Thursday, 24 April 2008
Primary Research
2. Choose sequences which you think you could usefully used with a real audience. Think about how you could use them, and how to structure it. Decide EXACTLY what you are trying to find out. What are male responses to bad women?
Thursday, 17 April 2008
Women villains
Fatal Attraction
Basic Instinct
Bond bad girls who are repositioned...
a modern one too.
Monster
Is femininity still dangerous to men? Look at the history a bit - femmes fatales etc and the dangerous women in the Fatal Attraction etc. But what about contemporary films.
Primary research
1. Does all this stuff still apply to contemporary film output?
2. How do real audiences react to the range of representations available. Perhaps men in particular...
Friday, 11 April 2008
Friday, 14 March 2008
Your first ideas
Women as villains. This is a good idea. I think you could begin by reviewing stuff on the “femme fatales” of film noir, and then look at more modern “bad women” films such as Fatal Attraction, Basic Instinct, etc. I have a few ideas about these myself. I think the first thing to do is decide on three modern films with villainous women in them, and to take it from there.
I have no essays by students about this issue, but think I have one by me somewhere (mainly about film noir).
For your primary research you could interview women audience members about their feelings about these “dangerous women”, and whether they allow a sort of pleasurable idenitification with transgressive behaviour which is not normally allowed.
Sean
Thursday, 13 March 2008
Initial Ideas: Women and Film
I've been thinking about studying this topic for my critical research project, due to my interest in film and gender representation within media texts. I would find it very interesting to carry out audience research on this subject to see not only how women react to villainous female characters, but also how men react.
I've not yet decided on whether to use a specific genre, or to use films varying in time. I think a cross comparison of classic Black Narcissus (Powell and Pressburger, 1947) and the more contemporary Mean Girls (Mark Waters, 2004) could be useful as the narrative could be easily linked, and both have female 'villains' or antagonists, though I have not fully developed this idea yet. Another idea could be to use the female characters in James Bond films, and discuss their role narratively.
To research audience interpretation I would initially survey a number of both male and female students, preferably ones who are not studying Film or Media, to find out their general impression of films and how they treat women, who are the typical heroes and victims etc. Secondly, I would screen two or three films in their entirety, and either record and transcribe a conversation, or ask participants to fill out a well-planned survey.