Thursday 3 December 2009

Improvements

The improvements which i need to make in my note taking skills are to focus more on the Mise en scene. To practise this i need will watch a veriety of clips and make note on the mise en scene.

Wednesday 2 December 2009

The WHO - Baba O' Riley

This song stands as the greatest song of all time in my opinion mainly because of the contrast of the instuments: firstly beginning with a piano intro, then the drums are introduced. I beleieve that it is an incredible unual introduction to a song. However the main reason why I love the song so much is the combined vocals of Roger Daltrey and Pete Townshend.




Out here in the fields



I fight for my meals


I get my back into my living


I don't need to fight


To prove I'm right


I don't need to be forgiven






Don't cry


Don't raise your eye


It's only teenage wasteland






Sally, take my hand


We'll travel south cross land


Put out the fire and don't look past my shoulder


The exodus is here


The happy ones are near


Let's get together before we get much older






Teenage wasteland


It's only teenage wasteland


Teenage wasteland, oh yeah


Teenage wasteland


They're all wasted



Tuesday 1 December 2009

The 39 Steps

The analysis of the first few scenes in the 2008 film The 39 Steps...

Narrative: Going to Scottland.
Genre: Action.
The action style fits with the period.

Richard Hannay - Male lead.
Characteristics...

Well dressed (suit)
Persistant
Strong
Clumsy (Non - stereotypical)
Flirtatious
A gentleman
Mysterious
Determined
Clean cut
Well spoken (A received pronunciation)
Alpha male
Unfazed
Sexist
Quick thinking


Setting: Hills/ iccolated.

The setting is a contrast from his 'city boy' life. Therefore making the character look out of place. (Vulnerability)

Camera angles...
Represent his fierce action background.

Facial expressions...
Often show concern.

















Victoria Sinclair - Female lead.
Characteristics...

Upper class (wearing a petti coat)
Suffragette
Sarcastic
Strong minded
Stubborn
Uses her femininity

All of the above are non stereotypical characteristics for a feamle lead; apart from using her femininity which is a very stereotypical action of a female lead.

Victoria Sinclair also has masculine charcteristics: Climbs walls.

The lead woman holds strong views: which is a non stereotypical characteristic. The character is often the only woman in each scene.

Camera angles...
The camera often lingers on her female curves: especially when she lifts her petti coat (camera focuses on her bare legs).

Facial expressions...
Often show annoyance.

Music...
Throughout the scenes where Victoria is present the music represents suspence/non diegtic. 


Monday 30 November 2009

Gender Stereotypes

Gender stereotypes :

Female steroetypes:                                                 Male stereotypes:
Bitchy                                                                            Solitary
Giggly                                                                            Blande
Emotional                                                                     Stoic (unemotional)
Moody                                                                           Arrogant
Social                                                                            Unsocial
Insecure                                                                        Vain
Uncoordinated                                                             Coordinated                         
Perfectionist /Hygenic                                                 Un - clean
'Girly' / 'afraid'                                                               Tough
Controlling                                                                    Laid back




A Stereotypical Woman.                   














A non-stereotypical woman.










A Stereotypical Male.









A non-stereotypical Male.





In previous years the stereotypes of the hollywood male lead where often....

Extreame muscles
A protector
A provider
Good looking
Charming
Large house
Fairly wealthy















However in todays society the hollywood male lead has an increase in stereotypical characteristics...
 
A provider
A protector
Strong
A good physique
Good looking
Charming
Tall/ Dark and hansom
Intelliegent
Funny
Rich
Nice cut suit
Large House






It seems as though as the demands of 'perfectition' in the media will continue to increase. Therefore making the nation vain, and thrieving for 'perfection'.

Wednesday 11 November 2009

Representation

"The process by which the media present the real world" - Rayner.

Selection process...
* The decision over what is chosen to be represented and what is rejected.
* The choices made when organising the representation.
* The options taken to focus the audience in a certain way.

Questions asked...
*WHO or what is being represented?
*HOW is the representation created?
*WHO has created thr representation?
*WHY is the representation created in that way? What is the intention?
*WHAT is the effect of the representation?

GateKeeping
* A theorist called WHITE (1961) spoke of the 'gatekeeper'' - the people who are part of the decision making process in the contruction of media texts. These include:

-The director
-The editor
-The producer
Etc.

These gatekeepers often white, upper/middle class men.







Wes Anderson.
(Director/producer)











Lorne Michaels
(Editor)














Steven Spielberg
(Director)










The seven areas of representation...

-Gender
-Age
-Ethnicity
-Sexuality
-Class status
-Physical ability/disability
-Regional identity


Wednesday 14 October 2009

Marjorie Ferguson (1980s)

Ferguson identified 4 types of facial expressions on the front cover of British women magazines.

Chocolate Box
- Half/ full smile
- Lips together/ Slightly parted
-Teeth barley visible
- Full/ three - quarter of face to the camera

Invitational
- Emphasis on the eyes
- Mouth shut with a hint of a smile
- Head to one side or looking back at the camera

Super - Smiler
- Full face
- Wide open, toothy smile
- Head thrusts forward or chin thrown back
- Hair often wind blown

Romantic or Sexual
- Includes male/ female 'two - somes'
- Dreamy
- Heavy lidded
-Overtly senual/ sexual

Effects
Chocolate box- Blandly pleasing, uniformity of beauty and devoid of uniqueness.
Invitational - Suggestive of mischief or mystery, hint of contact rather than sexual promise.
Super - smiler - Aggressive, look at me attitude.
Romantic/ Sexual - Possibly or definitely available.

The Male Gaze

Laura Mulvey...
"Visual pleasure and narrative cinema"

For femminist it can be thought of in three ways...
  • How men look at women
  • How women look at themselves
  • How women look at other women
Laura Mulvey coined the term 'male gaze' in 1975. She believed that film audiences have to view characters from the perspective of a heterosexual male.

Features... 
- The camera lingers on the curves of the females body, and events which occur to women are presented largely in the context of a man's reaction of these events.

- Relegates women to the status of objects. The female viewer must experience the narrative secondly , by identification with the male.

Criticisms...
- Some women enjoy being looked at e.g. beauty pageants.

- The gaze can also be directed towards members of the same genders for several reasons, not all of which are sexual: such as in comparison of body image or in clothing.


An example to support Laura Mulveys theroy is Cameron Diaz's entrance in the film 'The Mask'.

Tuesday 13 October 2009

Vladimir Propp

Vladimir Propp, a Russian Theorist...
-Propp analysed over 100 russian fairytales in the 1920's.
-He proposed that it was possible to classify the characters and their actions into clearly defined roles and functions.

Propps character roles...
  • The hero (Seeks something)
  • The villan (opposes the hero)
  • The donor (helps the hero e.g. by providing a magic object) 
  • The dispatcher (sends the hero on his way)
  • The false hero (falsey assuming the role of hero)
  • The helper (gives support to the hero)
  • The princess (the reward to the hero - needs protection)
  • The princess' father.

Monday 12 October 2009

Editing

Continuity (Hollywood editing) - The shot goes from point A - B. For example an actor will swing from a washing line (cut) then the next shot will be him coming through a window.

Montage - Sergi Eisenstien (from Russia) invented this. It flicks from one image to image - seemingly having no connection. The audience are very aware of the cuts and are meant to fill in the blanks...
A montage is when a director condenses lots of important infomation into a brief sequence.  E.g. Someone trying on various outfits before a night out.

Transitions - A term fot how an editior moves from one shot to another: an inappropriate transiton can destroy the mood of a film.

Cross cutting/ Parallel editing - Editing that alternates shots of two or more lines of action occuring in different places, often simultaniously - the butterfly effect.














Dissolve - A transition between two shots during which the first image gradually disapears whilst the second image appears.

Wipe - A transition between shots in which a line passes across the screen eliminating the first shot.

Camera Angles and Shots

Long Shot - Allows the viewer to know what is taking place.



Medium Shot - It is used to show character interaction - it is the most common cinema shot.



Close up - To show/ emphasise something/someone.













Shot reverse shot - Used for dialogue. It focuses on character talking- It makes you feel part of the conversation.

High angle Shot - It connotes power over the object you are viewing. Women have traditionally been shot in this way to make them look weak, and men powerful. 

Low angle shot - This is designed to make a character or object appear stronger.

Tracking Shot  - Camera is perpendicular to the action and follows the subject or action.

Pan Shot - The Camera rotates; no more than 180 degrees.

Tilt Shot - Starting at the feet and work up.

Matron Action -  E.g. One shot on the individual opening a door, then the next shot when the individual is through the door.

Point of view shot - As if looking through the characters eys. Camera switiching from one individual often during dialogue.

Mise en Scene

Mise en scene is a french term for the analysis of what you see on screen. It does NOT include sound...

  • Setting.
  • Acting including Facial expressions.
  • Costumes.
  • Props.
  • Lighting.
  • Camera angles.
The class and I applied our knowledge on Mise en scene in a group activity where we had to analyse a still shot from a programme and apply the aspects of the Mise en scene.

Narrative Structure.

Three Part Narrative...

Beginning - Equalibrium...
A state of 'Normality' in the narrative.

Middle - Disequalibrium...
Something disrupts this normality and the protagonist/hero must go on a journey to restore the normality.

End - New Equalibrium...
A new normality is created.

Narative Theory

Narative Theory - Roland Barthes.

Open narrative - is continuous e.g. A series programme.
Closed narrative - Has a start, middle and an end e.g. A film. 

The differences between SERIAL and SERIES...

Serial - Is a limited number of episodes e.g. Skins.













Series - On going programme e.g. Eastenders.











Bathes introduced 5 codes...

Action code - Applies to any action that implies a further narrative action, e.g. a gunshooter draws his gun on an adversary and we wonder what the resolution of this action will be.

Enigma code - Refers to any element in a story that is not explained; therefore exists as an enigma for the audience, raising questions that demand explanation. E.g. In a murder mystery - whose killed who?

The semantic code - Any element in a text that suggests a particular, often additional meaning by connotation and denotation.

The cultural code - Any element in a narrative that refers to a 'science' or to a 'body of knowledge'. In other words the cultural codes tend to point to our shared knowledge about the way the world works; this includes other cultures needs, e.g. Not all cultures know who santa is.

The symbolic code - Difficult to explain, to understand I firstly looked at binary opposites.

Levi Straus.
Straus believed that the world was split into a series of 'binary opposites'. Essentially one thing can only be described in relation to something that is completely opposite. E.g. For someone to be attractive, there has to be someone who is ugly.








                   -------> 





Mediation - the way an individual interprets a texts.

Ideology - An organised collection of idea. An Ideology can be thought of as a comprehensive vision, as a way of looking at things - a belief which helps explain the world around us.

Wednesday 7 October 2009

Preliminary Exercise - Magazine

As an introduction to this course, we began with two preliminary exercises. Firstly the film (which i will comment on, in a later post) and secondly the magazine cover.

During the introduction to producing the magazine the class were told to get into 'pairs.' Afetr deciding who to work with (Olivia), we made  a rough paper design of the front cover of the magazine. I brought in a camera from home and Olivia and I took a veriety of photographs of different individuals around school for the front cover, to distingush who was the most photogenic.

After deciciding which photo to use, i learnt how to use photoshop pro 5.0, which initially seemed difficult; turned out to be fairly simple.

A difficulty which we had to over come was that after half completing the magazine front cover Olivia was away for several lessons, and i had to finish the front cover singley - with the help of olivia via e-mail (e-mailing images of the front cover) and phone calls so Olivia could give her imput.