Monday, 30 November 2015
Representation of ethnicity- Line of Duty extract
Office scene
-The woman in this scene asks the man a question during a shot-reverse shot which implies that he is higher up in status than her and in the job hierarchy which is a countertype of the fact that black people aren't intelligent and this scene clearly portrays that he is.
House scene
-Hand held camera when he enters the house in an angry fashion, meets the stereotype of him being dangerous as it represents how he may be erratic.
-Camera zooms towards his angry face which suggests that he meets the stereotype of danger.
-When he has calmed down, the mid shot of him appears to be steady and stable which meets the stereotype of black people being friendly
-However when he begins to get angry again and arrests the woman, a two-shot is presented and is then hand held and the camera shakes which meets the stereotype of black people being dangerous again.
Car scene
- Tilted/canted camera angle of the women meets the stereotype of how white people are unstable.
- Close up of the black man which shows his tears, this meets the stereotype of how we feel pity towards him.
Sunday, 29 November 2015
Representation of ethnicity
Four key themes in racial representation:
- Exotic or other
- Dangerous
- Humorous
- Pitied
- Drug related
- Gangsters
- Athletes
- Friendly
- Criminals
The Walking Dead- Gabriel could be presented as exotic as he is a priest and as he believes in no violence, it shows that he may be weaker than others
Stereotypes for white people:
- Arrogant
- Rational
- Well Educated
- Awkward
Sherlock- Sherlock Holmes is socially very awkward as well as being highly educated
The Walking Dead- Rick is presented as making rational decisions as he is leader. He contrasts certain stereotypes as he isn't well educated and he isn't socially awkward as he is leader of the group and needs to be controlling.
Prison Break- Michael Scofield is presented stereotypically as he is very well educated and very rational in his decisions. However he also very kind and humble which contrasts the stereotype of whites being arrogant.
Stereotypes for East Asians:
- Intelligent
- Emotionless
- Hard Working
- Determined
- Good with technology
- Martial arts
The Walking Dead- Glenn is represented stereotypically as he is hard working, intelligent and very determined as he is one of the main characters in this TV drama. However he also contrasts the stereotype of them being emotionless as he is in a relationship with his wife.
Prison Break- William Kim is shown as being intelligent and hard working as he is very committed towards his job. He is also represented stereotypically as he shows lack of emotion.
Stereotypes of South Asians:
- Educated
- Religious
- Villains
- Criminals
- Educated
Monday, 23 November 2015
The British Film Industry
Why have a British film industry?
Pathe
Film4
eone
Working Title
The Avengers Age Of Ultron- 18/35
Ex Machina- 21/35
Mad Max Fury Road- 11/35
Star Wars: The Force Awakens- 12/35
eOne, StudioCanal and Entertainment control half of box office income made on all independent UK films.
How to be British
A British film industry allows films to grow and become popular in Britain. Also it acts as a business opportunity which can boost Britain's economy.
Pathe
- Chicken Run
- Inbetweeners 2
- Kill List
- MacBeth
- Cuban Fury
Film4
- Ex Machina
- Suffragette
- Two Brothers
- Trance
- Thunderpants
eone
- The Hunger Games
- Insidious 3
- Pixels
- The Age of Adaline
- The Little Prince
Working Title
- Everest
- We Are Your Friends
- Legend
- The Theory of Everything
- Rush
bigtalk productions
- The Worlds End
- Hot Fuzz
- Scott Pilgrim vs the World
- Cuban Fury
- In Fear
Warpfilm
- Four Lions
- This is England
- 71
- Submarine
- The Stone Roses
The Avengers Age Of Ultron- 18/35
Ex Machina- 21/35
Mad Max Fury Road- 11/35
Star Wars: The Force Awakens- 12/35
eOne, StudioCanal and Entertainment control half of box office income made on all independent UK films.
How to be British
- British director
- British producer
- Mostly British cast
- British production company
- British identity by the BFI
- British subject matter
- Sticking to the criteria
- Popular actors
- Originality
- Making sequels or prequels
- Play with British stereotypes
- High budget
- Usually have a smaller budget
- Niche audiences
- Mainstream- Usually only watches big Hollywood blockbusters and nothing else
- Aficionados- Watches a mix of films, including major foreign films
- Mainstream: plus- Likes the big blockbuster films but will see slightly lower budget films e.g. Mad Max Fury Road
- Film buffs- In favour of more challenging and interesting films e.g. Ex Machina
A British film industry allows films to grow and become popular in Britain. Also it acts as a business opportunity which can boost Britain's economy.
Monday, 16 November 2015
Mad Max Fury Road Facts
- Mad Max Fury Road starred actors such as Tom Hardy, Charlize Theron, Nicholas Hoult
- Filming first concluded in 2012
- Reshoots for the film happened in 2013
- The first set of filming lasted 120 days
- Early attempts were made to shoot the film in 2001 and 2003, but were delayed because of the Iraq war
- The film had a world premier on 7 May 2015
- Mel Gibson was originally supposed to star as Max but didn't after his cancellation
- It began a worldwide theatrical release on 14th May 2015
- Mad Max Fury Road made $374.4 million at the box office
- A PG-13 and R rated versions were both shown on separate screens, the R rated one was decided upon and then distributed by Warner Bros
- 114 people died in the film
- It is the longest film of all the Mad Max's with a duration of 2 hours
- Initial DVD release in the US 1st December 2015
- George Miller directed the film
- Its release in the UK was 14th May 2015
- Tom Hardy suffered a broken nose during filming following an elbow from Charlize Theron
- George Miller wanted to make sure that it wasn't a CGI film
- On April 3rd, Tom Hardy announced that he would sign on for 3 more Mad Max films
- The American dollar collapsed against the Australian dollar which made their budget "balloon"
- It made $16.77million on it's release day
- The film was released on Blu Ray and DVD in the UK on 5th October 2015
- So far has won 27 awards
- Tom Hardy played Max
- Charlize Theron played Furiosa
- Nicholas Hoult played Nux
- It contains 2000 visual effect shots
- George Miller recruited his wife Margaret Sixel to edit the film
- Charlize Theron wore a green cover over her arm to aid effects artists in digitally removing her arm from her scenes
- The film grossed over $375million worldwide, making it the highest grossing film in the Mad Max franchise
- Hugh Keays-Byrne played Immortan Joe
- The film is set after a nuclear holocaust
- Mad Max gets captured by war boys
- Max is imprisoned and used as a "blood bag" by Nux
- Imperator Furiosa is sent to collect gasoline, but when she goes off route and Immortan Joe realises that his five wives are missing, he sends his whole army in pursuit of Furiosa
- He calls on aid of nearby gas town and bullet farm
- Nux joins the pursuit with Max as his blood bag
- Furiosa drives everyone into a massive sandstorm in an attempt to loose the army
- It is successful apart from Nux attempts to sacrifice himself in an attempt to stop Furiosa
- After the storm, Max occupies the rig but cannot drive it
- He allows Furiosa and the wives to drive with him
- They drive through a canyon filled with bikers in an attempt to barter a deal for safe passage but they turn on her when they see the army coming
- Bikers chase the rig and one of the wives, pregnant with Joe's child, falls off, killing her and the baby
Representation of disability in TV dramas
The stereotypes:
In his 1991 study, Paul Hunt found that there are 10 stereotypes of disabled people, used in the media:- The disabled person as pitiable or pathetic
- An object of curiosity or violence
- Sinister or evil
- The super cripple
- As atmosphere
- Laughable
- His/her own worst enemy
- As a burden
- As Non-sexual
- Being unable to participate in daily life
Pitiful or pathetic:
Comedy:
Monday, 9 November 2015
Mad Max: Fury Road
Producer- George Miller, Doug Mitchell, P J Voeten
Distributer- Warner Bros production
Script writer-
Budget- $150 million
Box office gross- $224.7 million
Director- George Miller
Actors- Tom Hardy (Max), Charlize Theron (Furiosa), Nicholas Hoult (Nux), Hugh Keays-Byrne (Immortan Joe), Rosie Huntington-Whiteley (The Splendid Angharad)
Marketing-
Critical receptions- Rotten Tomatoes (87% liked it and it was rated 4.2/5), IMDb (8.2/10)
Reasons for success- The original 3 Mad Max's were a massive success in the 80's and 90's so it already had a big reputation so people were willing to see it.
Awards- It was voted best film of the year by International film critics, it also won most original trailer by the Golden trailer awards. It's also nominated for awards like, Best film, Best direction and Charlize Theron has been put up for best actress award by the AACTA awards.
Technology-
Distributer- Warner Bros production
Script writer-
Budget- $150 million
Box office gross- $224.7 million
Director- George Miller
Actors- Tom Hardy (Max), Charlize Theron (Furiosa), Nicholas Hoult (Nux), Hugh Keays-Byrne (Immortan Joe), Rosie Huntington-Whiteley (The Splendid Angharad)
Marketing-
Critical receptions- Rotten Tomatoes (87% liked it and it was rated 4.2/5), IMDb (8.2/10)
Reasons for success- The original 3 Mad Max's were a massive success in the 80's and 90's so it already had a big reputation so people were willing to see it.
Awards- It was voted best film of the year by International film critics, it also won most original trailer by the Golden trailer awards. It's also nominated for awards like, Best film, Best direction and Charlize Theron has been put up for best actress award by the AACTA awards.
Technology-
Tuesday, 3 November 2015
Stereotypes and countertypes of gender
Stereotype: a widely held and oversimplified image or idea about a type of person or group of people. Usually created by selecting the negative characteristics of that person/group of people.
Countertype: a widely held and oversimplified positive image or idea about a type of person or group of people. e.g. all religious people are kind.
Sex refers to the biological and physiological characteristics that define man or women.
Gender refers to socially constructed roles, behaviours, activities and attributes that a given society considers appropriate for men and women.
Male
Examples of male stereotypes include:
Countertype: a widely held and oversimplified positive image or idea about a type of person or group of people. e.g. all religious people are kind.
Sex refers to the biological and physiological characteristics that define man or women.
Gender refers to socially constructed roles, behaviours, activities and attributes that a given society considers appropriate for men and women.
Male
Examples of male stereotypes include:
- Anger/violent
- Can't multitask
Examples of male countertypes:
- Provides for family
- Physically strong
- Gentlemen
- Sporty
- In control
Female
Example of female stereotype include:
- Sexually promiscuous
- Avoid confrontation/weak
- Likes to go shopping
- Cooking and cleaning
Example of female countertype include:
- Nurturer
- Organised
- Romantic
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