Thursday 7 July 2016

Preparation Exercise (Practice)

Draft title: Steven Spielberg - An investigation of the use of characters in his films

Focus films:
My focus film will be Schindler's List (1993). The famous scene if the little girl in red show the importance of children in this film. This can help to investigate the bigger meaning character in his film. Other films I can use to relate to my focus film is E.T (1982) looking at children in that film and their role. I could also look at Saving Private Ryan (1998) as it will allow for a depth study in the characters in men in film, particularly Spielberg. Each film adds value to my research as they each focus on different types of characters in his films allowing for a broad look at the topic by using primary research.

Secondary Research:
Mark Kermode: The Good, The Bad and the Multiplex. Introduction to film studies. Action/Spectacle Cinema. Empire Magazine (specific articles will be mentioned when used) IMDB.

Textual Analysis:       
For Schindler's List I could focus on the scene with the little girl in the red coat. This is because it is a significant part of the story and fits in with the lonely child character that is common in Spielberg's films. I could also look at the scene with the women in their cabin in the concentration camp as they all talk and try and take each other's mind off the situation they are in. For Saving Private Ryan I could focus on the scene where the characters are faced with possibly having to kill another soldier. Also I could look at the scene where the child is in danger and the soldiers are faced with possibly having to protect her or risk their lives. This will allow for an in depth look into the characteristics of men in Spielberg's film. Also the use of children in the film helps to shape the men in the film. This should help to investigate the use of characters in Spielberg's films. Textual analysis of E.T will be added at a later date when I have re-watched the film to allow me to chose the correct scenes from the film.

Exploring the use of characters in Spielberg's films will be helped by the films I have chosen as they are a variation of time periods in history. Having both Saving Private Ryan and Schindler's List set in the time period of WW2 it creates different kind of characters to that of E.T creating contrasts. This will allow for a further kind of investigation into Spielberg's characters by looking at them from different angles than just the characters themselves and what they mean.

Monday 4 July 2016

(Old Idea) Indepth Look at Characters

Three Focus Films:
- Requiem for a Dream (2000)
- Pulp Fiction (1994)
- Trainspotting (1996)


Requiem for a Dream:
Characters (main):
- Sara Goldfarb (Ellen Burstyn)
- Harry Goldfarb (Jared Leto)
- Marion Silver (Jennifer Connelly)
- Tyrone C. Love (Marlon Wayans)
Relationships:
- Mother and son (Sara and Harry)
- Girlfriend and boyfriend (Harry and Marion)
- Best friends (Harry and Tyrone)
Identities:
- Harry ~ Doesn't have a job. Lives away from home. Takes and sells drugs. Thief. Young.
- Sara ~ Lives alone. Feels alone, through missing her husband and son. Addicted to TV. Old.
- Marion ~ Ambitious. Takes drugs with boyfriend. Young.
- Tyrone ~ Loves his mother (more than normal). Takes and sells drugs. Young.
Similarities:
- Loneliness
- Addiction to drugs
- Outside influence
Messages created by characters:
- More than one kind of addiction (drugs and food)
- Addiction causes addiction
- Weakness
- Escape is hard
- Drugs are damaging (don't end well)




Trainspotting:
Characters (Main):
- Renton (Ewan McGregor)
- Sick Boy (Johnny Lee Miller)
- Begbie (Robert Carlyle)
- Tommy (Kevin McKidd)
- Spud (Ewen Bremner)
- Diane (Kelly Macdonald)
Relationships:
- Friends (Sick Boy, Tommy, Spud, Begbie, Renton)
- Romantic attachment (Renton and Diane)
Identities:
- Renton ~ Lives away from home. Heroine addict. Little self will. Wants to escape. Young.
- Sick Boy ~ Con artist. Heroine addict. Has a son, it dies. Young.
- Tommy ~ Breaks up with girlfriend. Becomes a heroine addict. HIV positive. Young
- Begbie ~ Psychopath. Loves violence. Against drugs. Oldest.
- Spud ~ Simple minded. Heroine addict.
- Diane ~ 15. Still at school. Not an addict but does drugs. Lives with parents.
Similarities:
- Addicts (Renton, Sick Boy, Tommy and Spud)
- Disconnected
- Lost
- Held Back
Messages created by characters:
- Peer pressure
- Age (maturity)
- Addiction




Pulp Fiction:
Characters (main):
- Vincent Vega (John Travolta)
- Jules Winnfield (Samuel L. Jackson)
- Mia Wallace (Uma Thurman)
- Butch Coolidge (Bruce Willis)
Relationships:
- Partners (Vincent and Jules)
- Driver (Vincent for Mia)
- Murder (Butch to Vincent)
Identities:
- Vincent ~ Heroine addict. Hit man. Worked in Amsterdam.
- Jules ~ Hit man. Knows some of the Bible.
- Mia  ~ Married to Marsellus. Heroine addict.
- Butch ~ Father died in Vietnam war. A boxer. Has a French girlfriend
Similarities:
- Addicts (Mia and Vincent)
- Killers (Butch, Jules and Vincent)
- Angry
- Carefree
Messages created by characters:
- Can't run away from problems
- Violence
- Addiction


(Old Idea) Films About Drugs and the Characters


Focus Films:
- Trainspotting
- Pulp Fiction
- Requiem for a Dream


Requiem for a dream:
Quick overview of characters: Mother and a son. Love hate relationship. Son (Harry Goldfarb) steels from his mother. Mother (Sara Goldfarb) misses her son and is very lonely. Sara is addicted to TV and food. When made to go on a diet a new addiction to drug is created. Harry is a heroin addict along with girlfriend (Marion Silver) and Tyrone C. Love. Ambitions young people who don't understand the consequences of drugs until they occur.


Trainspotting: Quick over view of characters: Small group of men, Renton, Sick Boy, Spud Tommy and Begbie. All heroin addicts accept Tommy (to start off with) and Begbie who is instead addicted to violence. The small group takes drugs together. The small group impose on each other and as a collective have no control on their addiction causing Tommy to take up heroin. Crimes are committed (as well as drug taking) by the characters.


Pulp Fiction:
Quick over view of characters: