Lord Of The Flies: Compare the openings of the two films.

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Lord Of The Flies: Compare the openings of the two films.

The opening of the movie is very different to the American version. Peter Brook used still images and makes them appear to move. This approach to an opening of a film is very different to normal. I think that because it is different it makes the opening immediately quite effective. Also, the use of black and white makes the opening quite striking. Again, this makes it effective. Although, the film is quite old fashioned, the simplicity of the opening grabs the viewer’s attention.

The film begins with the ringing of a bell and a picture of an old building, which we then associate with a school building; because the next picture we see, is a portrait of schoolboys and schoolmasters. As the bell rings for the last time, the picture changes to another, of a classroom, with the sound of a man speaking Latin, whom we assume to be a schoolteacher.

This is successful we immediately realize that the film is going to be about school children, and having read the book the viewer get the sense that Peter Brook has followed the book quite carefully while producing the film. This becomes more and more apparent as we watch the rest of the opening.  

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It then cuts to a picture of a canteen with the sounds of children talking. Both of these stills create an image of everything going on as usual. The camera then pans upwards, as choir singing starts and the camera eventually reaches a window, which lets in the light. This mixture of the lit up window and the angelic singing gives the feeling of holiness. Here, I think Peter Brook was trying to create the sense of the film being about different types of boys; the choir boys and the regular school boys.  

The next still we ...

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