Tuesday, 6 May 2008
Your hypothesis/question
The female protagonist in action movies is "read" differently according to the gender of the audience. The protagonist - the "subject" - remains available for objectification and the male gaze. So do women identify and men objectify? Or is the act of viewing/spectatorship more complex?
Friday, 2 May 2008
Charlie’s angles trailer analysis.
Charlie’s angles trailer analysis.
Starts with Large African man saying ‘another movie from an old TV show’, making the whole film a meta-lingual parody of itself.
Two men are then seen jumping out form the plane and flying through the air clumsily.
Then a female is seen jumping from a helicopter, very gracefully. This female then removes the bomb from the man and this explodes. Establishing the genre.
The three sky diving people then land in a speed boat being driven by a beautiful blonde in a bikini. (Objectification) There is then a classic pastiche shot of Lucy Liu taking of her helmet and shaking her head around in a seductive fashion. For male gaze pleasure or parody of previous texts.
A man shout ‘Who are you people!’ drew Barrymore then proceeds to pull off the African man mask and say ‘dam I hate to fly’ there is then a shot of all the girls laughing and then they pull the classic ‘Charlie’s angles pose on the boat as it speeds away. This could be considered post-modern as there are plurality of truths. The audience is deceived and tricked into thinking something that is in fact not true.
There is then a action montage of the girls kicking people and explosions. Redundancy with the genre of the film. You see the girls dressed a geisha’s and in skimpy black leotards. A particularly interesting shot Is of Lucy dressed all in black with a whip in true dominatrix style.
Innocently Cameron tell as mail guy to ‘feel free to stick things in her slot.’ Sexual joke aimed at men.
Girls take the Mick of themselves in the trailer. Cameron bumps into a wall. Cameron dancing in front of the mirror in her pants.
When being given the orders of the new assignment, they are gathered together, Bosely is the one who presses the button to enable the girls to speak with him, and he also gives the files containing info. Control?
Objectifying shot of girls coming out of the water in wetsuits. Ursula Andres’s pastiche? Cameron in the middle, other two girls walk out of shot while she walks toward the camera, slowly undoing her wetsuit to reveal her breasts, her head is out of shot, purely based on her body.
Shot of two main male character having a ‘sumo’ fight where they don enormous fake sumo wrestler suits. They run at each other and clumsily have a fight and fall over. This is in direct contrast to the girls graceful fighting. Showing them in a more superior light.
Shot of Lucy saying ‘oh boy.’ In respect of the terrible fighting. Like Aeon saying ‘amateurs’.
There is a shot of the girls draped over Bosley in walking out of a lift, to make him look rich and powerful.
There is then a montage of voyeuristic camerawork. Lucy belly dancing in a blonde wig. Cameron dancing in a night club. Lucy bending over Drew in a car making her bottom the main focus of the shot.
Cameron in a speed boat in a gold bikini. Then there is a parody of the whole masculine fighting, with Cameron on the phone saying ‘hi Pete how are you?’ To regain the whole feminine side and to make her look available. There is a shot of her taking to Pete at a bar where she says ‘im like a virgin you know, its like my first time, here.’ This is also showing her to be sexually active.
Shot of Drew tied up with her hair a mess with lipstick all over her face. Looks like she has been having a rather passionate session. Then a bit with her rolling down a hill and having to ask two young boys for help as she is naked and covering herself with a pool inflatable.
Shot of Lucy in dominatrix style clothing pulling a man head into her breast. Dressed in Asian style rubbing her hands saying ‘at you service’ relate to sex trafficking of massage parlours.
Shot of Bosley trying to seduce a woman and setting fire to himself making men look less attractive and less suave.
Roles/ fantasies played throughout:
□ Dominatrix
□ American pin up (car scene, bimbos stretched over fast cars, FHM mag style)
□ Beach babe
□ Geishas
□ Acrobat
□ Innocent
□ Girl next door
□ Surfers
□ Belly dancers
□ Girl racers
□ Virgin
□ Masseuse
□ Dancer
‘They go where no one else dares, they do what no one else can, when there is only one chance to get it right, they are the ones to call, but they only
Starts with Large African man saying ‘another movie from an old TV show’, making the whole film a meta-lingual parody of itself.
Two men are then seen jumping out form the plane and flying through the air clumsily.
Then a female is seen jumping from a helicopter, very gracefully. This female then removes the bomb from the man and this explodes. Establishing the genre.
The three sky diving people then land in a speed boat being driven by a beautiful blonde in a bikini. (Objectification) There is then a classic pastiche shot of Lucy Liu taking of her helmet and shaking her head around in a seductive fashion. For male gaze pleasure or parody of previous texts.
A man shout ‘Who are you people!’ drew Barrymore then proceeds to pull off the African man mask and say ‘dam I hate to fly’ there is then a shot of all the girls laughing and then they pull the classic ‘Charlie’s angles pose on the boat as it speeds away. This could be considered post-modern as there are plurality of truths. The audience is deceived and tricked into thinking something that is in fact not true.
There is then a action montage of the girls kicking people and explosions. Redundancy with the genre of the film. You see the girls dressed a geisha’s and in skimpy black leotards. A particularly interesting shot Is of Lucy dressed all in black with a whip in true dominatrix style.
Innocently Cameron tell as mail guy to ‘feel free to stick things in her slot.’ Sexual joke aimed at men.
Girls take the Mick of themselves in the trailer. Cameron bumps into a wall. Cameron dancing in front of the mirror in her pants.
When being given the orders of the new assignment, they are gathered together, Bosely is the one who presses the button to enable the girls to speak with him, and he also gives the files containing info. Control?
Objectifying shot of girls coming out of the water in wetsuits. Ursula Andres’s pastiche? Cameron in the middle, other two girls walk out of shot while she walks toward the camera, slowly undoing her wetsuit to reveal her breasts, her head is out of shot, purely based on her body.
Shot of two main male character having a ‘sumo’ fight where they don enormous fake sumo wrestler suits. They run at each other and clumsily have a fight and fall over. This is in direct contrast to the girls graceful fighting. Showing them in a more superior light.
Shot of Lucy saying ‘oh boy.’ In respect of the terrible fighting. Like Aeon saying ‘amateurs’.
There is a shot of the girls draped over Bosley in walking out of a lift, to make him look rich and powerful.
There is then a montage of voyeuristic camerawork. Lucy belly dancing in a blonde wig. Cameron dancing in a night club. Lucy bending over Drew in a car making her bottom the main focus of the shot.
Cameron in a speed boat in a gold bikini. Then there is a parody of the whole masculine fighting, with Cameron on the phone saying ‘hi Pete how are you?’ To regain the whole feminine side and to make her look available. There is a shot of her taking to Pete at a bar where she says ‘im like a virgin you know, its like my first time, here.’ This is also showing her to be sexually active.
Shot of Drew tied up with her hair a mess with lipstick all over her face. Looks like she has been having a rather passionate session. Then a bit with her rolling down a hill and having to ask two young boys for help as she is naked and covering herself with a pool inflatable.
Shot of Lucy in dominatrix style clothing pulling a man head into her breast. Dressed in Asian style rubbing her hands saying ‘at you service’ relate to sex trafficking of massage parlours.
Shot of Bosley trying to seduce a woman and setting fire to himself making men look less attractive and less suave.
Roles/ fantasies played throughout:
□ Dominatrix
□ American pin up (car scene, bimbos stretched over fast cars, FHM mag style)
□ Beach babe
□ Geishas
□ Acrobat
□ Innocent
□ Girl next door
□ Surfers
□ Belly dancers
□ Girl racers
□ Virgin
□ Masseuse
□ Dancer
‘They go where no one else dares, they do what no one else can, when there is only one chance to get it right, they are the ones to call, but they only
Thursday, 1 May 2008
Friday, 25 April 2008
aeon flux trailer analysis
Aeon flux trailer analysis
The first shot of the main female protagonist is her standing from a crouched position. She holds herself in a very powerful way, a typical male stance.
We next see her looking down with her hair blowing around her face- in true comic book style.
We then see her jump off a building and there is a classic ‘flying’ shot as she falls through the air. The way her body is positioned means that her breasts are pushed forward and because of her skimpy latex outfit they are excentuated.
There is a shot of her shoes landing safely on the ground- these just happen to have a heel.
There is a male voice over saying ‘you’re needed’ this then gives the impression that she is under some kind of male authority.
Next the main female characters voice is heard giving information about the film. ‘it is the last city on earth’
There are shots of soldiers all dressed in black- bad guys- and they are all men. Gender battle?
There is a shot of the two main bad guys walking toward the camera they look powerful and in control.
When the voice over says ‘people disappear like they never existed’ a woman is seen being snatched. Damsel in distress, weak and powerless under the male soldiers.
The next shot is in my opinion a pointless one. Voyeuristic camera work shows the female protagonist in a very revealing swimming costume just walking around a futuristic house/flat. This just goes to show that the director is trying to appeal to the male audience as this shot tells us nothing of the film or its narrative.
There is also a scene where a man and woman are kissing passionately. The next shot is the man passing what looks like a pill into the woman’s mouth using his tongue. Showing again that the male is in control.
There are then various action shots with Aeon beating people. You see her being given a ‘assignment’ by a authoritarian figure who is a WOMAN! Unlike most other films where the boss I a male. A boss-man if you will. Charlie of Charlie’s angels, Lara’s dad in tomb raider, the boss types in resident evil.
There are then shots of Aeon and a female counterpart being acrobatic in their skimp outfits and ending up in somewhat revealing/ unfeminine positions. (spread eagled across a wall)
There is a really well framed shot showing what we are to believe is the female protagonist- only masked- and behind her is a enormous billboard with a picture of the man who she has been sent to assassinate.
‘she’s coming get to a safe place’ is said by a woman to the male character, this shows that she is dangerous and in control of the situation.
She uses a gadget to blast trough a wall made up of small metallic balls. Before they explode she says ‘good boys’ in a sexy husky voice. This is almost pastiche of the ‘hello boys’ first ever controversial wonder-bra ad. Referring to them as boys also makes her seem like the more dominant gender as they are doing her dirty work.
Toward the end of an action montage where Aeon is beating up bad guys- all male- she says ‘amateurs’ under her breath. This therefore anchoring the idea that she is all powerful and in control. A dangerous feisty female protagonist.
The last shot of her we see is her shooting with two machine guns, one held behind her head. That goes in time with a pleonastic drum beat.
The first shot of the main female protagonist is her standing from a crouched position. She holds herself in a very powerful way, a typical male stance.
We next see her looking down with her hair blowing around her face- in true comic book style.
We then see her jump off a building and there is a classic ‘flying’ shot as she falls through the air. The way her body is positioned means that her breasts are pushed forward and because of her skimpy latex outfit they are excentuated.
There is a shot of her shoes landing safely on the ground- these just happen to have a heel.
There is a male voice over saying ‘you’re needed’ this then gives the impression that she is under some kind of male authority.
Next the main female characters voice is heard giving information about the film. ‘it is the last city on earth’
There are shots of soldiers all dressed in black- bad guys- and they are all men. Gender battle?
There is a shot of the two main bad guys walking toward the camera they look powerful and in control.
When the voice over says ‘people disappear like they never existed’ a woman is seen being snatched. Damsel in distress, weak and powerless under the male soldiers.
The next shot is in my opinion a pointless one. Voyeuristic camera work shows the female protagonist in a very revealing swimming costume just walking around a futuristic house/flat. This just goes to show that the director is trying to appeal to the male audience as this shot tells us nothing of the film or its narrative.
There is also a scene where a man and woman are kissing passionately. The next shot is the man passing what looks like a pill into the woman’s mouth using his tongue. Showing again that the male is in control.
There are then various action shots with Aeon beating people. You see her being given a ‘assignment’ by a authoritarian figure who is a WOMAN! Unlike most other films where the boss I a male. A boss-man if you will. Charlie of Charlie’s angels, Lara’s dad in tomb raider, the boss types in resident evil.
There are then shots of Aeon and a female counterpart being acrobatic in their skimp outfits and ending up in somewhat revealing/ unfeminine positions. (spread eagled across a wall)
There is a really well framed shot showing what we are to believe is the female protagonist- only masked- and behind her is a enormous billboard with a picture of the man who she has been sent to assassinate.
‘she’s coming get to a safe place’ is said by a woman to the male character, this shows that she is dangerous and in control of the situation.
She uses a gadget to blast trough a wall made up of small metallic balls. Before they explode she says ‘good boys’ in a sexy husky voice. This is almost pastiche of the ‘hello boys’ first ever controversial wonder-bra ad. Referring to them as boys also makes her seem like the more dominant gender as they are doing her dirty work.
Toward the end of an action montage where Aeon is beating up bad guys- all male- she says ‘amateurs’ under her breath. This therefore anchoring the idea that she is all powerful and in control. A dangerous feisty female protagonist.
The last shot of her we see is her shooting with two machine guns, one held behind her head. That goes in time with a pleonastic drum beat.
Thursday, 24 April 2008
resident evil analysis
Resident evil trailer analysis
Starts with conventionally attractive protagonist lying in bathroom naked, draped in a white cloth. This gives the connotations of innocent and a demure damsel in distress feel to the trailer.
It then jumps into dramatic action packed shots of the previous film in order to set the scene and establish the genre and the fact that it is a sequel.
We then see the main protagonist being killed by a machine. This is shocking for the audience as she is known for being almost invincible.
Then a man is introduced saying ‘take a sample of her blood, then get rid of that.’ This now shows that he is in charge of the situation and that the female is seen as a commoditisation. This is then reinforced with a shot showing the main female protagonist’s clones.
We then see ‘the zombies’ trying to attack but being held back by a metal fence. Therefore informing the audience of the original ‘zombie’ problem in the previous film.
We see Alice (the main protagonist) whispering ‘sorry Stevie’ in a sexy husky voice before she shoots a zombie named Stevie in the head.
The rest of the characters are then introduced. A group of people trying to survive and kill as many zombies on the way. Each of the female characters are very attractive e.g. one character is a ex singer named Ashanti who was well known for her sex appeal- she is later killed by a flock of birds ha ha ha.
There is a interesting shot where Alice is talking to a male character where her head in down and he is talking to her in a authoritative way. By using this transactional language he could be proving that he is in charge and therefore the classic male hero of the film is familiar and notable. He is also later killed.
A male character is then seen being attacked by a zombie. The female characters are shown to be tough with a female voice over giving orders ‘you know the drill.’ Paradoxical to the ‘norm’ of action movies.
There is then a cut to Alice looking frightened when a zombie dog attacks her. The audience’s initial reaction is to look for superman to save her but in the next shot Alice is shown to be fending for herself. Therefore the ‘damsel in distress’ ritual is avoided.’
Close up shots of Alice in tight clothing and shots of her legs and eyes are voyeuristic. Classic male gaze is show.
Shot of Alice and another woman saying ‘everyone is scared’ could this be a weak link in the tough female image that is being shown in this trailer?
There is a shot of some ‘boss’ type men saying ‘make sure she is dead.’ ‘shut her down.’ In the film- but not shown in the trailer- is the fact that Alice is under some sort of control by the men in the film and they are able to essentially switch her off. This is a classic example of male authority being asserted over women just like in Charlie’s angels and tomb raider.
There is a shot where Alice has to avoid a laser and it chops of part of her red dress. This dress is a motif throughout the films and the computer games. Long with a very high slit and cut to reveal her boobs. Further objectification in this film is not only through costume but the lack of it. When Alice finds all her clones they are only wearing pants. So the female body is on show and up for objectification.
These is also a very small shot of Alice kissing the authoritarian male figure. This could be a example of women in action films only being present as a prize or sexual toy for the male protagonist.
The trailer finishes in classic comic book/action film way. Alice standing looking up at the sky which is burning. She is breathing heavily and looks somewhat scared and frightened. Some how I think if it was a male character he would be holding a power stance and looking at the camera whereas Alice is looking away
Starts with conventionally attractive protagonist lying in bathroom naked, draped in a white cloth. This gives the connotations of innocent and a demure damsel in distress feel to the trailer.
It then jumps into dramatic action packed shots of the previous film in order to set the scene and establish the genre and the fact that it is a sequel.
We then see the main protagonist being killed by a machine. This is shocking for the audience as she is known for being almost invincible.
Then a man is introduced saying ‘take a sample of her blood, then get rid of that.’ This now shows that he is in charge of the situation and that the female is seen as a commoditisation. This is then reinforced with a shot showing the main female protagonist’s clones.
We then see ‘the zombies’ trying to attack but being held back by a metal fence. Therefore informing the audience of the original ‘zombie’ problem in the previous film.
We see Alice (the main protagonist) whispering ‘sorry Stevie’ in a sexy husky voice before she shoots a zombie named Stevie in the head.
The rest of the characters are then introduced. A group of people trying to survive and kill as many zombies on the way. Each of the female characters are very attractive e.g. one character is a ex singer named Ashanti who was well known for her sex appeal- she is later killed by a flock of birds ha ha ha.
There is a interesting shot where Alice is talking to a male character where her head in down and he is talking to her in a authoritative way. By using this transactional language he could be proving that he is in charge and therefore the classic male hero of the film is familiar and notable. He is also later killed.
A male character is then seen being attacked by a zombie. The female characters are shown to be tough with a female voice over giving orders ‘you know the drill.’ Paradoxical to the ‘norm’ of action movies.
There is then a cut to Alice looking frightened when a zombie dog attacks her. The audience’s initial reaction is to look for superman to save her but in the next shot Alice is shown to be fending for herself. Therefore the ‘damsel in distress’ ritual is avoided.’
Close up shots of Alice in tight clothing and shots of her legs and eyes are voyeuristic. Classic male gaze is show.
Shot of Alice and another woman saying ‘everyone is scared’ could this be a weak link in the tough female image that is being shown in this trailer?
There is a shot of some ‘boss’ type men saying ‘make sure she is dead.’ ‘shut her down.’ In the film- but not shown in the trailer- is the fact that Alice is under some sort of control by the men in the film and they are able to essentially switch her off. This is a classic example of male authority being asserted over women just like in Charlie’s angels and tomb raider.
There is a shot where Alice has to avoid a laser and it chops of part of her red dress. This dress is a motif throughout the films and the computer games. Long with a very high slit and cut to reveal her boobs. Further objectification in this film is not only through costume but the lack of it. When Alice finds all her clones they are only wearing pants. So the female body is on show and up for objectification.
These is also a very small shot of Alice kissing the authoritarian male figure. This could be a example of women in action films only being present as a prize or sexual toy for the male protagonist.
The trailer finishes in classic comic book/action film way. Alice standing looking up at the sky which is burning. She is breathing heavily and looks somewhat scared and frightened. Some how I think if it was a male character he would be holding a power stance and looking at the camera whereas Alice is looking away
tomb raider trailer to analyse
shows both objectification and tomboyish nature. in some shots she bears resemblence to shara connor in terminator 2. with clothignlike park sunglasses, big boot, and unisex clothing.
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