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Wednesday, 20 September 2017

A Love Letter to The Perfect Sounds of Cinema

By Natalie Mokry

Whether diegetic or non-diegetic, sound can often be the overlooked hero of stories in motion.

While they have their own Oscar’s category and on occasion take over the iTunes’ charts, the musical accompaniment to our favorite films and TV shows often seem invisible. This is both a good and a bad thing. To not notice a song or a score in the background of a scene means that the perfect song has been chosen or the perfect score has been crafted and the sound work is smooth, but noticing the impact this sound design has on the story of the film or television show should be something we always try to do. Especially when considering it has such a strong role in guiding our emotions to where the storytellers intended them to go.

Diegetic vs. Non-diegetic

Like everything in a film, the musical accompaniment is a choice. Whether or not the characters play their music at a party or fall in love to a tune that only we as the audience can hear, when it comes to telling a story, both options make a difference. To understand the use of music on screen, however, it is important to understand the basics of sound work. Diegetic sound is defined as sound that comes from within the universe of the film. This includes everything from dialogue to the music being played from an instrument or device within the movie/TV show. Ultimately it’s the sound the characters are aware of when venturing through the story. However, the non-diegetic sound is defined as sound that is not an actual part of the story, which is pretty much everything else; the score playing in the background or voice-over narration guiding us through a particular character’s’ life. It may not seem like too vast a choice, and the options may seem obvious, but in reality, the fluidity of sound work in films and television shows is very meticulously crafted and has a very important role in setting the tone of the film.

A great example of this is the opening scene of Jaws, a classic thriller. Film schools like to use this movie as a way to exemplify the immense impact sound work can give to the story, and it really does hold up. The same goes for much of the sound work in suspenseful Hitchcock films as well. Thinking back to Jaws, however, as the girl is swimming in the ocean, we hear the shark’s theme song, that “da da da da da da” tune that appears each time it makes an appearance throughout the film. It sets the suspense of the scene and also signifies to us when Jaws is near.

The article A Love Letter to The Perfect Sounds of Cinema appeared first on Film School Rejects.

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