Wednesday, March 20, 2013

Korean Netiquette


After watching the Korean Netiquette I had seen that this is a lot different than the “The Archie” and the “The Anxiety”. Unlike the two documentaries that we watched in class, this one starts out in a classroom with the teacher talking in Korean with subtitles at the bottom. The Archie started out showing records and The Anxiety went straight to the point. The lighting is more realistic in the Korean Netiquette and not dull or a dark tint like“The Archie”. There are a lot of voice overs in this one. When the teacher is being interviewed and she is talking in Korean, the reporter voice overs in English. He should have just used subtitles instead. Unlike the other two documentaries this one doesn’t have any background noise which makes it feel like this is real life. This documentary in my opinion feels like something that will be on the news. It doesnt feel like a set up. It feels like the camera is not even there. The two we seen in class is set up in a scenario type of way. Unlike the other two documentaries the reporter is seen in this one. This is different and don’t know if that was really necessary. In the Archie and the Anxiety you know that they are there but you just don’t see them. This is a reason why the Korean netiquette feels like a news report. The background noises in the Archie and the Anxiety makes it feel like a scenario. The Korean netiquette ends with the Korean kids singing a song. This makes it seem like it was set up and not as realistic. The Anxiety ends with a cliff hanger and the Archie ends with you feeling bad for the guy. The Korean Netiquette is different by the way that there are no one on one close up interviews. There are just shots of the kids in the classroom and shots of the hallways of the school. This documentary overall has a more realistic feel to it.

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