Frogs
Questions
WATCH THIS SCENE(FOOTAGE FROM FULL LENGTH FILM 4:30 – 12:38)
SIGNIFIERS | DESCRIPTION | EFFECTS |
VISUALS | Lab coats, laboratory apparatus, sparks and flashes of electricity, frogs in petri dishes Human electrocution image followed by a sideways mechanical shutter effect |
Scientific experiments in electricity; Frankenstein. Death by electrocution. Stark, cruel, brutal, functional |
SOUND | Electrical fizzes at the start disappear inside ascending and descending string arpeggios and are overlaid by new baroque-style music. Beat is relentlessly regular, rhythmic & bouncy; an octave jump on strings is played in a detached, staccato manner. Busy little melodic semi-quaver runs and scales ascend and descend on violins The music is in a minor key & the bouncy rhythm fades beneath the return of sharp, electrical sound effects: hums, buzzes and ‘zsst’ noises and thunder and more metallic harmonics on ascending violins |
Locates the period as early c18th Baroque; the era of experiments in electricity. Comedic, lively, bouncy, twitchy: optimistic, positive Multiple notes all leap about at different times – the frogs have escaped! The bouncy, lively comedic mood is disrupted with hints of pain, cruelty & confusion. |
MOVEMENT | Repeated images of flexed knees & feet, sharp twitching gestures of head, knees; arms are inertly tied to sides. ‘Frog-shaped’ balances, lifts and jumps of varying sizes eventually give way to straight legs and a more upright stance; dynamic remains jerky and sudden.Chris breaks from the group – flambuoyant, naturalistic gestures: beckoning, pointing, nodding. He manipulates Al into a standing position & removes his lab coat Al is hauled up to the roof. He kicks, struggles, then hangs still. |
Electrified dead frogs
Comedic light mood turns more sinister with the gradual transformation to more human shapes |
Summary of Meaning, Mood and Significance
Though it can seem effortless, keeping in time with your fellow dancers is a vital element of performance that takes practice and focus.
Motionhouse dancer Martina Knight discusses the trials of synchronisation in ‘Lighting Storm’.