Friday 18 October 2013

Representation in V swedes



What significant examples of gender roles (mother/father/strength/power) in the characters?

How does the film use it's stock characters - why?

How does the film represent Distopian Britain as a nation and does it follow film stereotypes?

What messages is the film trying to get across through its representation of gender and nation in these scenes?

Psychoanalysis - what Yonic or Phallic imagery does the film have in these scenes and what meaning can you read into this?

  

Tuesday 15 October 2013

Work for Half Term & Intro to coursework

 
Prepare for Learning – 10 mins
Starter: Django unchained – stylistic dialogue
What Macro?
What clues?
What is stylised dialogue?

Present New Information – 25 mins
What do you have to make?
1 minute
what is an independent film?

Create Meaning  – (15 mins) (sharing ideas/interpreting the criteria)
Analysis of last years work
What grades, what improvements?

Answer: Apply to demonstrate
What was their MACRO Framework (Mood Board)
Selecting films/scenes MICRO focus – what did they look into (answer these)

Apply to demonstrate15 min 
Watch trailers and feedback – what did you pick up on? MACRO & MICRO
 
Review - 10 mins
how MICRO meaning> MACRO contextual meaningwrite 1 statement to show how this relates to your film


 


Friday 11 October 2013

Cover work for Friday

Building on your lesson last week - apply what you have learned about the following aspects:

Pick the key scenes from the film that demonstrate this and Swede you own version.
Email to me to post to the blog

Some things to consider in your scene selection.

Here are your examples to choose from:


Email me your groups swedes from youtube so I can put on the blog before the lesson next Tuesday.

There were 3 groups so I am expecting 3 Swedes from the class

Homework: Individual Analysis 300 word commentary to the 3 swedes to answer the following questions



Good Luck
Next Week: Children of Men

Tuesday 8 October 2013

Lesson Plan 1.5 Representation

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G4h7NGMz2RI















MACRO Representation Genre Stock Characters


' Character Name Description Examples
A



Absent-minded professor An absent-minded scientific genius[2] Professor Calculus, Julius Kelp, Emmett Brown

Action hero A film hero protagonist with unrealistic physical resistance and fighting capabilities John McClane; John Rambo

Alien invaders Extraterrestrials who mount an invasion against Earth[2] War of the Worlds, Body Snatchers, Independence Day

Anti-hero A cowardly, antisocial or honorless protagonist Tony Montana, Faust, Falstaff




B


Bad boy (archetype) A roguish macho Charlie Harper (Two and a Half Men), Johnny Strabler

Battle-axe (woman) A domineering, brash and brazen woman Carrie Nation, Xena

Bimbo A dumb, pretty girl Karen Smith (Mean Girls)









Black knight Evil fighter antagonist Modred, Nazgûl, Darth Vader

Blonde stereotype A pretty, but stupid blonde Blonde and Blonder

Boy next door Average and nice guy

Breeches role A role in which an actress appears in male clothing Shakespeare in Love





Byronic hero A proud, moody and cynical man, yet capable of deep and strong affection Childe Harold, Eugene Onegin
C










Contender (stock character) A competitive underdog Rocky Balboa, Terry Maloy




D


Damsel in distress A noble Lady in need of rescue, traditionally from dragons Princess Peach, Princess Buttercup, Princess and dragon

Dark Lady (character) A dark, malicious or doomed woman Lady Macbeth

Holmesian detective A private or police detective who solves crimes by using logical deduction Sherlock Holmes, Columbo, Hercule Poirot

Hardboiled detective A gruff, tough and streetwise, but generally honest detective Sam Spade, John Hartigan, Philip Marlowe
E


Elderly martial arts master A wise, powerful man teaching his powerful craft to a young student. Often needs to be avenged Keisuke Miyagi, Snake in the Eagle's Shadow, Pai Mei









Everyman An ordinary individual Everyman (play)




F


Fall guy A scapegoat




Femme fatale A beautiful, but mischievous and traitorous woman Ruth Wonderly, Xenia Onatopp, Poison Ivy

Final girl A "last girl standing" in a horror film Laurie Strode, Sally Hardesty, Lila Crane




G














Girl next door An average girl with a wholesome conduct Winnie Cooper




H


Hag A wizened old woman, often a malicious witch Hansel and Gretel, Baba Yaga









Hero A powerful and morally integer protagonist, often on a quest[2] Luke Skywalker, John Carter of Mars, Neo (The Matrix)









Hotshot A reckless character known for taking risks. Also referred to as a "Badass". Martin Riggs, Pete Mitchell (Top Gun)
I


Ingenue (stock character) a young woman who is endearingly innocent and wholesome Ophelia, Cosette
J










Jock (athlete) A male athlete, often muscular, but not very smart Tommy Ross, Luke Ward








K


Killbot Usually large, menacing machines created to perpetrate murder Terminator

Knight-errant A noble Knight on a Quest Galahad, Sir Gawain
L


Legacy Hero A hero who inherits or adopts the name and attributes of an already or previously existing hero The Phantom, Green Lantern, Robin (comics)

Lipstick lesbian Lesbian and bisexual women who exhibit extremely feminine gender attributes









Lone Vigilante Loner who becomes a vigilante for Justice Charles Bronson's Death Wish Movies; Dirty Harry; The Outlaw Josey Wales

Lovers (stock characters) Main characters who deeply and truly fall romantically in love, despite the blocking effect of other characters. Often moonstruck, star-crossed lovers that are strongly fraternizing with the enemy. Romeo & Juliet
Tony and Maria (West Side Story)
Buttercup & Westley in The Princess Bride
M


Mad scientist An insane or highly eccentric scientist, often villainous or amoral.[2][12] Dr. Frankenstein
Dr. Moreau
Emmett Brown
Girl Genius

































Mother's boy A man who is excessively attached to his mother Private Frank Pike
N













O


Outlaw (stock character) A romanticized, often charismatic or social bandit. Robin Hood, Billy the Kid
P


















Professor (stock character) A common generic name for fictional characters who fill the role of doctors, scientists, or mad scientists. The Professor (Gilligan's Island)
R


Rake (character) A man habituated to immoral conduct. Francis Charteris (rake), Lord Byron, Gully Foyle (The Stars My Destination).

Redshirt (character) An expendable character who dies soon after being introduced; this refers to characters from the original Star Trek television series, often from the security of engineering departments of the starship, who wore the red variation of the Starfleet uniform and whose purpose in the narrative was to serve as cannon fodder Star Trek.

Reluctant hero A person who doesn't seek adventure or the opportunity to do good, and often doubts his or her abilities to rise to heroism. However, circumstances inevitably result in the character's becoming a true hero. Bilbo Baggins, Han Solo from the Star Wars series, Neo from The Matrix.
S







Secret identity An alias a character may take so that he or she may act in secrecy. Superman's alias Clark Kent, Spider-Man's alias Peter Parker, and Batman's alias Bruce Wayne.













Sidekick A plucky but generally subordinate close companion of the protagonist Robin, Dr. Watson, Sancho Panza













Space Nazis Nazi-like antagonists in science fiction works Patterns of Force, Iron Sky








Spinster An older, childless woman who has never been married Miss Havisham









Superhero An unrealistically powerful hero dedicated to protecting the public[2] Superman, Spider-Man, Batman





Supersoldier A soldier who operates beyond human limits or abilities Captain America; Soldier (1998 American film), Master Chief (Halo)

Supervillain Antithesis to the Superhero Lex Luthor, The Joker, Dr. Doom





Swashbuckler A joyful, noisy and boastful renaissance era swordsman or pirate Captain Jack Sparrow, The Crimson Pirate, Swashbuckler (list).
T






Tomboy A girl with boyish and/or manly behavior. Juno Macguff





Town bully A bully oppressing meeker residents of a town. Biff Tannen, Nelson Muntz.





Tragic hero A hero with a major flaw that leads to his or her eventual death and downfall. Sigurd, Boromir, Orpheus









Tycoon A person who wields considerable economic power, often acting at the expense of the less fortunate Montgomery Burns, Scrooge McDuck, Ebeneezer Scrooge
V














Villain[2] An evil character in a story Snidely Whiplash, Fu Manchu Master (Doctor Who)
W


Whisky priest A priest or ordained minister who shows clear signs of moral weakness, while at the same time teaching a higher standard Father Callahan









Wise old man An elderly character who provides wisdom to the protagonist. Albus Dumbledore, Yoda, Gandalf Mickey Goldmill


















Tuesday 1 October 2013

Themes & Values

Freedom is more important than life

One man's freedom fighter is another man's terrorist

People should not be scared of their governments, governments should be scared of their people

Fascism/Oppression/Dictatorships happen only if the people allow it


Which scene shows Freedom
Does V deserve his Revenge?
Which scene shows Religious Corruption
What scene shows Fascism
Give 2 Themes
Is Torture justified
What is the message of the film?
What scene shows Oppression?
What scene shows Terrorism?

V for Vendetta Representation & Themes

Lesson Plan Mod 1 assessment Themes & Messages

Starter: 

Decade in 7 minutes video – Mind Map Quiz game: What is?

Discuss: What are messages?

There's no mistaking the political statement in V for Vendetta, in which the hero is also a terrorist. “ Discuss

New Info: What is Dystopia?

What are Distopian Themes?

V for Vendetta Messages & Values 2 - Categorise

New Info/Create Meaning (mood board) Themes in V for Vendetta - Mood Board


Research, Sharing & Learning:

Group 1

Themes & Social relevance

Group 2

V for Vendetta - some Themes

Group 3

V for Vendetta Messages & Values - Key Scene & Values

Group 4

V for Vendetta - Messages & Values Religion


Apply

Exam Skills: How to write a thematic essay & structure


Section A Question 1
How are the key messages and values communicated in the films you have studied? [40/100 marks]

For questions set on the area of messages and values, candidates may offer discussions centring on the types of messages and values that can be interpreted from the texts selected for response and also discuss the processes by which these messages and values may be communicated.

Stage 1: Point (Themes)
In mixed groups, short list to 5 Distopian Themes - select based on how this links to the messages and values of the film.

Stage 2: Planning: Point & Examples (Key Scenes)
Evey's Torture (Guantanamo, Rendition) & awakening
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0EWnPG_yKYk
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ruEUCwVgHdk

Larkhill (GMO & Vaccines) & Valerie's Letter
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JHC94ubuTEM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k2W0-z8EnaM

Bishop & Evey
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M2SuiGJAEoE

Ending (Revolution) & Evey's role
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_-gHVGOoE48

V's Speech (Suicide Bomber, Media Network)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=chqi8m4CEEY

Dietrich's Secret Life
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jtVWdplyDx8


Apply to demonstrate (essay plan – points & Key scenes examples)

Collage of the Themes of the film you will focus on from looking at the key scenes (using homework 4 hrs of prep – all posts labelled “messages and themes”



Do not use stills from the film or any of the iconography – use google images


Starter Quiz: Super Heroes


Review

Why does the film raise these themes – what message is it trying to put across?

How are the key messages and values communicated in the films you have studied? [40/100 marks]


Stage 2: Conclusion

Character Profile Role Play – ‘Black Bag”

Interrogate V about his story/motivation - what are his beliefs, values, message of his actions


Interrogate Sutler

Interrogate Evey

Interrogate Dietrich


Conclusion: Which of these beliefs/ideas is the film supporting or criticising?



Stage 2: PEAS Main Body - Using your Themes List (last lesson)


Thematic approach (as opposed to Chronological)

Theme> Example> (Analysis of scenes)> Message & Ideas (Explain meaning)



Essay frameworks (given out)

Through the theme ofthe film conveys the message that...


The character personifies (the theme of)... therefore film condones the belief that...


The theme of vengeance is used to explore the idea that Terrorism is...


“The film explores the theme of... through the scene/character... (description) the costume is... (analysis) and symbolises...(synthesis) this celebrates/criticises/warns the ideal/belief that...”


“The film has strong...values, and questions the role of... by exploring the themes of...”

Stage 3: Write your Thesis Statement (Answer the question): what are the ideas of the film?
>Freedom is more important than life
>One man's freedom fighter is another man's terrorist
>People should not be scared of their governments, governments should be scared of their people
>Fascism/Oppression/Dictatorships happen only if the people allow it


Check Your Learning


Exemplar: Thesis Statement V for Vendetta exam response exemplar (messages & values)

Point (Theme)
Examples (Clips/scenes)
Analysis (HOW they create this theme Mise, Sound, Edit, Cinematography & the PURPOSE of this, meaning behind it)
Explain (How it links, explores the Ideas & Messages the film)

Homework:
Preparatory Reading on Representation
http://leighmediaasfilm.blogspot.co.uk/2012/12/macro-representation.html 

Q. What meaning can you read into how National Identity or Gender is represented in V clips?

MACRO Representation V & CoM clips for analysis directors commentary

Task: Video Essay Next Week...(more Sweding...)