Blurb

Hello, this blog covers all the research and planning into our slasher film opening, Camp Ivy. Co-produced with Kate and Millie, and influenced from films such as Friday the 13th and set in a rural location inspired by Eden Lake.

Saturday 24 November 2012

SlasherEG3: Last House on the Left

Last House on the left 
(Wes Craven, 1972)




exposition
Budget - 90 k and was an indie production.
 It was made by Wes Craven and his friends and film students. No stars were in this film whatsoever. A common device in slasher films is to use an idiot figure and in this film it is kind of like a family unit with the father figure being the main killer.

opening shot
The denotation of the exposition at the start of the film is white writing with a sans serif font. This writing is chosen to look realistic to a scare audience. It uses fairly conventional media language. The film opens with a pan of an extreme long shot which then cuts to a different part of the environment. It has been a convention of all the slasher openings i have watched so far that it starts with an environment shot and not just the characters. A lot of the exposition is done by showing graffiti. Initially by the protagonists name being on the screen. The quality of the footage on the film isn't very good. Also at the beginning of this film there are some discontinuity editing.

titles
There are very minimal titles, only 6 including the film title being shown. No stars are mentioned because the budget wouldn't have been big enough to hire any. In a lot of the slasher films the reason for a lot of the deaths is due to immoral behaviour and the killer wanting to see them punished for something they may have done. Unlike a lot of slasher films it uses a lot of long takes and limited shot variety, this is probably also down to the lack of money.

titles
In the opening there is also an extreme close up of a neclace 'magical object'. This is a very significant part of the mise-en-scene.

Here is the whole of the first part:

1 comment:

  1. When you're citing theories like Propp's (magic object) its best to explicitly mention/cite the theorist
    Note too that this was Wes Craven's debut, and he went on to further (re)define the slasher with 1984's NoESt + 1996's Scream - a slasher auteur

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