Is what is visually believable necessarily true? The case of JACHALAY an “informative” film
Autor
Mouri, EleniFecha
2020Resumen
“Who are JACHALAY? Who could refer to and discuss about the
Jachalay with certainty? Probably no one. They have been there, just over the
centuries. We could only estimate and guess, since there is no communication
at all”.
“Jachalay” film (2012), is the thesis film of students Manos Gerogiannis and
Giannis Zoumakis for the Graphic Design department of TEI of Athens.
The film’s main idea is: Can somebody narrate the most blatant lies in a be-
lievable way?
Francis Vanoye’s believed that in the development of narrative in literature
and cinema, the signifier is developed in the form of expressive material and
expressive form, while the signified in the conceptual material and conceptual
the form.
So the following question appears: Which expressive form will be used in
the signifier, to make the signified as much as possible believable?
At the same time the informative animation is the main instrument to visualize
complex information, fast and clear, because the dramatic elements used in in-
form animation, aim to explain and inform. Inform animation uses info
graphics in motion that means moving optical information representations of
elements and knowledge; aiming at the fast, clear and direct communication.
This communication uses visualized symbols and the viewer decodes them au-
tomatic.
In this context, we analyze the particular film by using it as a case study of how
one could narrate the most absurd lies in the most believable way using in-
fographics and animation language
Mainly, through this case study, we deal with the following questions:
• When we use fake information or plausibility half-truths, it is possible this
audiovisual material to contain propaganda?
• How easy is through the artificial image, which is so easily created today, to
become the recipients of misinformation?