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- OCR SPECIFICATION
- OCR MEDIA STUDIES H409
- G322 TV DRAMA
- 1 FORMS & CONVENTIONS
- 2 REPRESENTATION OF SOCIAL GROUPS
- 3 DISTRIBUTION
- 4 Who is YOUR TARGET AUDIENCE for your film?
- 5 ATTRACTING & ADDRESSING AUDIENCES
- 6 NEW TECHNOLOGIES
- 7 WHAT I HAVE LEARNED ABOUT FILM MAKING
- G322 Past Papers*
- 2012 G322: INSTITUTIONS & AUDIENCES (FILM)
- 2014 G322: INSTITUTIONS & AUDIENCES (FILM)
- 2017 G322: INSTITUTIONS & AUDIENCES (FILM)
- NARRATIVE
- BLOG TOOLS
- BRITISH INDEPENDENT FILM
- FILM TRENDS
Friday, 7 October 2011
G322 TELEVISION DRAMA: REPRESENTATION and STEREOTYPING
We look at a variety of clips to scrutinize representations that draw on stereotypes about ethnicity, regional difference and class. We discuss accents and prejudices about them, taking a historical view.
Stereotype: an assumption about a person, place or issue that does not allow for flexibility or detail. Stereotyping involves the use of stock characters or types.
Archetype: a stock character who is the model or prototype, frequently copied in television , drama, film, radio and literature, such as the hero. The role is readily recognized by all.
We contrast Rab C.Nesbitt from Glasgow with the Edinburgh schoolteacher from The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie.
We compare an episode of The Coopers Church going scene with Peter Sellars in The Millionairess (1960) singing Goodness Gracious Me
We discuss how Armstrong and Miller make comedy in their sketch with RAF pilots using RP accents and mismatched vocabulary.
Monday, 3 October 2011
INTRODUCING BRITISH FILM DIRECTORS
Using a leaflet format, you research and introduce your favourite contemporary British film director, introduce him/her to the class and post the leaflet on your blog.
Suggested choices: Ridley Scott, David Yates, Ken Loach, Guy Ritchie, Shane Meadows, Danny Boyle, Edgar Wright, Gurinder Chadha, Sally Potter, Stephen Daldry, Richard Curtis, Paul Greengrass, Saul Dibb, Stephen Frears, Pawel Pawlikowski, Anthony Minghella, Kathryn Bigelow.
RESOURCES:
Suggested choices: Ridley Scott, David Yates, Ken Loach, Guy Ritchie, Shane Meadows, Danny Boyle, Edgar Wright, Gurinder Chadha, Sally Potter, Stephen Daldry, Richard Curtis, Paul Greengrass, Saul Dibb, Stephen Frears, Pawel Pawlikowski, Anthony Minghella, Kathryn Bigelow.
RESOURCES:
Pavel Pawlikowski: Dirty Pretty Things, Last Resort, This World
Michael Winterbottom: Jude, Welcome to Sarajevo, 24 Hour Party People, In This World
Richard Curtis Four Weddings(1994) Love Actually (2003) The Boat That Rocked (2009)
Danny Boyle: Trainspotting (1996)
Mike Leigh: Another Year (2010)
Shane Meadows: This is England (2006)
Ken Loach: Ae Fond Kiss (2004) Looking For Eric (2009)
Neil Jordan: The Crying Game (1992)
Stephen Frears: My Beautiful Laundrette (1985) High Fidelity (2000)
Mike Newell: Four Weddings And A Funeral (1994)
Alan Parker: The Commitments (1991)
Nicholas Hytner: The Madness of King George (1994)
Derek Jarman: Caravaggio (1986)
Anthony Minghella:The English Patient(1996) The Talented MrRipley
Sam Taylor Wood: Nowhere Boy (2009)
John Madden Shakespeare in Love (1998)
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By Ben Murray |
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By Lewis Harland |
INTRODUCING KEVIN MACDONALD
We view extracts from Kevin MacDonald's Life in a Day video documentary and discuss how new technology is changing audiences into makers. Life in a Day is a documentary film project by YouTube, announced on July 6, 2010. Users sent in videos of themselves on July 24, 2010, and then Oscar-nominated director Ridley Scott produced the film and edited the videos into a film with director Kevin MacDonald and film editor Joe Walker, consisting of footage from some of the contributors.
Friday, 30 September 2011
LAURA MULVEY: VISUAL PLEASURE AND NARRATIVE CINEMA
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Marilyn Munroe |
Daniel Chandler writes about film spectatorship and Laura Mulvey's gaze theory:
- 'Film has been called an instrument of the male gaze, producing representations of women, the good life, and sexual fantasy from a male point of view' (Schroeder 1998, 208). The concept derives from a seminal article called Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema by Laura Mulvey, a feminist film theorist. It was published in 1975 and is one of the most widely cited and anthologized (though certainly not one of the most accessible) articles in the whole of contemporary film theory. Laura Mulvey did not undertake empirical studies of actual filmgoers, but declared her intention to make ‘political use’ of Freudian psychoanalytic theory (in a version influenced by Jacques Lacan) in a study of cinematic spectatorship.
- Such psychoanalytically-inspired studies of 'spectatorship' focus on how 'subject positions' are constructed by media texts rather than investigating the viewing practices of individuals in specific social contexts. Mulvey notes that Freud had referred to (infantile) scopophilia - the pleasure involved in looking at other people’s bodies as (particularly, erotic) objects.
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Rita Hayworth |
- This is reflected in the dominant forms of cinema. Conventional narrative films in the ‘classical’ Hollywood tradition not only typically focus on a male protagonist in the narrative but also assume a male spectator. ‘As the spectator identifies with the main male protagonist, he projects his look onto that of his like, his screen surrogate, so that the power of the male protagonist as he controls events coincides with the active power of the erotic look, both giving a satisfying sense of omnipotence’.
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Halle Berry |
Adobe After Effects
Learning how to use After Effects: creating an ident with your production company name. You use a virtual camera to fly around the 3D image
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Piers Production team collaborating on a film ident |
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Smart Choice Productions ident in creation |
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'Don't Worry About It' Production Company |
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Chilling Productions in development |
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Wright Productions ident in development |
Wednesday, 28 September 2011
MY MEDIA WORLD
Your first blog post will answer the question:
What media do I use? How does it affect me and the world that I live in?
(You may use the guidelines below)
Aim to exploit the technologies available in blogging such as video, audio, images
Aim to exploit the technologies available in blogging such as video, audio, images


If I upgraded, I would choose…[mobile phone make with your reasons]

I am concerned / not concerned by privacy issues

I keep up with films by watching trailers online…I book cinema tickets online…I make use of orange Wednesdays to watch films…

I pay for music using iTunes / I avoid paying for music as…


I use the internet for……
My family uses the internet for…
I experience various problems with the internet, such as…

I still buy / rarely buy newspapers or magazines…

If I want to watch something that I have missed, I..
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Is there also a place for more traditional technology in your life? |

JOHN BERGER: WAYS OF SEEING
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Venus (Roger Michell 2007) |
Daniel Chandler in Notes on the Male Gaze writes:
- In Ways of Seeing, a highly influential book based on a BBC television series, John Berger observed that ‘according to usage and conventions which are at last being questioned but have by no means been overcome - men act and women appear. Men look at women. Women watch themselves being looked at’ (Berger 1972, 45, 47).
- Berger argues that in European art from the Renaissance onwards women were depicted as being ‘aware of being seen by a [male] spectator’, Berger adds that at least from the seventeenth century, paintings of female nudes reflected the woman’s submission to ‘the owner of both woman and painting’. He noted that ‘almost all post-Renaissance European sexual imagery is frontal - either literally or metaphorically - because the sexual protagonist is the spectator-owner looking at it’ . He advanced the idea that the realistic, ‘highly tactile’ depiction of things in oil paintings and later in colour photography (in particular where they were portrayed as ‘within touching distance’), represented a desire to possess the things (or the lifestyle) depicted . This also applied to women depicted in this way .
- Writing in 1972, Berger insisted that women were still ‘depicted in a different way to men - because the "ideal" spectator is always assumed to be male and the image of the woman is designed to flatter him’. In 1996 Jib Fowles still felt able to insist that ‘in advertising males gaze, and females are gazed at’ (Fowles 1996, 204). And Paul Messaris notes that female models in ads addressed to women ‘treat the lens as a substitute for the eye of an imaginary male onlooker,’ adding that ‘it could be argued that when women look at these ads, they are actually seeing themselves as a man might see them’ (Messaris 1997, 41).
- Such ads ‘appear to imply a male point of view, even though the intended viewer is often a woman. So the women who look at these ads are being invited to identify both with the person being viewed and with an implicit, opposite-sex viewer’ . We may note that within this dominant representational tradition the spectator is typically assumed not simply to be male but also to be heterosexual, over the age of puberty and often also white.
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