Is this is an example of American Montage (showing a passage of time) - rather than Soviet Montage (juxtaposition of unrelated shots/images to create a meaning separate from the individual shots/images)? One classic example of Soviet Montage is from Sergei Eisenstein's "Strike" where the filmmaker juxtaposes shots of striking workers being beaten with shots of cattle being slaughtered (two completely unrelated images) to create the idea that the workers are being treated like animals. On the other hand, a classic example of American Montage is the training scene from Rocky where successive shots of gradual improvement jump quickly from one shot to the next to create a compression of time.
Is this is an example of American Montage (showing a passage of time) - rather than Soviet Montage (juxtaposition of unrelated shots/images to create a meaning separate from the individual shots/images)? One classic example of Soviet Montage is from Sergei Eisenstein's "Strike" where the filmmaker juxtaposes shots of striking workers being beaten with shots of cattle being slaughtered (two completely unrelated images) to create the idea that the workers are being treated like animals. On the other hand, a classic example of American Montage is the training scene from Rocky where successive shots of gradual improvement jump quickly from one shot to the next to create a compression of time.
maybe, but the passing of time in this shortfilms is not an instrument is a concept.
Omg... amazing job!!
Great example and understanding of the form!
Beautiful!!!!
Very well done!
Godard uses that same shot of swirling bubbles in Two or Three Things I Know About Her. I've seen it a few other places, but can't remember where.
great observation.
What would this type of music be called? like what genre?
I've literally been trying to figure out the same thing for days since I've seen this.
There are the original scene (of the movie film) or it is just an example? I want to analyse a scene like that and to remake a scene.