Analyse how verbal and visual features of a text you have studied are used to give audiences a strong idea.
The Shawshank Redemption directed by Frank Darabont in 1994 is a story about Andy Dufrense a man accused of murdering his wife and her lover and is sentenced to two consecutive life sentences. He is shipped to Shawshank Maximum Security Prison in Maine. He finds his way to inner peace and holds on to great hope in the midst of terror of the prison regime. It is a story of hope, friendship and perseverance. The film is an allegory about holding on to a sense of personal worth in the face of dire hardship. The opening scene ‘Welcome to Shawshank conveys the strong idea of loss of hope. The director uses a variety of verbal and visual techniques to convey this strong idea, such as, camera angle, costume/colour, and music.
The scene where the audience is introduced to Shawshank shows the strong idea of loss of hope by using different camera angles (visual) to show how small the prisoners are compared to the prison. One camera angle the director uses to show loss of hope is the bird’s eye view shot where he pans over the prison showing how big the prison is. The shot shows the prisoners walking to the gate and shows how small they are compared to the walls and buildings of the prison. This shows the prisoners lack of power and loss of hope as you know they have no chance of escaping. The camera angles also link in with colour. When we see the bird’s eye view angle with the bus coming into the prison we can see that outside the grass is green and the water is blue and everything is nice colours. As soon as we enter the prison we see the big grey walls that make the prisoners look minute. The colourless walls represent the hopelessness of life in Shawshank which relates to the strong idea of loss of hope. As the bus enters the prison they leave the free and colourful world behind and enter the dull prison surrounded by giant grey walls.
In the middle scene of ‘Welcome to Shawshank’ where Andy arrives in Shawshank the director uses costume and colour (visual) to show that the prisoners are a part of the prison. He also uses a low angle shot to convey the strong idea of loss of hope. As Andy enters the prison the director uses a low angle shot to show how big the prison is. The doors fill the whole frame of the shot. This gives the viewer the impression that no one will ever escape the gothic like walls. The walls of the prison look gigantic in structure and shows
Rita Hayworth and the Shawshank Redemption Theme: Institutionalization ENG4C May 4, 2015 By: Cody Law The Shawshank Institution The theme of institutionalization is very relevant to the book “Rita Hayworth and Shawshank Redemption.” The main setting of the story, a prison, is a space that seeks to punish people by forcing them to live an institutionalized lifestyle. The theme of institutionalization in this story shows how staying in prison shapes someone so that they lose a sense of…
his few non-horror books he has written. The Shawshank Redemption the first theatrical feature written and directed by Darabont (he’d previously directed Buried Alive, a nastily entertaining made for TV thriller) Shawshank is based on a 91-page story called “Rita Hayworth and Shawshank Redemption”. Shawshank Redemption begins in 1946 with the voice over narration of Red (Morgan Freeman) a man who has spent most of his years in the maximum security Shawshank jail. Though there are other characters in…
13 October 2013 Revenge: the most prominent theme of Strip Cuts Revenge is the action of inflicting hurt or harm on someone for an injury or wrong suffered at their hands. In the novel Strip Cuts, the author David Drayer chronicles ordinary and surprising events in the lives of the townspeople in a small town named Cherry Run. This town is full of interesting, fictional characters including: a young man who undergoes torment from his peers, a Peeping Tom who is confronted by a woman whom he desire…
Analyse how a character has been used to explore a key idea in your studied text. It’s important to realise how and why cinematic tools / techniques are used in a visual text. For example, take Warden Norton in The Shawshank Redemption, directed by Frank Darabont. Norton’s power, corruption and development of character aren’t shown through traditional methods like low camera angles, full lighting and reaction shots, but more through what he says and how he says it. Dialogue is pivotal for this…
Name: Minh Tran Course: ENG3C1-01 Teacher: Kerr,R. Date: 9 September 2013 The Attract of "The Shawshank Redemption" "The Shawshank Redemption" is one of Stephen King's greatest stories turned into a perfect film entertains the audience. Andy is a protagonist of the film who was sent to the prison. By using the detention, the author show the audience how people can live and exist in a condition without freedom. One of the most surprise in the film is the way Andy's escaping with a long period…
Experiences provide discoveries which may be as threating as they are rewarding. “Raw” by Scott Monk and “Shawshank Redemption” by Stephen King show that through experiences discoveries can be a threating as they are rewarding. The composers uses the life experiences of Brett Dalton andAndy Dufresne the main charters along with characterisation, language and imagery to express the themes of protest, enforcement and compliance. Protest is a theme expressed through both texts. The composers have…
Connections across texts. Through the texts The Shawshank Redemption directed by Frank Darabont, Lord of The Flies written by William Golding, Jack Reacher directed by Christopher McQuarrie and Anthem for Doomed Youth written by Wilfred Owen, the main theme that is seen extensively throughout these texts is conflict between the powerful and the powerless. This conflict is revealed through internal and external conflict, developed through theme and character. I chose these texts because they all…
In 1994, Frank Darabont’s film ‘The Shawshank Redemption’ received a poor reception when released; it only made a $0.3m profit. More recently the film has become known as one of the greatest movies of all time, it has inspired hope in many people, helping them to lose weight, leave abusive marriages and such like. The film is based mainly upon two convicts, and the idea of hope. Andy Dufresne is a ‘Hot Shot Banker’ imprisoned with two life sentences, for the suspected murder of his wife and her lover…
The film adaptation of The Shawshank Redemption, directed by Frank Darabont, and based on the novella The Shawshank Redemption written by Stephen King was a fantastic adaptation of the novella. The film shows how terrible prison must be truly be through the escape scene, it follows the novella’s plotline almost perfectly, (except the few minor changes were needed to make it better,) and the ending gave viewers a more satisfying feeling of closure. To begin, the reason the film adaption was great…
Final Film Critique Richard Hogan ENG 225: Introduction to Film October 25, 2011 Final Film Critique Introduction The movie, The Shawshank Redemption (1994), is based on a character Andy Dufresne. Andy is a young and successful banker who is sent to Shawshank Prison for murdering his wife and her secret lover. His life is changed drastically upon being convicted and being sent to prison. He is sent to prison to serve a life term. Over the 20-years in prison, Andy retains optimism…