In one scene ‘Jimmy’s been naughty’ I felt that their use of focused white lighting helped express the pain and suffering of the…
The lighting was also used to accentuate depressing or joyful moments, making it dimmer when it was a dark moment and making it bright when they were sitting outside to show a sunny day. An example of excellent lighting was when Bill was in the club and how the back was like a dance floor and he was at the bar where it was brighter and when they used two different types of lighting on the same stage which made it look realistic. The lighting overall made my experience multiple times better than it already was because I was in…
Burton uses lighting to change the audiences’ feelings about the scene they are viewing. He creates and depicts multiple feelings throughout different scenes. For example, In Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, when the winners of the Golden Tickets are lined up outside, a mixture of high key lighting and low key lighting are used to give the scene its natural burton feeling of cheerfulness and uncertainty. In the beginning of the movie, the town was depicted as a post-depression town with people struggling to support their families. Low key lighting was used to make the scene depressed and gloomy. When the characters entered the…
For example in “Charlie and the Chocolate Factory” from the outside the factory looks very dark and dreary because of the dark lighting that Tim uses but once you open the door you see this bright and colorful land of candy that wouldn’t look as desirable if it didn’t have the bright lighting. Although in “big fish” everything was very dark because he was trying to create a mood of sadness for the dad dying except in the end when the dad turned into a fish. In “Edward scissorhands” the lighting around Edward’s house is very dark up until you actually get to the house then its light and whimsical to show that everyone thinks he’s so scary but really he’s a pretty cool guy that is just lonely and isolated and has never experienced the outside…
whole. Lighting is used in scene 1 to highlight Lewis’ entrance into a whole new world,…
For example, when Peg first walked into the mansion where Edward had been living, low key lighting was used; thus exaggerating the shadows and making the scene appear hostile and eerie. In doing so, Burton sets a suspenseful mood that keeps the audience on the edge of their seats. On the contrary, in the previous scene when Peg strolled around admiring the shuberry in the garden surrounding the house, high key lighting is used. In effect, the scene appeared bright and colorful, which therefore set a lighthearted mood. By doing this, Burton made clear the difference in lighting; had he not used high key lighting in the first scene, the low key lighting in the mansion would not have been as different from the lighting in the previous scene and thus less prominent. This manipulation made the mood set up by each lighting more prominent as well. The cheerful, bright mood in the first scene greatly contrasted from the dark, suspenseful mood in the second, and as a result, both were made more prominent to the audience. Another example this technique was when front lighting was used in the scene where Edward and Kim were saying their last goodbye on the top floor of the inventor’s broken down mansion. Both characters were standing in front of a broken window, and as a result, cast on their faces was what appeared to be dim…
The lightning, cinematography, narrative, and the film’s use of time are important components to the shifting realistic and fantastic views of the movie, and they affect the content greatly as well as helping to further the meaning of the film. The lighting used in most of the film is very contrasting to each other. In Donnie’s “real” life when he is in control, the lighting is bright and natural, conveying the feeling of normalcy. When the narrative delves into his more disturbed moments, the lighting becomes darker and heavier, complimenting the troubling mentality of Donnie in…
The use of a blow torch for lighting creates a sense of danger and harshness to the scene. This is the only light away from the main crew. Even this bright light does not diffuse the black and eerie colour scheme of the set.…
Tim Burton, in Sweeney Todd, takes advantage to the use of low key lighting in order to give the movie a constant pinch of suspense. Being the psychotic barber Burton convinced the…
For instance, in the scene where Cheech goes to the Lazy River, the lighting effects made the audience feel as if they were looking into the murky water. The cool colors of blue and gray gave the scene a dark and eerie mood. Lighting was also effective during the night club scenes in that it provided a feeling of temptation and lust. I think that it is important to note that the backdrop for this musical was very simple; therefore, the lighting is what made each scene realistic. In response to costumes, they were very 1929 New York like with some modern style.…
Stanley Cortez worked as a cinematographer for both Laughton and Welles and stated that, “in his experience only two directors understood the uses and meaning of light: Orson Welles and Charles Laughton (Barsam 186).” Both directors’ careers began in the 1930s when theatrical lighting had transformed into this major element of expression. Much like Laughton and Cortez’s use of lighting and shadows in The Night of the Hunter, Welles’ use of lighting and shadows in Citizen Kane helped to create a certain ambiance or mood within a scene and also to help further develop the characters. In Citizen Kane lighting and shadows are used with great effect during the confrontation scene between Boss Gettys and Kane at Susan Alexander’s apartment. In this particular scene Susan is standing outside the door of the apartment with Gettys and Kane in the doorframe. Both men are cast completely in shadow, whereas Susan is cast completely in light. Much like the use of backlighting in association with the danger and evil of Reverend Powell in The Night of the Hunter, the significance of this type of lighting in this scene from Citizen Kane is to reveal that both men seem to be shady, maybe even evil characters, with wrong motives, while Susan is the innocent party of the quarrel (see image…
Tim Burton’s films also use high and low key lighting in order to create a mysterious and gothic mood. Moreover, this is shown in Charlie and the Chocolate Factory low-key lighting is used when introducing the Bucket family. The lighting with the blue dark grey colors demonstrates a depressing, gloomy town right from the beginning. The low key lighting helps convey this dark depressing mood as we now feel bad for the Bucket’s, and that the community is very boring and everyone is “similar”. Another example of low-key lighting is in Edward Scissorhands when peg walked into the mansion by herself. The lighting continued to demonstrate the…
Shakespeare once said, “One may smile, and smile, and be a villain.” Eventhough the the typical villains in movies are easy to pick out due to wearing black and wreaking havoc (bring/cause destruction). A good villain is considered to be intimidating, cause entertainment, antisocial, and mischievous. In Strangers on a Train, Bruno is depicted as the villain. Based on the description/ traits of what an actual villain is, Bruno does not meet the criteria.…
The lighting is generally quite dark and cool-toned to create shadows and show how sinister parts of the film can be. Examples of this are scenes when her killer is shown, to make him appear to the audience as an evil man. However, in the scenes where Suzie is seen alive and in heaven for example, the lighting is brighter and more intense to resemble hope and show her growing happiness of how she is now safe. Special effects are used to make some scenes, such as heaven and the afterlife, seem supernatural and unearthly.…
Edward Hopper is able to capture suspense in his paintings and he does this through his use of lighting. He casts shadows and darkness in particular paintings in order to convey the mood he wishes to achieve. In his most famous painting, “Nighthawks”, Hopper uses shadows as a technique to create a strange feeling for the scene. The only light in the painting appears to be coming from the diner itself. It casts shadows on the outside which makes the viewer wonder what will happen next. Because it is dark, there is something eerie about why these people are up so late at night. Similar to Hopper, Hitchcock uses mysterious shadows to create this particular mood. This is seen through a still image of his movie “Rear Window”. During this scene, the main character Jeff, who is a wheel chair bound photojournalist, is confronted by Lars Thorwald, a traveling jewelry salesman who Jeff believes murdered someone. Lars shows up in Jeff’s apartment and the lighting cast upon him is dark. His figure is clearly there but the shadows cover his face completely, which helps to show this mysterious, eerie mood. Unlike Hopper, Hitchcock has an advantage of placing sound into the scene which adds to the atmosphere of uncertainty. If it had been day time or…