Elvis documentary

5
Analysis of the nation’s favourite Elvis song

Transcript of Elvis documentary

Page 1: Elvis documentary

Analysis of the nation’s favourite Elvis song

Page 2: Elvis documentary

camerawork

Interviewees were framed left or right like the conventional documentary and use the rule thirds, this is to draw the focus to the person who is speaking and it was filmed on a tripod which shows that the interviews in this documentary were planned and not just randomly selected.

There is a shallow depth of field on the interviewees because they are sat in their homes and so we don’t see as much as we would if they were filmed in the likes of a music studio or somewhere similar.

There were lots of close ups and big close ups on the archive footage that was used to show Elvis’s emotion whilst performing the songs.

Page 3: Elvis documentary

Mise en scene

All the interviews were in the homes of the interviewees so that is relevant because it is a subject that is easily debatable and so it is personal to each individual like their homes.

There are lots of retro looking things which is almost a theme through the program to reflect the time period that Elvis was alive and set some context for the audience without having to directly say about it.

The lighting is always focussed on the interviewee and this is so we focus on what it is that they are going to add to the documentary.

Page 4: Elvis documentary

sound

The sound is mainly elvis songs as a sound bed which is only to be expected, it is all relevant songs to the song or part of Elvis’s like they’re talking about.

The voiceover in the show was female and had a slight accent but spoke standard english and this will be because the voiceover addresses the majority audience so that they stay tuned in to what they are watching.

The jingle at the start of the documentary is can’t help falling in love by Elvis but an upbeat one that has been manipulated by the creators of the documentary for the documentary.

Page 5: Elvis documentary

Editing and archive material

There were very few editing techniques used in this show but that is because like all other documentaries, they want the audience to be focussed on the topic or subject matter. As usual for documentaries, the most common edit is the cut and there isn’t really anything else apart from a few crossfades between archive footage and not. There were also some montages.

There was a large percentage of this documentary that was archive material, mainly of Elvis performing and small parts of it were personal which were relevant to the stories people were sharing about their experiences with Elvis.

At one point there was footage of him getting on a plane coming back home from the army, this was used to show a side of Elvis that most people didn’t know