In Time - Andrew Niccol - 1.11 internal.
In Time is a film directed by Andrew Niccol. The film uses a range of film techniques to show the inequality across time zones. We see Will striving to achieve equality among society. We see how Will experiences near death and the struggles of trying to achieve his goal. During the scene we see Will at the Weis party, the minute men come to question him about the wealth that Will has just received. During the scene, we see inequality across the zones of Dayton and New Greenwich.
The director uses a range of camera techniques to show Will getting interrogated to create suspense and a clear power struggle. We see a long shot of Will Salas when he is getting questioned by the timekeeper Raymond Leon. Will is now suddenly trapped and is forced to be seated into a substantial plush chair. The setting is green painted room with gold incorporated into the decor. The long shot then transitions into a high angle shot. Through the shot, we can see guards positioned on either side of Will. This emphasizes that Will has been ambushed and is overpowered and that they are watching every move that Will makes. We also learn within the scene that Will is captured and cannot escape the timekeeper as well as the guards. This contrasts back to Dayton where the bars on Will 's apartment windows symbolised that he was trapped and was living in a controlled area. We learn that Will has ambition to make to make the system of time vanish and to become
Time is constant. No one has the power to stop it or to go back in it. Time cannot be changed for it is timeless. With time being everlasting there is a mystery within time’s boarders; why cannot one change time? Arcadia by Tom Stoppard explores the lives of many individuals in two different time periods but within the same setting, Sidley Park, which is a stately home. Within the first four scenes of the play there is a shift between the two time periods 1809 and contemporary time period. Time is omnipresent throughout the play, whatever happens will happen and time is constant regardless how you measure it. In Geraldine Cousin’s Playing for Time, Cousin explores the mystery of time’s immutability. She also explores the ideas of how the past always has a lingering effect on the future. Then in John Fleming’s Tom Stoppard’s: Arcadia compliments on how time is equally woven between the past and present. He also provokes the idea that one could split the play into two plays by splitting up the two times. The mystery behind time in Stoppard’s Arcadia is well defined. Time is inevitable and connected, you cannot have the past without the present and future. Tom Stoppard depicts that tie overlaps itself in order to show how chaos enables freewill.
"Time is the element in which we exist. We are either borne along with it or drowned in it." — Joyce Carol Oates (Brussat). Time is everything in movie In Time, time is currency to purchase food, pay bills, and also determines how long you live. This is the reality of Will Salas (Justin Timberlake) and Rachel Salas (Olivia Wilde) playing son and daughter.
The signs of the time are also shown through the use of specific camera shots, which humble the characters and show their frailty. Long Shots, in particular, are used to exemplify the smallness of the characters (without power) in the vastness of the world around them. In the scene in which the
The main focus is placed on Will, whom has a rare genius to put together abstract math problems and finds it hard to relate to world without getting arrested for doing something violent and rebellious. He grew up in South Boston and the hard streets have jaded him, while his intelligence further isolated him from people and made him hostile to other people. In the beginning of the film, Will is discovered by Lambeu (Stellan Skarsgard) a professor of mathematics, and his well-being becomes a serious issue and he is pursued. While placing a difficult math problem on the chalkboard
Josephine Tey’s The Daughter of Time is a historical novel that looks at the belief that
To see what they see, and compare our own thoughts with the evolution of the characters and the story. The dexterity of the images, and the impact that each scene has in portraying this theme, guide the viewer throughout the film with little use of dialogue and action. Our central character “Jeff,” is struggling with his casted imprisonment, his need for adventure is apparent as he watches outside his window. Conflicted with his girlfriend and conflicted with his theories, his character becomes more palpable, we begin to realize what is going on not only on the outside of him, but the inside of him as well. The aspects of the outside courtyard and the visual isolation of each apartment, help depict the humanity of each individual and sympathy for even the darkest characters. Hitchcock uses his camera, just as our protagonist does, to focus with him. The camera angles are depicted in a way to which we react with the character, rather than at the character, and eventually expose the minor elements of the story that bring to fruition the suspense of the movie and the thrills of discovery.
In ‘Run Lola Run’ time is shown to be an important theme right from the beginning. We
The film In Time takes place in the distant future. Time has replaced currency. Every person has a bright green clock on their arm showing how much time (or money) they have. Due to genetic engineering and scientific advances, once one turns 25, they stop aging. They are given a year left to live unless more time can be earned. The social classes are divided by time zones. The ghetto, or slums, live in
Jason and Gareth arrive there but to only be taken away and shown to a pharaoh who wants Gareth to his own, Jason refuses to this, and this causes the king to become frustrated. After this Jason and Gareth are now faced with another problem and this is to try to get the pharaoh to realize how cats need to be treated.
The Cinema Verite Robert Drew and Associates Robert drew was one of the pioneers of cinema verite. Drew had an idea for a new way to tell a story. He invested on new technology that allowed him to fulfill his vision. Giving birth to a new style of cinema that later came to be know as cinema verite. Drew had a unique philosophy that transcribed to his films from how he shot it to the cuts in the editing room.
Will is arrested, and during his arrest hits a cop, which seems to guarantee that he will be facing jail time.
In the film “In Time” Andrew Niccol develops the idea that injustice is a cycle that is difficult to break. This idea is relevant to people in today's society because injustice is a hard cycle to break as keeps on continuing on it is hard to interrupt the cycle because no one thinks that they are powerful enough to stop the cycle. Andrew Niccol uses the techniques of yellow filter and camera angles to show this idea. In Time shows the idea that injustice is a cycle that is difficult to break .
The short film, being a loose adaptation of H.G. Wells’s “The Time Machine”, serves as a supplement for viewers to ponder on how dystopia is hidden in this land perceived to be utopian. The film, as well as the original book, depicts an avid time traveller moving through the fourth dimension, through time, in hopes of seeing the heights the human race has reached in the future world. He wishes to share his discoveries with his skeptical friends and the rest of the world. The book explores this land of paradise only to unveil the two extreme classes of humanity coexisting in a single community.
In the essay “Our Time” by John Edgar Wideman he often takes a break from the narrative to address that he has many problems as a writer. He does this to try to consciously address these problems and hopefully solve these problems. He believes that if these problems are not rectified he would destroy any chance he has at telling a truthful account of his brother’s story. To rectify these problems he employs a variety of unique techniques in his writing. Looking at these techniques it is not always 100% clear how these are fixing his problems. It is also evident that the way he is writing may be going against a lot of things we were taught in school about our writing.
The beginning of the film depicts Will solving equations left on a chalk board at MIT that not even the most gifted of students can solve. Professor Lambeau searches for the mysterious “student” who is solving the posted equations. He finds Will in a court room where he is being sentenced to time in prison after being involved in assault on the streets of Boston. A deal is made with the judge that Will will see a therapist and also study with Professor Lambeau in exchange for time in prison. Will is introduced to many therapists before Lambeau finally goes to his old friend Sean. After a rocky start, Sean starts to get through to Will. They discuss many things together from Will’s troubled past to the newly formed relationship he has with Skylar. Lambeau repeatedly tries to force Will into high profile job interviews while Will continually does not show up to them. This causes an argument between Lambeau and Sean. Trouble then begins to start between Will and Skylar after she tells