Saturday, 28 March 2009

Comparison of TCM films Essay

Both the original Texas Change Saw Massacre and the new more up to date version display characteristics of the traditional slasher film but it is their key differences majorly based on the zeitgeist that reflects the changes of time ad eras of the slasher movie.
The Texas Chainsaw Massacre is a 1974 American independent horror film and the first in The Texas Chainsaw Massacre franchise. Tobe Hooper directed the film where the plot involves a group of friends on a road trip to visit a family grave site in Texas, their gas tank almost runs out so they stop near an abandoned house where they are attacked by a family of cannibals, including the main villain who is a chainsaw-wielding psycho called Leather face.

The 2003 film is a remake of the 1974 version, it was directed by Marcus Nispel and produced by Michael Bay. In this version of the plot five college students are on their way to a music concert in Dallas which is an immediate difference from the original as in the one before they was heading for a grave yard. They are returning from a trip to Mexico when they see a girl walking in the road which is another difference from the 1974 version as it was a crazy man they had picked up. After nearly hitting her group pick her up but she is in an unnatural state and unclearly warns them that they are in danger when she says he is a really bad man and that they are all going to die. She then tries to force the driver to turn the other way when they are passing though where she was desperately trying to come from, this scene is ironically repeated almost word for word by the main character and final girl Erin after she goes through her ordeal, this is a clear difference from the original as the crew doesn’t get a warning of what they are about to face in the original.

There are some similarities particularly highlighted in the beginning that attempted to recreate the feeling of the old version such as the fact that the group of friends have a form of illegal and recreational drugs that they picked up, this could be used by the directors to reflect the zeitgeist at the time when America during the 70s was a time where drug use by teenagers was at one of its highest because of the “hippie” craze.
Another similarity was the teenagers expected promiscuity when it showed two of them uncontrollably kissing at the back of the van, this reinforced the supposed “set of rules” require to be visual in a slasher film and also reminded the audience of their eventual fates much like in the way the first one did when the two characters having sex were the first to go.
In the 2003 version there are different aspects to the original family and new characters introduced such as the little boy who instead of being a part of the cannibal like family attempts to thwart their plans to butcher the final girl Erin in the same ways they did with her friends before that.


Another new character was the sheriff who wasn’t apparent in the first film, the twist on the narrative by showing the sheriff was part of the family was designed to shock and surprise the audience, but before that they were already shocked at his brutality and aggressiveness to the teenagers so in some ways some members of the audience may had already put 2 and 2 together and realized he was part of the family before it was revealed. The sheriffs’ personality was created to reflect the attitude of real life police officers of the 70s in America as being strict, ruthless and aggressive.
One of the major changes between the two sets of characters was the willingness not to give up on life and carry on fighting until they died. In the 1974 version it seemed that not one member of the group put up a decent fight to survive and all died in weak and feeble circumstances, in the new version Michael bay gave some of the group more fighting personalities as they didn’t die straight away and tried to carry on clinging for life as much as they could for instance when Morgan was kept on his own in a cell instead of perishing he managed to stay alive and get free with the help of Erin, also Andy after having his leg cut off and being dropped on a massive hook still managed to stay alive for the course of the film before asking Erin to put him out of his misery.

Moreover the final girl actually managed to fight back against leather face and ended up chopping his arm off with a hack which was an aspect which played a massive role in leather face inability to kill her off. The characters improvement in strength and desire to fight off the killer is used by the director to give the audience a sense of the times that we are living in; audiences would not expect characters to be killed so easily as they were in past slasher a movie without thinking it is realistic.

Finally the outcome of the two movies were similar and different in some ways as the final girl in both relied on someone to come in an distract leather face but in the 2003 version Erin got away on her own without being hitched hiked like in the first movie, she also got her revenge on the sheriff in the process by running him over in his police car. Both films were a success which was probably down to their uniqueness especially the 1974 version where at the time it was new, innovate and the level of voice and massacre had not been reached or seen before which is probably why it is one of the most memorable films of all time and defiantly in the slasher genre.
Word Count- 1,014

Similarities and differences Between TCM movies

Similarities of Old and New version of Texas Chainsaw Massacre

* Both have group of teenage Friends

* Leather face is the killer and part of a family of cannibals

* The majority of murders happen in the house where other murder victims are stored

*Plot twists such as the sheriff (new version) and the shop owner( old version) being revealed as part of the family

* Both times they pick up a hitch hiker who isn't in a normal state of mind

* Both take place in the countryside of Texas far away from civilization

* Respective Girl and Boy from each film who are promiscuous at the beginning die

* Group members murdered in the same way i.e being dropped on the big hook



Differences of Old and New version of Texas Chainsaw Massacre

* Final girl gets revenge one of the family members

* Grandad doesn't need victims blood to survive

* Family have stolen a baby that final girl saves at the end

* Group of friends are warned at the start that they face danger, hitchhiker in old harms himself but doesn't die whereas the girl picked up in the second shoots herself dead in the head

* Characters don't die instantly like they do in the first one instead they try to put up a fight

* New family members such as the little boy who tries to save teenagers from their expected fate

*Teenagers driving to different destinations( old they go to grave yard, new to a concert)

* Leather face gets arm chopped off

Thursday, 26 March 2009

Independent Study 2nd draft

“Storm, I hadn't thought of you as my student for years. In fact, I thought that, perhaps, you might take my place someday" From Prof Charles Xavier [1]
Are the female roles in the modern day genre of superhero films a victory for women or are they still objects of desire? With particular reference to the film x-men 3?

The superhero genre is credited for having a long history of providing great memorable films such as Superman, Fantastic 4 and the Spider man sequels. However, they have a direct link and association with Hollywood a film industry that has been accused of "symbolically annihilated" [2] females on screen. For generations, women have been giving negative representation of being weak, dumb, narrow minded and only interested in housework just to name a few.
It is not just in Hollywood that they have been discriminated it is apparent in aspects of different industries, in sports their is the tag that they cannot play as well as men and in the corporate world their is the myth (that Barthes created)[3] that women cannot compete intellectually with men and are only there to play token employees to show the company is not sexist.
The respective feminist’s movements (1920s and 1970s) have played an inaugural part in creating positive representation for females and expanding the limited roles that they played in movies such as the femme fatale (where the woman would be sinister, driven and even in some cases potentially deadly) or the hero’s love interest when their only existence was generally for a purpose to be saved by the leading male protagonist. They have seen both sides of the story and this essay will be undermining the answer to the question that has been set which is to justify fully whether female roles in Hollywood in the modern era, as opposed to generations before have changed for the better or are they subjected to being objectified.

X-Men: The Last Stand is a 2006 superhero film and the third in the X-Men series [4]. It is directed by Brett Ratner, who took over when Bryan Singer dropped out to direct Superman Returns. The movie revolves around a "mutant cure" that causes serious repercussions among mutants and humans.
X men 3 is based on the fighting between 2 sets of mutant teams, with the evil team fighting to take over the world and wage war on the human race, this has significant relations to the holocaust which reflects the zeitgeist of the time. In the holocaust the Jews were seen as “the other” and underneath the Germans in the same way as the evil mutants feel have been treated by the human society. The battle for equality amongst mutants also can be linked to the feminine struggle as they were fighting for the same purpose of fairness.
The use of non dietetic sound as up tempo high speed music is used to a contrapuntal effect to reflect the fast paced action and narrative of the movie, this iconography symbolises that this is an action movie and as a result due to statistics from the past (that only 29% of females are somewhat partially involved in action adventurers) [5] more spotlight is inevitably put on the roles the females play in this film. Its genre falls into the category of superhero and even in the name of the genre gender inequalities are displayed, by calling it superhero it immediately connotes that the main character is going to be a man in the same way that audiences will think it’s a female protagonist if the genre was called super heroine. Their primary target audience are loyal consumers of the previous texts that were in the form of comic books; they grew up reading the comics and gradually understood the narrative as each episode was released. While reading the magazines they realised that females were supposedly equal to their male counterpart’s therefore setting up audience expectation on the film itself to represent the females as powerful and contributive as possible.
X men 3: The last stand supposedly gives the opportunity for women to shine on screen like they have never done before, as studies showed that “films almost always focused on male heroes they typically made the decisions which led the story and were more confident assertive and dominant” [6] Up until now films that are categorized as superhero have represented “woman as frightened and in need of protection and direction”. [7] This is reflected in some of the actions of the female characters in X men as they are repeatedly set up as the ones that need saving from the enemies clutches and not their male counterparts. However What is encouraging for women in the film X men from the quote is that Professor Xavier the head of the mutants team believes that storm ( a female) can take over his position in power which will ultimately mean she would become to most powerful character. [8]

In the late nineteenth century and the early twentieth century’s feminism emerged, and grew especially at like many other protests for civil rights in the time of the First World War. Feminism was the response from angry females who were unhappy with a life of inequality. They believed that women had a right to have political as well as social equality with men. It had various movements and Feminist theory and theorists emerged as a result from these times including Laura Mulvey and Gay Tuchman.
The First wave of feminism as many people call it refers to a period of time when feminist activity was at its highest, the second wave of feminism occurred during the 1960s and 1970s. The difference between the two sets of waves was the first-wave feminism focused mainly on overturning laws to function equality like in work while second-wave feminism addressed the more unofficial inequalities like house roles etc. Many films narratives in Hollywood in the 60s 70s and in some occasions the 80s reflected society’s apparent view that women should be subservient to men, even the more well known actresses like Marylyn Monroe at some point in the narrative had to play roles that displayed the dominance of males at the time.
The attitude towards feminism by males especially in the 1970s portrayed the roles on screen women were playing in Hollywood as the number of different roles and personalities that females could have started to expand even if they were still negative which is the case in X-Men 3where there are both evil and good characters displaying different characteristics that portray the role of both Madonna ( storm or rogue) and the whore (Mystique).
For instance in Fatal Attraction when the leading character was female but she was still represented as a woman who had misused the power she had been given after having an affair with the main male character. However considering that until the creation of feminism women were treated almost as passive agents in a male world.
Looking back at the two waves of feminism they have arguably played a major role in creating new wider spread characters both on screen and off in comparison to the one dimensional characters they used to play.
Without women fighting for equality in the work place or with the right to vote then it wouldn’t of resulted in impartiality in Hollywood either and directors had to take that into account when casting and making the narrative, because not only did they want to reflect society at the time but they did not want to upset feminists groups that could potentially put negative spotlight on their movies if upset at the representation of women. “The action film has historically been a male genre dealing with stories of male heroism, produced by male filmmakers for principally male audiences”. This was the case before feminism came along and sometimes still is and feminism has helped to curb that statement if not end it.

The roles that many female’ stars past and present have played on screen have been naturally very inadequate to a degree where they only play certain roles where their personalities are limited. Before the 1980s there were two well known type of characters that female would be cast in – the Madonna role or the hore. Nowadays there are many more roles for females to play such as the femme fatale, although the femme fatale is give negative representation she is involved further in the plot and contributes much more to the narrative then other roles do. It is the same with the “final girl” a role which was developed when the slasher film came to light [9]. Some of the more positive newer roles that have been created through time is roles that come with more power and responsibility such as the male heroes boss or the villains sidekick, this rise in important roles for women to play in superhero films suggests that slowly but steadily females in the superhero genre are becoming more significant.
Throughout time the roles have developed but not really changed in terms of female representation, it seems an injustice but in reality the first feature you have to have to play a main female role is be good looking. Taking Men in black 2 into account (a superhero movie with Sci fi aspects) you have a female villain now even though this isn’t the first female villain to appear she seems to have it all regarding presentation of herself. She is powerful, seductive, smart and generally good looking, if the directors wanted to take a big step towards gender equality in Hollywood they would have hired someone who isn’t as naturally blessed with good looks and thus would not appeal to the audience.
If you look at the contrast in role requirements between male and female characters within the average superhero narrative they are usually very different. Take the early superman for instance nearly every women’s role in the film was either to be saved by superman or to provide some sort of information, they were never directly involved in the action themselves. In contrast the male characters role requirements included being the hero, villain, helper dispatcher [10] and the passer of key information, this list has been repeated in loads of superhero movies and continues to this day.
One key member of the film Xmen is storm who is played by Halle berry, she was once voted the worlds sexiest woman in 2003 round about the same time the second x-men movie hit the cinema screens which is something that could be seen as a male gaze [11] motive from the directors to hire her . She is known for other roles in hit films like die another day and cat women where she is also subdued to wearing tight clothing and bikinis in famous memorable scenes. Even though her looks and sexual presence may have played parts in given her roles during films she portrays sophistication, intelligence and charm proving it’s not just their beauty but also their brains that plays parts in female actresses successes. She wouldn’t be in so many movies if this wasn’t the case as the audience would just get tired of her looks if that was all she brought to the role.
Marie d an canto (rogue) who played the main female protagonist in the first of the 3 Men movies is also given a positive representation in Xmen 3 using her Witt to get her out of trouble while also displaying her physical force when fighting against her opponents. Although both storm and rogue acting abilities produced better female representation it is undeniable that their good looks got them there in the first place and they were still symbolised as objects of desire hence the tight clothing.
More over In the modern generation and especially in x men 3 gender roles are a lot more equal with females getting their fair share of the action characters like storm, mystique, rogue are always involved in the plot and in the inevitable fighting between the two mutant teams however it’s clear that the women on the evil mutant side are no way near as matched as their so-called powers also seem rather feeble compared to the Men on their team “Storm could just summon a hurricane and blow the woman away like troublesome flies” [12]
An example in a working world situation would be when a company hires females to work within their business, although it seems females have more respectful jobs and actually get to keep their clothes on, real purposes for some companies is just to show that they aren’t sexist and so in reality female workers aren’t their because of what they can offer but so some companies can shrug off any accusations of sexism. In addition when they are hired the majority of their job roles are limited because in most cases their male bosses don’t believe they have the brains to handle bigger jobs so they get the simpler ones like the sectary or coffee makers.
Women in general no matter what generation they come from will have all at one point or another been subjected to being prejudged on as part of stereotypical views from others. A stereotype has been described as a short cut to meaning [13] or a widely circulated idea about particular groups outside one’s own experiences [14]. They are possible characters in the media who are considered as “types” rather than complex people, they are based on assumptions made by people who have been influenced by what they have seen or heard about through others (usually the government).
Usually stereotypes are developed through the media creating a moral panic [15] emphasizing the negatively placed on these prejudgements of people, places or cultures. The concept of stereotypes is probably the main reason females have been thought of as inferior to men in the past, as a result inevitably binary oppositions [16] have been created by men highlighting their patricidal view of their supremacy over women. Commonly accepted oppositions include that men are strong, dominant and smart while women are weak, feeble and incapable of looking after themselves.
Men have also been accused of stereotypical actions that represent the whole of their gender, they are seen as voyeurs by many feminists who strongly feel that the majority of the male population only go to watch movies with a female lead character to participate in a fetishistic gaze [17], this is when the man objectifies the women in a sexual manner focusing on a certain part of the body to give him visual pleasure. The term scopophilia is associated with the entire male race when looking and judging beautiful women by feminists, scopophilia is when you have pleasure in looking and being sexually aroused. If this is the case then the suggestion that women’s new respectable roles as the main character can only be seen as a hallow victory for feminists because instead of males appreciating the females protagonist elegancy, brains and class they are only focusing on her body assets and therefore dehumanising them by not treating women as their equal but as a fine aspect of their fantasy life. This can be related to my film of study X Men 3 where some of the women are persistently overlooked for higher positions in the hierarchy of power because neither the good or bad mutants have a woman as their leader meaning the significant positions of power and authority go to the males.
As much as both female audiences and the female stars themselves would like to see male directors alter their gender identities (for instance their actions on screen being more linked to masculinity than femininity) that would highlight a change from the traditional objectification that they have been familiarized with by a male audience, it seems that realistically that won’t be happening for a long time as directors see good looking female stars such Catherin zeta Jones and Jessica Albers sex appeal as a guaranteed audience puller. When considering that Hollywood is a business and a business’s objectives are to make profit and survive it justifies directors why they wouldn’t want to modify a winning formula hence the reason female roles when playing the protagonist of a superhero or action movie have hardly been changed over the years . If the female stars have to sacrifice their ideologies on equality and female exposure in order to make the movie then they will do that because it is their profession and its how they make a living.
Stereotypes do play a big part in director’s ideas of satisfying the audience because when thinking of stereotypes it relates to gender identities which most directors don’t want to tamper with through fears of losing their audience. For instance they wouldn’t think that a predominantly male audience’s expectations would be fulfilled after watching someone like Halle berry (who is a massive figure of the male gaze ) acting manly, not wearing prerogative clothing or being sexually seductive as a way of getting what she wants. This wouldn’t put heterosexual males in cinema seats thus loosing the company money; however it has been proven that if someone takes a gamble and changes the gender identity of the subject such as Quinton taritnino did with Uma Thurman in kill bill it can be a success both with male and females.
Tarintino portrays Uma as a vengeful, blood thirsty killer who murders her enemies in the most brutal and disturbing circumstances, with these being her characteristics she doesn’t conform to the stereotype of the average female hero and goes against the hegemonic values of society that women shouldn’t act like that. Although she displays characteristics more accustomed to a male anti hero there are aspects of her femininity like her humility and compassion to her colleagues suggesting that it is almost impossible to give a realistic portrayal of a women without their key emotions and features.

The lack of female directors in Hollywood can be seen as a direct link to the slow progression of positive representation of females in both the past and present. You could argue that the main reason there is such a drought of female directors is because so much of their time is devoted to bringing up children and if they have a husband it conforms with the hegemonic view on society that women should stay home and take care of the children. Ziaddin Sardar says a patricidal society expects an “honourable married women job is to remind the audience of men’s natural intended rightful place for women which is to raise children and dutifully supporting the more important work of men"[18] so there might be some implanted guilt on females to go off and work if they want to have children because there is the feeling society won’t allow them to have both.
With this statically being the case it shows that female off screen get just as much negative treatment as the ones on it. It could be argued that female actresses could do more to increase the number of female directors by publicly endorsing them. There is no doubt that a young new female director who shares the same patriarchal views as the actresses would result in a rise of new narratives and films that would satisfy the female audiences as opposed to exploiting them. However there is already an established hierarchy in place in the film industry that has a way of continuation on certain rules about gender superiority, this is putting females off getting into the industry because of expected sexism and objectification. This myth [4] has been around for a long time and females believe that myth to be true because there aren't any well known female directors.
Less known movie makers like Gurinder Chadha who has directed movies such as Bend it like Beckham (2002)[19] and Bride and Prejudice (2004) [20] , and has won 14 major awards in her life time have made names for themselves with a majority of niche markets and occasionally the mass market. Others like Debbie Allen who has overcome major obstacles in her life such as racism [21] have proven that with hard work women can achieve the glamour roles of directors.
Directors such as these can be inspiring to females but they haven’t got the pulling power to even make themselves known to young female aspiring directors and this is what makes it harder for females, male directors such as Steven Spielberg and Quinton Tarintino have so much exposure it’s almost impossible not to hear of them.

Selina Scott the news reader was one of many women discriminated by ageism, she claimed that she wasn’t chosen for the role that was filled by a leaving Natasha kaplenski because the managers though she was too old and would not appeal to their mass audience, this act of age discrimination has repeated itself and in Hollywood it is very apparent. Looking at the stats the comparison between the length of careers females and males have in the movie industry is clear to see, and with the hierarchy being defined by defensively masculine directors and managers in charge of the casting it seems like women are ultimately refused a voice[22].
Depending on what model audience you tend to follow it will be a different reading of the situation, people who consider themselves hegemonic and therefore a passive audience will feel that it is just part of the circle of life when someone old gets replaced with the “perfect provocateur”[23] who is young, good looking and sexually perfective both in Hollywood and in the TV industry, while others that believe the pluralistic model will be active and see that it is a blatant case of discrimination and unfair as it would represent almost all working females and possible create a moral panic for any hard working women.
In my film of study X men 3 gender equalities are more fair and even though it doesn’t represent the whole of the superhero genre it is a big step to have the head chief in power Prof chares display a confident faith in a female character storm that she could one day take his seat of power and lead the rest of the Xmen. The fact that he sees her potentially as his heir to his throne demonstrates the improving relations and esteem between the men and women of the film purely because he believes that a women could handle that much power and responsibility many would argue that speaks volumes about the new roles women play are much more positive and respectful.
The discrimination they suffer in their representation would affect the consumers of the text as well because there is supposed to be an aspect of idealization between the consumer and the hero. For instance strong powerful minded females would not want to look up to a female actress that is a patriarchal male directors money making puppet but instead a independent elegant classy female hero so they can personally identify [24] themselves with the protagonist, " feminist critics have in particular been attracted to iconic images of strong women"[25]. Some factors that lead to the exposure of women on screen such as the props (i.e. tight clothing) split audiences down the middle in opinion. Some members of an average audience would question whether Lara croft in tomb raider played by Angelina Jolie is a feminist icon or a heterosexual male’s wet dream [26]
Overall I think that while women’s roles have changed over time their features haven’t therefore making a victory for female representation a victory but a rather limited one for women and feminists in particular.
In the past by looking at the stats it suggest that females were badly treated in terms of presence on the TV screen, there weren’t many on screen and the ones that did appear where seen as token characters and given representations that degraded the female population. As miles reported in 1975 [27] in adventure films only 15% of females had leads in films which subjected them to cameo or insignificant roles which at the time didn’t show much progress. While there have been numerical improvements in the number of female hero’s they still don’t share the same respect or admiration by the male public as their male counterparts and because of that male characters are still seen as more intelligent assertive and prevalent.
If Cortes says that there is “symbolic and institutionalised sexism” [29] in advertising then this must be the case in Hollywood with the consistent representation of women as sexually promiscuous and continuously used seduction techniques on the males hero on his quest. As females on screen are conducting themselves this way within the narrative to suit male audiences this creates the ideology that sex sells and as long as that belief is in place it is hard to see women’s roles in superhero movies changing for the better in terms of female representation and therefore they are still and probably will always remain objects of desire.

[1] http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0376994/quotes
[2] Tuchman, Gay (1978)
[3] Barthes, Roland (1984)
[4] Xmen3: The Last Stand (2006)
[5] Davis (1990) Gauntlet, David (2002): Media Gender & Identity: Representations of Gender in the Past, (page 43)
[6] Gauntlet, David (2002): Media Gender & Identity: Representation of Gender in the Past (page 46)
[7] Gauntlet, David (2002): Media Gender & Identity: Representation of Gender in the Past (page 46)
[8] http://www.adherents.com/lit/comics/ProfessorX.html
[9] http://www.horschamp.qc.ca/new_offscreen/final_girl.html
[10] Propp Vladimir (1928), Bennett, Jacquie (2005) :Media Studies AS & A2 ( page 92)
[11] Mulvey, Laura (1975): Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema
[12] http://www.tiscali.co.uk/entertainment/film/reviews/x-men3.html
[13] Lacey, Nick (2004): Introduction to film (pg 263)
[14] Bennett, Jacquie (2005): Media Studies AS & A2 (page 114)
[15] Cohen, Stanley (1972)
[16] Strauss, Levi (1949): The Elementary Structure
[17] Scott Galloway, Lucy (2007) A beginners guide to Laura Mulvey
[18] Sardar, Ziaddin: Introducing Media studies 2000 (page 138)
[19] http://farm.imdb.com/name/nm0149446/- Gurinder Chada
[20] http://farm.imdb.com/name/nm0149446/-Gurinder Chada again
[21] http://jordan-murray.blogspot.com
[22] Kaplan Ann (1983): Ann Kaplan’s Women and Film
[23] Cortese, Anthony: Images of Women and Minorities in Advertising (1999)
[24] Bennett, Jacquie (2005): Media Studies AS & A2 (page 90) Uses and Grats theory
[25] Tasher, Yvonne (2004): Action and Adventure cinema (page 9)
[26] Lacey, Nick (2004): Introduction to film (page 203)
[27] Gauntlet, David (2002): Media Gender & Identity: Representation of Gender in the Past (page 43)
[28] Cortese, Anthony: Images of Women and Minorities in Advertising (1999)


Bibliography

Works cited
Books
Gauntlett, David. Media, Gender and Identity: An Introduction. New York: Routledge, 2008
Mulvey, Laura. Visual and Other Pleasures (Language, Discourse, Society). New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2007.
Lacey, Nick. Introduction to Film. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2005
Scott Galloway, Lucy (2007) A beginners guide to Laura Mulvey
Sardar, Ziauddin. Introducing Media Studies, 3rd Edition (Introducing). Thriplow, Cambridge, UK: Totem Books, 2006.
Kaplan, E. Ann. Women and Film: Both Sides of the Camera. New York: Routledge, 1990
Anthony, Cortese. Provocateur: Images of Women and Minorities in Advertising. Lanham: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc., 2007.
Tasher, Yvonne (2004): Action and Adventure cinema

Moving image texts
Tarantino, Q. (Director). (2004). Kill Bill, Volume 2 [Motion Picture]. US: Miramax Home Entertainment.
P. (Director). (2004). Catwoman (Full Screen Edition) [Motion Picture]. America : Warner Home Video.
Story, T. (Director). (2005). Fantastic Four (Widescreen Edition) [Motion Picture]. USA: 20th Century Fox.

Internet
The Final Girl: A Few Thoughts on Feminism and Horror. (n.d.). Retrieved February 5, 2009, from http://www.horschamp.qc.ca/new
independant study jordan. (n.d.). Retrieved February 5, 2009, from http://jordan-murray.blogspot.com.
Gurinder Chadha. (n.d.). Retrieved February 5, 2009, from http://farm.imdb.com/name/nm0149446/
X-Men film review . (n.d.). Retrieved February 5, 2009, from http://www.tiscali.co.uk/entertainment/film/reviews/x-men.html

Works consulted
Books
Bennett, Jacquie (2005) :Media Studies AS & A2
Strauss, Levi (1949): The Elementary Structure

Moving image texts
Donner, R. (Director). (1978). Superman - The Movie (Four-Disc Special Edition) [Motion Picture]. America: Warner Home Video

Internet/ Newspaper
http://www.mirror.co.uk/celebs/latest/2008/10/07/clint-eastwood-angelina-jolie-is-too-sexy-115875-20780457/

Word Count- 4,189

Wednesday, 25 March 2009

Scary movie Franchise

Scary Movie

As you might expect, a group of teenagers -- not-terribly-bright Buffy (Shannon Elizabeth), her best friend Brenda (Regina Hall), stoner Shorty (Marlon Wayans), fey football player Ray (Shawn Wayans), loudmouthed Greg (Lochlyn Munro), sexually overexcited Bobby (Jon Abrahams), and his prim girlfriend Cindy (Anna Faris) -- are on the run from a maniacal killer who is looking for revenge after the kids accidentally kill a man following an auto accident. They also find themselves having to contend with intrusive reporter Gail Hailstorm (Cheri Oteri) and eccentric high school principal Squiggly (David L. Lander). Incidentally, the title Scary Movie is something of an inside joke: it was the working title for Scream, the movie that kick-started the mid-'90s slasher film revival.

The film was released on July 7, 2000 and grossed $42,346,669 (USD) in the opening weekend in the box-office. It went on to gross a total of $157,019,771 at the domestic box-office and a world-wide total of $278,019,771. Critics gave the film mixed reviews. The film currently has a "Rotten" rating of 52% on Rotten Tomatoes, and a rating of 48 out of 100 from Metacritic, indicating "mixed or average reviews".

Other movies linked to scary movie

Scary movie 2- The sequel to Scary Movie begins with a parody of The Exorcist, in which Megan Voorhees (Natasha Lyonne), is possessed and two priests, Father McFeely (James Woods) and Father Harris (Andy Richter), must drive the demon out. The exorcism doesn't go as planned, and a chain of The Exorcist-like vomiting occurs. Megan insults McFeely's mother and he shoots her in the head.

The Sixth Sense- sixth sense is a 1999 psychological thriller film written and directed by M. Night Shyamalan. It tells the story of Cole Sear, a troubled, isolated boy (Haley Joel Osment) who is able to see and talk to the dead, and an equally troubled child psychologist (Bruce Willis) who tries to help him, only to discover that he himself is dead. The film established Shyamalan as a writer and director, and introduced the cinema public to his signatures, most notably his affinity for twist endings. The film was nominated for six Academy Awards, including Best Picture

The Blair Witch Project - Blair witch project is a low-budget American horror filmreleased in 1999.Though the film is entirely fictional, the narrative is presented as a documentary pieced together from amateur footage. The film was produced by the Haxan Films production company.
The film tells the story of three young student filmmakers (Heather Donahue, Joshua Leonard, and Michael C. Williams) who supposedly go into the Black Hills of Burkittsville, Maryland to film a documentary about a local legend known as the Blair Witch. The three students never came back. The viewer is told that neither the students nor their bodies were ever found, although their video and sound equipment (along with most of the footage they shot) were discovered a year later.

Definitions

Parody: A parody is in contemporary usage, is a work created to mock, comment on, or poke fun at an original work, its subject, or author, or some other target, by means of humorous, satiric or ironic imitation

Spoof : a composition that imitates or misrepresents some body's style, usually in a humorous way

Scary Movie is both these things as it takes mocking other movies to a level that had not presiously been reached before. In the past movies such as scream have slighty made fun of movies that had come before them with little bits of dramtic irony in thier narrative here n there but scary movie is based enitlry of mocking the set of "rules" that have been buitl up on years of slasher/ horror movies.

Scream franchise

Original Scream

Scream is a 1996 film directed by Wes Craven and written by Kevin Williamson. The film revitalized the slasher film genre in the mid 1990s, similar to the impact Halloween (1978) had on late 1970s film, by using a standard concept with a tongue-in-cheek approach that combined straightforward scares with dialogue that satirized slasher film conventions. The film features many teen idols of the time, including: Neve Campbell, Rose McGowan, Skeet Ulrich, Matthew Lillard, Drew Barrymore, David Arquette and Courteney Cox Arquette.
Scream became a major commercial success upon its release, and was one of the highest grossing films of 1996. It was also highly acclaimed by many critics worldwide, who appreciated the film's tongue-in-cheek approach. It received an 84% "fresh" rating on Rottentomatoes.com As a result it spawned two sequels, Scream 2 and Scream 3. A fourth film was announced by The Weinstein Company in July 2008.


Scream 2

Scream 2 (1997) is a horror thriller film, the second part of the Scream trilogy. As with the other films in the trilogy, Scream 2 combines straight-forward scares with dialogue that satirizes conventions of slasher films, especially (in this case) slasher film sequels

Plot- Sidney (Neve Campbell) and Randy (Jamie Kennedy) are attending Windsor College. They see news reports that a couple (Jada Pinkett Smith and Omar Epps) were murdered in a movie theatre at the preview of the Stab movie, which was based on a book by Gale Weathers(Courteney Cox) about the Woodsboro murders (in other words, the events of the movie Scream). Phil Stevens is stabbed in the head through the wall of a bathroom cubicle. The killer then enters the cinema and sits next to Maureen Evans, and she assumes the killer is simply her boyfriend wearing a mask. During the Casey Becker kill scene in the film Stab, the crowd goes wild. Taking advantage of this, the killer stabs Maureen multiple times. Since many of the movie-goers are wearing the killer's costume (as publicity material provided by the movie studio) and are all carrying fake knives, nobody takes Maureen's attack seriously. Seriously wounded and dying, she climbs up the stairs in front of the movie screen and lets out one final cry before falling down dead. Soon, Sidney and Randy realize that the nightmare is starting all over again.

Scream 3

Scream 3 (2000) is the third installment in the successful Scream series of satirical horror films. It was originally meant to be last installment of the Scream series, but in 2008, Scream 4 was officially announced by Dimension Films.
The film stars Neve Campbell, David Arquette and Courteney Cox Arquette, each reprising their roles from the first two films. This is the only part of the Scream trilogy not to be written by Kevin Williamson, as he was busy working on his short-lived television series Wasteland. Ehren Kruger (writer of the film Arlington Road who would later go on to write the screenplays for The Ring, The Ring Two and The Skeleton Key) was given the task of writing the script based on notes Williamson himself had sketched out



Summary

Scream is considered a post modern movie because of its refrences to movies that have come before it, in a spoof style way they have made up thier own rules based on the unlucky outcomes that victims of past horror movies have reciveded thier main set of "rules" include


You wont survive the movie if you have sex.
Dont answer the phone
You wont survive the movie if you drink or do drugs.

Not opening the door
You may not survive the movie if you say "I'll be right back","Hello?" or "Who's there?"
Dont Scream



Other movies scream makes refrences too

Nightmare on elm street
Halloween film series
Night of the living dead
Dementia 13
The thing with 2 heads
Candy man
Prom night
The Howling

Definition of Terms

Pastiche: A media text made up form other media text pieces or of imitations of other styles

Irony:Irony is when humor is based on using words to suggest the opposite of their literal meaning

Intertextuality:
The practice of purposely including a reference of one text in the narrative of another, it can generate levels of meaning for the viewer.

How it links to Scream

All these 3 terms can in some way or another be linked to all three scream movies, firstly pastiche suggests that scream imitates other movies styles from the past which is arguably true because of the amount of slasher/ horror movies they make refrence to. There are aspects of texts such as halloween and nightmare on elm street that they imitate to give audiences a sense of genre identification towards the film such as the iconography they use like knifes, blood and brutal killings.

There is a high level of irony in scream with what they say because when they say certain puns they dont mean what they are saying but say it with comic effect because the adueince know what they realy mean and usually by saying particualr things they are making fun of movies in thier genre from the past. The intertextuality used in scream is blatant because that if the effect wes craven wanted to create with the target audience he selected, as he wanted his audience to be familiarised with the seruois aspects of the slasher film scream allowed him to use intertextuality from other texts and include it in his own films to create greater meaning for audiences so they could relate back to texts from the past and compare it to the imitated narrative that scream used.

Monday, 23 March 2009

Halloween UK

In a 2010 remake of the film Halloween I would not change some iconic features that are associate with the film to keep a sense of identity not only to the genre of the film but the entire franchise. I would keep the same killer but put him as part of another storyline that would be directly linked to the film of the past so audiences immediately get to grips of who the killer is and what his motivate for revenge is.

The two things I would mainly change are the characters and the settings, the characters would need to have a more 21st century look and style about them to maintain the realistic aspect of the film as audiences wont be able to identity with the protagonist like they would have 10 or 20 years ago because the times are different so how they would react to a crazy stalker would be different to times nowadays.

In addition I would have to alter the setting to give it a more up to date look that reflects how society is portrayed now, also some of the ways in which victims die will have to be updated because for audiences in 2009 the way in which victims are murdered would be almost laughable looking back to the 70s so they would have to die in ways that would realistic reflect life in these times.

I would create a character who is a pregnant teenage girl who goes on to be a protagonist in the film, she would be revealed as the daughter of Laura strode( he main female character of the original film) the storyline would revolve around the villains desire to kill the daughter and her baby as a substitute for failing to kill Laurie in the original movie. Her pregnant daughter would highlight the social issue of teenage pregnancy and the lack of a boyfriend supporting the family because their would be an absent Father so she will have to fend of the killer on her own.

Sunday, 22 March 2009

Elm Street Franchise

Nightmare on Elm Street

* A Nightmare on Elm Street is an American horror franchise that consists of eight slasher films, a television show, novels, and comic books


* The franchise began with the film series, which was created by Wes Craven, with various other individuals taking over those jobs for each film sequel


* The franchise is based on the fictional character of Freddy Kruger, introduced in A Nightmare on Elm Street(1984), who stalks and kills teenagers in their dreams; if Freddy kills the teenager in the dream world then they are ultimately killed in the real world.


* New nightmare movie planned to be released in April 2009


Wes Craven New Nightmare

* This film is kind of a spoof to the nightmare franchise

*The plot focuses on Freddy invading the real world and haunting the actors and crew responsible for the Nightmare on Elm Street films.

* It stands out from the rest of the franchise movies because it isn't part of the storyline that the franchise follows but instead takes a step into "real life"
* For New Nightmare, Freddy Kruger is portrayed closer to what Craven had imagined which was more darker and less comical







Summary



The Elm street franchise has grown a lot since it first came about producing very different yet similar style movies to one another all involving the villain Freddy Kruger, 5 of the 8 movies within the franchise were made in the 80s which is highlighted by the lack of key differences in technology or camera work between the movies. The new nightmare 1994 (spoof/ slasher)and Freddy vs Jason 2003(slasher/horror) films which are both hybrid are a world apart from the 80s movies in terms of the zeitgeist and the clear improvements of surroundings, editing and narrative as well as machinery like their weapons of choice being more dynamic from what they used in the 80s.

I think Wes cravens new nightmare helped paved the way for more movies of its kind which is considered the spoof genre, it was his idea to create a movie that was separate from the franchise movies that followed a storyline and intertwined with the rest of the movies in the franchise such as Freddy's dead: the final night mare and nightmare on elm street 5 : the dream child. As it was out of the ordinary in terms of the narrative and ideology of the film it made people take notice as it wasn't what they had been used to seeing.

cravens new nightmare combines fictional aspects of the films he had made such as the characters and setting with a real life spin on it making it seem like Freddy Kruger is carrying out his punishment in reality after escaping form the movie world, seemingly mocking the rules of the slasher genre thus why it is a spoof style movie. Scream which is made a couple years later reinforces some of the rules that slasher films go by but mocking some of the features of horror/ slasher movies that have come before it so in this case it would seem that Wes cravens new nightmare acted as a platform to build scream on to give a comical twist while still meeting audiences expectations in the process.




Friday 13th Hybrid movie

If I were to create a remake of the film Friday the 13th then i would keep some aspects the same as the movies in the past and change others to meet the current target audiences expectations. The repertoire of elements that have become accustomed to horror/slasher movies will be kept to keep in touch with the audiences of old who cherished those particular conventions that came with the type of genre and not try to alter that.

What I'm talking about when I mean those conventions are things like the use of knives to butcher helpless victims and groups of friends tress passing on the villains land, it would be based around the same narrative that Friday the 13th used in the original expect it would have a spin with the characters knowing beforehand about the villains threats but they will still go ahead with the counselling at camp Cristal lake.

Although audiences will question their intelligence at this decision I would make the characters arguably more intelligent then the killer by outsmarting him on more than one occasion, in addition the characters will give up more of a fight before dying rather than just get instantly murdered in a weak fashion this will give a more respectful outlook to the audience who have come accustomed to unrealistic scenarios.

By giving female characters more of a push with more fighting characteristics it would reflect the zeitgeist as women are being portrayed in a better fashion than they were 30 years ago in the time of the 2nd wave of feminism. The whole blonde bimbo ideology will be challenged through the main female leads personality and determination giving a more recent 21st century representation to blonde females. Another thing i would update is the "unwritten rules of slasher film" where if characters are promiscuous they are punished by death, I would change that to reflect the fact that society doesn't look at sex as such a sin as it did in the past but more about the consequences of sex instead (teenage pregnancies etc)

The setting will remain the same so the audience so the film doesn't lose a sense of its identity that the Cristal lake gives it, the setting is the perfect area for murderers to happen as it is quest away form civilization which allows Jason( the murderer) to commit his murders without the knowledge of society. Finally the killer will be able to savage his victims in a quest for revenge in a variety of different ways apposed to the limited ways they could do it in the past, new weapons would be introduced to murder the victims and different scenarios to the expectancies will be used as well to give the audience a sense of realism considering the changing of the times in society has found methods or murderer's in real life to be more sickening than in the past.

Friday 13th Horror Franchise

Friday 13th (1980) The original
* Paramount spent approximately $500,000 in advertisements for the film, and then an additional $500,000 when the film began performing well at the box office

* Friday the 13th, inspired by the success of John Carpenter's Haloween was made on an estimated budget of $550,000

* Friday the 13th was a horror classic that set the standard for slasher flicks of the 1980s.

* The film was made in a comic book and novel version afters its success

* The writer for this film was Victor miller and the director was sean cunningham

* It is based on a story where many years after a boy drowns one summer and two camp counselors are killed, a new owner decides to reopen which sparks a series of grisly murders

* The film came in at 31 on Bravo's 100 Scariest Movie Moments for the ending sequence, and was voted 15 in Channel 4's 100 Greatest Scariest Moments.


Other films that followed in the franchise


Friday the 13th Part 2- April 30, 1981- Mrs. Voorhees is dead, and Camp Crystal Lake is shut down, but a camp next to the imfamous place is stalked by an unknown assailant. Is it Mrs. Voorhee's son Jason who didn't drown in the lake some 30 years before


Friday the 13th Part III-August 13, 1982/ May 13, 1983- Two years ago, Chris Higgins had a traumatic experience at her family's lakeside resort when she was attacked by a mysterious and disfigured man. Now she returns with some friends to the very same...


Friday the 13th: The Final Chapter-April 13, 1984-After the confrontation with Chris, Jason presumed dead, is taken to the Wessex County Morgue. There he escapes killing an attendant and a nurse, making his way back to Crystal Lake Camp. Six teenagers rent a cabin next to the Jarvis' in Crystal Lake. Soon Jason finds his way to eliminate all who trespasses his way, but not for long


Friday the 13th: A New Beginning- March 22, 1985- While Jason lies unconscious, a local man decides to use Jason's old M.O. and wreaks havoc at a halfway house for troubled teens


Friday the 13th Part VI: Jason Lives- August 1, 1986- Tommy returns to the grave to make sure Jason is dead and accidently brings him back to life. Now it's up to Tommy to stop Jason's mindless killing and put him back where he belongs.


Friday the 13th Part VII: The New Blood-May 13, 1988- A distraught little Tina dreams of the time when she believes she drowned her father with her anger-triggered psychic powers. A trip back to the site is supposed to help Tina, but her doctor merely wants to exploit her. In a rage, Tina accidentally frees Jason from the bottom of the lake with her powers, and he begins to slaughter the teens next door

Friday the 13th Part VIII: Jason Takes Manhattan- July 28, 1989- The graduating class of the local high school is going on a cruise with Jason as a stowaway. The heroine believes she was almost drowned by Jason as a child. Jason eventually sinks the boat and kills many of the students on it, but many of them escape to Manhattan.

Jason Goes to Hell: The Final Friday-August 13, 1993- The secret of Jason's evil is revealed. It is up to the last remaining descendant of the Voorhees family to stop Jason before he becomes immortal and unstoppable. This is the final (?) battle to end Jason's reign of terror forever


Jason X-April 26, 2002- Jason Voorhees returns with a new look, a new machete, and his same murderous attitude as he is awakened on a spaceship in the 25th century


Freddy vs. Jason- August 15, 2003- It's been nearly ten years since Freddy Krueger terrorized people in the dreams, and the towns folk want to keep him erased from their memory. Freddy still has one more plan on getting back to Elm Street. He resurrects Jason Voorhees and sends him off to kill. The more bodies which fall to the ground, the stronger in which Freddy becomes. This is until, Freddy realizes that Jason isn't going to step aside easily, and must be taken down himself

Friday the 13th (2009) - February 13, 2009- The movie starts out in 1980 with Pamela Voorhees chasing the final surviving victim of the original Friday the 13th killings. She blames the counselors for Jason's death and is about to stab the last girl when the girl picks up a machete and cuts off Mrs. Voorhees' head before running away. Meanwhile, a young Jason is watching from above in a tree and jumps down to retrieve his mother's body and the machete


Summurary of franchise

It seems that the Friday the 13th franchise has come a long way since the original movie in 1980 with other 10 different remakes of the film all featuring the main lead character Jason but with new plots, twists and characters directors have managed to keep alive the franchise through the freshening up of the film. The last 3 movies in the franchise were made post 2000 and is clearly different to their predecessors mainly through the zeitgeist that is reflected in them compared to the ones of the 80s and 90s.

For instance the use of new 21st centenuary style machetes to show the evolution of technology throughout the decade, and the powers that the villains have are a lot more complex and dynamic of what they possessed in the first few movies in the time. Directors have had to change how the movies were perceived because the audiences through that time have also changed and with the theory that genre never stays the same being more evident through joining the sci fi and horror genres together in particular relation to the Freddy vs Jason movie where two separate characters form different genres and eras are brought into one movie to appeal to both sets of elder and younger fans

Monday, 16 March 2009

Essay Homework task

Essay Feedback

WWW

Referred to many aspects of Migrain and genre
Good use of Shep
Good links to narrative
lots of contexts points
Good links to feminist theories
Good links to other media issues and debates
Clear points and conclusion


EBI

Lots of small errors
Could use more aspects of Shep
Need to refer to my text more often


Targets for Essay

Check punctuation
Use more key concepts
Must use media language more
Include Laura Mulvey on a more regular basis
Use smaller footnotes
Get rid of headings


Bibliography

Put down more books
Refer to more films
Include word count


Next step

The next step I need to take to bring my independent study up to the next level is to Proofread the whole essay carefully and while doing that improve the accuracy and expressions I used. This will help me to see where i have gone wrong in the past and what specific things i need to put right in order to improve on the level i am currently working on.