Devising our film title:
Today we
worked on the exact wording for our film title.
We wanted the title to:
- establish the film’s genre (modern thriller, dramatic and realistic, with psychological and criminal dimensions)
- convey the key ideas (woman with a flawed personality and a dark secret)
- intrigue the audience (by suggesting an unresolved problem)
- tap into intertextuality through shared knowledge of cultural codes (through using terms or images that the audience is already familiar with
Our short list:
Bouquet of
Blood; Bouquet of Barbed Wire; The Language of Flowers; Bouquet of Brutality;
The Black Rose.
After a long discussion with my group we decided that The Black Rose was the best name for our thriller film seeing as it
has so many connotations that work with our plot, in particular the central character
of the florist with a dark secret:
- red roses are a traditional symbol of love and the woman in our film feels love and attraction for her victims
- she works in a florist and understands the language of flowers
- a black rose is the opposite of what you expect because it is a contradiction in terms, an impossible combination (flowers are never genuinely black)
- Black has connotations of death and hatred, from this it shows a clear view on how the thriller is going to be set out just through the message of one flower.
Design Process:
We knew that we wanted to create our film title in
Adobe After Effects so we set about researching visual imagery to convey the
woman’s disturbed state of mind and forbidden, suppressed longings. We as a group then explored how visual imagery worked in the following:
-
- - Black roses in photos and line drawings
- American beauty- film poster
- Fuselli Gothic nightmares
v - William Blake Oh
Rose, Thou Art Sick
- - This led us to a discussion of the
symbolism of snakes, serpents and evil within, with the snake being a
universally recognised symbol for Satan.