Narrative Features Of Connect


Feature Establishing Protagonist
- We learn that our protagonist is disconnected and bored from reality. This highlighted when she starts to imagine bizarre and abrupt events like the old women being shot and falling in love with the business man. The suddenness of these events being accompanied with the energetic music, contrasts the grittiness and somewhat boring realism of the world the protagonist lives in and causes the audience to question if these events are even real. This describes the protagonist as bored and frustrated with her ordinary and dull and manifests strange ideas in reality to maybe motivate herself or keep herself from boredom or maybe even reflects her sub-conscience desires.

Establishing Other Characters - the other civilians in Connect are depicted as apathetic, emotionless and almost robotic. For example, on the bus the various people are seen in the background. More specifically their faces lack any emotion and they hardly move. In fact when they do move it is when they are getting off the bus, which maybe a metaphor for how dogmatic and stable their lives are; the stability that the protagonist is desperately trying to escape. Furthermore, the lack of emotion on their faces is a jarring contrast from the clear emotion displayed from the protagonist, highlighting the difference and once again, emphasising her disconnect from society.

Establishing Location - Connect is set on a London bus, highlighted with close-up shot of the protagonist's oyster card. The setting of a dim lit, cramped, eery bus gives the scene a claustrophobic tone due to the mass swarm of people filling up the bus. This could be symbolising how the protagonist feels trapped by society's expectations and boundaries and feels like shes being overcome with oppression. This explains the character's imaginative and wild creations she makes because the only place where she can feel accepted is her own mind. The location of the scene creates a clear tone for short film and is used as a backdrop for the protagonist's imaginati

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

No Country For Old Men vs Captain Fantastic: Visuals and Sound

Shaun Of The Dead Opening Analysis

The Grandmother Analysis