Setting- setting is a location where a film is being set and its conventional to the genre it belongs to, if the setting doesn't go with the film then it will be confusing. Setting is important to thriller because it creates denotation and connotation so it make the move more conventional to its genre. For example a disowned house, abandoned hospital and narrow corridors are a common setting in horror films.
Action- highway, alleyways, busy roads, office
Sci-fi- outer-space, empty fields, forest, abandoned houses, graveyard
Crime- office, forest, abandoned places, busy roads
Suspense/horror- graveyards, alleyways, haunted houses
Psychological- hospital, abandoned places, narrow corridors
iconography- it is the object that cause significance to the scene. This is conventional to the genre it belongs to because it creates different meaning. For example there is a narrow corridor that has flashing lights, the audience would connote that as a suspense thriller film. As for when there is a person sitting on a electric chair we would connote it as a psychological thriller.
iconography in sub-genre
Sci-fi- technology, creature
Psychological- rope, handcuff, electrical chairs
Crime- police cars, guns, knife,
Horror/suspense- weapons, hidden identities (mask),
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eveUzWmTxl4
In this scene the gun has been use as a iconography. It creates a emotion from the audience to help them understand the characters emotion. The setting of the scene was the office which give the audience an idea that it is a serious situation.


Some good work here. You identify some conventional uses of setting and iconography and discuss them to some detail in terms of the audience response. There is also recognition on how this changes according to sub-genre.
ReplyDelete-in your scene analysis, try and write in the PEER structure so you explain what the example you are discussing means and why it is conventional to the thriller genre
-sometimes you mention horror rather than a thriller. Thrillers are what we are interested in
-proof read your work please