Sunday, 30 June 2013

Useful theory for women in film noir...


Laura Mulvey and the Male Gaze 



Laura Mulvey and her theory of the Male gaze influenced by the works of Freud, is key to the Feminist Film theory movement and has been of great influence since the mid 1970's. Mulvey argues that in classic hollywood films in particular women are merely represented to provide visual pleasure to men, and the audience is constructed in a manner where they are all expected to be men. This male gaze is both voyeuristic and fetishistic. 



Her concept of "to-be-looked-at-ness", exemplifies that women were merley shown on screen in classic hollywood in order to provide men with visual pleasure and have an erotic impact. Mulvey argued that the typical key protaganist within a classic hollywood film was male and the audience members where similarly typically expected to be men. The typical male audience member is alligned with the films protagonist, by identification, admiration or aspiration. Therefore the audience member gains narcissistic pleasure from identifying with the films protagonist, placing themselves "in the shoes" of the films hero. 

Further the infulence of Freud an influnetial pyschoanalytic theorist to Laura Mulvey's theory is the idea of castration anxiety which is what a person unconciously think. For example if a woman was not objectified in the way she was in classic hollywood or placed in a position of lower authority a male would not feel as powerful. This unconcious idea is that a males power and dominance over a female is his sex drive and his dominance is threatened by a woman if she does not arouse this.

Tuesday, 18 June 2013

Great notes on 'MILDRED PIERCE'

http://www.filmsite.org/mild.html

RESEARCH TASK - Group C - COPY AND PASTE


THE BIG HEAT
Research for ‘THE BIG HEAT’. Fill in details below for the following, I’ve done the first one for you.

NUCLEAR BOMB/RADIOACTIVITY

  • Taken from Walter Metz - Film Criticism 21.3 Spring 1997. 
  • The bomb from the car is a flash and doesn’t show the car’s damage. This connects the car bombing to a cliche common in 1950s films. 
  • Debbie has hot coffee thrown in her face, the shows the audience a way of confronting the effects of violence on women. 
  • The effects of the coffee on her face suggest the consequences of radiation poisoning - a connection to atomic warfare. There were government attempts to censor radiation. 
  • ‘The coffee is a radioactive drink, it’s stinging effects are felt by Debbie’. 
  • The radiation burns on her face become the film’s ‘angel of death’. 

      
FRITZ LANG FLEEING GERMANY
       

          






HOLLYWOOD STUDIO SYSTEM DURING RELEASE OF THE BIG HEAT










KEFAUVER HEARINGS, USA AND CONNECTION THE BIG HEAT

Monday, 17 June 2013

Prep Tonight - Research...

NUCLEAR BOMB - BIG HEAT


FRITZ LANG FLEEING GERMANY


HOLLYWOOD STUDIO SYSTEM - BIG HEAT


KEFAUVER HEARINGS, USA AND
CONNECTION WITH THE BIG HEAT

FILM NOIR EXAM CRITERIA


EXAM CRITERIA – DEMONSTRATE UNDERSTANDING OF A RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN GENRE AND SOCIETY

You will choose - how film noir is influenced by society.

YOUR FILM NOIR EXAM

NOT ACHIEVED

  •  wrote about individual texts, not mentioning genre, or how the individual films related to an issue in society at the time the film was made
  • referred to one or two texts, or made very minimal reference to texts
  • generalised, or oversimplified their ideas with little supporting evidence from the genre or from society
  • showed a weak understanding of historical events
  • historical events did not show an obvious link to genre
  • did not identify a characteristic of the genre
  • wrote on texts that did not easily relate to their genre.

ACHIEVED

  • identified a suitable genre
  • referenced three texts
  • provided two links between genre and society and gave a valid explanation
  • examined the genre through individual texts and made some link to genre
  • discussed an aspect of genre
  • focused on a text and its connection with a significant historical event without developing an argument about the genre.

ACHIEVEMENT WITH MERIT Candidates awarded Achievement with Merit typically:

  • identified a significant feature of the genre, a key aspect of the genre that could be linked to society
  • used valid and accurate details about the genre and society
  • analysed the purpose or essence of the genre and developed an argument about the link between genre and society
  • built an argument for the link between genre and society by using several texts as evidence for each part of their analysis
  • showed a level of evaluation and supported generalisations with evidence.

ACHIEVEMENT WITH EXCELLENCE Candidates awarded Achievement with Excellence typically:

  • gave a structured response with a strong argument used thesis statements based on their chosen question and carried the argument through the response
  • effectively incorporated relevant critical theories to develop their responses, using genre theory or additional material to convincingly support their generalisations, such as audience reception or representation theories
  • evaluated an aspect of the genre by going beyond the texts, drawing together society and genre
  • wrote clearly, logically and fluently used comprehensive and insightful evidence from all texts studied to develop a response on their genre understood the complex nature of evolving societies and the evolution of genres.

Sunday, 16 June 2013

MILDRED PIERCE NOTES



Cast

Crew
Joan Crawford - Mildred Pierce 
Jack Carson - Wally Fay 
Zachary Scott - Monte Beragon 
Eve Arden - Ida Corwin 
Ann Blyth - Veda Pierce 
Bruce Bennett - Bert Pierce

Michael Curtiz - Director
Jerry Wald - Producer
Ernest Haller - Cinematographer 
Ranald MacDougall - Screenwriter 
James M. Cain - Original Novel
Max Steiner - Film Score



Mildred Pierce is the story of the eponymous housewife and mother (Joan Crawford), who has a pathological need to win the love and approval of her older daughter Veda (Ann Blyth). Mildred asks her unemployed husband Bert (Bruce Bennett) to leave their home when he begins spending way too much time with a Mrs. Lee Biederhoff. Mildred takes a job as a waitress, afraid that snobbish Veda will find out what she does for a living and think less of her.
She enlists her husband's unctuous former business partner Wally (Jack Carson) to help her open her own restaurant and throws herself into her work after the tragic death of her younger daughter Kay (Jo Ann Marlowe). Mildred becomes involved with Monte Beragon (Zachary Scott), the owner of the property she buys, but she sends him packing when he turns out to be a parasite. When she has a falling out with Veda, however, she marries Monte in the hopes that the people he knows and the elegant world he inhabits will attract Veda into coming home. This it does, but with disastrous consequences.
Mildred Pierce is is imbued with real cinematic know-how (albeit in a style not as showy as Alfred Hitchcock's), and the dialogue is often priceless. Michael Curtiz's direction is crisp, smooth and highly efficient, his handling of both players and props taut and assured. Curtiz and the brilliant cinematographer Ernest Haller ensure that Mildred Pierce is filled with expert camerawork, interesting angles, and evocative lighting schemes.
It is a question if Mildred Pierce, like Double Indemnity, can truly be classified as film noir. It shares many of the same elements--sleazy men supported by women, too-young women with hot bodies, illicit love affairs, murder in ritzy quarters on a moonlit night--but it lacks one of the most essential ingredients: a hard-boiled anti-hero, unless one counts Veda (Ann Blyth).
--LAWRENCE J. QUIRK, from Joan Crawford:
The Essential Biography
, 2002.

The 1941 film version of the James M. Cain novel Mildred Pierce was the brainchild of Jerry Wald. Cain wrote 'DOUBLE INDEMNITY' the novel. He had been a 1930s Warner writer for seven years, performing much the same machine-like screenplay function that Zanuck had done in the late 1920s. Wald and Michael Curtiz had been personal friends since at least 1934, but they had never worked together until Wald had grown determined to bring Mildred Pierce to the screen with Curtiz as director.
Cain's novel was a sleazy domestic drama without crime or thriller ingredients, unlikely as it stood to be allowed by the Hays Code. Wald had hit upon the idea of introducing a murder at the opening and then a flashback narrative device which would open the way for the "moral retribution" element so beloved by the censors. Jack Warner had given him no encouragement, but Wald persisted to the point where he had approached Cain himself to write a screenplay in mid-1943. When Cain had first agreed and then withdrawn, Wald had invited Thames Williamson, a story analyst and an aspiring writer, to try his luck. The resulting script was good enough for Wald to show it to Jack Warner, who agreed to buy the screen rights.
At this point various actresses, including Ida Lupino, Ann Sheridan, and Barbara Stanwyck, were considered for the part of Mildred. This seems to have been destined for Rosalind Russell, presumably on the strength of her showing in Roughly Speaking, still being filmed. But Joan Crawford, who had not appeared in a major role since signing for Warners, lobbied relentlessly for the part. By degrees her sheer perserverance won over Wald, Trilling, and finally Jack Warner as it dawned on them that her movement into early middle age, combined with the rags-to-riches roles she had so often played at MGM during the 1930s, rendered her more suitable for Mildred than they had previously appreciated.
Curtiz gave this soap opera plot gleaming treatment. The opening scenes of Beragon's murder by an unseen assailant, Mildred's effort to frame Fay by luring him to the beach house and then locking him in with the dead body, and the police station exchanges before the main story dissoves into flashbacks, are electric. Curtiz's direction keeps the plot moving steadily, while the players are without exception in top form. Joan Crawford embodies energetic ambition, Eve Arden wisecracking sisterly humor, Jack Carson ruthless opportunism, Zachary Scott smooth but brainless idleness and lust, Bruce Bennett worthy salt-of-the-earth dullness, and Ann Blyth detestable self-centered go-getting heedless of the consequences for others.
The 1945 summer was occupied with the Steiner score, editing, and sound fine-tuning, after which Jack Warner deferred the release in the hope that the film would fare better in a post-war atmosphere. On this basis it was released a few weeks after Japan's surrender in September 1945. It raked in a profit of just over four million dollars and gained the best actress Oscar for Crawford, revitalizing her career. Oscar nominations also went to Blyth, Arden, and Haller. Mildred Pierce, arguably the finest noir film of its genre in cinema history, rounded off a very impressive wartime record for Cutiz. The three largest studio box-office draws were Casablanca, Yankee Doodle Dandy, and Mildred Pierce in that order. All three have remained classics.
--JAMES C. ROBERTSON, from The Casablanca Man:
The Cinema of Michael Curtiz


Saturday, 15 June 2013

Wednesday, 12 June 2013

THE BIG HEAT - NOTES FOR EXAM





Gloria Grahame and Glenn Ford in The Big Heat. 1953. USA. Directed by Fritz Lang

Fritz Lang (1890–1976) found his American sea legs with You Only Live Once (1937). In successive years, he adapted the themes of violence and fate that dominated his German films to more prosaic milieus than those provided by Richard Wagner, a futuristic metropolis, the Moon, or the bizarre Berlin underworld. During this period, Lang actually made three Westerns (The Return of Frank James, Western Union, and the highly stylized Rancho Notorious), and he enthusiastically met his obligations to his new nation with commendable anti-Nazi films like Man Hunt, Hangmen Also Die, and Ministry of Fear. As America emerged from the war era, however, Lang was able to discover a fertile homegrown landscape for his particular paranoia. The America of his imagination in The Woman in the Window, Scarlet Street, and Clash by Night was cheesy and corrupt, but his vision of violence and crime reached its fullest flowering in The Big Heat.


As Kim Newman has pointed out, the 1950s were a rich time for Hollywood movies about organized crime. This was, after all, the time of the televised Kefauver hearings (which was about major drug/crime kingpins being tried in the public domain). As with a similar cycle in the early 1930s, during the Cagney/Robinson/Muni era at Warner Brothers, these films were exploiting public interest in contemporary headlines, and The Big Heat seems to have had its own level of credibility. (As fanciful as Lang’s Mabuse films and M may appear to us now, they had a certain level of authenticity for German audiences of their time, although these same masses would shortly find value in the ravings of Adolph Hitler.) As film historian and director Gavin Lambert put it, “The basic material of The Big Heat resembles that of a score of American thrillers, but a personal imagination transforms it and relates it to the artist’s own created world…rich in symbols of evil prescience.”



In the years between You Only Live Once and The Big Heat, Lang’s approach seems to have changed. The “criminals” in the earlier film, the Clyde-and-Bonnie-like Henry Fonda and Sylvia Sidney, were presented sympathetically, with organized society, in the form of the police, out to get them. Even Peter Lorre’s child murderer in M, after all, had been given moments of pathos. In The Big Heat, however, Glenn Ford’s cop is the hero and victim of the criminals. What Lang is acknowledging is what critic Lotte Eisner refers to as his recognition of “the spread of corruption throughout society on both sides of the law.” Although he is motivated by revenge, Ford’s character has the purity of Siegfried in Die Nibelungen(1924) and, like Siegfried, he is contending with overpowering and menacing forces. It seems an open question as to whether the “big heat” (the police crackdown on crime) will be hot enough to contend with this menace.
In a sense, The Big Heat represents Lang at his most mature and persuasive. Thanks to a superior script by Sidney Boehm, there is a pervasive air of normality, and the characters have more depth and detail than is typical in Lang’s films. Lacking the visual nuance of the German films, his American works are more dependent on conventional virtues of plausibility, and the director is immensely assisted here by the performances of his actors. Glenn Ford was probably never better, and Lee Marvin, a decade before his switch to being a good guy, was about as bad as anyone could be. In spite of her Oscar for The Bad and the Beautiful, Gloria Grahame was one of the most underappreciated 1950s actresses. I can only echo what my late friend, George Morris, said of her performance for Lang: “Grahame proves once again that she has no peers in the petulant-slut department.”

Monday, 10 June 2013

Year 13 Media Studies

Watch the following documentary: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p9CvTTyBW9M

Take notes on the following:

CONTEXT:
ACTORS/INDUSTRY:
CINEMATOGRAPHY:
RUMOURS REGARDING THE FILM:
OTHER NOTES:

Tuesday, 4 June 2013

QUESTIONS FOR DOCUMENTARY

CLICK 'SLIDESHARE' ICON, CLICK 'SAVE' and download.
Questions for film noir documentary 'bringing darkness into light' from Emily Bell

If you have any problems just copy and paste!!!


QUESTIONS FOR FILM NOIR DOCUMENTARY - ‘Bringing Darkness to Light’

·  What is film noir described as by James Elroy (CLUE: he speaks about it at the end and at the beginning)?

·  In what time period did film noir occur?

·  Kim Newman described the routes of film noir as coming from what country? What was this movement called?

·  The writer/director of SIN CITY (Frank Miller) describes the difference between the crime genre and film noir. What does he say?

·  What distinguishes film noir as a ‘genre’?

·  Eddie Muller describes the politics at the time film noir was made. What does he say?

·  Eddie Muller describes how directors/writers pitch noir to audiences. What does he say?

·  What films did Eddie Muller and Christopher Nolan describe as starting noir?

·  Who says the following? ‘the black tide that washed over Hollywood in the post WW2 years’, ‘indicative of America’s loss of innocence’ and ‘screenwriters painted almost an anti-myth’.

·   How does Eddie Muller describe how film noir emerged from France?

·  What did screenwriters have to work within the limits of?

·      What will you find in terms of conventions in these films?

Monday, 3 June 2013