Point 1, Genre: American Film noir – the development of film noir
Classic technical elements used in cinematography, editing, narrative.
Modernised technical elements – greenscreen set, shot on digital, narrative dif
Point 2, History: The influence of major historical events and its effect on the theme of film noir, i.e. Post war anxiety, trauma, fear of infiltration, and loss of trust in law enforcement.
1947 – 2 years after the war ended. Post war Recession – Cold war, anti-communist, Hiroshima.
2001 – attack on the twin towers by terrorist group al-Qaeda. Trauma, fear of the other, loss of trust
Point 3, Post feminism: Historical context and the representation of femme fatale
Elsa Bannister her role as a femme fatale
Nancy Callahan her representation and roles in the film
Point 1: Tropes, and themes associated with films
Point 2: The fear of the other within the community
Q. How does the ‘Serial Killer’ subgenre change when applied to different cultural contexts, shown with ‘Zodiac‘ (David Fincher, 2007) and ‘Memories of Murder‘ (Bong Joon-ho, 2003)?
In conclusion, the ‘Serial Killer’ subgenre has many similarities and differences when compared between separate cultures. With the rise in popularity of films from outside Hollywood, foreign films are receiving much more recognition, and this trend has continued and expanded with films such as Parasite and TV shows like Squid Game, which will expose audiences to other interpretations of the genres and subgenres they are typically used to.
Q. How does the ‘Serial Killer’ subgenre change when applied to different cultural contexts, shown with ‘Zodiac‘ (David Fincher, 2007) and ‘Memories of Murder‘ (Bong Joon-ho, 2003)?
POINT BY POINT COMPARISON
‘Zodiac‘ EXAMPLE
‘Memories of Murder‘ EXAMPLE
Comparative Point 1 Genre
Comparative Point 2 Perspectives
The main characters
The murderer
Comparative Point 3 Cultural Background
USA
South Korea
Comparative Point 1:
Zodiac and Memories of Murder are both remarkably similar, yet strikingly different interpretations of the ‘Serial Killer’ subgenre. These films can be viewed through Steve Neale’s genre theory, where he argues that enjoyment is extracted from “repetition and difference.” [PRESENT WORDS ONSCREEN]He suggests that genres are interpreted and understood by audiences through the repetition of the use of components utilised within those genres, in addition to newer or more unique elements that the filmmaker has chosen to include, to differentiate from other films with the same genre. This blend of repetition and difference arguably creates more engagement and intrigue for the audience, since rather than watching the repetitive narrative and predictability of the films, they are introduced to slight or major variations in story and content. The films can also be viewed through Christian Metz’s genre theory, in which he believed that genres go through a cycle of stages during their lifetime. These were: the experimental stage, with films such as The Cabinet of Dr Caligari, where the generic codes and conventions are set; the classic stage, with films such as Dial M for Murder, where the codes and conventions become iconic and idealized as guidelines for the genre; the parody stage, with films such as Clue, where the codes and conventions are used to mock the genre; and the deconstruction stage, with films such as Pulp Fiction, where the genre begins to evolve and merge with other genres. Both Zodiac and Memories of Murder fall under the category of the deconstruction stage.
Comparative Point 2:
These films create their own unique identities through the distinguishable perspectives they are told from. Zodiac takes the traditional approach, in which the audience connect with the principal characters working on the case, with the narrative being told from their perspectives throughout. Even when they are not present during a scene, Fincher presents their perception of each crime through the similar and differing accounts that the surviving victims gave to the detectives. This is made clear through the inconsistent appearance of the Zodiac killer in the recollections of each crime, where he is described with contrasting physical features including size and stature, with a different actor playing him each time. The decision to direct the film in this way was through David Fincher’s intense obsession for historical accuracy. When deciding which Zodiac murders he should include in the film, he made certain that every death he included had a surviving witness that he was able to interview. With so much misinformation surrounding the Zodiac killer, he only wanted to include moments in his film that he could verify the accuracy of. By watching the film through the protagonists’ eyes, the audience are easily misled and only receive information when it is revealed to the main characters. Memories of Murder, on the other hand, has a clear borderline between the audience and the characters onscreen, by giving them the perspective of ‘spectators’, watching the action unfold without needing to participate. Through this perspective, the audience is allowed to witness the murders as they take place, gaining information that the detectives don’t even have, and there are even moments of intra-diegesis from the killer’s point of view as he stalks his next victim. The final shot of Memories of Murder, where Detective Park breaks the fourth wall and looks directly into the lens of the camera, as though looking for the killer in the audience, puts the viewer in the culprit’s perspective, which forms the revelation that the scenes where he commits the crimes, are his memories.
Comparative Point 3:
With both Zodiac and Memories of Murder being based around true past events, there is plenty of historical and cultural context that can be used when comparing the two films. In Zodiac, the main story is set in the busy city of San Francisco during the late 1960s to early 1970s, where most citizens of San Francisco see the taunting letters, phone calls and murders as more of an interesting story than an actual danger, making the Zodiac killer seem insignificant and unthreatening. The director, David Fincher, grew up in the San Francisco Bay Area and could recall being afraid of the Zodiac killer as a child, so he had a personal connection to the material which assisted in the crafting of the film, as well as the 18 months both Fincher and screenwriter, James Vanderbilt, spent researching the case by reading thousands of documents, and interviewing many surviving witnesses and police officers to piece together the most accurate version of the story. In Memories of Murder, the main story is set in a small, isolated village in South Korea during the 1980s, where the people live in fear of the serial killer roaming their town. With the bigger cities in South Korea developing at a much faster pace than the small villages, the characters are poorly educated, and systems in place to deal with crime scenes are non-existent, with evidence constantly being mishandled or tampered with. For example, when a tractor drives over a footprint at the place of the murder, ruining it, Detective Park uses the shoe of his first suspect to plant a new footprint, and takes a photo for evidence. By re-examining a real-life crime that many Koreans would still remember, the film has the chance of appealing to its Korean audience and remind them of the politically and socially dark period during the 1980s.
Author(s): Paul Schrader Source: Film Comment, Vol. 8, No. 1 (SPRING 1972), pp. 8-13 Published by: Film Society of Lincoln Center Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/43752885
19/5/22
The Philosophy of Film Noir
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Conard, M. T. (Ed.). (2006). The Philosophy of Film Noir. University Press of Kentucky. http://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt2jchn4
23/5/22
Encyclopedia of Film Noir
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Mayer, Geoff. Encyclopedia of fi lm noir / by Geoff Mayer and Brian McDonnell. p. cm. https://books.google.je/books/about/Encyclopedia_of_Film_Noir.html?id=RsBHnZoyO4kC&source=kp_book_description&redir_esc=y
23/5/22
The Philosophy of Neo-Noir (The Philosophy of Popular Culture)
book
Conard, Mark T., editor. The Philosophy of Neo-Noir. University Press of Kentucky, 2007. JSTOR, http://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt2jcts3. Accessed 23 May 2022.
Naremore, James. “American Film Noir: The History of an Idea.” Film Quarterly, vol. 49, no. 2, 1995, pp. 12–28. JSTOR, https://doi.org/10.2307/1213310. Accessed 23 May 2022.
23/5/22
Projecting Trauma: The Femme Fatale in Weimar and Hollywood Film Noir.
Extract
Hales, Barbara. “Projecting Trauma: The Femme Fatale in Weimar and Hollywood Film Noir.” Women in German Yearbook, vol. 23, 2007, pp. 224–43. JSTOR, http://www.jstor.org/stable/20688286. Accessed 23 May 2022.
23/5/22
Agency and Fate in Orson Welles’s The Lady from Shanghai
Allison, Deborah. “Film Noir: From Berlin to Sin City.” Film Quarterly, vol. 60, no. 2, 2006, pp. 80–81. JSTOR, https://doi.org/10.1525/fq.2006.60.2.79.3. Accessed 23 May 2022.
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Crime, Guilt, and Subjectivity in “Film Noir”
Journal
Fluck, Winfried. “Crime, Guilt, and Subjectivity in ‘Film Noir.’” Amerikastudien / American Studies, vol. 46, no. 3, 2001, pp. 379–408. JSTOR, http://www.jstor.org/stable/41157665. Accessed 23 May 2022.
Jordan Peele’s 2017 film Get Out and Bong Joon-Ho’s 2019 film Parasite are prime examples of the subgenre social thrillers. These two films have moulded the subgenre due to their different cultural approaches. Parasite follows the Kim family who are struggling through poverty and find a way to all work in the same household for a wealthy South-Korean family, the film shows the power that money has on Korean society and the lengths the poor are willing to go to get it. Peele’s Get Out on the other hand follows Chris, an African American man, who goes with his White girlfriend to visit her parents for the weekend. After arriving Chris slowly realises that his girlfriend’s parents are abducting African Americans and brainwashing them. The film focuses on racial alienation and shows the racially motivated anxiety Black people are faced with. Peele’s film was one of the first films to be named a sociological thriller (social thriller) and brought mass attention to the subgenre. I choose these two films as they both present large societal issues for each of their cultures for example, poverty in South Korea and racism in North America.