
What We Discussed
On Friday, January 24th, 2020, my group met at the local Dunkin Donuts to discuss in further detail what our plans are for the film we are going to create. We talked about creating a sci-fi noir that involves a simulation glitching or catching a virus and the people in charge of it send a detective and a hacker to find out who is responsible and to fix the simulation. Obviously, the two main characters will embody what their respective genre represents: the detective (noir) will be someone who prefers to work alone but is forced to work with the hacker for plot convenience, an outsider to the simulation, and more of a gritty anti-hero. Meanwhile, the hacker (sci-fi) will most likely be the antithesis of the detective so we can use the contrast between the two in order to highlight the elements of their respective genre. In the opening 2 minutes, we plan on creating a sense of suspense and mystery as they are important to both the sci-fi and noir. The setting will be at night and in an urban environment to show the noir aspects of the film. However, since we plan on using simulation theory to support the sci-fi aspects, we do not need to establish a futuristic setting as it will take place in the simulated reality. We would need a gimble to help stabilize our shots and potentially a green screen for the VFX. The intended audience for our film is nerds, people from the 90’s (as they will hopefully have found memories of watching The Matrix) teenagers and young adults. These groups of people are the most likely to see this movie and thus provide us with the most profit. We plan on platforming the film to areas that are big in the technology industry such as California and New England and if the film does well there continue to distribute it to other cities. A good way to market this film – given our main target audience is nerds – would be to give a mysterious link for them to follow on socially media and perhaps on TV ads. This would cause them to invest their time and become invested in the film; it would also build hype around it and once what is at the end of link spreads, it would be of similar effect to regular advertisements. The titles for our types of film are usually short (one or two words), bold, and with large spacing between the letters. Given that white males are usually the ones who write sci-fi movies, the protagonist tends to be American or English because writers portray their social groups. We will attempt to avoid this by hiring Fares (an Egyptian) and me (an Albanian) as actors to portray more social groups.
Film noir
(Notable media: Taxi Driver, Blade Runner, The Dark Knight, Sin City, Notorious, Memento, Drive)
Here is a good video that defines what film noir is and its conventions; this is where I got all of my new information. Defining Film Noir
Film noir is a genre of film recognized for its use of chiaroscuro – an effect created from high saturation and a monochromatic pallet – and was the main genre of film in the 1940’s and 1950’s. However, it has since become a niche genre and the new films in this genre have ditched the chiaroscuro and have been dubbed “neo-noir.” However, for the purposes of this project, I will neo-noir and film noir to be one genre as the two are largely similar (the two biggest changes are the time period and the use of chiaroscuro). Film noir, unlike sci-fi, does not have a lot of variations within its formula; most film noir films involve a detective or a private eye (this was especially apparent in when film noir was at its prime and can still be found in modern installments of the genre such as The Dark Knight) but no matter what they are, the main character ends up in a worse place then where they started. This “worse place” can be a lot of things: sometimes they are a little more insane in the end than in the beginning (such as the case in Taxi Driver), other times they lose someone who was important to them (Memento), or sometimes they just die at the end (The Dark Knight trilogy). Another important aspect of noir is the time period the film takes place in. This is important because the time period influences the thematic focus of the film; which becomes apparent when comparing movies like Notorious – which came out in 1946 and has an anti-fascist theme because of WWII – and Taxi Driver – which as anti-war themes because of the draft and the Vietnam War.
Types of Sci-fi
There is a myriad of subgenres in sci-fi: you got the robots, simulations, aliens, aliens that make you go insane if you look at them, and the good ol’ “everything is wrong how did we get here” subgenre. These subgenres usually intertwine while still being able to stand out. For the example, The Matrix is a mixture of simulation theory – the remains of the human race live in a simulation – and dystopian – because the real reality is nightmarish. The fact the sub genres are usually mixed together can make it difficult to find sci-fi movies that are strictly one subgenre, but it does narrow the amount of research while also allowing more creativity since the directors, cinematographers, director of photography, etc. do not need to worry about confining to one specific style. Each genre, however, has unique qualities that make it easy to identify what subgenres a film belongs to. Some of these subgenres are alien, cyberpunk, dystopian, Lovecraftian horror (this subgenre belongs both sci-fi and horror), simulation theory.
Alien
Notable media: Alien, Predator, The Thing, E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial
As the name suggests, this subgenre involves aliens (what a shocker). The aliens are usually end up on Earth but on some instances humans find themselves on alien planets. Xenophobia and how we see outsiders are often hot topics in alien movies.
Cyberpunk
Notable media: Blade Runner, Ghost in the Shell, Akira, Robocop
This subgenre is often, if not always, set in the future and a trademark of it is artificial limbs/implants. Cyberpunk often questions the boundaries between man and machine which is shown in many ways such as giving AI the desire to be more human such as in Ghost in the Shell where The Puppet Master (the antagonistic AI) tells Major Motoko Kusanagi that he/she/it desires to have the ability to reproduce and die. Another characteristic of the cyberpunk is the setting which is usually a massive city in the future with ads and technology everywhere. When politics is involved, cyberpunk movies tend to be anti-capitalist.
Dystopian
Notable media: A Clockwork Orange, The Matrix, V for Vendetta, 1984
Dystopian movies can be summed with a question: how did the government get so much power? While some dystopian films do not involve the government (see The Matrix), they often involve some higher power being oppressing the masses. These movies usually take place in the future (relative to the source material/movie) and are usually very anti-communist.
Lovecraftian horror
Notable media: The Void, Annihilation, Bloodborne (video game), Dagon (short story)
Lovecraftian/cosmic horror – my personal favorite subgenre of both sci-fi and horror – is similar in premis to the alien subgenre: some other worldly being is within our boundaries. However, Lovecraftian is a little more specific than that – the “aliens” that invade us are more akin to gods (especially in H.P. Lovecraft’s writings such as Dagon) and we, as humans, cannot fathom such beings so we either cannot see them or go insane in their presence. This previous statement clearly shows why there are few Lovecraftian horror movies (and even fewer good ones), it cannot be created in a visual medium. How do you show something that, once seen, makes those who see it go insane?
Simulation Theory
Notable media: The Matrix, Ready Player One, Inception
The simulation subgenre focuses on the idea that we are currently living in a simulation “unbeknownst” to us. This subgenre mostly takes in place in a simulation but usually shows what the world outside the simulation is like and usually has themes of our lives being out of our hands.
Introduction
Hi, my name is Kevin Foughty and this is my blog for part of my AICE Media Studies final in which we create an opening for an original film. My group (Susan Hammond, Nicholas Gray, and Fares Eltoukhy) and I, plan on making a film that is a mix between the sci-fi and noir genres; hopefully the result is a movie similar to The Matrix or Blade Runner. In case you want to know more about me and my film going habits, my favorite genres are horror (recommendations: Evil Dead 2, The Thing, and The Texas Chainsaw Massacre) sci-fi (recommendations: Ghost in the Shell, Spaceballs, The Iron Giant,) mainly because both of these genres are diverse; with horror you can watch a found footage movie or a slasher flick and with sci-fi you can watch a movie about simulations or a movie about how bad the future will be. Since sci-fi is such as broad genre, my group and I felt it would be easier to do then some other genres as there are different options we can take each with their own conventions. For example, if we decided to do a film in the dystopian sub genre, we wouldn’t have to worry about showing spaceships flying or aliens invading since they are not a convention of the dystopian subgenre (which are oppressive government that is usually socialist and the rights of the people being stripped away). We chose the noir part because it can blend well with the sci-fi genre as evidenced with films such as The Matrix and Blade Runner due to the mystery surrounding surrounding the technology that is frequent in the sci-fi movies and mystery solving nature of the noir genre. Well, just like Darth Helmet and his crew did in Spaceballs, let’s go straight to “ludicrous speed.”
