What does the term representation mean?
How people, groups, events, or ideas are presented to an audience for a particular purpose.
What is the difference between a fact and an opinion?
A fact can be proven true; an opinion is a personal belief or viewpoint.
What is a language feature?
A technique used to communicate meaning and influence audiences.
What is a text structure?
The way information and ideas are organised within a text?
What is a close up shot?
A camera shot focusing closely on a person or object, often showing emotion.
How might a text represent a family as 'dysfunctional'?
Through conflict, poor communication, tension, arguments, isolation, or negative behaviours.
If a narrator says 'families today are falling apart' is this a fact or an opinion?
Opinion
List three examples of a symbolic film code?
Colour, Objects, Characterisation, Body Language, Facial Expressions
What is a technical film code? List three examples.
How a film has been technically constructed using film equipment. E.g. camera angles, shot types, lighting, graming, editing
How can lighting influence representations of families?
Bright lighting may suggest warmth and happiness; dark lighting may suggest tension or conflict.
What is the representation being created in a TV show that repeatedly shows the parents as absent and teenagers making all the deisions?
That they lack guidance or support. Potentially that the teenagers are forced to be independent.
How can a text encourage audiences to sympathise with a family member? HINT: List three examples of language features a filmmaker might use.
Through emotional language, music, close-up shots, backstory, or dialogue.
How does repetition influence audiences?
It emphasise ideas and makes messages more memorable. Makes it stick in your brain
Why might a flashback be ued in a film about family conflict?
To provide background information or explain relationship dynamics and motivations
What effect can non-diegetic music have during a family argument scene?
It can create tension, sadness, suspense, or emotional impact.
Why do creators construct particular representation of families?
To influence audience opinion, communicate values, entaintain, challenge stereotypes, or reflect society through real-world experiences.
What idea about family might be communicated through repeated scenes of sharing dinner?
Family connection, tradition, or unity is important.
Why might a writer use a rhetorical question?
To engage audiences, hijack the brain, and encourage them to think about the topic.
How does chronological structure help audiences understand family dynamics.
Presents events in order, making relationships and character developments easy to follow.
Why might a director use silence in a scene between family members?
To emphasise awkwardness, tension, emotion, or conflict.
Explain how audiences from different backgrounds may interpret the same family representation differently?
Audiences bring different experiences, cultures, values, and beliefs which shape how they understnd a representation.
Why is it important to identify bias in representations of families?
Because texts may present limited or unfair viewpoints.
What is the difference between diegetic and non-diegetic audio? Give an example for each.
Diagetic: a sound that occurs naturally within the world of the film. E.g. the sound of rain or an explosion.
Non-diegetic: A sound that does not exist within the world of the film. E.g a laugh track
How does constract help shape audience understanding of family dynamics?
Highlights differences in relationships, values, and emotions.
A film shows a teenager isolated in wide shots, ignored during conversations, and framed in darker lighting than the rest of the family.
How do film codes and conventions help construct the representation of this family dynamic?
Wide shots suggest isolation, darker lighting creates a negative or lonely mood, and being ignored in dialogue represents disconnection within the family.