A field guide to film form

Read film like a language.

The symbolic, technical and written codes of film — explained with precision, then shown in the scenes that prove them. Every idea links to the moment it lives in.

01 — The reference

Codes & conventions

All codes
01

Camerawork

How the camera is operated, positioned and moved for effect — shot size, angle, movement, exposure and lens choice.

17 scenes · Technical codes
02

Editing

How shots are selected, ordered and timed — from continuity cutting to montage, rhythm and the structuring of time.

9 scenes · Technical codes
03

Audio

Everything we hear — dialogue, sound effects, music and silence — and the crucial split between diegetic and non-diegetic sound.

4 scenes · Technical codes
04

Lighting

How light and shadow are shaped to model a subject, set mood and direct the eye — high key, low key and film noir.

4 scenes · Technical codes
05

Setting

Where and when a story takes place, and how location, period and place are used to carry meaning.

2 scenes · Symbolic codes
06

Mise en Scène

Everything arranged within the frame — set, props, costume and visual composition — and what that arrangement means.

6 scenes · Symbolic codes
07

Acting

Performance as a code — facial expression, body language, voice and movement used to build character and meaning.

2 scenes · Symbolic codes
08

Colour

How palette, saturation and contrast are used to set mood, link ideas and direct the audience's eye.

6 scenes · Symbolic codes
09

Form Conventions

The expected ways a media form is constructed — continuity editing, narrative structure and the patterns that make a product easy to read.

0 scenes · Conventions
10

Story Conventions

The shared storytelling patterns audiences expect — structure, character roles, openings, point of view and the ordering of time.

8 scenes · Conventions
11

Genre Conventions

The tropes, characters, settings and themes audiences associate with a genre — and the expectations they create.

0 scenes · Conventions
12

Printed Language

The on-screen text within a media product — intertitles, subtitles, credits, titles and signs — and how it anchors meaning.

0 scenes · Written codes
13

Spoken Language

The words characters speak — dialogue, voiceover, accent and delivery — and the meaning carried by language itself.

1 scene · Written codes

02 — The evidence

From Playback

All 37 scenes

03 — The method

Analyse with COCA

Worked example

A single shot, read four ways — the through-line from one frame to the meaning of the whole film.

C 01

Contention

Your claim — what the filmmaker is doing in the scene, and to what end.

O 02

Observation

The evidence — the exact code you can see or hear at work in the frame.

C 03

Connotation

The meaning — what that choice suggests, implies or symbolises.

A 04

Audience

The effect — how the choice positions the audience to think and feel.

04 — The transmission

Don't drop the signal.

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