Conventions of a Thriller
The Aim of a Thriller: to create suspense and excitement for the audience.
The thriller often uses busy streets and the environment is usually urban or suburban.
The narrative revolves around the investigation of an enigma or the hero is the only person able to solve the enigma and reveal the truth.
Violence is central to most thriller films as well as it often reveals the workings of particular institutions such as the police, the army or the government.
There will be rational rather than supernatural explanations of the puzzle.
The hero and the villain, although on opposing sides, share some characteristics. The hero is often an outsider, isolated, secretive but moral. The enigma of the thriller will be solves by the hero/s
The thriller centres on injustice in society but solves these wrongs.
Sound
is used to create tension with eerie or intense music being played either as
diegetic or non-diegetic material within a scene. High pitched sound is often
used as it makes the audience uncomfortable and shows how the scene might not
be pleasant or something unexpected might happen. Many other sounds are used in
thrillers and even within dialogue. This makes it unique to other genres as
inner monologues or perhaps narrators can be found in many thriller films,
which creates a more direct tension to the audience.
Cinematography
depicts the different camera shots and angles and when the thriller genre is
concerned, these shots and angles are used in greater doses and with faster
transitions from on to the next. In conventional thriller films, such as Alfred
Hitchcock’s ‘Psycho’, camera angles are used more excessively such as within
the scene where Marion Crane is murdered in the shower. The camera is used to
show the front view of Marion as if we ourselves are taking the perspective of
the murderer adding tension and disgust to the scene.