How to Analyze · Part 5 of 8

How to Analyze a Film

Every film makes arguments; about power, identity, virtue, and how the world works; through images, sound, narrative, and the choices of what to show and what to conceal.

Series How to Analyze Read 8 min

Films are the most rhetorically powerful mass medium in history; and one of the least consciously analyzed. They work primarily below the threshold of critical attention, persuading through emotional identification, narrative structure, and visual composition while their audiences experience them as entertainment rather than argument. Rhetorical film analysis makes these invisible arguments visible: it examines how films construct their cases, what ideological positions they embed, and how their formal choices; cinematography, editing, music, narrative structure; serve their persuasive purposes.

Rhetorical Film Analysis

The systematic examination of a film as a rhetorical act; analyzing how its formal elements (cinematography, editing, sound, narrative) construct arguments about values, identity, and the world, and how those arguments are designed to produce specific effects in their audiences.

Step One: Identify the Film's Central Argument

Every film has a central argument; a claim about how the world is, how it should be, or what it means to live well. This argument is rarely stated explicitly; it emerges from the combination of narrative outcome, character arcs, and thematic repetition. To identify it, ask:

Step Two: Analyze the Rhetorical Situation

Films are produced in specific historical moments for specific audiences, and their arguments are calibrated to those contexts:

Step Three: Analyze Cinematic Ethos, Pathos, and Logos

Cinematic Ethos: The Film as Authority

Films construct credibility through different means than verbal rhetoric. Realism; the appearance of documentary authenticity; is a powerful ethos-building technique: handheld cameras, natural lighting, non-professional actors, and location shooting all signal that the film is showing you reality rather than constructing it. The opposite technique; conspicuous stylization; can also build ethos in a different register, positioning the film as a self-aware artistic work rather than a transparent window on the world.

Generic conventions also carry ethos: audiences bring different credence to documentaries, fiction films, and animated films. The choice of genre is a rhetorical choice about authority and identification.

Cinematic Pathos: Emotional Architecture

Film's primary mode of persuasion is emotional; it constructs emotionally compelling experiences that produce empathy, identification, fear, awe, or desire. The emotional architecture of a film is built through:

Cinematic Logos: Argument Through Narrative

Narrative is argument: the way a story is structured makes causal claims (this action produced this consequence), evaluative claims (this outcome was deserved or unjust), and predictive claims (people of this type in situations of this kind will act in this way). Analyze narrative structure as logical structure:

Step Four: Analyze Visual Rhetoric

Every visual choice in a film is a rhetorical choice. The key dimensions:

Camera Angle and Distance

Low-angle shots (camera below subject) make subjects appear powerful, threatening, or heroic. High-angle shots (camera above subject) make subjects appear vulnerable, small, or pitiable. Eye-level shots produce equality. Camera distance communicates intimacy (close-up), neutrality (medium shot), or objectification (extreme long shot). These choices make arguments about power before any dialogue is spoken.

Framing and Composition

Who or what appears at the center of the frame, and who at the margins? Who is in focus and who is blurred? Who appears in the frame at all, and who is excluded? Visual composition encodes hierarchies of importance and power that often reflect and reinforce the film's ideological arguments.

Lighting

High-key lighting (bright, even illumination) creates openness, safety, and optimism. Low-key lighting (dark, high contrast) creates danger, moral ambiguity, and dread. The association of light with virtue and darkness with vice is one of cinema's oldest and most ideologically loaded conventions; and one worth interrogating carefully.

Step Five: Identify Ideological Arguments

Films reproduce and reinforce ideological assumptions about race, gender, class, sexuality, and national identity in ways that often feel natural because they are so pervasive. A complete rhetorical analysis asks:

The Analyst's Key Move

Separate the film's formal and emotional experience from its ideological content. You can be genuinely moved by a film that makes arguments you ultimately reject; you can be bored by a film that makes arguments you strongly endorse. Rhetorical analysis holds both responses simultaneously; asking both "how does this work?" and "what does this argue?"

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