Focus on how NARRATIVE and GENRE features create MEANING and generate response in a film sequence of no more that 15 minutes. Scream from 0.00-12.23.

Authors Avatar
Focus on how NARRATIVE and GENRE features create MEANING and generate response in a film sequence of no more that 15 minutes. Scream from 0.00-12.23. The scene opens with the title Scream accompanied by non-diegetic screams, a heartbeat and a telephone ringing which acts as a sound bridge into the first scene. This establishes that the film is going to be a scary horror straight away. A blonde girl answers the telephone. It is typical in the horror/slasher genre of blonde girls to be victims of the killer of the film. They are usually “airheads” but Casey appears to be quite smart. The conversation is light and casual so there is no cause to worry. This is the equilibrium of the scene. After she puts the telephone down, she starts to walk away and the telephone rings again. The conversation is again casual and Casey assumes nothing is suspicious, but the camera shooting her is at a slight angle to show a slight sense of danger from this telephone call. This is one example of dramatic irony in this film sequence, which adds tension to the scene. The camera pans from a treetop to show us a swing swinging outside her house. The director uses this as an indication that someone has been there. The shot also shows that the house is very big and
Join now!
isolated. A genre requirement. We get a ‘nasty jump’ when the cooker is switched on. The gas makes that whooshing sound. Casey now arrives in her kitchen. The telephone rings again. This time she picks up a cordless telephone and it is the same person who rang before. From this, we can tell that the telephone is going to be a main narrative device as she keeps the telephone with her at all times from now on. It is emphasised, as it is large and white. Telephones are used a lot it slasher genre films. They are supposed to be ...

This is a preview of the whole essay