Exploring the Purpose of Film Openings
Although there are many different ways in which to start a film, film openings often include a set of typical conventions for specific purposes.
| Convention | Purpose |
|---|---|
| Production Logo and Film Title | The production logo is shown to introduce the company behind the film and create a first impression for the audience. A film title and the way it is presented is chosen to reflect the tone, genre, and style of the film. |
| Establishing the Genre | It is important to establish the genre of the film right at the start so that the audience understands the mood, expectations, and themes of the narrative. |
| Character Introduction | Main characters are often introduced early to help the audience build connections and understand their role within the story. |
| Topic/Theme | Film openings may hint at key themes, conflicts, or ideas that will become important throughout the narrative. |
| Creating Enigma and Suspense | Many film openings intentionally create mystery and unanswered questions to engage the audience and encourage them to continue watching. |
Some common ways of starting a film include:
- opening with action or tension
- introducing a mysterious event
- using narration or dialogue
- establishing setting through montage shots
- beginning with a flashback or symbolic imagery
Film opening research:
| Film Opening Technique | Purpose / Effect on Audience | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Hook the Audience Immediately | Opening scenes should instantly capture attention through action, mystery, emotion, or spectacle to encourage the audience to continue watching. | General film openings |
| Enter the Villain | Introduces the antagonist early to establish danger, tension, personality, and tone. Can create suspense and excitement immediately. | The Dark Knight |
| Enter the Hero | Introduces the protagonist in action to quickly establish their skills, personality, and importance within the narrative. | Skyfall |
| Establish Relationships | Focuses on character interactions and emotional connections to make future conflicts more meaningful and impactful. | Marriage Story |
| Introduce the Plot Catalyst | Introduces an important object, event, or idea that drives the narrative forward and gains significance later in the story. | Uncut Gems |
| Establish Genre and Tone | Uses visuals, sound, editing, and atmosphere to immediately communicate the film’s genre and mood to the audience. | La La Land |
| Flip or Mix Genres | Combines multiple genres to create unpredictability, layered meaning, and a unique audience experience. | Get Out |
| Flashbacks | Reveals past events to provide context, mystery, or emotional depth. | Common narrative technique |
| Flash-forwards | Shows future events to create suspense or curiosity about how events will unfold. | Common narrative technique |
| Dreams | Can reveal character psychology, fears, symbolism, or uncertainty between reality and imagination. | Common narrative technique |
| Metaphors | Uses symbolic imagery or situations to communicate deeper themes or ideas. | Common narrative technique |
| Bookends | Begins and ends a story with similar scenes or ideas to create narrative closure or thematic meaning. | Common narrative technique |
| Red Herrings | Misleads the audience to create mystery, suspense, or false assumptions. | Common thriller convention |
| MacGuffins | Uses an object or goal that drives the plot and motivates characters, even if the object itself is less important. | Common narrative device |
note to self: film opening make reasearch doc/organise into somehting