Analysis Of The Film 'The Warriors'

1093 Words3 Pages

Released in 1979, The Warriors, is a film based on the book by Sol Yurick. Directed by Water Hill, the film is a cult classic about a gang that becomes stranded away from home. Consequently, the gang spends the entire film fighting their way back to their home turf. The basis of this movie mirrors an event from Grecian times, the Battle of Cunaxa in 401 B.C., chronicled in Xenophon’s “The Anabasis” that follows a Grecian army who becomes stranded after the battle between Athens and Sparta. (The Making, 2016). Ranked by Entertainment weekly as number 16 in the Top 50 Cult movies it is a cult classic despite receiving critical critique for its filming style (The Top 50, 2016).

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YeEbtiruH2Q

The Warriors “Come out to Play”: An analysis of Mis en scène
The scene I have chosen starts at 0.00 and ends at 0.15. …show more content…

There is a brilliant use of diagonal dimensions in this scene in the railing behind the hearse, again sending a message of disorganization and anxiety. There is also the use of movement here as a gentle breeze ruffles the hair of the character, almost as a caress, and it is a stark contrast to the underlying sense of danger. The brightly colored almost cartoon-like use of the graffiti hearse and the colorful signs as dominate contrasts suggest that there is a bit of hope for the characters in this film. At second 5 the scene changes to a center framed shot with the main character shot at a quarter turn. The subsidiary focus is the characters in the background who also are at a quarter turn. The shot is with a hazy lens to depict their secondary significance to the main character. The lighting used here is both high and low key with the emphasis in high key lighting on the center foreground character to draw the viewer’s eye to him. He also appears taller than the subsidiary characters to reinforce his status as the

Open Document