All posts by Xavier Potter

Filters

Author:
Category:

Television CSPs

Capital

`Capital’ is a drama adaptation of Peter Bowker’s best-selling novel of the same name. The story follows the impact of gentrification in a city, particularly focusing on a fictional Pepys Road, in South London. It was released in December 2015 and directed by Euros Lyn. Matt Strevens produced it and it originated in the United Kingdom.

Deutschland 83

Deutschland 83 is a 2015 German television series starring Jonas Nay as a 24-year-old native of East Germany who, in 1983, is sent to West Germany as an undercover spy for the HVA, the foreign intelligence agency of the Stasi. It premiered on the 17th of June 2015 and was directed by Edward Berger and Samira Radsi. It originated in the United States, and also partly in Germany.

Letter to the Free

Letter to the Free was released by Common in 2016, and it was less for entertainment than it was for sending out a political message. It was made for a documentary called the Thirteenth which documents black American culture and the legacy of slavery, and highlights the mass imprisonment of black Americans.

Common is an American Hip-Hop artist and rapper, known for intelligent and positive lyrics that were performed in a spoken-word style.

“Slavery’s still alive, check Amendment 13
Not whips and chains, all subliminal” – References the law that you can become a slave if you commit a crime, and how he believes this to be morally wrong and constituting to slavery’s resistance to dying.

“Barren souls, heroic songs unsung” – talks about how so many people, particularly of the black community, could have achieved a lot more if not for how they are treated – “heroic songs unsung”

“Tied with the rope that my grandmother died” – depicts how the slavery of old is still in effect today with similar principles.

Jodie’s powerpoint – https://hautlieucreative.co.uk/media23al/wp-content/uploads/sites/58/2022/01/Music-as-Political-Protest.pdf

Cultural hegemony: power, rule, or domination maintained by ideological and cultural means. Letter to the Free’s lyrics could be seen as cultural resistance in response to this.

Post – Colonialism

Postcolonialism is specifically looking at identity and representation through the lens of Empire and Colonialism.

The Shadow of Slavery

Postcolonial critical thought emerged as a distinct category in the 1990’s, with an aim to undermine the universalist claims that ‘great literature has a timeless and universal significance [which] thereby demotes or disregards cultural, social, regional, and nations differences in experience and outlook’

The Link between culture, imperial power & colonialism

Edward Said was a respected academic. He asked if ‘imperialism was principally economic‘ and looked to answer that question by highlighting ‘the privileged role of culture in the modern imperial experience’ (1997:3) He came up with orientalism.

Jacques Lacan

THE ‘OTHER’

LANGUAGE OF MOVING IMAGE

Different media forms have their own sets of rules and guidelines to follow. In any kind of designing or art related task key fundamental concepts to consider are space, size and scale.

Camera + Focus

A camera is the most important piece of equipment used for moving image production and a crucial feature of it is the focus (depth of field), which can effectively control what the viewer is seeing and keeping track of at any given time. If I were to film my sequences again I would take more shots and use focus to control which parts of the shot viewers should be paying attention to.

  • High angle / Low angle / bulls-eye / birds eye / canted angle
  • Tracking / Panning / Craning / Tilting / Hand held / Steadicam
  • Establishing Shot / Long Shot / Medium Shot / Close-up / Big Close-Up / Extreme Close Up (students often struggle with the first and the last again issues with SCALE, SIZE & SPACE, so practice is really important)
  • Insert Shot

There are lots of types of shots you can use in moving image production, such as establishing shots, close shots and long shots. I am going to use close ups of my characters eyes, and a long establishing shot of a football pitch.

An insert shot is one which focuses on a specific object, and they can be used to effectively transition between scenes and provide detailed information to the viewer. I could use an insert shot of a door being closed in my sequence.

Edit

Moving from Camera to Edit, would be to compare the way that the camera can frame and position characters and thereby the audience by creating ‘subjectivity‘ and empathy. This is so important for creating a story, characters, a theme and of course COMMUNICATING MEANING. Similarly, the way in which images are edited together has a massive significance in terms of communicating an idea and of creating meaning.

It’s important to understand that everything visible in the frame will be noticed and looked at by the viewer.

The key question is WHEN TO EDIT e.g when is it best to move from one shot to another? The answer is usually found in the following list:

  1. EDIT ON ACTION
  2. EDIT ON A MATCHING SHAPE, COLOUR, THEME
  3. EDIT ON A LOOK, A GLANCE, EYELINE
  4. EDIT ON A SOUND BRIDGE
  5. EDIT ON A CHANGE OF SHOT SIZE
  6. EDIT ON A CHANGE OF SHOT CAMERA POSITION (+30′)

Parallel Editing – Editing between different places/characters at the same time. I could use this when comparing the reactions to the person making an offer and the football player.

Montage editing – Combining lots of shots in quick succession to tell a story in a short space of time. I could use this when the football player is training to combine many shots.

Shot Progression

Conventional shot progression – to create VERISIMILITUDE (ie realism, believability) usually involves the following shots (although not always in the same order). This links to the idea of invisible editing where the edit is not as noticeable.

  • establishing shot / ES, moving to
  • wide shot / WS,
  • to medium shot / MS,
  • to close up / CU,
  • to big close up / BCU;
  • and then back out again

Shot/Reverse Shots

This is when shots are captured within the range of a conversation or exchange. The basic sequence runs from a wide angle master shot that is at a 90′ angle to (usually) two characters. This sets up the visual space and allows the film-maker to to then shoot separate close-ups, that if connected through an eye-line match are able to give the impression that they are opposite each other talking. The shots are usually over the shoulder. External reverses – over the shoulder and both characters are visible. Internal reverses – excludes the head of the other character, much more close up shot.

Chatman / Barthes Notes

Chatman

Chatman came up with several ideas and terms, such as kernels, satellites and non-sequitars.

Kernels: Key moments in the plot and narrative structure

Satellites: Embellishments, developments or aesthetics

Non-sequitars: When elements may emerge and play out but actually turn out to be of little value, meaning or consequence to the overall / main parts of the narrative – not relevant in the big picture.

Elements that are essential to the story/plot/development are called kernels and moments that can be removed and the story would still make sense are called satellites.

Satellites are useful to develop character, emotion, location, time.

Roland Barthes

Proairetic code: Action, movement, causation

Hermenuetic code: Reflection, dialogue, character or thematic development.

Enigma code: The way in which intrigue and ideas are raised – which encourage an audience to want more information.

Moving image products are either based around ‘doing’/‘action’ which is proairetic code or ‘talking’ / ‘reflection’ which is hermenuetic code.

Genre

A style, type or category of entertainment. Often predictable.

Genre rests around a relationship between similarities and differences.

Genres are very important for institutions, audiences and industries.

“Producers are saddled with conventions and stereotypes, formulas and clichés and all of these limitations were codified in specific genres. This was the very foundation of the studio system and audiences love genre pictures” – this suggests that limitations are set out when attempting to create a film or moving image that will sell well, and there are difficulties in keeping similar ideas to fit the target audience, but making it slightly different so it isn’t boring or repetitive.

Steve Neale: “Genre is a repetition of differences and similarities to create different stories”

He argues that definitions and formations of genres are developed by media organisations. Furthermore it is seen that genres can change massively overtime, for example in 2002 Spider-man was released, which showed characters with super-human abilities to defeat villains with an opposing power, the films were seen to be comic like and colourful, whereas films from the exact same company like x-men were darker and more rough. But fast forward 20 years, action films are seen to have a lot more aspects of comedy and adventure in them to intrigue the viewers and keep the genre fresh and interesting.

This goes with Neales idea that genre keeps changing as society and humanity changes as well, film genre’s represent what is going on in the current moment in history, that could be opinions, events, politics, anything.

Ghost Town Notes

Key idea: the political, personal and cultural are always intertwined.

Antonio Gramsci was an Italian philosopher in the 1930s, and he wrote about cultural hegemony.

Cultural hegemony: power, rule, or domination maintained by ideological and cultural means.

Cultural hegemony works by passing the beliefs and ideas of the most powerful people in society as the only morally correct and legitimate one.

This is done by expressing and maintaining the ideas through its economic, political, moral, and social institutions (like the education system and the media).

These institutions socialise people into accepting the norms, values and beliefs of the dominant social
group.

The result of this is that society comes to believe that these ideas were not simply conjured up by people in power, but were created by some natural means and not fabricated.

Black Music as a Rebellious Notion

The lyrics of many reggae songs revolve around the black experience black history, black consciousness of economic and social deprivation, and a continuing enslavement in a racist ideology.

Reggae is often sung in Jamaican accents, emphasising a black subjectivity that is independent from white hegemony and offering a method of rebellion from the racist viewpoints offered by the white people inhabiting Britain.

Generally, black music brought forward ideas about challenging what Gilroy has termed, ‘the capitalist system of racial exploitation and domination’.

Britain’s streets erupted into rioting the day before Ghost Town reached number one in the charts. This was due to Ghost Town being released on 20 June 1981 against a backdrop of rising unemployment and it expressed the mood of the early days of Thatcher’s Britain for many.

“It was clear that something was very, very, wrong,” the song’s writer, Jerry Dammers, has said in an interview with the BBC.

Neville Staple (vocalist) said in Ghost Town that there was “too much fighting on the dance floor” which he sang from personal experience. This was closely related to the riots and violence which was occurring in Britain at this time, particularly because of the cultural hegemony involving black people who had migrated to Britain after the second world war. It was also linked with the rising unemployment rates in Britain at the time, particularly because of the work of Margaret Thatcher, the prime minister at the time who had closed the doors of a lot of factories, stripping many people of their jobs.

Paul Gilroy explores the construction of racial ‘otherness’ as an underlying presence within print media reportage during the 1970s and 1980s, arguing that criminalised representations of black males regularly stigmatised the black community. and set a bad example for the black community as a whole leading to racism and unfair treatment.

  • ‘Ghost Town’ is a haunting 1981 protest song that still makes sense today
  • It was The Specials’ last song before splitting up and reforming as The Special AKA and stayed at the top of the UK charts for three weeks.
  • The music video was directed by Barney Bubbles and filmed in the East End of London, Blackwell Tunnel and a before-hours City of London.

The fact that this music video is a Ska track relates to the idea that Britain has entered a state of multiculturalism in that Ska is a mix of reggae (Jamaican style music) and punk (white style rock music) and this represents how black and white people were intertwined at the time of the song’s release.

Todorov can be linked to Ghost Town in many ways. One of these is the idea that there is a beginning, middle and end to the music video as they start off in the tunnel in the beginning, enter the derelict city in the middle, and then return back to the tunnel at the end. I think this could represent the journey of many people coming from overseas to Britain at the time of the music video’s release, in that they were coming through the tunnel to get into Britain, they experienced harsh conditions while in Britain, and then left it, going back through the tunnel perhaps through the means of death, or perhaps imprisonment due to the cultural hegemony in effect at the time.

Levi-Strauss can be linked to Ghost Town in that binary oppositions are often hard to consider. For example, it is often unclear whether the music video is of a truly “black” or “white” nature, as many contrasting characters feature. However, there are some binary opposites that very clearly and obvious relate to ghost town, such as employed and unemployed being the latter.

Summed Up

Neville Staples – “Too much fighting on the dance floor” – Fighting and riots at the time because of unemployment – Thatcher and cultural hegemony as described by Gramsci involving black people.

Gilroy – “Racial Otherness” – Criminalised representations of black males set a bad example for the black community – racism, poor treatment.

Gilroy also describes “Postcolonial melancholia” – Idea that people from around the world in Britain are living reminders of the power Britain once had.

Genre of ghost town is Ska, genre is a repertoire of elements described by Neale – mix of reggae and punk music – Links to how black (Reggae) and white (Punk) people were constantly intertwined at the time whether they liked it or not.

Todorov – Beginning middle and end – Going through tunnel, into city and out via tunnel – journey of people from around the world – coming through tunnel into Britain, receiving harsh treatment in derelict city and exiting from Britain through the tunnel via death or perhaps imprisonment.

Levi – Strauss – Binary opposites – Black/white unclear, Unemployed/employed clear.

Film Poster Analysis

Stream NFL Games: How to Watch NFL Games Live on Hulu | Hulu

These three posters are part of a collection, and they all contain close up shots of one key dominant signifier. These signifiers show the main characters, being sports players, in a dominant, powerful light and this is reactionary to the audience that would usually consume this kind of product (young to middle aged men). The settings in these film posters are of football pitches/stadiums, and these give connotations of physical activity. The title text is all clearly defined and easy to see, and is often the second sign you will notice after the main character in the centre.

Forum Cinemas - Streltsov

Firstly, this film poster shows a dominant signifier of a sports player, dressed in sports clothing which connotes ideas of physical activity. Unlike the other posters above, however, it contains a lot more text than just the title, such as credits, release date, and the company licensing it. These bits of text are nicely indented to the point that they to not obstruct the view of the dominant signifier, but can be read easily. This creates a paradigm of signs which give information about the film.

FIFA 16 - Blossom Toko Komputer - Malang

This poster shows a similar dominant signifier, but here he is presented in the middle of running, giving connotations of physical activity. The other signs, such as the text, company logo and licensing label are neatly arranged, and the title text makes use of different colours to stand out from the rest of the elements. The number in the title has a different colour to highlight it, as this is a separate edition of the same film series. The signs cover the dominant signifier in such a way that their face is still showed clearly, and his facial expression remains easy to read in the bullseye shot.

32 World Cup Posters By Brazilian Artist Cristiano Siqueira | Solopress

This poster shows once again a single dominant signifier in a similar posture, with details such as copyright information and the event the poster is referencing. The title text, being an icon, is slightly hidden by the dominant signifier. This makes it seem like anchorage and makes it more supplementary than this kind of title text should be, however I think this makes it pleasant to look at.

FIFA 21 Video Game Poster – My Hot Posters

This poster has many images of the dominant signifier, being a football player, partaking in many different sporting actions. They are arranged in such a way that you can easily tell what his facial expressions are, giving connotations of head work and physical activity, and the icons of age rating and company branding are neatly positioned in a way which makes them only relevant if you look for them.

Moving Image NEA

Practical Elements of producing a media product include:

  • Actors
  • Set
  • Props
  • Technicians
  • Post Production Teams
  • Equipment
  • Scriptwriters
  • Producers
  • Musicians

Conceptual Elements of producing a media product include:

  • Storyline
  • Performance
  • Emotions
  • Events
  • Characters
  • Themes
  • Protagonists/Antagonists
  • Linear/Cyclical Structure

Key Terminology

  1. Linear – A straightforward structure with a very smooth progression and a definitive beginning/middle/end.
  2. Chronological – An order where events pass in an order of time.
  3. Sequential – When a media product is following a logical order or sequence.
  4. Circular structure
  5. Time based
  6. Narrative arc
  7. Freytag’s Pyramid
  8. exposition,
  9. inciting incident,
  10. rising action,
  11. climax,
  12. falling action,
  13. resolution,
  14. denouement 
  15. Beginning / middle / end
  16. Equilibrium
  17. Disruption
  18. New Equilibrium
  19. Peripeteia – A drastic and sudden change in fortune.
  20. Anagnoresis – A sudden dramatic revelation, usually occurs within the protagonist.
  21. Catharsis – The idea that we as humans can feel and absorb emotions from consuming a piece of media.
  22. The 3 Unities: Action, Time, Place
  23. flashback / flash forward
  24. Foreshadowing
  25. Ellipsis
  26. Pathos
  27. Empathy
  28. diegetic / non-diegetic
  29. slow motion

Peripeteia in Blinded by the Light – When the tickets are ripped up.

Anagnoresis in Blinded by the Light – When his father is badly hurt.

Catharsis in Blinded by the Light – At the end when Springsteen’s music is played by his father in the car.

My Film Synopsis

My film will be about a guy who plays a load of football, then gets an offer from a big professional club and goes on a wild adventure through the professional footballing world coming from humble beginnings.

Statement of Intent

My film will start out with a the boy playing football in a field(?) and then being approached by a scout who offers him a big opportunity after watching him play – staying outside after the session. My two film posters would feature the protagonist before the big disruption in the story, being excited about the offer he’s just received, and then the climax, with the protagonist crying in an office(?) about how his career is declining with someone else trying to comfort him. The pathos should be significant here, with a lot of sympathy for the protagonist coming into effect. The type of audience which would consume this product is one of young people, typically males, who resonate with football and often dream about growing up to be a footballer themselves. The type of institution who would release this kind of film would probably be a mainstream one, with perhaps ties to sports clothing/ a sports brand or even with relations to football games.

Todorov

Tztevan Todorov proposed the idea of a Tripartite narrative structure, which breaks down narrative structures into having a beginning, middle and end. He describes these as Equilibrium, Disruption and New Equilibrium.

Equilibrium – State of calmness, things are okay.

Disruption – When something drastic occurs and the protagonist has to reroute his actions in order to solve it.

New Equilibrium – The new state after the disruption has been solved.

Unreliable Narration – Deliberately deceiving audiences and providing plots that reveal unexpected moments.

Frame Stories – Stories told inside of other stories, testing the narrative structure by presenting nested moments of equilibrium and new equilibrium.

Multiperspective narratives – Using viewpoints of different characters and perspectives in a story, and so presenting equilibrium as disruption in another person’s eyes.

Vladimir Propp

Propp’s work suggests that stories use STOCK CHARACTERS to structure stories. This doesn’t mean that the characters are the sae every time, but all stories draw on familiar characters performing similar functions to provide familiar narrative structures. This is important because it means that the products created become reactionary, and sales are more guaranteed in a “risky business” such as the media and creative industry. Examples of stock characters are:

  1. Hero
  2. Helper
  3. Princess
  4. Villain
  5. Victim
  6. Dispatcher
  7. Father
  8. False Hero

Often there is a villain who has done something to a victim. This means that we need a hero, who (often) accompanied by a helper is sent out (by a dispatcher) to fight the villain. The dispatcher or similar donor (such as a father figure) prepares the hero in his ‘quest‘ and gives the hero some magical object. The hero generally meets the princess as part of his quest / journey which usually provides a happy ending. During the narrative we (and the princess) may be presented by a false hero.

Paul Gilroy – Cultural colonialism

After the world wars, the widespread British Empire was not sustainable anymore and so many people all over the world were taken back to Britain. This led to racial tension as many people of different skin colours, races and origins were gathered all in one place. Paul Gilroy talks about this and he argues that the British are undergoing a crisis of national identity. This was to do with the loss of the empire, and so the “British” culture shifted to a point where no-one knew what the true, legitimate ideas to believe were. There was increased tension because of the fact that the British people were bitter and angry after the loss of their empire and dominant position in the world, and so violence an conflict in these times was inevitable. Gilroy says that the people in Britain who came from different areas all over the world are living, physical reminders of the great power Britain once had. This is referred to as postcolonial melancholia.

Claude Levi-Strauss

Levi-Strauss was one of the first to bring forward and discuss the theory of Binary opposition. Binary means 2 different, opposing and contrasting things that can be used for comparison. This theory suggests that narratives (=myths) are structured around binary options.

Binary Opposites in Ghost Town

Opposition 1Strongly AgreeAgreeNeutralAgreeStrongly AgreeOpposition 2
Black.White
Employed.Unemployed
In control.No control
Upbeat.Lowbeat
Peaceful.Chaotic
Buzzing.Derelict