Tuesday, June 15, 2010

Raging Bull

Raging Bull was an extremely accurate portray of Jake La Moto's life as a boxer and showed the audience how different things were then versus how they are now. An example of that wold be now a days it would be considered abuse if you hit your wife and you would be considered a wife beater and could be in jail but back then when the movie was actually happening it was considered acceptable to beat your wife for doing something wrong if thought I do not agree with it that is was people were accustom to. The movie was shot ing black in white because it added to the effects of the movie showing people that this film was actually happened when color movies were just coming out so it added to the effects to have it in black and white. I would give this movie 4 out of 5 stars. In this movie there are distinct timing and editing features that are extremely apparent in this movie.


Real time is a one minute on screen. Once you have one minute on screen you actually have page worth of script that has to be read in the one minute. Screen time is the time that the movie runs and there are actually things happening on screen and not just credits. The restructuring of time is when they edit and make it so that everything happens how it is supposed to like the police do not so up before a bank robbery to catch the suspect before the robbery evens happens. The rhythm of edited sequences is when the frames are added together in order to make the movie actually real and making it the best possible outcome using what the director shot and the vision of the writer.


This was extremely well planned and edited using transitions footage that was shot as different angles in order to give the audience a three dimensional visual of the actual scene. Raging bull was an accurate portray of a boxer's life and struggles in the 1940s and how society treated people.

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