A Look Into the Process of Acting In a Movie

     In the movie that my group made for the fascination project, I was one of the actors in the mini film. It was an interesting and fun experience, and it actually took more thought and planning than I was expecting it to. Furthermore, after reading the chapter on acting in Moving Pictures, it's fascinating to see how many solidified acting strategies that me and my group actually used. 

    First of all, one thing that my group definitely had was limited time for rehearsals. We really had to just plan our scenes on the fly and do the best we could in the moment to act out the scene a way that best fit the ideas in our heads. In reading the textbook, it's really fascinating to see that's common practice in cinema as a whole, and that figuring out how to act out a scene very quickly is something that's necessary to succeed as an actor. It's also fascinating how my group used the method of blocking without even knowing it was a thing. We just naturally planned and acted out the motions of our scenes beforehand, and apparently that is a standard practice within the world of cinema as well.

    It's also fascinating how my group's approach towards acting was actually more theatrical than naturalistic, which is opposite of what is common today. Naturalistic acting is an attempt to display emotions really honestly, while theatrical acting goes more for entertainment and less realism, and this style was really popular in the beginning of cinema history. My group went for this approach because we actually felt it fit the style of the movie genre we were using, which was horror comedy. But nevertheless, a video likely displays the differences better, so here is a video of theatrical acting:

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