Week-6

By zggaofei

1344984843.jpg      200604240496_1258788.jpg    For a film composition can be defined as the orderly arrangement of elements in a scene which, when taken as a whole, conveys intent and meaning. 
Static composition: covers the content of fixed images such as painting or still photos.
Dynamic composition: goes a step further and takes into consideration the effect of time= moment-to-moment change. When you get start for shooting. We must control the elements of headroom, talking room and center of interest carefully, because they will decide understanding of the audience. 
Daisy is a good movie that tells you how important are the framing and composition to a film. The story is about Hye Young a rather naïve Korean girl named Hye Young who lives in Amsterdam and spending her life working in her grandfather’s antique. One day, she begins receiving flowers at exactly the same time from a secret admirer, who she believes to be a mystery man from her past who once built her a nice little bridge. One day she meets Jeong Woo who unbeknownst to her is actually an Interpol agent tracking Asian criminals in the Netherlands .With Hye Young assuming that Jeong Woo is responsible for the flowers, the two fall very slowly into a chaste romantic relationship. However, it turns out that the man sending the flowers is actually Park Yi, an assassin working for a Chinese crime syndicate. Inevitably, the love triangle turns tragic and the two men end up facing off while poor Hye Young tries to work out which of the two is the love of her life. 
The first hour can be separated into three parts. But we can say it’s just one part but played three times by shifting different interests. Audiences can get different meaning by different interests but in the same scene.     

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