Sunday, April 12, 2020
Shine Essays - English-language Films, Films,
  Shine  Directed by Scott Hicks, the drama Shine is a formalist masterpiece. Writing the  piece as a fiction film gave the author license to alter the events in the story  of David Helfgott, a real musician who had a nervous breakdown on his way to  magnificence. Geoffrey Rush's portrayal gave life and believability to David,  and Rush won an Academy Award for his realistic method acting. He had not only  to provide depth to the character, but had additional physical demands placed  upon him due to David's irregular speech and his tendency to twitch. Both  setting and costume are unobtrusive, allowing the audience to focus on the  characters rather than their adornments. The formalistic style allows for  manipulation of time, and the film begins in medias reas, jumping back and then  foreward as it progresses. The structure is highly fragmented, and much of the  action is cyclical. Every element of film composition is elegantly intertwined  in this picture, mingling together to form connections and patterns out of  seemingly separated things. The film opens with a close shot side-view of the  protagonist's face as he smokes a cigarette, smoke drifting up from his lips and  into the surrounding darkness. He is talking, but that soon is faded into the  sound of rainwater. The rain becomes visible as it replaces David's face in a  fade technique, and David enters the frame and walks from the right of the  screen to its left, suggesting change and action. He arrives at a restaurant  window, peers in, and falls into a strange conversation with the employees. This  is now the chronological middle of the story, and, while common in Medieval  literature, is a highly unorthodox place to begin a picture. Though this film is  more easily classified as a formalist piece, it has outstanding avant garde  elements throughout. The transition from the restaurant to the car is masked by  the dialogue covering it. Since the acting overrides editing as a way to convey  meaning in Shine, Hicks employs many sound motifs to ease editing transitions  and make them seem more natural. As the discussion fades and the rain again  takes auditory prominence, the scene darkens and the water becomes the clapping  of many hands. In this way David eases into a flashback of his childhood. He  walks small and silent to the stage for his first competition, and a long shot  is used to emphasise the fright and anxiety of the boy. Other transitory devices  include David's glasses, his hands on the piano keys, and sometimes a change in  his costume, such as when he first plays the restaurant in rags. When he stands  to receive his applause, he is dressed much more nicely, now an employee of the  establishment. Hicks also employs classical cutting techniques, which depend on  the content curve (the moment when the audience has had a chance to assimilate  all information presented but not analyse or become bored with it) to determine  breaks in scenes. One example of this technique is after David presents his  professor with the Rack III and asks "Am I mad enough?" The scene is  cut before the professor answers, and the following scene is the professor  intensively training David on the very piece. Cutting for continuity is commonly  used to condense time while maintaining a sense of the actions taking place  between two major events. Preparations for one of David's concerts are edited in  such a manner, making a ritual out of the ordeal while not wasting too much time  on it. Besides editing, relationships can be suggested through film devices such  as proxemic ranges, angles, and reaction shots. After David loses his first  competition, his father stares at the ground while walking well ahead of the  boy. His father is disappointed, and David is rather unaware of any problem as  he innocently plays hopscotch as he follows. The reactions of David's father and  his instructor are shown through parallel editing when the announcement of the    National Champion does not coincide with their hopes for David. Both are  displeased, but Mr. Helfgott simmers with barely restrained anger. Since he was  denied music as a child, he forces it upon David and demands greatness from him.    Later in the film, David is filmed standing on the second floor of a library  balcony as his father calls to him from below. The low angle used when the scene  is shot from the father's point of view suggests his decrease in power and his  growing respect for his son. Moments before they walked down the hall to    
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