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− | ==Classical Hollywood cinema==
| + | Buster Keaton flies through the air into a pool |
− | <gallery mode="packed" heights=600px>
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− | File:Narrative Structure - Classical Film.jpeg|alt=Diagram of classical narrative structure.|''Television'' Figure 3.6 The rise and fall of the narrative action in classical film.
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− | </gallery>
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− | Does ''Always Be My Maybe'' fit the classical implementation of:
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− | #Single protagonist
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− | #Exposition
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− | #Motivation
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− | #Narrative enigma
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− | #Cause-effect chain
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− | #*''Story time'' versus ''screen time''--in terms of duration and order
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− | #Climax
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− | #Resolution
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− | ==The television series==
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− | <gallery mode="packed" heights=600px>
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− | File:Fig03-12 TV Series Narrative Structure - rendered.jpg|alt=Diagram of series-TV narrative structure.|''Television'' Figure 3.12 Linear-TV series' narrative structure must accommodate commercial interruptions and allow for a repeatable narrative problematic.
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− | </gallery>
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− | Break down the "The Vartabedian Conundrum" episode from ''The Big Bang Theory'' (December 8, 2008). Number each scene and provide a ''brief'' description of it.
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− | *How many scenes does it have?
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− | Does the episode contain the conventional elements of a TV series? What are the key differences between its narrative structure and that of a classical film?
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− | #Multiple protagonists
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− | #Exposition
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− | #Motivation
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− | #Narrative problematic
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− | #Cause-effect chain
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− | #Climax
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− | #Resolution?
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− | [[Category:BUI301F2022]]
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− | [[Category:BUI301F2022 Discussion]]
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Latest revision as of 20:06, 26 September 2022
Buster Keaton flies through the air into a pool