Saturday, 7 December 2013

The representation of women in independent rom-coms compared to Hollywood rom-coms

In independent films, such as (500) Days of Summer, women are represented as independent and not needing of a relationship, whereas in Hollywood movies, women are represented in a stereotypical way, and require a man to help them or to be happy, and in the film Bridget Jones's Diary: The Edge of Reason, these ideas are very obviously portrayed.

The first time that these ideas are shown is in the introduction to both of these films. In Bridget Jones's Diary, Bridget Jones is the narrator, as the film is based on her diary, and she says: 
"Mark Darcy and Bridget Jones; I've found my happy ending and nothing else can spoil it."
 This quote shows that Bridget Jones is happy because she is in a relationship, which is a juxtaposition of Summer in (500) Days of Summer as the first description we are given of her is:
"...Tom Hansen grew up believing that he would never be happy until he found 'the one'... The girl, Summer, did not share this belief."
From this quote, we can see that the stereotypical male/female relationship is not adhered to in this film as it is the male in the relationship who believes that you can only be happy when you find 'the one' and the woman is sceptic of this belief.

In Hollywood rom-coms, the relationship between the two main characters is a happy one, even though they have bad bits in the middle, which can be seen when Bridget says as a narrator in a voice-over near the beginning:
"Have never been happier in my entire life (billboard says: Mark and Bridget are the real thing) Bridget Darcy; Mrs Darcy; Mr and Mrs Darcy; Lord and Lady Darcy..."
However, at the beginning of (500) Days of Summer as Tom looks back on his relationship with Summer with his sister, he realises that it was never a good relationship, and he describes the break up scene at a diner with Summer describing their relationship;
"We've been like Sid and Nancy for months now."
And as he analyses his relationship with Summer more, the audience, and Tom Hansen, both realise that although Tom may have been happy, Summer wasn't.

Another contrast that Hollywood and independent rom-coms entail is the need for a relationship. In Bridget Jones's Diary, (29:20) Bridget grovels over Mark's voicemail because she thinks that he is going to break up with her after a bad date, whereas in (500) Days of Summer, Tom and one of his friends, McKenzie, are surprised when Summer says:
"I don't want (a boyfriend)... You don't believe that a woman can be free and independent?"
These two clips prove how differently women are portrayed in Hollywood and independent rom-coms; in independent rom-coms, women are seen as quite strong characters, whereas in Hollywood movies, women are seen as needing a man, or a relationship, which can also be seen when Bridget gets arrested in Thailand.

When Bridget Jones is arrested in Thailand over a drug charge, she doesn't do anything to help herself. Instead, she waits around for a man, although in this case a rather emasculated and feminine man, to help her as she talks to the inmates about stereotypical female topics, such as boyfriends, bras, and Madonna. Although no one is arrested in (500) Days of Summer, Tom Hansen starts smashing plates when Summer breaks up with him, and it is up to a strong female character to save him, such as his younger sister, who he goes to numerous times throughout the film to ask for help. 

Finally, the ending of Bridget Jones's Diary: The Edge of Reason, conforms to a classic Hollywood rom-com as she and Mark walk off into the distance as she says in a voice-over:
"So as you can see, I have found my happy ending at last, and I truly believe that love is possible, even when you're 33 and have the bottom the size of 2 bowling balls."
While (500) Days of Summer finishes with Summer marrying another man, and Tom meeting a girl who is applying for the same architectural job as him, which is a very deceiving ending because the beginning scene is him holding Summer's hand with a wedding ring on.  

In conclusion, women are represented as very stereotypical and require a man in their life to be happy in Hollywood rom-coms, whereas in independent rom-coms, women are represented as being independent and as having high goals in their professional life rather than their sex life, however there is a stereotypical male and female role in relationships in both Hollywood and independent rom-coms.

Friday, 6 December 2013

(500) Days of Summer notes

1:15 - Tom Hansen grew up believing that he would never be happy until he found the one

1:33 - The girl did not share this belief. Since the disintegration of her parents marriage she only loved two things...

1:55 - He knows straight away that she was the one

5:20 - I think we should break up... Is this normal?

5:58 - No, I'm Sid.
           So I'm Nancy

7:40 - There are only two types of people in this world; women, and men

18:40 - You got a boyfriend? No. Why not? Because I don't want one. No way. You don't believe that a woman can be free and independent? ...I don't feel comfortable being anyone's anything. I like being in my own. Relationships are messy and people get hurt. Holy Shit. She's a dude'

19:26 - You don't believe that? Do you? What does that word mean? I've been in relationships and I've never seen it... There's no such thing as love. I think it's fantasy. 

28:30 - I'm not really looking for anything serious. 

41:21 - I don't know. Who cares? I'm happy.

43:55 - I can't be love you... Was that for me? Was that for my benefit?... Yeah, well next time don't. 

44:52 - We're just friends... I like you, I just don't want a relationship  

47:14 - I can't give you that. (Talking about consistency)

47:32 - I like you - can't say I love you 

49:00 - What happened? What always happens; life

01:19.40 - You're married. Yeah. It's crazy, huh. 

01:20: 41 - It just happened... I just woke up one day and I knew... What I was never sure about with you

01:22:15 - It was meant to be... Tom was right, it just wasn't me that you were right about. 

Wednesday, 4 December 2013

Genre

Genre

Genre - he style of the film - can determine what it's about - is seen in the trailer -

Audiences
People have expectations, if they are met it's a good film(mainstream), if it doesn't meet expectations it is bad.
- Bad - Not Ron - not what it says on the tin - dissatisfaction 
• Changes over time
• Can convert to make a hybrid 
Children of Men - Thriller - dark colours
Audiences like genre because they know what they're gonna get

Producers
- recipe - ingredients - conventions 

Consider the use of casting/actors

Horror - turning it into a rom com - "happy family" - kid who's looking for a dad who gets a new one

What Genre is V for Vendetta and children of men

C - apply the concept of genre to V and CoM - find the key scenes that demonstrate the genre effectively - produce a collage of the key scenes

B - use genre as a critical perspective - compare films and think about how they use genre

A - think about what one conforms and why

1) mood board
2) props, costume, makeup, actors
3) write an essay about why they are using genre in the ways that they are 


Adaptation of a comic book - visual affect and stylistic filming - three plots
Camera swooping through tunnels - scary (not for kids) 
Straight from the comic - angles are perfect - good looking movie 
Gives fans what they want - analysing the characters 
Good cast
Tone and look of the movie 
Dialog is smart, clever and thought out - feels real (what the future is gonna loom like) 
Emotion, depth, realistic (not glamorous) - batman was physically challenged 

Comic book films should keep to the original source material and look nice - what parts of V conform to a typical comic book movie? 

A hero has to sacrifice themselves to prove that they are heroic (theme of sacrifice) - sense of rebirth 
V has superhuman abilities through the tests that were conducted on him, progression of science - survival - theme of rebellion - way of getting rid of pent up anger 

Hybrid

Cups = genre 
Fluid = conventions 

Brown (sci Fi) & clear (action)
Strong colour got weaker and weak colour got stronger 

What makes CoM a thriller?
Messages through a TV screen - when he is on the bus. 
Fire, surroundings in a state, when he is on the bus or when he is in the refugee camp.
Flashbacks to the past - when he is looking at photos of his wife and kid. 
Theme of war - dystopian themes. 
Camera is not perfectly still

Essay plan for textual analysis - 5 key scenes from each film. Come to class with a conclusion. First draft due in 2 weeks. 


Tuesday, 26 November 2013

Video essay notes

A video essay needs to have major clips relating to the point 

Narrative > CHN
> characters > 
> post modern narrative

Key points (as titles)
V & CoM
1. CHN - narrative plot outline/cause/effect/heroes journey
2. CHN - clear resolution/ending has a sense of closure. 
3. CHN - characters, psychological profile
4. Opposites - problems & challenges - good v. bad } stock characters
5. Stock characters - off the rack

Title - to what extent does children of men and v for vendetta conform to CHN

CoM is more about putting the message out there. 

Total Recall is more similar to Children of Men because he doesn't know what is real or not on TR, in the same way that the dude in CoM doesn't know what he's really fighting. 
Terminator Salvation is more like V because he is fighting for a cause in a war. 

Tuesday, 19 November 2013

V for Vendetta and Children of Men - Points of Comparison

Government Sponsored Terrorism


Government sponsored terrorism is seen in Children of men when a coffee shop is blown up, and is used to keep people in control and afraid of rebelling.

Government sponsored terrorism is used in V for Vendetta when the government launches the St Mary's virus at a school, a water treatment facility, and a park, which kills 80,000 people. This was used to get people to vote for Adam Sutler as he had the cure.



Tuesday, 12 November 2013

12/11/13

Style creates message - "Children of Men" is shit in a realistic way as a warning that it could actually happen

Macro - style
Micro - crime thriller - blue (cold colour)
Sad at the beginning - sound to set the scene
Set in a graveyard - gothic horror
Following a structure poorly

Ambiguous - double meaning 

They seem to be at the top of the chain - but later on they're not.

Friday, 8 November 2013

8/11/13

Third film
Narrative - how the story is told through the characters and music
Restrictive narrative
It tells the story through his journey
Influenced by "the hangover"
Narrative over cinematography

Genre: rom-com
Representation: friendship
Theme: party animal
Narrative: 
Style: seagull, through glasses, from his POV

Filmed through his perspective - exposure of the camera - could emphasise the hangover - white could represent dream state - emphasise another world or state (hyper reality) - lucid dreaming - broader palette of creativity - animalistic style 


First film
Style over substance - used every micro aspect to emphasise the visual style - focus on style and camera angle rather than the style - bright lighting (change exposure of the camera) 
Focuses on foreground - leaves, man is in the background - nature is more important than people 
Macro - narrative (used the characters as a device) Classic 

Hollywood narrative - there isn't just one narrative - exploring other types of narrative - all we know is mainstream
Style - no dialog (the way it is shot) - what does the leaf mean? - style over substance - films can be appreciate through aesthetics - relationship between the sound and the visual - all a low angle - they are both running - keeps on tracking (movement) film is called motion - THEME - how limiting is the classical Hollywood narrative to a film?