Semiotic analysis is the interpretation of signs and symbols, typically involving metaphors and analogies to both inanimate objects and characters within a film. Because symbols have several meanings, writers often need to determine what a particular symbol means in the film and in a broader cultural or historical context.
Here are a few questions to consider for this type of analysis:
Narrative analysis is an examination of the story elements, including narrative structure, character, and plot. This type of analysis considers the entirety of the film and the story it seeks to tell.
To create this type of analysis, you could consider questions like:
One of the most common types of analysis is the examination of a film’s relationship to its broader cultural, historical, or theoretical contexts. Whether films intentionally comment on their context or not, they are always a product of the culture or period in which they were created. By placing the film in a particular context, this type of analysis asks how the film models, challenges, or subverts different types of relations, whether historical, social, or even theoretical.
A few of the many questions you could ask in this vein include:
A mise-en-scène analysis attends to how the filmmakers have arranged compositional elements in a film and specifically within a scene or even a single shot. This type of analysis organizes the individual elements of a scene to explore how they come together to produce meaning. You may focus on anything that adds meaning to the formal effect produced by a given scene, including: blocking, lighting, design, color, costume, as well as how these attributes work in conjunction with decisions related to sound, cinematography, and editing.
To conduct this type of analysis, you could ask:
The following information was taken from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill's Writing Center page on film analysis, citation below.
The Writing Center, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. "Film Analysis." The Writing Center, UNC at Chapel Hill, https://writingcenter.unc.edu/tips-and-tools/film-analysis/.