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The Godfather · 1972

Restaurant Kill

The screeching elevated train swells on the soundtrack as Michael steels himself — expressive, non-literal sound design carrying his interior state.

Watch for

  • The rising screech of the elevated train on the soundtrack as Michael sits, steeling himself.
  • How the sound grows louder and more abrasive than realism allows — expressive, not literal.
  • The way the noise externalises Michael's pounding nerves before he crosses a line he can't uncross.

A worked reading · COCA

CContention
Coppola uses expressive, non-literal sound to put us inside Michael's nerves at the instant he becomes a killer.
OObservation
As Michael waits, the screech of a passing elevated train swells unnaturally high on the soundtrack, almost drowning the dialogue.
CConnotation
Pushing a real-world sound far past realistic volume turns it into a direct expression of Michael's interior panic and the enormity of what he is about to do.
AAudience
We feel his dread mounting from the inside, so the murder reads as a psychological threshold rather than just an action.

Your turn

  1. Is the train sound realistic, or louder than it 'should' be? Why might the filmmaker exaggerate it?
  2. What is the difference between literal sound effects and expressive sound? Which is this?
  3. How does the soundtrack tell us about Michael's state of mind without any dialogue?
For teachers

An excellent example of expressive (non-literal) sound design. A tense scene that ends in violence — preview for younger groups. Pairs with the Audio page.

Up next ▸ Bomb Sequence — The Hurt Locker (2008)

See also

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