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Monday, 27 November 2017

Crossing Over: How ‘Lost in Translation’ Uses the Frame

By Jacob Oller

The caverns of meaning and negative space can operates similarly.

Bridging the gaps in our lives can be spatial or metaphysical. When it comes to Bill Murray and Scarlett Johansson finding each other in a foreign land, sharing a moment of each other’s lives in Lost in Translation, the images are as important as the narrative – and honestly if that final interaction is any indication, more important.

Crossing the negative space in the middle of the frame, when both characters hug the edges of the screen, is how they show unwillingness to change. There is fear and complacency lodged in their stuckness. Only when they cross is development possible.

Fabian Broeker’s video essay helps convey this thematic usage, pushing its characters together and then throwing them apart. Sofia Coppola’s control of her frames, along with her director of photography Lance Acord (who did Where the Wild Things Are and Marie Antoinette after this), makes the film a visual delight.

The article Crossing Over: How ‘Lost in Translation’ Uses the Frame appeared first on Film School Rejects.

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