Thursday, 20 November 2014

Central and A-Central Imagining clips

CENTRAL IMAGINING:



A-CENTRAL IMAGINING:



Spectatorship

Joseph Anderson - film theorist


-We all have individual interpretations and judgements

"making sense of the film is significantly the same as making sens of the real world"
Stuart Hall - film theorist
-Developed the theory or "Reception Theory" 1960s
-The first time that people analysing film started to look at the way the text is recieved rather than the text itself.
-The text has put in various ideologies about the film
-The audience all recieve it in different ways depending on their backgrounds


3 Main Readings

-Preferred Readings: the spectator goes in with an intended meaning of the film and agrees with all the messages

-Negotiated Reading: spectator agrees with most of the messages but disagrees with some aspects
-Oppositional Reading: the viewer does not identify with the meaning at all and comes up with an alternate meaning to the film

How the text is recieved from the audience as opposed to the text itself

Film is about desire

-An intellectually demanding film
-A provocative film (controversy)
-One which is throw away, spectacular fun




"Blue Is The Warmest Color" is an example of provocative film:

-The film focuses on homosexual relationships which is a taboo when it comes to contemporary cinema

-The intimacy elements of this film are explicitly presented, intending to get a reaction from the audience

Central Imagining

-FEELINGS
-Creates an emotional response
-This is translated to te spectator by the director (textual)
-Feeling the character's pain
MICRO = cinematography, editing, sound, mise-en-scene

A-Central Imagining

-The difference is we feel less, but imagine more

-Rather than a physical response, it's an emotional response