Generic codes and conventions of a thriller
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Transcript of Generic codes and conventions of a thriller
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GENERIC CODES AND
CONVENTIONS OF A THRILLER
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NARRATION
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■A non-linear narrative to surprise the audience, e.g. through red herrings, plot twists and cliff-hangers;
■Restricted narration to create an enigmatic opening that generates mystery — a thriller convention;
■A key sub-genre or theme, e.g. crime; reinforced through a film’s microelements;
■A gripping, well-constructed storyline that evokes tension, excitement and suspense.
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MISE-EN-SCÉNE
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■An eerie setting (e.g., asylum) that establishes a key theme (e.g., isolation);
■Costumes are usually contrasting and symbolic, e.g. an antagonist may have a dark costume to represent negativity; a protagonist could have a white costume to symbolise purity;
■Iconography includes props such as knives, low-key lighting (to create shadows), and blood; all have connotations of thriller conventions, e.g. knifes symbolise violence;
■Facial expressions and body language to show who is the antagonist/protagonist, e.g. an apathetic psychopath may be emotionless/motionless.
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CAMERAWORK
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■Establishing shot to establish the tone and atmosphere of a scene, e.g. eeriness of a haunted mansion;
■Panning/tracking shot to surprise the audience with an unexpected object/subject;
■Close-up to emphasise emotion, e.g. a victim being attacked;
■Extreme close-ups, enabling audience to enter a character’s intimate space, e.g. psyche of a psychopath;
■Over-the-shoulder shots build tension, e.g. symbolising that a figure is behind a victim;
■Low-angle shots to create a sense of in-superiority.
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EDITING
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■Obtrusive editing to accentuate suspense and tension; ■Fast-paced cutting to build suspense and tension;■Jump shots to surprise/scare the audience – a thriller
convention;■Montage editing to bring discontinuous and unrelated shots
together, and to compress time;■Fades, enabling the audience to catch their breath after a
dramatic scene, e.g. death;■Match-on action, to emphasise scenes e.g. those containing
violence;■Eyeline match, to show what the character onscreen is seeing,
e.g. an unknown figure;■180-degree rule, to ensure continuity; ■Special effects such as a split-screen effect to serve as a
unique selling point that appeals to the target audience.
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SOUND
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■Loud thundering diegetic sound, e.g. slamming doors, to break tension;
■Quiet, eerie diegetic sounds to build tension and suspense, e.g. breathing;
■Foley sound for pleonastic sounds in which dramatic scenes are emphasised, e.g. stabbings;
■Silence to create a brief false sense of security;■Contrapuntal sound that doesn't match onscreen action, e.g. a
door slamming in a distance;■Dialogue—the tone, pitch and volume of actors’ voices is
adjusted to enable the audience to relate to characters;■Non-diegetic music to create a sound bridge during
transitions; ■Dramatic non-diegetic music to construct the conventional
dark atmosphere of a thriller film, e.g. an orchestral soundtrack.
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CHARACTERS
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“Stock” characters including:■Heroic, ordinary people;■Criminals;■Assassins;■Characters carrying secrets;■Innocent victims;■Police (e.g., if subgenre is crime);■Psychopaths (e.g., if subgenre is psychological);■Sociopaths;■Corrupt businessmen (e.g. if subgenre is political);■Usually a key protagonist and antagonist.
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THEMES
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