Tuesday, 5 February 2019

Cuffs: Extract Practice

What do the opening scene and credits suggest/tell us about the genre, narrative and characters? What would the audience expect from this scene?

The opening scene and credits of Cuffs used quick, upbeat music, which fits the genre of crime drama, but the music is quite edgy, which suggests that Cuffs is aimed at a younger target audience. The scene shows Brighton and graffiti in the bottom right, and in the top left, it shows the main police officers. This suggests that Cuffs is based on the police fighting against society. This also suggests that Cuffs only shows the point of view of the police, not the criminals.The setting of Brighton being shown in the opening credits connotes gay representations, so suggests this could be a theme shown in Cuffs. Juxtaposition of police images on top of the graffiti connotes the narratives will entertain audiences by following class crime narrative convention of police vs criminals as graffiti is against the law. The text in this scene is all yellow and bold, which doesn't fit police drama stereotypes, because you would usually expect to see black, white and blue, but the use of the colour yellow, suggests it is more upbeat and aimed at younger target audiences. From this scene, the audience can expect Cuffs to be a upbeat crime drama, that is aimed at young people, involving police fighting against society.

How has sound been used to create meaning?

Diegetic and non-diegetic sound was used in the opening sequence to show the setting and the genre of Cuffs. Non-diegetic sound shows the setting, because seagulls and she sea crashing is used to show people that Cuffs is set in a seaside town. Non-diegetic background music then gets louder, and deeper, to create drama.

Diegetic sound then connotes the genre and takes the narrative forward as a police radio then begins to shout commands at the main character, Ryan Draper. Once the radio  has stopped, a police siren comes on and we see the police car driving along. This automatically shows the audience that this is a crime drama, because of the sounds of police radios and sirens. A non-diegetic voiceover then begins to talk, and a sound bridge is used to carry this over into another scene. The voiceover then becomes diegetic dialogue, with the Chief Supt. talking about the police and the things they do. "Ensuring cohesion and security" and "gaining the respect of the public" suggests that this police force is a highly respected part of society.

The scene then goes back to the main character, Ryan Draper, on the beach. Diegetic dialogue is then used to show what is happening in the narrative. Non-diegetic music is then used in the background to create drama, and it gets louder. Ryan is then punched in the face by a member of the public, and you hear this through a diegetic crack sound. The people on the nudist beach then say to Ryan "seriously.. what is the point in you", because he lets the people get away. This juxtaposes what was said earlier on by Chief Supt. because he said that the police brought security and respect, but this people seem to not respect Ryan.

The scene then goes back to the Chief Supt. where he is now talking about the new officers, and introduces the narrative of favouritism by saying, "I am here no only in my professional capacity, but like you as a family member." This suggests that he expects his son, Jake to do well and make him proud. Non-Diegetic music brings tension to it all, suggesting Jake won't make his father proud. Then, the opening credits begin with loud upbeat music. This suggests that Cuffs is aimed at a younger target audience, because younger people would 

2 comments:

  1. Great work on your 5 marker (Cuff's intro), your responses are starting to hit the L6/7 criteria in terms of writing style, terminology and content. WELL DONE!! Targets (make improvements in purple):
    - Make sure Cuffs always starts with a capital (this error could drop you a grade in the real exam).
    - Make one/two more points e.g. Brighton setting connotes gay representation could be a theme.
    - Juxtaposition of police images on top of graffiti connotes narratives will entertain audiences by follow classic crime narrative convention of police v criminals as graffiti is against the law.

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  2. Good work on your sound practice question. You are making relevant points and starting to use the right terminology. TARGETS (make all improvements in purple):
    - Use paragraphs.
    - Where you say 'A police radio...' start by saying diegetic sound then connotes the genre and takes the narrative forward as a police radio...
    - Correct any incorrect spellings of diegetic.
    - Link all points back to why the sound choices connote genre and represent the audience (who want to be entertained by an exciting crime drama narrative).

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