Friday 18 February 2011

The Thriller Genre

Thrillers use suspense, tension and excitement as the main elements. One of the most important characteristics of a thriller is to keep the audience on the edge of their seats as the film builds towards a climax. Tension is created when a character is in a situation that is seemingly impossible to escape or where the audience is aware of something the character is not. Alfred Hitchcock is iconic in the thriller genre, a pioneer labelled ‘The master of suspense’ with such films as Psycho and The Birds. In recent years thrillers have been more heavily influenced by the horror genre being more sadistic, gory and brutal such as the Saw franchise, The Collector and Last House on the Left this is possibly because audiences are becoming more desensitised and are constantly looking for more shocking footage. However there are still great thrillers being made which keep the audience entertained by more conventional methods rather than having to use brutality such as Inception, Shutter Island and The Next Three Days.

Monday 7 February 2011

'The Collector' (Marcus Dunstan, 2009)

'Seven' (David Fincher, 1995)

Thriller Research

07/02/11

Researching several different thrillers was useful as it gave me inspiration and allowed me to identify the different conventions of a thriller. The first thriller I chose to research and analyse was 'Seven' (David Fincher, 1995). This opening is perfect as it is 2 minutes long and incorporates everything I will need to include in my opening sequence. As well as the opening credits to 'The Collector' (Marcus Dunstan, 2009) which is quite similar but I find the music shocking and keeps the tempo going as the drum beat represents the build up of the audience heart beat.