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Christian Filmmakers & Artistic Redemptive Films |
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Guidelines for Effective Communication |
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For many
years I have been conducting research and writing about the power of
role models in
autobiographical stories.
I think this work is especially significant today and can bring light into our
dark world of personal, national, and international
struggles. In redemptive autobiographical stories, we can find inspirational
journeys of those who have persevered and
overcome against great odds and high stakes.
Here are some of my insights about what makes an artistic, redemptive film. An effective narrative film requires a well-written screenplay, skillful acting, and artful directing. An effective documentary needs similar structural elements and skillful directing. The screenplay and documentary need the following: a unifying concept, universal themes/ideas that are revealed through experience (shown rather than told), a captivating beginning, foreshadowing, building tension, multi-dimensional characters, unpredicted twists and turns, a gripping climax, and a meaningful resolution. Characters in an authentic and believable film are multi-dimensional. Heroes or heroines are often more fascinating if they overcome internal and external obstacles that are formidable, are underdogs, and/or are the least likely or unanticipated victors. Internal and external opponents and opposing factors must also be multi-dimensional. If the opposing factors are internal and involve difficult experiences and memories, there are multi-dimensional ways to visual these internal opponents in film. Giving internal challenges visual form helps the characters and the audience to process them. The Sensation of Sight powerfully visualizes the internal struggles of the characters. Likewise this movie visualizes Memory and Time in forms that give the characters and audience handles for processing them. Like internal opponents, opposing environmental or inanimate factors can also be visualized in multi-dimensional ways. For example there are specific kinds of Memory and experiences with Time: Generic Memory, Flashbulb Memory, and Engram. Generic Memory involves the blending of personal memories into a generic image of common experiences. Flashbulb Memory involves specific, intense, immediate memories of the circumstances in which one first encountered a consequential event. Epiphanies seem related to this kind of memory. An Engram is an auditory memory. Time can telescope or tunnel. It can warp into different dimensions in the future or past. Memory, time, and experience can move from misperceptions to reality. Further, human opponents and factors can have sympathetic dimensions or reasons related to why they have become harmful, abusive, or evil. Again, there are powerful examples of these techniques in The Sensation of Sight and also in The Soloist. A good film actor usually displays the following: minimized movement, minimal dialogue, effective listening to other characters passionate internal commitment, heart-felt empathy with the character, vulnerability, believability, authenticity, subtle non-verbal communication, and compelling eyes. Artistic directing of narrative or documentary films depends on the following: careful pre-production planning, good equipment, effective film crew, skillful editors, captivating music, artful lighting, and clear sound. The effective cinematographer and director carefully plan each scene to captivate and engage viewers with dramatic, moving, visual elements. Film in all its forms captures living experience. Unlike other literary, visual, or performing art forms it presents moving, dynamic experiences in and over time that helps us understand and process our lives and those of others. Film largely uses visual, moving images (and music) to engage us. Christian artists value the example of our incarnated Lord as the Word who became flesh and dwelt among us. Film can incarnate truth as it visualizes it and makes it concrete in terms of human experience. Non-verbal factors of communication and incarnation are powerfully significant in effective filmmaking. Christian filmmakers understand that nature and the heavens powerfully and complexly reveal the glory of God. Christian storytellers value storytelling models our Lord Jesus Christ gave us in His parables. As Christian filmmakers, we have our heavenly Father, the incarnated Christ, and God's Spirit to guide us, model for us, and include us in the greatest, epic story every told. An effective redemptive film uses storytelling in artful ways. Just as our Lord Jesus led his listeners to Truth through visual metaphors and parable, a redemptive film leads the audience to think and come to its own conclusions without direct sermonizing. It has an edifying story that reveals universal ideas and lifts the viewer from negativism, cynicism, and/or pessimism to what is positive, renewing, and hopeful. Although, it presents honest, difficult struggles, it turns what is paralyzing, degrading and debilitating to what is freeing, beautiful and eternal. |
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Examples of Best Practice: |
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The Hiding Place
The Lord
of the Rings
The Chronicles of Narnia
Amazing
Grace
Bella
The
Sensation of Sight
The
Help Sandra Bullock plays well a real life Steel Magnolia, who develops in character as she provides for the neglected Gentle Giant, Michael Oher in The Blind Side. Jae Head, as S. J. Tuoghy, is especially delightful as he is juxtaposed to Quinton Aaron as Michael Oher. The Blind Side is entertaining, uplifting, and meaningful. The comedy has had audiences laughing and crying in theaters across the nation. This film encourages us to value all human relationships at a time when we especially need this inspiration. It is refreshing to see a true story about real Christian people in Michael Oher's family and school, who learn to demonstrate unconditional love and support that leads Michael, who formerly had many odds against him, to wonderful success in his life. Thank you, Sandra Bullock, cast, crew, and real personalities in the story of The Blind Side. This film is a gift to those that see it.
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