Thursday, 10 October 2013

clip-sound


The scene starts with non-diegetic music to set the mood of the scene that’s about to come forth, starting the mood music low and quiet creates anticipation and starts of the scene with a mood already being presented to the audience. At the beginning we see a couple trying to result their issues after breaking up; the the beginning of the music connotates that their relationship might be over for good and that its time for a different story which then the clip moves on to another scene/storyline.


The non-diegetic music carries on to the next storyline (sound bridge); a different story is starting. The first thing we hear is the ringing of a phone, we don't see where the ringing comes from till the scene is cut to Navid who picks up the phone (diegetic sound). A dialogue starts between Dixon who's in the car and Navid. The non diegetic music lowers down as the two speak so the audience can hear the dialogue clearer, throughout we hear the sound of the car (diegetic sound), ensuring the audience that the character is still in the car. During the dialogue we get the knowledge that Dixon is planning on getting back the girl he loves when we hear him say "tell her that i love her...I'm coming back for her right now". Soon after we see a truck fast approaching the car; where then we hear the car horn



Diegetic: phone ringing, car moving, truck, car crash, ambulance

 Sound whose source is visible on the screen or whose source is implied to be present by the action of the film:

  • voices of characters
  • sounds made by objects in the story
  • music represented as coming from instruments in the story space


Non diegetic: song in the background (fun)

 Sound whose source is neither visible on the screen nor has been implied to be present in the action:

  • narrator's commentary
  • sound effects which is added for the dramatic effect
  • mood music


Synchronous: car crash, driving

Sound that appears to be matched to certain movements occurring in the scene, as when footsteps correspond to feet walking.

Sound Bridge: opposite to a sound bridge, phone rings then we see in the next scene the phone that’s ringing

When the scene begins with the carry-over sound from the previous scene before the new sound begins

Dialogue: Adriana and the guy in the plane

Conversation between two or more people as a feature of a book, TV series, play, or movie.

Mode of Address/Direct Address: irony, guy comes to get the girl and she thinks he doesn’t come for her when he’s actually been in a car accident

 how the texts speaks to the audience. It involves how a text influences an audience to respond to a text in a particular way.

Sound Perspective: song in the background gets louder when accident happens

the sense of a sound's position in space, yielded by volume, timbre, pitch, and, in stereophonic reproduction systems, binaural information.

Ambient Sound:

 the background sounds which presents the surrounding area, environment or location e.g. birds, wind, cars, train horns.


Upbeat song-ironic as it’s a sad scene

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