Sunday 30 June 2013

MALE GAZE - LAURA MULVEY


Laura Mulvey and the Male Gaze 





Laura Mulvey and her theory of the Male gaze influenced by the works of Freud, is key to the Feminist Film theory movement and has been of great influence since the mid 1970's. Mulvey argues that in classic hollywood films in particular women are merely represented to provide visual pleasure to men, and the audience is constructed in a manner where they are all expected to be men. This male gaze is both voyeuristic and fetishistic. 




Her concept of "to-be-looked-at-ness", exemplifies that women were merley shown on screen in classic hollywood in order to provide men with visual pleasure and have an erotic impact. Mulvey argued that the typical key protaganist within a classic hollywood film was male and the audience members where similarly typically expected to be men. The typical male audience member is alligned with the films protagonist, by identification, admiration or aspiration. Therefore the audience member gains narcissistic pleasure from identifying with the films protagonist, placing themselves "in the shoes" of the films hero. 

Further the infulence of Freud an influnetial pyschoanalytic theorist to Laura Mulvey's theory is the idea of castration anxiety which is what a person unconciously think. For example if a woman was not objectified in the way she was in classic hollywood or placed in a position of lower authority a male would not feel as powerful. This unconcious idea is that a males power and dominance over a female is his sex drive and his dominance is threatened by a woman if she does not arouse this.

SCREAM notes


Tuesday 25 June 2013

THEORIES TO LEARN!



Clover’s Theory: The Final Girl

 

The Final Girl Theory is a concept within thriller and horror films, that specifically refers to the last woman or girl alive to confront the killer, who then is left to tell the story. A common plot line in many horror films, particularly prior to the 1990s, is where a series of victims get killed off one by one leaving which builds up the climax in which the last person standing from the group, a female, either defeats the killed or gets away.
According to Clover the final girl in many typical horror fillm plots share a common characteristic, she is typically sexually unavailable or virginal and they sometimes have a unisex name, such as, Teddy, Billie, Georgie, Sidney. Also, occasionally the final girl has a shared history with the killer, for example, in Halloween II, Michael Myers is revealed to be the brother of Laurie Strode, in Scream 1, Sidney Prescott’s boyfriend, Billy Loomis, is the killed and in Scream 3, the killed is revealed to be Roman Bridger, half brother of Sidney. The final girl is the ‘investigating consciousness’ of the film, moving the narrative forward and as such, she exhibits intelligence curiosity and vigilance.


The final girl theory has been used in dozens of  horror films, including:
Friday the 13th (2009)
The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (1974)
A white film poster of a man holding a large chainsaw, with a screaming woman fastened to a wall behind him. The writing on the poster says, "Who will survive and what will be left of them?"; "America's most bizarre and brutal crimes!"; "The Texas Chainsaw Massacre"; "What happened is true. Now the motion picture that's just as real. "
Final Destination (2000)
I Know What You Did Last Summer (1997)
Hellraiser (1987)
The Strangers (2008)
Terror Train (1980)
Event Horizon (1997)
Picture of spacecraft with the text "Infinite size, Infinite Terror"
 The Cabin in the Woods (2012)
Resident Evil (2002)
A black and red picture shows Alice standing back to back with Rain. Alice is holding a machine gun and wearing a red dress, cutaway showing a skirt. The tagline below reads "Survive the horror".
These final girls’ confront the object of horror within their film. They all follow the stereotype of the final girl as they start off ordinary and innocent or as for Wendy from ‘The Shining’ maternal and then lead to protecting themselves with a weapon, giving a sense of sudden masculinity.
Alien (1979), Ellen Ridley
The Shining (1980), Wendy Terrance
Scream (1996), Sidney Prescott


Thursday 13 June 2013

Notes on BLAIR WITCH PROJECT

ON THE MARKETING

http://www.sagindie.org/indieblog/witch-hunt-a-look-back-at-the-beginnings-of-viral-marketing-and-its-impact-on-today

ON THE STYLE OF HORROR

http://madisonmovie.wordpress.com/2013/03/02/the-frankenstein-theory-the-found-footage-horror-genre-is-still-alive-alive/

Tuesday 4 June 2013

DUE 13th JUNE (THURSDAY)

Due June 13th - all templates below...

STORYBOARDS
LOCATION PICTURES WITH ANNOTATIONS/IMAGES
CAST/CREW LISTS
PROPS/COSTUMES LIST
PRODUCTION SCHEDULE

Lists of any sound effects, music, stock footage (if you're using it!)

HALLOWEEN NOTES - Download

Click SLIDESHARE icon and then on SLIDESHARE select 'save'.

ACTORS/ACTRESSES, CREW & PROPS COSTUMES (It's expected you include pictures for merit/excellence level!!)

ACTRESS/ACTOR NAME
ROLE IN THE FILM
DATES/TIMES REQUIRED

                                                 


























CREW NAME
PRODUCTION ROLE
DATES/TIMES REQUIRED























PROP/COSTUMES NEEDED
DATES REQUIRED
NEEDED FOR WHICH SCENE IN THE FILM?




































STORYBOARDS TEMPLATE & EXAMPLE - I expect 1-2 detailed storyboards!





PRODUCTION SCHEDULE TEMPLATE


FILMING DATES/
TIMES
CAST/CREW REQUIRED
DESCRIPTION OF THE SCENE






























LOCATION PHOTOS TEMPLATE

LOCATION PHOTOS LOCATION PICTURE 1:
 (paste below)
 Description of why I have chosen it for my film/who
I must get permission from:



LOCATION PICTURE 2: (paste below)

 Description of why I have chosen it for my film/who
I must get permission from:







LOCATION PICTURE 3: (paste below)

 Description of why I have chosen it for my film/who
I must get permission from:






LOCATION PICTURE 4: (paste below)

 Description of why I have chosen it for my film/who
I must get permission from: