Author Archives: SB

Foreboding and Symbolism in Hitchcock’s Psycho

As seen in my personal blog, littlefilmthings The parlour scene of Alfred Hitchcock’s famous thriller film, Psycho (1960), is rife with foreboding; something that can only be truly noticed if you know what’s to come and you’ve seen the film before. The dialogue is the most obvious vehicle for the dark sense of imminence that is abundant from the […]

Otherness in the Hand Over of Marie Antoinette

Sofia Coppola is well know for her eye for the aesthetically pleasing in terms of her cinematography – possibly stemming from her experience in painting, modelling, and photography – as well as inconclusive plot lines and struggling young woman in coming-of-age narratives, all which are present in her film starring Kirsten Dunst, Marie Antoinette (2006). Here […]

Billy Wilder, Auteur

The term ‘auteurism’, coined in the Cahiers du Cinéma in 1951, details the change of cinema from simple entertainment into an art form and a mode of self-expression. Literally translated to ‘author’, the auteur moves cinema away from just the ‘how to’ of filmmaking, the mise-en-scène, to creating deep and intertextual connections between each of […]

Mise-en-Scène in Rebel Without a Cause (1955)

In his well-loved and esteemed film, Rebel Without A Cause (1955) starring famed James Dean, director Nicholas Ray uses his extensive knowledge and intellect to manipulate and use the elements of mise-en-scène as well as sound to execute and explain both the plot and the larger narrative meanings of the film to the audience. All of […]

Advertising the American Dream

‘Smoke Gets In Your Eyes’ is a stunningly direct and rapid entry into the 1960s world of Mad Men (Taylor, 2007), where the search and struggle for the “American Dream” is still in earnest swing. Instantly in the opening credits we are immersed in the style and advertising – the angular and minimalistic imagery juxtaposed […]

Me on Ebert on Miyazaki

“Here is a children’s film made for the world we should live in, rather than the one we occupy,” Roger Ebert opens with on his review of My Neighbor Totoro directed by esteemed director Hayao Miyazaki (1993), “a film with no villains… no fight scenes… a world where if you meet a strange towering creature in the forest, […]