Literature and Film Week 14 - Gary Yuen 的部落格 - udn部落格
Gary Yuen 的部落格
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    Literature and Film Week 14
    2016/06/21 20:46:22
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    Six Approaches to Writing about Film


    1)FILM HISTORY

    A historical approach is one of the most widely used methods in film criticism.

    It can be employed with varying degrees of emphasis or consciousness,

    but in general, the writer using this approach organizes and investigates

    films according to their place within a historical context and in light

    of historical developments. Such an approach might explore the following:

    -The historical relationships of the films themselves, as when a

    writer compares and contrasts the use of sets in a film from the

    thirties with their use ina film from the seventies.

    -The relationship of films to their conditions of production,

    perhaps allowing a writer to make connections between

    American films of the eighties and the trend during those

    years toward the ownership of studios by large corporations

    like Gulf+ Western or TransAmerica.

    -The relationship of movies to their reception, demonstrated in

    an essay that explores how television in the fifties changed the

    expectations of movie audiences at that time.


    2)NATIONAL CINEMAS

    If historical issues usually play some part in essays on the movies, another

    important (and related) way to discuss them is in terms of their cultural

    or national character. The presumption behind this approach is that film

    cultures evolve with a certain amount of individuality and that to understand,

    for instance, the complexities of Alexander Dovzhenko's Arsenal

    (1929), one must locate it first in the political and aesthetic climate of

    postrevolutionary Russia. Similarly, to analyze an Indian film of Satyajit

    Ray, such as Distant Thunder (1973), a writer should know something

    about the society and culture of India. According to this approach, ways

    of seeing the world and ways of portraying the world in the movies differ

    for each country and culture, and it is necessary to understand the culrural

    conditions that surround a movie if we are to understand what it is

    about. Because it employs many westero themes and formulas, an American

    spectator might have little trouble comprehending a film by Akira

    Kurosawa, but without guidance and some cultural background on Japanese

    society,the films of Kenji Mizoguchi or Mikio Naruse might seem too

    foreign and confusing for the average American student.

    3)GENRES

    A French word meaning "kind," genre is a category for classifying films in

    terms of common patterns of form and content. Many of us casually practice

    the categorizing behind genre studies when we view movies: often,

    we identify a set of similar themes, characters, narrative structures, and

    camera techniques that link movies together as westerns, musicals, film

    noir, road movies, melodramas, or sel-f films. Westerns feature cowboys

    and open, uncivilized spaces; sel-f movies deal with adventures in outer

    space or intrusions by extraterrestrials. In analytical writing, a discussion

    of genre is frequently an effective way to begin examining how a film organizes

    its story and its audience's expectations.


    4)AUTEURS

    Auteur criticism is one of the most widely accepted and often unconsciously

    practiced film criticisms today: it identifies and examines a movie

    by associating it with a director or occasionally with another dominant

    figure, such as a star (say, Clint Eastwood). In a sense, referring to "a

    David Lean film" or "a Steven Spielberg movie" is in itself a critical act,

    because it implies that tile unifying vision behind what you see on the

    screen is the director's and that there are certain common themes and

    stylistic traits that link films by the same filmmaker. Although writers refer

    casually to a dominant actor or even a screenwriter as an auteur (an

    "author"), auteur criticism has its historical roots in the claims of literary

    independence and creativity made by and for certain directors.


    5)KINDS OF FORMALISM

    Formalism is a name often given to film criticism concerned with matters

    of structure and style in a movie, or with how those features (such as the narrative or the mise-en-scene) are organized in particular ways in a movie. In most instances, a writer will want to discuss these formal matters together with the major themes of a film, but the

    chief focus of a formalist essay will be on patterns such as narrative openings

    and closings, the Significant repetition and variation of camera techniques,

    or the relation of shots and sequences to each other.


    6)IDEOLOGY

    In one sense, ideology is a more subtle and expansive way of saying

    politics, at least if we think of politics as the ideas or beliefs on which we

    base our lives and our vision of the world. Ideology might refer to one

    person's belief in the sanctity of the family or another person's sense that

    civilization is basically progressive. When we see a movie such as No

    Man's Land (2001) or Potemkin; there is little chance of mistaking the

    different political messages at work in each. The first describes a contemporary

    political quagmire by telling a darkly comic tale of a Bosnian and a

    Serbian soldier trapped together between enemy lines; the second hails

    the force of a socialist revolution in Russia.

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