questions that the narrative has raised about this mysterious figure, viewers want to see Norman’s mother clearly and up close, not from the odd angle Hitchcock provides. But, by delaying the desired response, Hitchcock builds FILMMAKER SPOTLIGHT
Alfred Hitchcock
Alfred Hitchcock was a consummate showman and
entertainer and a serious artist who used film to
explore dark currents of human thought and be-
havior. He thrived in the classical Hollywood studio
system because his films were popular with audi-
ences and enjoyed considerable critical respect. As a
result, Hitchcock became one of the most powerful
Hollywood directors and one of the few known to
the public by name.
Born into a Catholic family in the East End of
London in 1899, Hitchcock grew into a solitary boy
possessed of an active imagination and fascinated by
crime. Uncommonly anxious, he believed his many
VERTIGO (PARAMOUNT PICTURES, 1958)
fears motivated his preference for making films about
James Stewart portrays a detective terrified of
innocent characters suddenly caught up in an unpre-
heights in Vertigo , Hitchcock’s most passionate
dictable whirlpool of danger, madness, and intrigue.
and poetic film. Stewart’s pose here is a classic
“I was terrified of the police, of the Jesuit Fathers, of
Hitchcock image of the individual haunted by
physical punishment, of a lot of things. This is the root
the darkness in his mind and beset by chaos in
of my work.”
the outer world. Hitchcock’s darkest films offer
In 1920, Hitchcock entered the British film indus-
no places of safety. Frame enlargement.
try as a scriptwriter and set and costume designer.
In 1924–1925, he worked as an assistant director,
and then director, in Germany on several British–
Hitchcock rapidly consolidated his reputation as a
German co-productions. He studied and absorbed
leading director and defined his unique screen world.
the style of German Expressionism, and in all hisr />
Using suspense as his method for drawing the
subsequent films he relied on expressionistically dis-
audience into the fictional screen world, Hitchcock
torted images to suggest an unstable world.
concentrated on stories of crime, madness, and
Hitchcock rose to the peak of the British industry
espionage in which ostensibly innocent characters
with a cycle of elegant spy thrillers— The Man Who
confront their guilt and complicity in unsavory or
Knew Too Much (1934), The 39 Steps (1935), The Lady
villainous activities. In Shadow of a Doubt (1943) a
Vanishes (1938). Seeking greater creative freedom
psychopathic serial killer (Joseph Cotton) visits his
and technical resources, Hitchcock left Britain for
sister in a small California town, and his idealistic
Hollywood and completed his first U.S. film, Rebecca ,
young niece discovers his secret and the many ties
in 1940. An auspicious debut, it won an Academy
that bind her to him. In Notorious (1946), two U.S.
Award for Best Picture. In the years that followed,
spies (Cary Grant and Ingrid Bergman) fall in love
( continued)
29
Film Structure
while manipulating and emotionally betraying one
Hitchcock had one more hit in the 1960s— The
another. In Strangers on a Train (1951), a charming
Birds (1963)—and then began a period of decline.
psychopath (Robert Walker) proposes an exchange
Marnie (1964), Torn Curtain (1966), and Topaz
of murders to a celebrity tennis player. “You do
(1969) were critical and commercial disappoint-
mine, I do yours,” he tells the shocked but intrigued
ments. The industry and the modern audience were
athlete.
changing, and Hitchcock could not adapt. The
Hitchcock reached the height of his powers, and
old studio system was dead, and many of the stars
the zenith of his career, in the 1950s with a series of