Saturday, 8 December 2012
CLASSIFICATION OF MEDIA
There are different ways to
classify media.
1.
Print
media, non-print media, electronic media
- Print media. They include: books, journals, magazines, newspapers, workbook, textbooks
- Non-print media: they include: projected and non-projected media
- Electronic media: they include: Audio media, Visual media and Audio-Visual
2.
Projected
media & non-projected media
- Projected media: they require light source for projection. E.g. film projector slides etc.
- Non-projected media: they do not require light source. They include 3dimensional objects, 2dimensional objects, prints, charts, models etc.
- Audio media, Visual media & Audio-visual
- Audio media: this form of media carry sounds alone. E.g. audio tapes, record player,
- Visual media: These are the ones that can be seen. E.g. TV, computer, white board
- Audio-Visual: this term refers to those instructional materials which provide students with audio and visual experiences by appearing to the hearing and seeing senses at the same time. E.g. TV, video tapes, closed circuit television (CCTV).
- Hardware and software
- Hardware: this the classification of machines or equipment used in the instructional process. It is upon these gadgets that the software is transmitted. E.g. Television set, tape recorder etc.
- Software: this classification consists of all materials used with the machine. They are the real carrier of knowledge or information. They include, films, tapes transparencies.
TYPES OF FILM
Comedy
Originally, a comedy is any story
that has a happy ending. It can be easily identified by its appearance and
plots, and by the deliberate way that these plots are arranged so as to
influence the attitude of the audience by generating laughter. The comic
characters in the comedy are usually single-minded. They usually possess some
peculiar character traits such as gullibility (believing everything, especially
obviously impossible and outrageous things), greed (getting into trouble
because they cannot be satisfied), gluttony or lust (their insatiable appetite
leads them into trouble), etc. The real humour lies in the fact that those
characters single mindedly pursue their foolish ambitions thereby exposing
their inadequacies and foolishness from time to time. They also never suffer
psychological or physical pain since they are not even aware that they are
doing anything strange.
Tragedy
In this genre, the protagonist is
confronted by overwhelming dilemmas and also finds himself participating in his
own downfall. The image presented by tragedy is that of a human being who is
forced to endure the worst, and yet not surrendering to self-defeat, but who
finally is subdued and loses out completely. Tragic characters usually possess
admirable traits such as ambition, patience, fortitude, self-confidence,
intelligence etc. which draw audience affection to them. However, they are
eventually confronted by their inadequacies. They are usually shocked at the
last moment to realize that they have overestimated themselves. Their tragic
overestimation usually includes a character flaw that has been carefully hidden
for which they have to account. Their downfall usually affects everyone around
them. It is however important to note that tragedies in this sense may not be
too common in popular arts such as movies; this is because audience do not wish
to regard any situation as hopeless or be burdened with misfortune.
Nevertheless, they still exist.
Melodrama
This is a broad term that is
applicable to most movies. This genre stresses elements such as strong emotion,
high adventure and self-sacrifice in the service of a noble cause. It usually
presents a conflict between good and evil in which good finally triumphs. The
characters in a melodrama are easily recognizable by their moral or social
commitment to a cause.
Adventure
These films are also melodramatic
in nature. Among what adventures and melodramas have in common are: action,
film climaxing in physical conflict, confrontation between good and evil,
experience, persistence etc. Adventure movies may have classic fairy tale
structures, or they may follow traditional plots such as that of an originally
helpless hero who finally locates and destroys a villain. Adventure heroes are
usually full of virtues. Actions in adventure films usually take place in
exotic settings such as jungles and unfamiliar of inaccessible parts of cities.
A Thriller is not really a genre, rather, it is a characteristic of many
adventure as well as other films. Thrillers place emphasis on suspense and
fearful anticipation.
Horror
film
These are films that horrify by
invoking experiences that are strange and difficult to explain. They create the
feeling of encountering unfamiliar circumstances within familiar environments,
with the threat of the unknown destabilizing the security of the known. One of
the major characteristics of horror films is the use of low-key lighting so as
to intensify the contrast between the seen and the unseen as well as the known
and the unknown. They also make use of dissonant music with the intention of
creating the feeling of disharmony. Horror films play on the secret fears that
lurk at the sub-conscious of their audience. They also give substance to the
nameless fear that dwells in the minds of such audience.
Science
fiction
“Sci-fi”, as films in this category are
popularly called; also specialize in offering strange and mysterious
experiences. They are sometimes sub-genres of horror while at other times, they
stand on their own. Their own prominent characteristic is the displacement of
time into a technological future where some current tendencies of our culture have
become dominant. This may include a situation in which machines become more
active in the running of human lives that they (the machines) even attempt to,
or actually take over. It may also be in the form of a technological invasion
by more advanced cultures (mostly aliens).
Music
video
A music video is a film that is
predominantly musical in content and which is mostly combined with dances or
some sort of movement. A musical, as it is also called, displays the
performer’s and composer’s talents through singing and dancing and thereby
making the music very satisfying. This type of film has become quite common in
modern times. Most music videos are recorded as mini-feature films and some can
even be as elaborate as feature films both in cost and in production.
Documentary
A documentary is a factual film
about an event, thing or person, and it presents the facts with little or no
fiction. It is a film that captures the various stages of the existence or the
process by which something is achieved. This type of film is usually produced
for the sole purpose of educating and enlightening its audience. Information in
documentaries can be taken at face-value because it is supposed to be the
product of a research. Examples of documentaries are films produced on subjects
such as wildlife, historical developments, political events etc.
Biography
In biographical films, real life
experiences are fictionalized so as to provide examples of virtue, bravery,
perseverance, commitment etc. to the viewers. Biographies permit the audience
to enjoy a feeling of intimacy with famous people, and allow them to feel a
part of those personalities’ adversity as well as their triumphs.
HISTORY OF FILM
History of film is linked up with
photography. In 1873 a former California governor, Leland Stanford, hired a
well-known photographer, Eadweard Muybridge in order to prove and win a bet
that a horse in full gallop had all four feet off the ground. In 1877,
Muybridge arranged a series of still camera along a stretch of racetrack. Each
still camera took its picture as the horse sprinted. The photographs won
Stanford his bet while at the same time, they sparked an idea of motion
pictures in Muybridge. This eventually led to the invention of zoopraxiscope by
Muybridge. Zoopraxiscope is a machine for projecting slides onto a distant
surface.
Muybridge met Thomas Edison in
1888 and was inspired by Muybridge segmental action photographs. William
Dickson, a scientist with Edison embarked on the task of developing a better
system of filming and came up with Kinetograph-a workable motion picture camera
in 1889.
By 1891, Edison built a crude
motion picture studio called “Black Maria”, which started the commercial motion
picture industry in America. From Black Maria came a series of very short
films, which were shown, on a large contraption called a Kinetoscope. The next
advance on film was made by two French men the Lumiere brothers. Auguste and
Louis were brothers who worked with their father’s manufacturing photographic
plates and film. Using the technology they learnt from Edison’s work, they
succeeded in developing a camera much more portable and less cumbersome than
Edison’s own that could print and project pictures with a crude yet
intermittent motion. The invention was named the cinematogrape-a device that
both photographed and projected action.
Recognizing the advantage of the
cinematographe over his kinetoscope, Edison acquired the patent for an advanced
projection developed by U.S. inventor Thomas Armet and Francis Jenkins. The
vita scope, as the device was called was premiered in New York City on April
23, 1896, and the American movie business was born.
Following this, a Frenchman,
Georges Mêlées began making narrative motion pictures in about 1897. He also
added special effects to film making. Mêlées most famous film, “A Trip to
Moon”, showed a group of scientist and chorus girls launching a rocket to the
moon. Some special effects which Mêlées incorporated in the film include the
earth rising on the horizon and a trick photography scene of moon people
disappearing in smoke.
Another brilliant contributor was
D.W.Griffith. He introduced innovations such as scheduled rehearsals before
final shooting and production based on close adherence to a shooting script. He
lavished attention on otherwise ignored aspects of a film such as costume and
lighting and used close-ups and other dramatic camera and angles to transmit
emotions. He also displayed mastery in his editing techniques of all the films
produced by Griffith; he displayed the greatest talent in “The Birth of a
Nation” (1914) and in “Tolerance”.
In 1927, sound was introduced to
motion pictures. This development made possible new genres like musicals.
Actors and Actresses now had to really act and film production became much more
complicated and expensive. Film flourished even through the Great depression of
the 1930s. Profits were plowed back into bigger productions and lavish sound
stages. World War II promoted the boom. Then in the 1950s, film met a new
competitor- Television.
FILM AND ITS TYPES
DEFINITION
OF FILM
What is Film? Film is a medium of
communication which combines visual and audio (audiovisual). It contains the
recording of a story, acted by people to make it as close to reality as
possible. The Collins English Dictionary defines film as a sequence of images
of moving objects photographed by a camera providing the optical illusion of
continuous movement when projected onto a screen.
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