Thursday, 24 November 2016
Wednesday, 23 November 2016
Tuesday, 1 November 2016
Friday, 28 October 2016
Synopsis
Sunset until darkness (timelapse) to show time is just passing by.
Her life is a mess and she's struggling with mental health
Due to this, she has suicidal thoughts.
She is trying to get help but nothing seems to work /help.
However, all just gets too much therefore commits suicide.
Her life is a mess and she's struggling with mental health
Due to this, she has suicidal thoughts.
She is trying to get help but nothing seems to work /help.
However, all just gets too much therefore commits suicide.
Thursday, 20 October 2016
Influences
Cigarette Daydreams - Cage the Elephant
- Black and white themes in conjunction with coloured segments
- 'Home video'- esque
- Use of close ups to the face
- Over the shoulder shots (to see actress in the handheld mirror)
- Actress looking directly at the camera
- Misty landscape scenes
Breezeblocks - Alt J
- Reversed chronology
- Dark mise-en-scene
- Close ups on certain objects (e.g tap, knife, hand/ring)
Take me to church - Hozier
- Black and white
- Side profile close ups of actors face smoking
- Wide shot of fire
Wednesday, 19 October 2016
Thursday, 13 October 2016
Audience reasearch
Create your own user feedback survey
Audience responses from ashcane
The responses from this survey has given me an indication and direction of how I would like my video to go.
The responses from this survey has given me an indication and direction of how I would like my video to go.
Wednesday, 12 October 2016
Artist Identity
Create your own user feedback survey
I've used a survey monkey to collect public responses to how i should edit the video also on what the name of the band should be with space for the audience to suggest a name.
Reasoning behind the names:
daZed - The dictionary definition of dazed is to make someone unable to react or think properly, this is what the artist aims to do with their music because it will be enjoyable. The capitalised Z adds individuality which is a key aspect of the indie music subcultures.
Black Label - Gives off a more of a higher status, though the stereotypical audience of the indie genre is usually working class therefore it gives the audience a false sense of middle class reality.
The Canals - No specific reason however it is very memorable therefore likely to stick in listeners head
Violet Hues - This gives off an innocent feel where the listener can have a small sense of no worries, like a child so can just enjoy the music.
I've used a survey monkey to collect public responses to how i should edit the video also on what the name of the band should be with space for the audience to suggest a name.
Reasoning behind the names:
daZed - The dictionary definition of dazed is to make someone unable to react or think properly, this is what the artist aims to do with their music because it will be enjoyable. The capitalised Z adds individuality which is a key aspect of the indie music subcultures.
Black Label - Gives off a more of a higher status, though the stereotypical audience of the indie genre is usually working class therefore it gives the audience a false sense of middle class reality.
The Canals - No specific reason however it is very memorable therefore likely to stick in listeners head
Violet Hues - This gives off an innocent feel where the listener can have a small sense of no worries, like a child so can just enjoy the music.
Logo:
Tuesday, 11 October 2016
Cage The Elephant - Cold Cold Cold lyric analysis and timings
Doctor
look into my eyes
I've been
breathing air but there's no sign of life
“I’ve been
breathing air” means that his body is still alive, but “there’s no sign of
life” because he is constantly depressed and is losing hope
Doctor the
problem's in my chest
His heart
hurts, he can’t feel love or he feels like no one loves him
My heart
feels cold as ice but it's anybody's guess
He thinks
that the issue originates in himself, i.e. his heart, but he does not really
know for sure. The fact that he cannot pinpoint the source of his sorrow only
makes him sadder.
Doctor can
you help me cause I don't feel right
Better
make it fast before I change my mind
He is feeling sad, so he begs a doctor to help cure
him and free him from the 'cold' of depression. He warns the doctor to help him
quickly because he his depression is severe. If the doctor does not “make it
fast”, he may change his mind about wanting help. The alternative to getting
help would be giving up on life, dying, or potentially committing suicide.
Doctor can
you help me cause I don't feel right
Better make it fast before I change my mind
Well it's
cold, cold, cold, cold inside
Depression often feels like a cold dark feeling
inside your chest
Darker in
the day than the dead of night
His thoughts
are active during the day, thus he feels “darker” (depressed) during the day.
At night, his thoughts rest, and so his depression does as well.
Cold,
cold, cold, cold inside
Lyrical irony is used here to show just how cold, or
depressed, he feels inside his mind. One might expect him to say that it is
cold outside instead of inside.
Doctor can
you help me cause something don't feel right
Something don't feel right
Sweet
nurse don't look at me that way
I've seen
those eyes before I can tell you want to play
Nurse is often seen as sexual but doctor is not.
The person who needs help dosen’t want the help in a sexual way, he is
searching for a doctor.
Counselor
give me some advice
Realizes his
problem is psychological. His search for more help shows how much he is damaged
and wants to get better
Tell me
how hard will I fall if I live a double life
He is hiding his feelings from everybody. He's living a sad life but
pretending to be happy.
Doctor can
you help me cause I don't feel right
Better
make it fast before I change my mind
Doctor can you help me cause I don't feel right
Better make it fast because there ain't much time
Well it's
cold, cold, cold, cold inside
Darker in
the day than the dead of night
Cold,
cold, cold, cold inside
Doctor can
you help me cause something don't feel right
Something
don't feel right, something just ain't right
And as the
darkness falls it fills up both my eyes
Depression has consumed his thoughts to the point
where all that he sees in every day life has a negative
My life
before me like a flash in the night
Before you
die it is said you see your life flash before you
With my
arms open wide
Open to the
idea of his life flashing before his eyes (death)
Well it's cold, cold, cold, cold inside
Cold, cold, cold, cold inside
Cold,
cold, cold, cold inside
Doctor can
you help me cause something don't feel right
Something
don't feel right, something just ain't right
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Intro music [0:00-0:13]
Doctor look into
my eyes [0:14- 0:19]
I've been breathing air but there's no sign of life [0:21-0:25]
Doctor the problem's in my chest [0:26-0:32]
My heart feels cold as ice but it's anybody's guess [0:34 – 0:39]
Doctor can you help me cause I don't feel right [0:41-0:44]
Better make it fast before I change my mind [0:45-0:47]
Doctor can you help me cause I don't feel right [0:48-0:51]
Better make it fast before I change my mind [0:52-0:55]
Well it's cold, cold, cold, cold inside [0:57-1:01]
Darker in the day than the dead of night [1:02-1:04]
Cold, cold, cold, cold inside[1:05-1:08]
Doctor can you help me cause something don't feel right [1:09-1:13]
Something don't feel right [1:14-1:16]
Sweet nurse don't look at me that way [1:23-1:27]
I've seen those eyes before I can tell you want to play [1:30-1:34]
Counselor give me some advice[1:37-1:41]
Tell me how hard will I fall if I live a double life [1:43-1:49]
Doctor can you help me cause I don't feel right [1:51-1:54]
Better make it fast before I change my mind [1:55-1:57]
Doctor can you help me cause I don't feel right [1:58-2:01]
Better make it fast because there ain't much time [2:02-2:06]
Well it's cold, cold, cold, cold inside [2:07-2:10]
Darker in the day than the dead of night [2:11-2:14]
Cold, cold, cold, cold inside [2:15-2:17]
Doctor can you help me cause something don't feel right [2:19-2:22]
Something don't feel right, something just ain't right [2:24-2:30]
And as the darkness falls it fills up both my eyes [2:34-2:39]
My life before me like a flash in the night [2:41-2:46]
With my arms open wide [2:47-2:50]
I've been breathing air but there's no sign of life [0:21-0:25]
Doctor the problem's in my chest [0:26-0:32]
My heart feels cold as ice but it's anybody's guess [0:34 – 0:39]
Doctor can you help me cause I don't feel right [0:41-0:44]
Better make it fast before I change my mind [0:45-0:47]
Doctor can you help me cause I don't feel right [0:48-0:51]
Better make it fast before I change my mind [0:52-0:55]
Well it's cold, cold, cold, cold inside [0:57-1:01]
Darker in the day than the dead of night [1:02-1:04]
Cold, cold, cold, cold inside[1:05-1:08]
Doctor can you help me cause something don't feel right [1:09-1:13]
Something don't feel right [1:14-1:16]
Sweet nurse don't look at me that way [1:23-1:27]
I've seen those eyes before I can tell you want to play [1:30-1:34]
Counselor give me some advice[1:37-1:41]
Tell me how hard will I fall if I live a double life [1:43-1:49]
Doctor can you help me cause I don't feel right [1:51-1:54]
Better make it fast before I change my mind [1:55-1:57]
Doctor can you help me cause I don't feel right [1:58-2:01]
Better make it fast because there ain't much time [2:02-2:06]
Well it's cold, cold, cold, cold inside [2:07-2:10]
Darker in the day than the dead of night [2:11-2:14]
Cold, cold, cold, cold inside [2:15-2:17]
Doctor can you help me cause something don't feel right [2:19-2:22]
Something don't feel right, something just ain't right [2:24-2:30]
And as the darkness falls it fills up both my eyes [2:34-2:39]
My life before me like a flash in the night [2:41-2:46]
With my arms open wide [2:47-2:50]
Instrumental [2:51- 3:05]
Well it's cold,
cold, cold, cold inside [3:06-3:09]
Cold, cold, cold, cold inside [3:10-3:13]
Cold, cold, cold, cold inside [3:14-3:16]
Doctor can you help me cause something don't feel right [3:17-3:21]
Something don't feel right, something just ain't right [3:23-3:28]
Cold, cold, cold, cold inside [3:10-3:13]
Cold, cold, cold, cold inside [3:14-3:16]
Doctor can you help me cause something don't feel right [3:17-3:21]
Something don't feel right, something just ain't right [3:23-3:28]
Tuesday, 4 October 2016
Audience
Uses and gratification theory
Blumer and Katz (1959)- Escapism = diversion + entertainment
- Personal companion = media is a friend, caring about the cast of pop star
- Personal identity = how do I fit in? who am I?
- Surveillance = finding out what is happening in the world
Gerbner and Gross (1975)
- Audiences consume media gradually and develop views about the world, some of which are false.
- Impacts on the sudiences understanding of representation - gender, sexuality, yound people and ethnic groups.
Hall (1980)
- Audiences make sense of media texts according to their soicial position (gender, age, class, ethnic backgroud)
Coleman (2004)
- Audiences are influences by the media texts that they consume
- More of an assumption used by journalists to explain an individuals negative behaviour
Anderson (2006)
- This theory describes how the internet has influences audience consumption
- Since broadband these impacts have been most prominent
- Niche audiences are no longer economically unviable
Thursday, 22 September 2016
Media language
Semiotics - science of signs and symbols
Form - structure of the media product e.g radio, music video
Charles Sanders Pierce (1931)
'we only think in signs'
'nothing is a sign unless interperated as a sign'
Pierce suggests there is 3 types of signs:
Icon/iconic: a symbol/sign that anyone can recognise e.g Empire State Building is linked with New York or the Eiffel Tower is linked to Paris
Inder/indexical: linked directly to the concept e.g a clock linked to time
Symbol/symbolic: signifier does not resemble the signified e.g. national flags
Sven E Clarsson (1999)
Believes music artists represent themselves as one of three things:
Commercial exhibitionisnts - presenting themselves as a brand and selling their appearance e.g 'Drunk in love' Beyonce (2013) or 'Jenny from the block' Jennifer Lopez (2002)
Televised bard - the artist representing themselves as part of the story or as the storyteller e.g 'Seven years' Lukas Graham (2016)
Electronic shaman - Big budget productions where the artists has immortal powers or adops an alter ego of another iconic character, personality or superhero e.g. 'scream' Michael Jackson (1995) or 'Roar' Katy Perry (2013)
Feminist and stereotype theory
Male gaze - objectifying of womens bodies in the media have been constant.
Laura Mulvey (1975)
Dominant point of view is masculine. The female body is displayed for the male gaze to provide male erotic pleasure
O ' Sullivan et al (1998)
Details that a stereotype is a label that involves a process of categorisation and evaluation.
Form - structure of the media product e.g radio, music video
Charles Sanders Pierce (1931)
'we only think in signs'
'nothing is a sign unless interperated as a sign'
Pierce suggests there is 3 types of signs:
Icon/iconic: a symbol/sign that anyone can recognise e.g Empire State Building is linked with New York or the Eiffel Tower is linked to Paris
Inder/indexical: linked directly to the concept e.g a clock linked to time
Symbol/symbolic: signifier does not resemble the signified e.g. national flags
Sven E Clarsson (1999)
Believes music artists represent themselves as one of three things:
Commercial exhibitionisnts - presenting themselves as a brand and selling their appearance e.g 'Drunk in love' Beyonce (2013) or 'Jenny from the block' Jennifer Lopez (2002)
Televised bard - the artist representing themselves as part of the story or as the storyteller e.g 'Seven years' Lukas Graham (2016)
Electronic shaman - Big budget productions where the artists has immortal powers or adops an alter ego of another iconic character, personality or superhero e.g. 'scream' Michael Jackson (1995) or 'Roar' Katy Perry (2013)
Feminist and stereotype theory
Male gaze - objectifying of womens bodies in the media have been constant.
Laura Mulvey (1975)
Dominant point of view is masculine. The female body is displayed for the male gaze to provide male erotic pleasure
O ' Sullivan et al (1998)
Details that a stereotype is a label that involves a process of categorisation and evaluation.
Friday, 16 September 2016
Narrative
Tim O'Sullivan et al (1998)
- All text tells us some kind of story.
- Media texts offer a way of telling stories about ourselves. Usually the story of us as a culture or set of cultures.
- Shows that what we experience when we 'read' a story is to understand the set of constructions or conventions.
Narrative : The structure of a story
Diegesis :The fictional time and space implied by the narrative - the world in which the story takes place
Verisimilitude : To engage us it must appear real to us as we watch it.
Bordwell and Thompson (1997)
- Offer two distinctions between story and plot which relate to the diegetic world of the narrative.
- Fabula (story) events in the narrative that we see and infer.
- Syuzhet (plot) everything visible and audibly present before us
Tzvetan Todorov (1977)
- •Stage 1: A point of stable equilibrium, where everything is satisfied, calm and normal.
- •Stage 2: This stability is disrupted by some kind of force, which creates a state of disequilibrium.
- •Stage 3: Recognition that a disruption has taken place.
- •Stage 4: It is only possible to re-create equilibrium through action directed against the disruption.
- •Stage 5: Restoration of a new state of equilibrium. The consequences of the reaction is to change the world of the narrative and/or the characters so that the final state of equilibrium in not the same as the initial state.
Barthes
(1977)
Narrative works with five different codes and the enigma code
works to keep up setting problems or puzzles for the audience. His action code
(a look, significant word, movement) is based on our cultural and stereotypical
understanding of actions that act as a shorthand to advancing the narrative.
Kate Domaille (2001)
Identifies 8 narrative types:
•Achilles: The fatal flaw that
leads to the destruction of the previously flawless, or almost flawless,
person, e.g. Superman, Fatal Attraction.
•Candide: The indomitable
hero who cannot be put down, e.g. Indiana Jones, James Bond, Rocky etc.
•Cinderella: The dream comes
true, e.g. Pretty
Woman.
•Circe: The Chase, the
spider and the fly, the innocent and the victim e.g. Smokey And The Bandit,
Duel, The Terminator.
•Faust: Selling your soul to
the devil may bring riches but eventually your soul belongs to him, e.g.
Bedazzled, Wall Street.
•Orpheus: The loss of
something personal, the gift that is taken away, the tragedy of losss or the journey which
follows the loss, e.g. The Sixth Sense, Love Story, Born On the Fourth Of July.
•Romeo
And Juliet: The love
story, e.g. Titanic.
•Tristan
and Iseult:
The love triangle, Man loves woman…unfortunately one or both of them are
already spoken for, or a third party intervenes, e.g. Casablanca.
Vladimir Propp (1928)
Identified 7 broad characters:
•The villain - struggles against
the hero.
•The donor - prepares the hero or
gives the hero some magical object.
•The (magical) helper - helps the hero in the quest.
•The princess and her father - gives the task to the hero, identifies the false hero,
marries the hero, often sought for during the narrative. Propp noted that functionally, the princess and
the father can not be clearly distinguished.
•The dispatcher -
character who makes the lack known and
sends the hero off.
•The hero or victim/seeker hero - reacts to the donor, weds the princess.
•[False hero] - takes
credit for the hero’s actions or tries to marry the princess.
Monday, 12 September 2016
Representation
Representation
Intertextuality
Text alludes
to or references to another text. Julia Kristeva (1969) literacy critic and
sociologist; “the shaping of texts meaning by another text”.
“The use of
an intertextual reference in any texts is the absorption and transformation of
another”
Some referencing
is iconic and the audience can easily remember and recognize the style. Referencing
can reinforce nostalgia and familiarity.
· Bettie Page - 1950’s glamour model and pin up.
· Divine - US actor and drag queen
· Blacksploitation film; Jackie Brown (film) - typography
· Roy Lichtenstein - US pop artist
· Wonder Woman and Captain America
Genre
What is genre?
Genre helps us study texts and audience responses to texts by dividing them into categories based on common elements.
Genre helps us study texts and audience responses to texts by dividing them into categories based on common elements.
Daniel
Chandler (2001): argues that the word genre
comes from the French (and originally Latin) word for 'kind' or 'class'. The
term is widely used in rhetoric, literary theory, media theory to refer to a
distinctive type of ‘text’.
All
genres have sub genres.
Barry
Keith Grant (1995): Genre divided up into more specific categories that allow audiences to identify
them specifically by their familiar and what become recognisable
characteristics
Steve
Neale (1995): “Genres are not ‘systems’ they are
processes of systematization” – i.e. They are dynamic and evolve over time.
Jason
Mittell (2001): Genres are cultural categories that
surpass the boundaries of media texts and operate within industry, audience,
and cultural practices as well.
Rick
Altman (1999): Genre offers audiences ‘a set of
pleasures’
- Emotional Pleasures: The emotional pleasures offered to audiences of genre films are particularly significant when they generate a strong audience response.
- Visceral Pleasures: Visceral pleasures (‘visceral’ refers to internal organs) are ‘gut’ responses and are defined by how the film’s stylistic construction elicits a physical effect upon its audience. This can be a feeling of revulsion, kinetic speed, or a ‘roller coaster ride’.
- Intellectual Puzzles: Certain film genres such as the thriller or the ‘whodunit’ offer the pleasure in trying to unravel a mystery or a puzzle. Pleasure is derived from deciphering the plot and forecasting the end or the being surprised by the unexpected.
COMEDY OR ANIMATION ARE NOT GENRES
They're styles or treatments
The
Strengths Of Genre Theory
The main strength of genre theory
is that everybody uses it and understands it – media experts use it to study
media texts, the media industry uses it to develop and market texts and
audiences use it to decide what texts to consume.
The potential for the same concept
to be understood by producers, audiences and scholars makes genre a useful
critical tool. Its accessibility as a concept also means that it can be applied across a wide range of texts.
Genre
Themes
David
Bordwell
(1989): 'any
theme may appear in any genre‘.
Horror films, for example, are basically just
modern fairy tales and often act as morality plays in which people who break
society’s rules are punished.
Fear of the unknown – the monster is the ‘monstrous
other’ i.e. anything that is scary because it is foreign or different.
Sex = death – in horror movies, especially
Slasher movies, sex is immoral and must be punished, werewolf movies can be
seen as a metaphor for puberty, vampires can be as metaphors for sexually
transmitted diseases or rape etc.
The breakdown of society – post-apocalyptic movies are
about our fear (or secret desire for) of the breakdown of society. The collapse
of civilisation results in human kind reverting to their animal instincts.
David Buckingham (1993): 'Genre is
not... Simply "given" by the culture: rather, it is in a constant
process of negotiation and change’.
Sunday, 11 September 2016
Coursework brief
A promotion package for the release of an album, to produce and music video promo video together with:
- A cover for its release part of a digipak (cd/dvd package)
- A magazine advertisement for the digipak (cd/dvd package)
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