Conduct the research and begin preparing pieces of the Formal Analytical Report. The following
steps should occur during phase two and will be submitted in the Phase 2 Progress Report:
In your research, begin with general works for an overview, and then consult more specific sources.
Skim the sources, looking for high points.
Take notes selectively (p 628), summarize (p 168), and record each source.
Plan and administer questionnaires, interviews, and inquiries IF NEEDED. Briefly review chapters 17
(Technical Definitions), 18 (Technical Descriptions, Specifications, and Marketing Materials), and 19
(Instructions and Procedures). Use these where appropriate to create relevant sections in your Formal
Analytical Report.
Try to conclude your research with direct observation.
Evaluate each finding for accuracy, reliability, fairness, and completeness.
Decide what your findings mean.
Use the checklist on page 166 to reassess your methods, interpretation, and reasoning.
Prepare and submit a short Progress Report so that your instructor knows what progress you’re making. This is
also a chance to ask for advice.
matisation of visual representation. Jeunet, using the same tactics as advertisements, wooes the audience with his movie of a “stereotyped idea of Paris that exists in the world, rather than recording Paris as it exists”. With an extraordinary number of shots in the film-over 300 in the prologue alone-each shot must make an instant impression. The power of the edited image to make this impression is enhanced by the soundtrack. The soundtrack emphasises the beginning and end of each shot, with almost every scene, and many individual moments, concluding with audible finality.
Jeunet also uses close-ups to mark the end of sequences: “Looping crane shots, rapid zooms, and dizzying montage passages give way to several seconds of Tautou, absolutely still, staring directly into the camera, an object of our lingering gaze.”As with every other aspect of the film, Tautou’s face does not escape Jeunet’s aesthetic edits, serving the superficial narrative as much as-if not more than-the fantastical Paris. As a shot, close-ups, in the terms of Eisenstein, are both individuals and collectives. In presenting Amelie through close-ups, she is presented as an icon, both an “imagined friend and an inaccessible ideal”. The combination of proximity and distance that enables the success of a media icon is an ideal employed by Jeunet. Like a media icon, Amélie provides the audience with traces of reality: opportunities for autonomy, references to past-cinema, while simultaneously isolating the world of the movie through the heavily stylised aesthetics and edited visuals.
The close-up presents a dualistic paradox for the viewer. There is an intimacy in the proximity of the shot which, as severed from the ‘bigger picture’, necessitates the abstraction of information; the close-up, in its narrow perspective, refers viewers beyond the immediate. The multitude of close-ups of Tautou’s face, presents Tautou iconically, as they create a pause in the film, providing the audience with multiple instances to reflect on the image in and of itself. The power of the close-up comes from the referential value attributed to it. The close-ups of Tautou therefore give the audience an opportunity for their own autonomous imaginative response to the film by pausing the action visually and temporally. As such, the close-up is a strategy that exemplifies greater themes of the film: the spectator and the significance of the image. In presenting Tautou’s face so iconicly throughout the movie, Jeunet is provoking the relationship betwe