Who I asked - My Explorer Scout Group
What I was trying to find out - Their film preferences and a question relating to my opening


This demonstrates that the males are spread out amongst various genres while the females are fixed on one particular genre (in which case it's comedy mainly).

So as we can see most of the group don't tend to think much of what the critics (who are knowledgable about what goes into a movie) think of various movies. I do think I need to be a bit more specific about which film websites I mean (such as Rotten Tomatoes and Metacritic). However I wasn't expecting film websites to get a high number of responses.


This is the result I expected since multiplex cinemas are the normal type of cinemas you expect to see moviegoers at.

This was a problem also because some of the people doing the questionnaire (mainly the girls) may have thought this was Q11 (Which of the films nominated for the Best Picture Oscar have you seen and which one would you like to see win?) continued and ended up condeming one of their own favourite films of 2010 to Razzie shame. It also shows that, if it wasn't for Toy Story 3, then the results would have shown that people these days are not as interested in quality than they are in the things that make films not that good to watch.



The objects of an opening sequence are:
From Scottie’s POV, the ground below seems to move further away from him putting across to the viewer that Scottie suffers from acrophobia (or vertigo as most people may think) and making a dramatic point of how far he is off the ground. This is dramatically underlined when Scottie’s weak point allows the criminal to escape (since he used it as an advantage over Scottie and the cop) and his fellow cop to fall to his death when trying to help Scottie back up.





In the third scene, the location is finally revealed as Korea during the Korean War via a piece of text that says ‘And then there was Korea…’ Originally Robert Altman intended not to state that this movie was set in Korea so that the audience would mistake the setting for Vietnam. Following that is an extract from statements by General Douglas MacArthur and President Eisenhower. The use of a statement by General MacArthur further enforces the anti-war message since MacArthur was very unpopular due to his ego during the war. The satire is also used in this scene too since there is a character wandering around as if lost while heroic music (spoofing the composer Susa) plays in the background making it very out of context. The scene is also where we get a glimpse of the set for the first time, its appearance is dirty and run down which is what you’d expect crudely built Vietnam War Camps to look like.