Monday, 25 February 2019

GENRE CONVENTION: This Is England

Production: Big Arty Productions, EM Media, Film Four, Optimum Releasing, Screen Yorkshire, UK Film Council, Warp Films
Distribution (US): IFC Films, Netflix, Red Envelope Entertainment, IFC First Take
Distribution (UK): Optimum Releasing
Lighting: attempts to reproduce naturalistic lighting for example at the beginning in Sean's house, in the school and in the cafe are lit to make them look as naturalistic as possible.
Setting: often on location in urban areas somewhere in the north of England to add a strong sense of realism.
Handheld shots: making the audience feel they are part of the action

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BoxOffice: $329k(US) /  £3,1m(UK) / $8,2m(Worldwide)
This Is England made around 10 more in the UK than in the US. It didn't perform well in the US is because the choice of the central protagonist (young boy, ginger) which doesn't make it glomerate and something Working Title [WT] would never do. Also the choice of cast (no A-list stars) and their accent makes it hard to understand for a lot of viewers and the social realist genre doesn't appeal to the US film market.


This Is England are rarely funded by the studio's system since they don't make much in Box Office, so they are often funded independently or through organisations such as the Film Council, National Lottery, Channel4. 

In addition, the film was a critical success winning many awards, and also a commercial success making over $8m on a cost of $1.5m

This is England is an Indie, low financed and social realist film. Being a social realism, the film tackles various issues within society, and looks at the points of view of different generations and social classes from the same time the movie was set. However, the movie was made around 2006, because certain political parties such as BNP and UKIP started to form in the early 2000's and there was a lot of controversy around them due to their racial policies and views. Because the movie is set in the 1980's it connotes how culturally diverse England was at that time, it therefore makes the viewer aware of the issues surrounding immigrants and certain people extreme view on them.

The movie addresses the culture and attitudes of the 'skinheads' and the English Nationalists and the consequent effects that this has on the various characters throughout the film. 

Narrative

Shane uses Todorov's narrative theory to make the movie even more realistic.
Equilibrium: Sean lives with his mother and his father was killed in the war which makes him very upset and in addition he gets bullied at school.
Disruption: Sean meets Woody and his gang, they befriend him and enrolled him into the gang and giving him a 'skinhead' uniform.
Recognition: Sean joins the gang around Combo and gets drawn in to the racist national front and their cirminal activities
Repair: Sean witnesses the violent attack on Milky and realises that Combo is a vicious racist bully
Restoration of a new equilibrium: The new equilibrium is that Sean rejects the racial ideology of Combo, symbolically throwing the flag into the sea.

Representation

The opening sequence is important is representing the social, historical and cultural context of the film. The montage of archive footage from 1980's TV series is shown in low and grainy quality which signifies the historical context. Also the music, typical late 70's SKA reflects the skinhead culture who adopted this genre of music.


Denotation
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The ripped wallpaper, old furniture and the fact that he is using a chair as a nightstand denote that this boy is not very rich.

Connotes/Connotation

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The font is worn off and gritty so we connote that it is a film about war.

Signifier
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The font is worn down so it indicates the environment is rough.

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Because the bicycle in front of the house wasn't locked and untouched it signifies that it is a safe area.

Binary Opposition/Opposite
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When Shawn(kid) meets Wally(adult)

Polysemy
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This is a picture of Shawn's father. It tells us that his father died during the war or just simply that he misses him.

Anchors/Anchorage
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The damaged wallpaper and old furniture shows that he is poor.

Commutation Test
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This first shot of Margaret Thatcher is confusing, we don't know if the movie is about her or what impact she exerted in the '80s.

Preferred Reading
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Nowadays people aged 60 could relate to this scene a lot more than teenagers.

Negotiated Reading
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The director is making fun of her but some people could interpret this in a different way but still get the same message.

Oppositional Reading
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This shot is quite odd. Probably the only reason why it's in the film opening is that it was made during the same time period as the film.

Narrative Enigma
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It only shows very little of the subject which makes the viewer want to know more.

Intertextuality
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Mise-en-scene links into the Boy George Culture Club which was a very famous culture followed by numerous teenagers at that time.


Representation
whether it is social realist or a rom-com, representation is always something artificially constructed by those creating the media text - lighting, costume, props, dialogue etc.
This is England poster

Demographics
Ways in which audiences are categorized (gender, socio-economic status, race, urban, rural, educated, uneducated, age etc.)

This Is England

  • Large portion of the budget was a grant
  • Warp production
  • Had no IP or franchising initially (did become a tv show)
  • Social realist
  • Set in the North of England
    • Not a huge amount of selling potential 

Opening montage
All footage shown on the television of the Falkland wars painted the English in a positive light, showing men with lost limbs, all footage showing them in a negative light would have been censored.
Shane meadows selects footage which does not paint the English in positive light (a criticism of Margaret Thatcher).
opening montage screenshot


  • Denotation: 4 white men in a tank
    • normative idea that military is a male/masculine territory
    • exclusively Caucasian
    • all aged 25-30
      • younger ones are only soldiers, higher ranking officials would likely be older
        • representation of tie with age and authoritative power
    • appears heteronormative (although sexuality is not really made reference to)
Some reasons for success
  • Protagonist:
    • did not have a Northern Irish accent despite the film being set in Ireland
    • McCarthyist ideology of Us and Them, with the local northern Irish population being the violent, wild, backwards and uncivil Other
      • reinforces negative northern Irish stereotypes
      • is more accessible to more audiences 
    • BUT: at the end of the film throws the medal he earned for killing a bunch of Northern Irish people into the ocean
      • creates a parallel
      • symbolic of rejection of these values
  • Reviews:
    • was reviewed by the guardian (ABC1) on release date
Protagonist 
  • Northern accent (not southern)
  • unglamorous 
    • In mainstream studio films this character would likely be the Other, butt of a joke, a negative stereotype, a 2 dimensional character
      • e.g. Grimsby (a Working Title production): the father of a lot of bastard children, bad hygiene, lazy, extended joke at expense of the working class
The Skinheads
  • All swear, drink underage, smoke, act aggressively, 
    having just shown up with beer he
    had to wait an hour for he then bullies Sean
     
    • is part of the social realist aspect:
    • is not a 2 dimensional stereotype as this is not all there is to the characters
    • a "warts and all" representation - complex characters

Industry
More niche representations have less chance of being successful as fewer demographics are able to identify with the characters

  • Studio films have less varied representation of minority demographics as less people go to see them
  • Indie films are more able to
  • Britain used to set legal minimum if films screened in cinemas that must be British productions
    • was a safeguard for British film cinemas
    • without such protection American film would dominate
    • when this law was dropped British cinemas nose-dived, and American cinema practically monopolised it
  • This similar to laws in France and China
    • a yearly quota of national films met be shown in cinemas, otherwise American products would dominate and national business would collapse
  • Free market ideology is not successful for domestic market
  • Without grants from BFI indie films with diverse representation would not exist 
    • they are not commercial and unlikely to make profit
    • would not be made without subsidy
      • e.g. Tyrannosaur would not have been made due to the representation of the protagonist (a racist, violent, unemployed middle aged working class man)
      • large audiences not able to identify
  • Southern English accents are more normalised for international appeal due to companies like Working Title
  • The control of the media industry by mostly American companies assures a certain degree of positive representation for them
    • allows for some level of global power 
    • idea of world police can be perpetuated
      • e.g. the majority of sci-fi films are set in America or have America as the 'hero' of the world (Independence Day, Evolution)

Thursday, 21 February 2019

GENRE CONVENTION '71 (Warp, 2015)

(Harriet's Work)

'71 is a 2014 British historical thriller film set in Northern Ireland. For our mock exam we analysed the opening of this film under timed conditions in a style similar to the summer exam format - I have embedded the essay (after typing it up) at the bottom of this post as it has lots of relevant points (many of which have been extracted and put in the bullet point format throughout this post).
'71 poster




PRODUCTION CONTEXT/HISTORY

PRODUCTION: Crab Apple, Warp, Film4, BFI, Screen Yorkshire, Creative Scotland

DISTRIBUTION: Studio Canal; 11 territories

BUDGET: £8.1M
BOX OFFICE: $3.2m
BBFC: 15


This production is a Warp production, but it had a much higher budget than the majority of their films. It did receive grants form the BFI and Film4 - typical of indie productions. This ensures that films with more diverse/controversial representations are still made and the industry is not monopolised by conglomerates.
This film lost a lot of money, and it was a big risk for art to have such a high budget in the first place.

The hybrid aspect of it being a historical thriller/action/social realist film did give it a higher chance at being commercially viable than the majority of Warp films, and though Studio Canal is a well-established distributor it did not put much of a gamble into the film and marketing was limited.

The film did have a week long theatrical release in America (to qualify for the Oscars), showing the ambition o this film in comparison to Warp's other productions, but the amount of territories it was related in was still a low number in compassion to WT films (and there was no distribution in China).
No. of territories (BoxOfficeMojo)
Company list (distribution) (IMDB)

The 15 rating form the BBFC is interesting, as This is England got rated an 18 mostly due to cursing and the violent scene at the end (which is relevant to the moral values the film condemns), but '71 has extremely graphic and violent scenes throughout (when his friend is shot in the face when they arrive in Belfast, when a bar is later blown up with a child inside, the homemade stitching done o the protagonist etc.). This is an examples of how more commercially acceptable films are given more chance for commercial success than more controversial ones.

Although the film was ultimately a commercial/financial flop, it was nominated for BAFTAs, BIFAs, and O'Connell won the EE Rising Star award. This shows how although the film was not a financial success, its' critical reception proved it to be a success in ways that many other Warp films are.

IDENTS/COMPANIES

  • Studio Canal
    • distribution and production company (mostly distribution)
    • Subsidiary of NBCUniversal (one of the Big Six)
    • co-production financing (that way risk is spread if the film is a flop)
    • can be part of meaning (has worked with WT and Warp)
      • shows range
  • Film4
    • tv channel (UK)
    • denotes low budget
  • BFI (British Film Institute)
    • gives grants to low budget indie films they think require subsidy (which do not need to be repaid)
    • government funded
    • previously known as UKFC (UK Film Council)
    • Screen Yorkshire is a regional branch -  the film was not shot on location, and the extensive creation of the streets with houses in varying states of destruction show where much of the budget was spent.

TITLES
  • informational words are smaller than company names
  • small serif font (white on black)
    • signifies serious drama 
  • 'presents'
    • production and distribution
  • co-production between Crab and Warp
    • the Warp logo is also on screen - larger contributor



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MISE-EN-SCENE FOR EXPOSITION
  • blood, sweat, costume, hair
    • all wearing green military costume
    • all sweaty (including those not fighting)
    • all crew cuts (functional, military)
      • creates high level of verisimilitude
  • on the bus:
    • is not a sports car
      • signifies poverty
    • man wearing a flat cap and smoking
      • connotes Yorkshire
      • signifies film is set in the past (cannot smoke on busses now), hence the name '71
  • in the cafĂ©
    • is not a fancy 5 star restaurant
      • run down, cheap looking place
      • signifies poverty
    • Is very similar to the sudden cut to the unappetising, greasy food in Withnail and I 
  • Though not in the opening, when the locals bang their metal bin lids on the ground
    • metal bins are now out of date, so signify the time period (maintain verisimilitude)
    • preferred reading: it was a warning that police/army were approaching
      • signifies target audience (older, native to the uk/Ireland)
EDITING
  • fight scene:
    • no ELS (establishing shot)
    • fast-paced editing, short takes
      • action genre
    • cuts closer to protagonists face and cuts to see his reactions
      • anchors protagonist
      • centrally framed protagonist
  • Training montage:
    • quick fade from black (ellipsis)
    • longer takes
    • hand-held camera
      • documentary style of realist genre
    • sticks to 180 degree rule
  • morning scene:
    • almost a match cut done through the audio (the sound of the gun is similar to the lights turning on)
    • fade-up from black
      • shows ellipsis
  • CafĂ© scene:
    • fast-pan to reveal brother's face
    • shot reverse shot in the conversation
    • continuity editing
    • 180 degree rule is used
    • match on action with the fork and food

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CINEMATOGRAPHY
  • fight scene:
    • no long shots (M/MCU)
    • no fade-up
      • cuts straight to action
        • impact
        • shows brutality
    • whip-pan and hand-held tracking shots (realist)
      • Barthes action codes
    • low-key lighting
      • brutal/grim
      • natural lighting?
    • shallow field of focus
      • protagonist in focus (and foreground), but can still see detail in the background
      • anchors protagonist
    • cuts back to protagonists reaction (and centrally framed)
  • Training montage:
    • ellipsis (there is an overall ellipsis, not just here)
    • tracking shots of protagonist
    • cuts back to protagonist
      • anchorage
  • morning scene:
    • begins with tracking shot of superior officer
    • becomes MCU
    • long take
    • lighting as man steps forward (lowkey and shows shadow on half his face)
      • signified as villain?
      • establishes power dynamic
        • protagonist is in the edge of the frame
        • sets up equilibrium with protagonist having very little power within his situation
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SOUND; GENRE SIGNIFICATION
  • Fight scene:
    • audiobridge over titles
    • sound is unclear: basketball? fighting? shouting and hitting noises
      • creates narrative enigma (Barthes)
    • audio does not fade up - cuts in
      • impact
      • brutality
    • diegetic sound
    • ambient sound (crowd shouting and hitting)
    • only coherent speech is coming form the coach
      • Northern accent (Yorkshire)
    • all for verisimilitude
  • Morning scene:
    • audiobridge fade-up
    • music is sinister
      • foreshadowing

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CENTRAL PROTAGONIST/NARRATIVE

  • Anchorage:
    • the camera repeatedly cuts back to the protagonist to show his reactions
    • the protagonist is the first character we see in an MCU
    • As the fight scene comes to a close there is a tracking shot of the protagonist, form an MLS to an MCU of his face, showing the blood and sweat on it (verisimilitude)
  • Todorov's narrative theory:
    • the protagonist's equilibrium is established almost entirely through the editing of the opening:
      • he is established as the protagonist by repeatedly cutting back to show his reactions
      • in the training montage, there is always an establishing shot of the area, with the troops training, then it cuts to a close-up of the protagonist's face - this shows him as indiscernible from the rest of the men (a 'cog in a machine')