Theatrical Techniques
Introduction
Whether it is obvious or not, numerous, sometimes well-disguised theatrical techniques have become common place in the Marquess-produced The Bill.
Costuming, lighting and camera angles are all placed to give the characters you love their "evil side". Occasionally, these have (unfairly) changed the mood of entire events. THEM. will uncover the ones it knows about.
Chandler and Spears' appearance as made-up in Handford episode
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Hardford episodes did not always obstain from the use of some of these techniques, probably being the director who called the shots on that one. Also, Marquess episodes have a hugely increased level of contrast, contributing to the vibrancy of skin tone (but not that much). However, they were never used to the extreme and some unbiased examples have been chosen (both in sunlight). Personally, I would say they are extremly similar in skintone, Chandler a shade "pinker". |
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Contrast increase VS Pancake |
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It would be a fair argument that maybe it's just Steven Hartley's skintone against certain lighting conditions that caused the "orange tinge".
However, this seems not the case as in the zoomed-in pictures below. |
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A closer look at the hairline, where the pancake certainly can't be filmed over, shows of a remarkable change in skin-tone back to the more ordinary, natural "pinker" tone. |
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Scene examples and techniques used |
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"Heated discussion about race relations" Techniques: orange pancake The Bill's site's comment about Chandler's discussion with Meadows as, "Meadows and Chandler have a heated discussion over how to handle a race march through a heavily populated Asian area", which clearly sounds as if they're equals. But as the pancake (and the famous phrase borrowed from George Orwell's Animal Farm) dicatated, some are more equal than others. Chandler was deliberatly made to look the "bad guy" in this situation, prejudicing his arguments. |
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Renezvous with Spears at Conway's Peril Techniques: blue light with dim frontal lighting, orange pancake Chandler and Spears' meeting on the night of Conway's death was made to look seedy deliberately. The blue light behind them harbours feelings of unease and detriment, this effect pushed further with the lack of frontal lighting, placing emphasis on the moblie phone (and gin and tonic). Chandler also seems unusually tinged, and as it seems, the orange pancake has struck again. |
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Rape is about power... |
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And wait for it...
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The Creme-de-la-creme: the "suicide" scene |
Conclusion
Theatrical techniques can be used very effectively to harness viewer emotions. In Baz Luhrmann's Moulin Rouge the use of colour and lighting, costuming and camera angles, the viewer was drawn further into the Melodramatic story.
However, the Marquess Bill's feeble attempts seem more like a disguise for mediocre and poorly-written scripts.
In conclusion, always take everything you see for what it is, don't let the bright lights and orange pancake blind you!







