At the start of the movie “Stand by Me”, four boys go on a journey to find a deceased classmate. Throughout the movie, they experience many different emotions. In the beginning, they are quite anxious to find the dead body, but when they discover their classmate their feelings change. Although they don’t quite know it, they start to understand the meaning of empathy. Once the boys find Brower’s body, they show empathy by how they deal with the situation.
Tim Burton is a famous director who puts a lot of originality into his work. Burton uses editing techniques, music and sound, as well as shots and framing and camera movements to determine the mood of the scene. Editing is one of the techniques Burton uses to create emotion and suspense in the audience. One way Burton does this is by using fade in Big Fish, Edward crosses paths with Karl who was waiting for him on the longer road.
Lenny Abrahamson’s drama film Room follows Joy and her five-year-old son Jack and their experiences of living in a tiny room with only so much space. Throughout the film, both aspects of low-key lighting and high-key lighting are filmed in various scenes. These lighting styles indicate both the rough and unstable atmosphere of living in just one small room as well as the freedom of escaping the small room and starting a new chapter in their lives. In addition, both lighting styles also play an important role in the film’s plot and set the mood for the plot by either adding suspense or relief. Room narrates the story of Joy and her son Jack’s lives as they are trapped in a very small shelter that they refer to as Room.
People share and express some form of empathy towards one another everyday. Empathy is the ability to understand and share mutual feelings with another person. For example, we see this when someone cries because their beloved dog got hit by a car, and the other person empathizes because they too had previously lost a pet. Susan Glaspell ’s play, a small town murder committed by a lonely farmer's wife and the other two main female characters end up hiding the evidence with an alternative motive.
In the movie, Edward Scissorhands, Tim burton uses low-key lighting when Peg meets Edward for the first time in a castle. Edward was sitting in a dark corner and there was just enough light to see his face but not his clothes. This shows the amount of loneliness of Edward and that he was sad and frightened but also willing to make a friend when he approaches Peg. Also, in the movie, Charlie in the
Throughout his life in making films, Tim Burton has shown his unique talent and vision. He proceeds taking advantage of the cinematic techniques; lighting, sound, and camera movements creating a certain mood/tone. These three techniques are used numerous of times for the duration of each film. Although, many various emotions are constructed, there are feelings that anyone may connect to. Tim Burton is a successful filmmaker and has inspired many with the use of his cinematic techniques.
A slow fade from black to colour reveals Brian Wilson in his bed, panning in and over the camera breaks room the blinding white light in the corner to focus on the lit but shadow engulfed character. Surrounded by grays, blues and beiges it looks like the making of a prozac commercial. Blue is a colour that is seen as calmness and as the relationship with Melinda progresses the two share an assortments of blues and white, the change in colour shows his regression back to a previous state without the light she offered. Jump to a close up of him in his bed, his eyes wander with half his face covered in light shadows, the slow falloff intensifying as the scene progresses. The camera follows the index vectors created by his eyes upward before
Dark, foreboding alleyways, creepy villains, and sinister music are all things one would expect to find in a Tim Burton film. But do you know why? Every aspect of his films are carefully thought out to give off a specific effect. One example of this is how Burton uses camera angles and lightings to create an ominous and lonely mood in his films, because he wants his audience to connect with the strange, or “different” characters.
In the history of human culture, films have adapted to become one of the most popular ways of storytelling, there are now so many films that have been made and more still to be made. Even with all these films still being made, there is one film director who is very successful and stands out, getting increasingly popular even now, he is Tim Burton. Today, people all over the world watch his movies because of how well made it is with his unique style of directing. Tim Burton is like a film director who never lost what the gift of what it’s like to be a child. His films are heavily inspired from Dr.Seuss, Roald Dahl, Edgar Allan Poe, Walt Disney, and Grimm’s fairy tales.
Tim Burton’s distinct style became evident in his very first films and stayed clear in his later film, while the plot of Burton’s films vary greatly his style stays pronounced. This can be seen across his many movies from Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, Edward Scissorhands, “Vincent”, and “Frankenweenie”. In all of these films his distinct style is developed through the use of a strong contrast of high and low key lighting to show contrast between characters and circumstances, a recurring motif of mobs antagonizing the antagonist, and the frequent use of shot reverse shots to show the development of the relationship between the outsider and the people on the inside. With the use of a contrast between high and low-key lighting, a recurring mob motif, and the use of shot-reverse-shots Tim Burton develops his hopelessly bleak style. One of the most evident cinematic techniques that Tim Burton uses to develop his hopelessly bleak style is the use of a strong contrast of high and low-key lighting or colors.
In the fifteenth paragraph, Ottino and Morson explain the need for empathy in all people implementing logos. Empathy is the ability to understand and share the feelings of another. The authors suggest empathy is “what literature is good at teaching.” Empathy “creates better people and better technical innovations for people to use.” They explain writers successfully use empathy when a reader can “identify with a character” and “experience what she is experiencing.”
Tim Burton is an American film director, producer, artist, writer and animator, who like to work with Johnny Depp for the main character in his film. He is known for his dark, gothic and quirky fantasy films such as Edward Scissorhands, Corpse Bride, Beetlejuice. Tim Burton often uses strange characters, gothic genre, two opposite worlds in his film such as the dark, sad world and the colourful happiness world to represent his style. Corpse Bride, this film it is a gothic film because it focusses on death and life after death.
Tim Burton contributes to the world of animation in the film industry and redefined stop motion . Lighting is an important cinematic technique directors can use to set the mood for a particular scene. For instance, high-key lighting is used to flood a scene with light, often making the set and characters appear happy and safe. In contrast, low-key lighting casts deep shadows across the set and characters creating a sense of danger. Burton makes good use of lighting techniques in many of his films.
Tim Burton uses many different cinematic techniques to achieve very specific effects in his movies. The most important cinematic techniques that he uses to create his unique style are Non-Diegetic sound, lighting, eye level, and zoom. These techniques that can be seen in the films Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, Edward Scissorhands, and Corpse Bride, create the effects of sadness, dark moments, express the feeling of other without telling. He uses Non-Diegetic sound when he puts a song, he uses sad songs, happy songs, and more to show the feeling of the character, to give us like a hint of something that is going to happen, if it’s going to be bad or sad. He uses lighting to make the moment or scene sad or mysterious.
Tim Burton is a man praised for his cinematic style and contributions into the world of film. Tim Burton is influenced by his fascination with children’s stories and fairy tales. An article states, “Burton stories encourage escapism into worlds of fantasy and supernatural.” Some of his children’s movies are rather dark but delightful. Tim Burton was influenced by Roald Dahl along with other well-known authors such as Dr. Suess.