Wednesday, 25 February 2015

The Lion King

The narrative to The Lion King is liner story that follows the life of young lion cub called Simba growing up to become the king of Pride rock and facing up to his responsibilities and over coming the troubles in the past of his fathers Mufasas death and the lies that come from his uncle Scar.
The narrative of The Lion King follows Todovos theory the equilibrium, Simba is born and everything is going well the disequilibrium happens when Scar kills Mufasa and forces Simba to run away, a false equilibrium is established when Simba meets Timon and Pumba, Simba recognises the disorder when Nala finds him and explains what his uncle is doing and Rafiki teaches him a lesson, Simba repairs the damage when he defeats Scar in a fight and then the new equilibrium is formed when Simba becomes the new king of pride rock. 
Propps character theory that every film having eight character types is evident throughout The Lion King; the villain is Scar, the hero is Simba, the dispatcher is Rafiki this can be seen in the scene where Rafiki convinces Simba to return to Pride Rock, the false hero is also Scar as he acts like he truly cared about the deaths of both Mufasa  and Simba. He also lies to the pride to appear kind and be crowned king, the donor is Rafiki as he shows Simba a way to talk to his father through magic and teachers him that his dad is a part of him so he is brave and strong enough to fight Scar. The helpers are Timon and Pumba they save Simba from death and bring him up and continue to help him in the fight against Scar. The last two character types are the princess and the father who are represented by Nala and Mufasa respectively.
Barthes action code, that resolution can be found through conflict, can be seen in The Lion King in the final fight scene between good and evil and Simba and Scar, the resolution being the end of Scars reign and the rightful crowning of Simba. The enigma code, another one of Barthes theories, is also evident throughout the film shown by Simbas ignorance to the true nature of Scars character as well as Simba being oblivious to what is going on in the pride land during is self inflicted banishment under Scars rule.

The genre of The Lion King is an animated musical family adventure this is clear from the conventions and codes used throughout the film, some of the codes that are used are slapstick comedy (childish), talking animals, mostly upbeat catchy music, for the adventure side there are jungles, fighting and a quest to save pride rock, musical codes are spontaneous singing and dancing as well as good triumphing over evil. 
The film strongly sticks to the convention of changing weather and environment to reinforce the mood within the scenes as demonstrated in the opening scene  of the film Simba is being presented to the kingdom the sun is rising to show the coming of a new day and new king. Another example of this convention can be seen during Scars musical number, the sky darkens, the smoke from the geyser goes green to add to his menacing and dark demeanour. A third example of pathetic fallacy is during in the final confrontation between Simba and Scar as the sky starts to get dark and appears angry and aggressive this is followed by thunder and lighting which starts the fire reinforcing the danger and creating more tension within the fight, as well as reiterating the anger and aggression shown by the main characters.
It is a common convention in children animations the animals are often anthropomorphised, the facial features on the main characters are smilier to the faces of the actors that voice them such as Shenzi the hyena voiced by Whoopi Goldberg. The lions can also smile and show various other human expressions and actions they are naturally incapable of such as playful acts of ‘’noogying’’ when Mufasa and Simba are play fighting.
As in all musicals the songs advance the plot and help to tell the narrative, a common convention with Disney films are that the opening song of the film eludes to the plot of the whole film, although in a somewhat abstract way. The opening song The Circle of Life tells a story about how people are part of a great big plan, The Circle of Life and everyone has to take their place and play their part in that plan, so when Mufasa dies it is Simbas duty and his role in the Circle of Life to take over the pride and become king, although he tries to run away from this in the end he still has to do it as this is the Circle of Life.

When looking at the film The Lion King there is a diverse representation of stereotypical character archetypes. There is Simba who is the films protagonist he is large, muscular and healthy in appearance, all of which are good looking qualities and help portray him as the hero. Next is Scar the films antagonist, Scar, he is slim and underweight, he appears unhealthy and as his name implies has a large ugly scar down his left eye. this gives him a much darker and more evil appearance and demeanour and also creates binary opposites between the two main characters. Scar also has dark brown fur and a black mane, in contrast to the more traditional colours of the rest of the pride, this helps him to stand out and reinforces his image of an outcast and different. The contrast between him and the other lions that have bright yellow fur this singles him out as a outsider and its to show he is the villain. The monkey Rafiki is the dispatcher of the film. He is portrayed as a wise old man but is also made to be funny and lighthearted as shown by him being very animated in his speech, having a very over the top and infectious laugh throughout the film and even going so far as hitting Simba to teach him a lesson in one scene.
Another stereotype is provided by the bird Zazu who is the majordomo to all the kings in the film. He portrays an almost servant like role, obediently doing whatever is asked of him by both Mufasa and Scar, when they are king. Zazu is voiced by British actor Rowan Atkinson, this feeds into the the stereotype of British people as being posh as well as butlers, this convention can also be seen in the Batman film series.


The hyenas in the film are shown to be Scars henchmen and army that are represented to be scars army, they help reinforce Scars image of being a tyrannical dictator as shown in one particular scene, where Scar stands in a general position overseeing his troops and the hyenas are marching past in a similar way to the troops of the Nazi army.
Rafiki is the only character in the film with a thick African accent even though the film is set in Africa, this is because the film is aimed at an American audience, specifically children, and to make the characters easier to relate to and for them to easily identify who is good and who is evil. As is traditional in american films the good characters (with the exception of Zazu as discussed above)  have American accents from various regions and states. The main villain has a very posh English accent, which is common in a multitude of different American films. 


There are many different symbolic scenes in The Lion King, the first being the opening sequence of the film, when Simba is being presented to the kingdom for the first time. In this scene the sun is rising, showing the start of a new day and therefore symbolising a new era, the era of the new king or king to be Simba. 
In another scene Simba is seen to be stepping directly into his fathers paw print in the dirt, the connotations of this very literal symbol are that Simba has a lot of growing up to do if he wants to be able to fill his fathers place in the Pride, it also be showing that Mufasa has left “big shoes” to fill and it represents Simbas insecurity about never being good enough to be king like Mufasa. Thirdly after Simba runs away from the pride he falls down in the desert and is surrounded by vultures. Vultures traditionally represent death and in this scene they, along with the desert, are used to symbolise the apparent death of Simba and being alone in the world, until he is saved by Timon and Pumba. Finally the climax to the film once Scar has been defeated and Simba ascends to his place on Pride Rock. This symbolises his filling of his fathers “shoes” and he is literally stepping into Mufasas place as the new and rightful King.


 

Semiotics

how signs communicate, method of communication includes words, images, sounds etc.
How is meaning produced by media texts.

Denotation - what you see - black flag
Connotation - the meaning behind what you see - pirate 

Any object or image denotes a basic meaning of what it is
A red face on a character denotes just that: a 'red face’
A shaking hand denotes… 'a shaking hand'!

Sometimes, an object or image within creates extra meaning beyond its denotation
A red face might be said to connote excitement, illness or exertion after exercise
A shaking hand might connote
illness, old age or fear

An object that signifies meaning is referred to as a sign
This picture = sign
The shot type, angle, his facial expression and colour inc. clothing = signifier

Cultural meanings within a sign system
‘Ideology’ is invaluable to socially-oriented semiotics because it identifies a unitary object that incorporates complex sets of meanings with the social agents and processes that produced them.


This is not a pipe, its a picture of a pipe. 

Romeo & Juliet
Analyse the sequence from Romeo & Juliet using semiotics
Think about:
Soundtrack
Camera Angles, Movement and Composition/Framing
Identify:
Signifiers (Denotations)
What is Signified (Connotations)
Any Ideological references

Romeo & Juliet

Classic story of Romeo and Juliet, set in a modern-day city of Verona Beach. The Montagues and Capulets are two feuding families, whose children meet and fall in love. They have to hide their love from the world because they know that their parents will not allow them to be together. There are obstacles on the way, like Juliet's cousin, Tybalt, and Romeo's friend Mercutio, and many fights. But although it is set in modern times, it is still the same timeless story of the "star crossed lovers".

Director: Baz Luhrmann
Writers: William Shakespeare (play), Craig Pearce(screenplay)
Genres: Drama | Romance
Country: USA
Language: English
Release Date: 1 November 1996 (USA)

i watch the scene from Tybalt showing up at the beach and the just after he killed Mercurio.

Camera angles - the scene starts off with wide shot of the Capulets pulling up in there car then to a close up on Tybalts face to show his anger.
this is is very dramatic so there are many close ups on the actors faces because the scene is a lot about what emotions are going on and the best way to see emotion is through close ups.

 






Sunday, 25 January 2015

Narrative

22.01.2015

Narrative 
A chain of events with a beginning, middle and end that embodies a judgement about the narrative events 
Narrative is the art of storytelling 
Think of the story as raw Ingredient of text
Narrative = plot + story 
Plot is everything visibly and audibly present in the text
Story is all the events of the narrative both explicit and implicit 
Narrative is a chain of events in a cause and effect relationship in time and space

Technical Codes
This refers to all the aspects of narrative construction that involve technical decision making. Therefore anything to do with camera angles and movement, lighting, sound, props. shot framing and composition, design and layout and editing. What do each of the choices made tell you about what is going on - for instance, is a character shot from a high or low angle and how does that make you, the audience, feel about them? How are sound effects used to help you make sense of what is going on?

Verbal Codes

The use of language - written and spoken - and signs contained in graphics. We learn a lot about a narrative from what we are told in this way, but the best narratives show rather than tell, leaving the audience to draw their own conclusions.

Symbolic Codes

These are the signs contained in the narrative that we decode as being significant and having meaning - for example a ragged coat worn by a character may mean that they are poor and possibly hungry. Think of them as clues that have to be followed, and different viewers/readers will follow clues in different ways.
Structure
Russian theorist, Tzvetan Todorov, suggests that all narratives follow a three part structure. They begin with equilibrium, where everything is balanced, progress as something comes along to disrupt that equilibrium, and finally reach a resolution, when equilibrium is restored.

The Seven Character Types of Vladimir Propp

  1. The villain—struggles against the hero
  2. The donor—prepares the hero or gives the hero some magical object
  3. The (magical) helper—helps the hero in the quest
  4. The princess and her father—gives the task to the hero, identifies the false hero, marries the hero, often sought for during the narrative. Propp noted that functionally, the princess and the father can not be clearly distinguished
  5. The dispatcher—character who makes the lack known and sends the hero off.
  6. The hero or victim/seeker hero—reacts to the donor, weds the princess
  7. False hero—takes credit for the hero’s actions or tries to marry the princess.
These roles could sometimes be distributed among various characters, as the hero kills the villain dragon, and the dragon's sisters take on the villainous role of chasing him. Conversely, one character could engage in acts as more than one role, as a father could send his son on the quest and give him a sword, acting as both dispatcher and donor.
Barthes codes 
Enigma code
Teases the audience
A puzzle or riddle to be solved
Creates tension
Drives Narrative
Action code
A resolution is produced through action
What is to come

Momento 
A man creates a strange system to help him remember things; so he can hunt for the murderer of his wife without his short-term memory loss being an obstacle.

Writers: Christopher Nolan (screenplay), Jonathan Nolan(short story "Memento Mori")
Country: USA
Language: English
Release Date: 25 May 2001 (USA)
 
  • Starts shooting someone then goes backwards in time when the film is in colour.
  • when the film is in black and white it is liner between the coloured parts of the film at some point towards the end the two link and the black and white leads into the coloured storyline. 
  • Leonard - uses tattoos to remind himself about people and events. also uses lots of notes and pictures of people.
  • we only see what he can so the story is just as confusing to the audience as it is for the main character. 
  • People like Natalie manipulate him by using his memory loss to get him to do her dirty work and tired to get him to kill someone. 
  • the enigma code is that you don’t know who is on the phone.
  • Don’t know who the killers/rapist are until the end 
it turns out that learned killed his wife by giving her too much insulin but creates this false story about Sammy Jenkins when its what really happened to kill.
  • Leonard made the conscious decision to kill John at the end.

The Seven Character Types of Vladimir Propp


  1. The villain—Leonard 
  2. The donor— Natalie
  3. The helper - Teddy
  4. The dispatcher—Natalie
  5. The hero - Teddy 
  6. False hero—Leonard
  7. princess - the wife
  8. father - ?

Tuesday, 20 January 2015

Genre

15.01.2015
Critical approaches – Genre
Genre means type and it’s putting media text into different groups
Codes – symbols, noise and visuals
Conventions – the way the codes are used

Iconography - Patterns of visual imagery and Signals of genre

How to analyse genre
What is the story?
Where is the film set?
Characters in the film?
Actors and directors involved?
Iconography of the film?
What music is used?

The Horror Genre
Codes – fog, blood, children, knives, silence, and disturb
Conventions – women running and screaming, the promiscuous woman dies first, devil children
Directors – James Wan, Rob Zombie, Danny Boyle
Sub-genre – zombie, vampire, devils, gore
Hybrid-genre – comedy/horror, thriller/horror

Audience expectation is what the audience expects to see in a genre

Issues with genre
Popular text can reflect and influence social, economic, and political concerns
Can show changes with genres and the rise and fall of the genres popularity
Changers to the horror genre
Concerns about the supernatural
It’s become closer to home

The orphanage
Synopsis - A woman brings her family back to her childhood home, which used to be an orphanage for handicapped children. Before long, her son starts to communicate with an invisible new friend.
Year: 2008
Director: J.A. Bayona
Cast: Belén Rueda, Fernando Cayo, Roger Príncep
Country: Spain
Language: Spanish
Production Co: Esta Vivo! Laboratorio de Nuevos Talentos, Grupo Rodar, Rodar y Rodar Cine y Televisión
  
Best bits
To me in a horror film the best bits are when you are scared because that is the main goal of the horror genre. So one of the best bits in the film to me is when an old woman crossing the road with a pram is hit by a truck because her been it is so unexpected it shocks you and makes you jump and then when you see the old woman on the floor with her bottom jaw knocked off its gruesome but the build up to seeing her creates a lot of tension so it continues the scare from the truck.

Worst bits
The worst bit for me was when the parents were looking for the young boy around the house I felt they started to panic to quickly so it doesn’t build the same tension to me than it would if it a was slower build up for the boy to be missing.
The sound effects are too loud for everyday things that usually wouldn’t even hear.
Great shots
In the opening scene with the children running around and playing outside the colour and cinematography is so warming and really gives you a feeling of nostalgia and happiness.
The panning shot over the sea looks smooth and is a very nice establishing shot.
Interesting sounds

In the opening scene with the children playing there is sort music and bird chirps creating a really innocent feel. 

Murderball

08.01.2015
Representation notes – Murderball

Director: Steve James
Release Date: 22 July 2005 
Production company: Paramount Picture, MTV Films, Participant Media, A&E IndieFilms, and EAT Films
Country: USA
Language: English

Synopsis – murderball is about the US Quad rugby team, between 2002 games in Sweden and the 2004 Paralympics in Athens. Young men, most with spinal injuries, play this rough and tumble sport in special chairs. We get to know several and their families. They talk frankly about their injuries, feelings in public, sex lives, competitiveness, and love of the game. There's also an angry former team member gone north to coach the Canadian team, tough on everyone, including his viola-playing son. We meet a recently injured man, in rehab, at times close to despair, finding possible joy in quad rugby. After Athens, the team meets young men and women injured in war.

Best Bits
I think one of the best bits is when the cast start talking about the sexual experiences because it breaks a big taboo around it like most people assume that disable people don’t have sex lives or don’t like it but most of the cast have wifes or girlfriends. Also in the beginning were is shows a man in a wheel chair getting dressed I think this was a powerful shot because it makes the audience a little uncomfortable like it would watching anybody struggle more than them with an everyday task so it forces people to watch and except that even though its difficult he can still do things on his own and is independent.   

Worst bits
 The only thing that bothered me while watching the films was how bad the audio became at points with all the popping at crapping when it peaked. The documentary forces a lot on the aggression of two or three members of the cast.                             

What or who is been represented? Paraplegics that play quad rugby.
How is the representation created? Through watching the games, their everyday life and interviews with the cast.

Why is it created that why? So you can get a personal insight on what their lives are like. It also created to break some of the lies about people in wheel chairs and by talking about taboo subjects it breaks the awkwardness of some of the issues like sex.  

What is the effect of the representation? Changes the preconceived ideas around what people in wheel chairs can do and what they are like.

Binary oppositions: able – disabled, anger – happiness, winning – losing, USA – Canada, jock – academic.

Connotation:  when you first think of people in wheel chairs you think there are loads of constrictions to the chair but then you see then play rugby and you start to see them as athletes or get to know their personality and you forget about the chair.

Institution (who created the representation)?  From the documentary it seems as though the filmmakers create the representation because it is clear they want to show each stage of what its like when someone becomes a paraplegic and that even though things might be more effort for them to do they can still do what everyone else can.

Dominant values or ideology?
·         The USA plays are obsessed with winning.
·         If you don’t stay positive you will never get passed your accent.  

·         You have to use what you’ve got to get through life.