Abstractions and aesthetic representations of loss in film

This paper aims to explore the aesthetic representations of death and loss in film through film theories and concepts like Schrader’s (1972) transcendental style and it’s application in the thesis film Kintsugi. Alongside comparisons to Kore-eda’s debut feature Maborosi, the visual language of loss...

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Main Author: Choo, Austen Jin Ting
Other Authors: Wong Chen-Hsi
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/74235
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-742352019-12-10T11:33:06Z Abstractions and aesthetic representations of loss in film Choo, Austen Jin Ting Wong Chen-Hsi School of Art, Design and Media DRNTU::Social sciences::Mass media::Broadcasting::Motion pictures and films::Film theory and criticism DRNTU::Visual arts and music::Film::Digital This paper aims to explore the aesthetic representations of death and loss in film through film theories and concepts like Schrader’s (1972) transcendental style and it’s application in the thesis film Kintsugi. Alongside comparisons to Kore-eda’s debut feature Maborosi, the visual language of loss will be examined through a discourse on the ideas of cinematic stasis and its patterns alongside time and montage, to establish how these filmic devices are utilised to portray themes of finality and bereavement. By investigating the aesthetic treatment towards filmic representations of human finitude, this paper further seeks to establish how the relationship between the style of a film, and its thematic narrative, is rooted in the nature of cinema itself. This paper concludes that the abstract depictions of death in film is a standpoint from which audiences view life, through the functionalities of cinema itself as well as its artistic measures. Ultimately, the paper raises questions on the filmic construct of human behaviour and emotions amid such instances of death, expounding on how the “transcendent” is able to be represented within films through a cross-pollination of ideas in elements like semiotics, structuralism and its relationship with auteurism, allowing for future dialogue and conversations towards abstract depictions and representations of life and death to be examined within the malleable and ever-expanding nature of film and filmmaking. Bachelor of Fine Arts 2018-05-14T01:59:43Z 2018-05-14T01:59:43Z 2018 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/74235 en Nanyang Technological University 9 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Social sciences::Mass media::Broadcasting::Motion pictures and films::Film theory and criticism
DRNTU::Visual arts and music::Film::Digital
spellingShingle DRNTU::Social sciences::Mass media::Broadcasting::Motion pictures and films::Film theory and criticism
DRNTU::Visual arts and music::Film::Digital
Choo, Austen Jin Ting
Abstractions and aesthetic representations of loss in film
description This paper aims to explore the aesthetic representations of death and loss in film through film theories and concepts like Schrader’s (1972) transcendental style and it’s application in the thesis film Kintsugi. Alongside comparisons to Kore-eda’s debut feature Maborosi, the visual language of loss will be examined through a discourse on the ideas of cinematic stasis and its patterns alongside time and montage, to establish how these filmic devices are utilised to portray themes of finality and bereavement. By investigating the aesthetic treatment towards filmic representations of human finitude, this paper further seeks to establish how the relationship between the style of a film, and its thematic narrative, is rooted in the nature of cinema itself. This paper concludes that the abstract depictions of death in film is a standpoint from which audiences view life, through the functionalities of cinema itself as well as its artistic measures. Ultimately, the paper raises questions on the filmic construct of human behaviour and emotions amid such instances of death, expounding on how the “transcendent” is able to be represented within films through a cross-pollination of ideas in elements like semiotics, structuralism and its relationship with auteurism, allowing for future dialogue and conversations towards abstract depictions and representations of life and death to be examined within the malleable and ever-expanding nature of film and filmmaking.
author2 Wong Chen-Hsi
author_facet Wong Chen-Hsi
Choo, Austen Jin Ting
format Final Year Project
author Choo, Austen Jin Ting
author_sort Choo, Austen Jin Ting
title Abstractions and aesthetic representations of loss in film
title_short Abstractions and aesthetic representations of loss in film
title_full Abstractions and aesthetic representations of loss in film
title_fullStr Abstractions and aesthetic representations of loss in film
title_full_unstemmed Abstractions and aesthetic representations of loss in film
title_sort abstractions and aesthetic representations of loss in film
publishDate 2018
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/74235
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