Fallen Angels: Ending Notes

Auteur Signature Film Form: 

  • Use of pop song – not used ironically
  • Step printing 
  • Roaming camera movement 
  • High key lighting 
  • Bold contrasting colours
  • Time manipulation 

 

Experimental Use of Film Form: 

  • Phasing/tinny sound 
  • Wide angle lens and use of close up – deep depth of field (distance, connection, loneliness) – realist approach to filmmaking normally, but not in this movie, it’s jarring, the film is jarring and doesn’t look real, but uses this to create and explore recognisable feelings 
  • Harsh lighting 
  • Close up camera 
  • Ennui – a feeling of listlessness and dissatisfaction arising from a lack of occupation or excitement.

 

Experimental Narrative Devices/Narrative Construction: 

  • Use of big star, but they only speak through voice over – use of V/O instead of dialogue 
  • Not about character motivation (or is it?) or development, but their feelings (link with themes) – why does the fight start??
  • Open endedness (or is it?) – no resolutions to any of the categories – maybe 
  • Cinematic time and space isn’t ordinary – ellipsis, parallel timelines – film as a whole 

 

Auteur Narrative Style and Themes: 

  • Connection (‘and we never connect’ V/O)
  • Love
  • Loneliness
  • Identity e.g. uniform (air hostess – also in Chungking Express) 

 

Auteur Signature as Experimental Process: 

  • Film without finished scripts
  • Third part if Chungking Express – aesthetically similar 

 

Auteur Signature and Meaning Making/Themes: 

  • Connection 
  • Love 
  • Loneliness
  • Identity 

Fallen Angels: Videoing Dad Scene Notes

 

Auteur Signature Film Form: 

  • Pop music
  • Reflection of father and son in bed (off mirror) 

 

Experimental Use of Film Form: 

  • Functional lighting e.g. light on the dad when sleeping  is seemingly unmotivated 
  • Phasing/tinny noise
  • Allowing the actor to dictate cinematography – authenticity 
  • Cinematography links to feelings 
  • Glitch in the video tape – authenticity 
  • Un-flattering camera angles – authenticity 
  • Deep focus – separated by wall, but together 

 

Experimental Narrative Devices/Narrative Construction: 

  • Non=professional actor (dad) – authenticity 
  • Not about character development/motivation – or is it?
  • Minimal cause and effect 

 

Auteur Signature as Experimental Process: 

  • Improv and unfinished scripts 

 

Auteur Signature and Meaning Making/Themes:

  • Theme of connection 
  • Nostalgia (music, home footage – pixels, camcorder), yellow – warmth 

 

Fallen Angels: Assassination Scene Notes

 Auteur Signature Film Form: 

  • Hong Kong cityscape
  • Dynamic editing – jump cuts
  • Reflections – rain on the streets
  • Pop song creating certain feeling (not romantic)
  • Step printing 
  • Extreme wide angle lens
  • CU of his feet waiting 
  • Jump cuts during the assassination 

 

Experimental Use of Film Form: 

  • Time manipulation – slow motion of unnamed assassin
  • Blood on the lens 
  • Wide angle lens 
  • Phasing sound (tinny)
  • Shower curtain divides the room and matches lipstick of the partner 

 

Experimental Narrative Devices/Narrative Construction:

  • No explanation of why he kills them – feeling not plot (narrative)

Fallen Angels: Opening Notes

 

Auteur Signature Film Form: 

  • Close up – contrast of foreground and background 
  • Black and white 
  • Dynamic editing – breaks 180 degree rule, jump cuts, not continuous 
  • Mirror 
  • Off-beat camera angles
  • Wide angle lens
  • Voice over
  • Editing – repetition – they both go to the same places, him in the station is edited the same as her 
  • All at night time 
  • High contrast, black and white, no explanation – this happened at a different time 
  • Harsh, functional lighting 
  • High contrast, extreme wide angle lens, depth of field 
  • Functional lighting e.g. lamp 
  • Close (house), city/outside is faraway – binary opposition and disconnected theme 

 

Experimental use of Film Form: 

  • Wide angle lens – unflattering 
  • Sound – phasing (tinny) and sonic perspective isn’t right? E.g. train far away sounds close 
  • Sped up train and plant shot – establishing shot, sense of emptiness 
  • Foley of police car when we don’t actually see (binary opposition of criminals and cops?)

 

Experimental Narrative Devices/Narrative Construction: 

  • No explanation of these characters relationship 
  • Not about plot but feelings 

 

Auteur Narrative Style and Themes: 

  • Loneliness – pager – can’t reply 
  • Not about plot, but feelings 

 

Auteur Signature as Experimental Process:

  • Use of big star, but he doesn’t let him speak (apart from voice over, which is in the opening)

 

Auteur Signature and Meaning Making/Themes: 

  • Narrative repetition – explores characters relationship 

 

Fallen Angels: General/Overview Notes

Auteur Signature Film Form: 

  • Rain – brings characters together
  • Mirrors
  • Use of colour, contrast of bold colours – doesn’t use colour theory 
  • Pop songs – romantic not ironic 
  • Step printing – alienates character 
  • Hong Kong cityscape, neon, night 
  • Wide lens and close up (?)
  • High key, functional lighting 
  • Unfinished scripts 
  • Dynamic editing 
  • Ignores narrative form 

 

Experimental use of Film Form: 

  • Wide lens 
  • Time manipulation – fast motion, slow motion, step printing, freeze frame 
  • High key lighting 

 

Experimental Narrative Devices/Narrative Construction: 

  • Ignores narrative form 
  • Unfinished scripts
  • Lack of exposition 
  • No closed endings 
  • No explanation of motivations 
  • Ecliptic 

 

Auteur Narrative Style and Themes: 

  • Crossing paths (characters)
  • Loneliness
  • Love
  • Narrative – feeling not plot 
  • Not standard narrative/structure – feeling not plot, circling, ecliptic 

 

Auteur Signature as Experimental: 

  • Wide lens (and close up)
  • Unfinished scripts
  • Use of same actors
  • Getting main actor, who’s a big star, to not speak 
  • Amateur actors (the dad)

 

Auteur Signature and Meaning Making/Themes: 

  • Alienated characters
  • Loneliness 
  • Love 
  • Mirrors – shows internal climate of his characters 

Film Easter ISP

Film Easter ISP

 

The Fallen Angels Question didn’t work for some reason, so here it is:

Section D: Film movements – Experimental film (1960-2000)

62) To what extent is the film you have studied recognisable as the product of an auteur? [20]

Fallen Angels is very recognisable as the product of the auteur Wong Kar-wai. For example, his recognisable use of film form. One of the main examples is his use of non-diegetic pop songs throughout the movie, not for ironic purposes, but to connote certain feelings to the audience. Another main example is his use of rain, which he uses to bring characters together in Fallen Angels, furthering the themes of loneliness and togetherness. The mise-en-scene of rain is also used in his other films like ‘The Grandmaster’. Furthermore, he has a specific use of editing in terms of time manipulation to convey meaning. Such as, the use of step printing, like during the assassination sequence, which to partially used to connote a sense of coolness to the character. He also uses slow motion, like the slow motion of the train dirivng past during the opening, which has a sense of lonliness. Simialrly, his use of cinematography also does this. His use of wide angle lens and deep depth of field shots create the sense of sepeartion, as the character at the front is distant from those behind them, creating the sense of lonliness and need for connection with other human beings. These themes can also be seen in his film ‘Chungking Express’, which is the sister film to Fallen Angels, which was initially the third part to the movie. Another connection between these movies are the actors. Interestingly, the same non-actor was used in both, which is an experminetal attitude to film making.  

 

Narratively, Wong Kar-wai’s work tends to be experimental, which is part of his auteur signature. Such as, instead of the narrative focusing on plot and explantaion, it focuses on character, themes like lonliness and connection, and emtions, as he uses expermintal narrative devices and narrative structure to convey very real human emotion. Such as, the narrative device during the opening of narrative repeition of two characters following the same path through the station, then both picking up the same key (close up) and enetring the same house but at different times highlights their lonliness and lack of close connection. This is instead of narrative devices being used for expostion, which most films have during the opengn equilibrium, but Fallen Angels does not. Throughout, instead of explaining who the charcaters are, and why they do what they do, like why the man assisinates people, Wong Kar-wai doesn’t tell us, and instead focuses on the emotion. This could be why the ending equilibrium is open instead of a closed ending, as the two characters on the same bike, with her holding on to him, is suggesting a closness between the two, even if momentary, which in a way sums up the themes of the films and the emotions of the film rather than any plot. During this ending, the lighting in the tunnel is green, and green lighting was also iused earlier when the son was spying on his dad watching the footage he filmed. As Wong Kar-wai doesn’t foolow traditional colour theory, it can be hard to intepret the exact connotations and meaning of his colour choices, but they are picked intentionaly and for emotional meaning. It’s possible due to both times that green lighting was used that it represents closeness between the characters.