Monday, 18 December 2023

Cultivating polysemy - audience negotiation and the final montage of episode 1 of Les Revenants

Stuart Hall argues that producers use media language to ENCODE an ideological perspective that audiences will DECODE. Different audiences will NEGOTIATE different responses based on their cultural and social background. However, PRODUCERS will typically use media language to ANCHOR an audiences' expectations, and attempt to get them to agree with the PREFERRED READING of the media product.

Les Revenants, however, is not conventional, and does not play by these rules. 

Anchorage - where the meaning of a media product is weighed down by media language. For example a gesture, caption, costume or so on can make clear to the audience the preferred reading

What is notable about Les Revenants’ utilisation of anchorage? That's right: it has none! Perhaps this is an overstatement, but there is very little use of media language in this episode to suggest what the audience SHOULD be thinking. Instead, audiences are encouraged to, as Hall would put it, NEGOTIATE the narrative and draw their own conclusions.

Key scene: the final sequence

  1. How are audiences positioned in this sequence? 
  2. How can audiences negotiate this sequence, based on a number of factors?
  3. What is the preferred reading of this sequence?

Discussion

Les Revenants positions audiences in a deliberately controversial mode of address, by cross cutting between a fairly explicit sex scene and Camille's sudden and frightening death. Audiences are forced to try and make sense of this scene, despite not being provided with adequate information to interpret it. 



The final montage of Les Revenants episode one represents the sexual act as deeply complex one with potentially grave consequences. This highly confrontational and even problematic sequence encourages a range of highly polysemic audience interpretations 


  • Seen from a Christian viewpoint, the sequence could be seen to reinforce the ideology that pre-marital sex is wrong and is punished. However, the punishment is highly irregular and involves Camille dying instead, affecting the family. Is this a biblical allegory???
  • The scene reinforces that sex is important to Lena’s character, and establishes one of her primary motivations. This sex positive representation is somewhat unusual, especially in the horror genre, and may appeal to feminist audiences, as Lena has her own autonomy 
  • The use of close up shots and a lack of non-diegetic sound positions the audience directly above them, and in a voyeuristic mode of address. This deliberately uncomfortable montage emphasises the unease being felt by Camille, and further potentially upsets the target audiences, yet also positions them as a teenage girl having sex for the first. Anchored through the casting of the same actor for both roles, the scene confirms the loss of virginity can be traumatic. This bizarre mode of address can target intellectual and educated audiences
  • Simultaneously, younger audiences, in particular teenage girls will identify with the scene with Lena losing her virginity. The mundane nature of the MES, for example her partner’s beanie hat and the unglamorous costumes, as well as Lena’s absolutely bizarre reference to her own sister during sex constructs a highly naïve mode of address that teenagers (and nostalgic adults) will be able to identify with. This further niche audience is very different from the missile class intellectual that potentially may be watching the show for completely different reasons
  • An uncomfortable mode of address is cultivated through the montage of close ups and extreme close ups. This positions the audience in an uncomfortable BEV, but also a voyeuristic mode of address. Unlike the highly stereotypical and hyperreal sex scene in San Jun, the sex scene in Les Revs is not idealised, yet is highly realistic and even relatable to younger audiences 
  • The boy’s beanie hat and stereotypical MES of his costume is connotative of youth, and once more constructs a relatable mode of address to it’s audience 
  • However audiences are forced to negotiate the death of Camille, seemly dying because of Lena’s lost virginity, and forces audiences to consider the implications of sex. Lena skips a school trip, and chooses to have sex, while Camille dies horribly, seemingly as a result. This highly poetic mode of address forces the target audiences to negotiate this scene in a number of radical ways, something which is only made possible through the lack of anchorage
  • Additionally, this sequence forms a binary opposition between Camille and Lena, which allows for further understanding of the audience 
  • Completely inappropriately Lena makes reference to her sister during sex. This may act as a proairetic code, indicating future confusion between the siblings. It constructs an ironic mode of address, as 4 years later, the sisters are completely different physically and emotional, and reinforces the notion that Camille is forever a child 

Cult TV

Black Mirror is science fiction. Les Revenants is horror. Both shows are very different from one another. Yet both of them are 'cult'. Cult media is something that provokes a fervent response in an audience. Cult audiences have an almost religious response to media products, and may do specific things with the products. Cult audiences are fans. This is basically another word for fandom. But how do TV shows (and films) encourage a cult following?

  • Cult TV 'speaks to' and positions a niche or marginalised audience
  • Cult TV uses hermeneutics to drive narratives, which keeps audiences asking questions (often to other audience members)
  • Cult TV uses complex narratives, that encourages watching and more importantly re-watching episodes to get the most out of it

Analysing fan trailers of 90s cult television


This is what fake teenagers looked like in the 90s


The following analyses use fan trailers to give you a brief rundown of the show and its content. However, the fact that fan trailers for all of these shows are so easy to find is a great example of fandom, and active audiences engaging with shows that actively encourage such engagement!

Task: watch each of these trailers, and then comment on the following:

  • How does this show position a niche or even marginalised audience?
  • How does this show use hermeneutic codes to engage it’s audiences?
  • How does this show encourage audiences to re-watch the show, and to engage with other audience members?

The X Files


Twin Peaks 


Buffy the Vampire Slayer


Conclusions


While there had been cult shows before (Star Trek and The Twilight Zone, for example), targeting niche and participatory audiences was rare until the onslaught of cult TV in the 1990s. What is fascinating about the shows above is that their target audience is NOT 'just anyone watching TV', but nerds, geeks and outcasts. Once TV producers discovered it was profitable to target cult audiences, the momentum never stopped, and now the highest grossing films of all time explicitly target participatory audiences of comic book fans. 

Far from being totally original, both Black Mirror and Les Revenants pay significant debt to a range of cult TV shows from The Twilight Zone to Twin Peaks. Targeting a niche yet highly involved target audience can be highly lucrative, and all the shows listed above have been massive successes, both financially, but also culturally.

Wednesday, 13 December 2023

Industry research megatask

 In the most recent mock, you didn't get an industry question! Maybe that was a good thing. Or a very bad thing. The reason for this is that industry questions are all about facts. As long as you remember facts and place them in your response (and actually answer the question) you get marks.

For this task, you will be making notes based on several resources, many of them released by the exam board!

The exam board has many excellent resources, and now is an excellent time to find them and to start using them!


Task 0 - familiarise yourself with some useful resources


Do this - Check out all the resources for A-level media studies! There's lots of helpful stuff here, so spend at least ten minutes right now clicking around and making sure you know what's available to you!


Task 1 - Black Mirror and aspects of industry


Do this - Click here to access the Black Mirror fact sheet.  Go to page 5, find the heading 'PART 3: STARTING POINTS – Media industries' and make extensive notes about the industrial context surrounding Black Mirror, and in particular series 3.


Task 2 - disputing the facts


There's an eye-opening paragraph in the fact sheet that I take exception to:

"In contrast to [Hesmondhalgh's assertion that media industries are structured to minimise risk and to maximise profit], Netflix (and other web-based streaming services) invest vast sums of money in their productions, and yet leave almost all creative control to the showrunners. This has led to a diverse range of products, unafraid to take risks and ‘push the envelope’ of what makes successful TV".

This argument falls apart when we realise that Netflix typically only aquires exisiting series that are already successful and have a pre-sold, pre-exising audience (like... Black Mirror!), and that Netflix are notoriously ruthless at cancelling and even delisting shows that do not meet their sales expectations.


Do this - find three examples of shows acquired (purchased) by Netflix that were already wildly popular already, and three examples of shows cancelled by Netflix even though they were popular with fans. These examples can be used to support both Hesmondhalgh and Curran and Seaton's arguments that media industries are solely motivated by power and profit.


Task 3 - researching Les Revenants and industry


Sometimes I need to admit defeat. Because there is an absolutely amazing set of resources for Les Revenants and industry just sitting on the Eduqas website. And your task is to read through this document, click on the links, and make notes. Because there's everything you need here to answer industry questions in the exam.


Do this - click here and work through the tasks, watch the videos, and if there's a dead link, just move on

An initial analysis of the 'Johnson front pages'

This is a nice, snappy task which will not only round off the year, but will also help you to prepare for the next one! After Christmas we are turning our back on industry and audience and moving on to media language and representation, and the very first lesson we will be discussing these front covers. Therefore this lesson is essential!

What's the difference between the print editions and the set texts?

This handy slide should help. This is very confusing so don't worry if this makes little sense!


The set texts - used for representation and media language analysis


Download these two images and shove them in your blog!





The main task - constructing meaning

This is really simple: for each front cover, write a brief paragraph explaining how meaning is created. Use the following bullet points to inspire you:

  • Point of view and ideology 
  • Masthead
  • Headline
  • Body text
  • Captions
  • Layout and design 
  • Composition 
  • Selection of stories
  • Columns
  • Photographs - camera shot type, angle, focus
  • Font size, type of font (e.g. serif/sans serif)
  • Mise-en-scène – colour, lighting, location, costume/dress, hair/make-up
  • Graphics, logos 
  • Language – headline, sub-headings, captions
  • Anchorage of images and text
  • Elements of narrative

Another way of doing this is for each bullet point, find an example from the newspaper front page, and briefly explain what this means

TOP TIP - for the media language question, you basically need to come up with what the product means on the spot. A good way to do this is to keep asking yourself why questions, and then answer them! So here are some examples:


WHY does this masthead feature a combination of sans serif font and bright red background? 
WHY has a close up shot of Johnson been used?
WHY is the word 'zero' in bright yellow?
WHY have so many numbers been used?

and so on.

I hope you enjoy completing this very simple and yet so very important task! Merrrrrrrry Christmas!

Examples of surrealist films

This post is related to film studies. But media studies students should also check out the cool, weird, surreal films linked below! Remember the more you watch, the better you become at the subject!

Surrealism is is an art movement that demonstrates at least some of the following qualities:

  • Demonstrates the logic of dreams 
  • Uses the unconscious mind
  • Breaks the rules of 'conscious logic'
  • Breaking down the boundaries of space and time
  • Reflects deep and hidden desires 
  • Themes of fetishism and repressed sexuality

Surrealism isn't 'weird for the sake of being weird'. In fact, early surrealists thought the movement could be used to challenge ways of thinking and to even change the world around us! Surrealism is often playful and exciting. yet it is also often genuinely nightmarish, using disturbing images that seemingly do not make sense. Surrealism originated in France, but the aesthetic became particularly popular in Eastern Europe and Japan. 

The following clips, trailers, and short films are all SURREAL. They all use film language to reflect the above characteristics. There is such thing as a 'surreal aesthetic', even though these films are very different, there are many similarities in this aesthetic!

Task - watch at least four of the following clips. Please note that some clips contain disturbing images. For each clip, write notes on how these clips use micro elements (film language) to construct a surrealist aesthetic. Please use the bullet point list above to help you. In short, how do these films break the logic of waking life?

All these films and directors are some of my very favourites! I hope you enjoy them!


















Friday, 8 December 2023

Indie news - alternative media outlets

James Curran and Jean Seaton argued that in spite of the growing conglomeration of media platforms, there also exist a range of alternative, independently owned sources that position themselves as an alternative to the mainstream. Two examples of alternative UK news media have been listed below, one predominantly aligned with the political left, the other the political right. Check out the below websites, and consider the following questions.

In the interests of political neutrality, I have selected two very different and ideologically opposed non-mainstream news sources. What is interesting is that the far right publication is, if anything MORE vociferously opposed to the conservative party! Do remember that the world of politics and political affiliation is far more complex than simply 'being' Labour or Tory! And it is this very dissatisfaction with the current model of government that both publications are tapping in to.











How do these websites position these audiences?


How do these websites meet the needs of their audiences?


What opportunities do these websites present for audience interaction?

bell hooks and Les Revenants

bell hooks - key points




Let’s question and explore each of these points

  • Society is based on it’s exclusions, and we must address this - Exclusion is deliberately not including somebody from society. A good example is in the field of work. Certain roles such as blue collar jobs such as being a mechanic or being a builder see women excluded through old fashioned stereotypes. Women may be made to feel uncomfortable, for example
  • Radical feminism is the only way to address inequality, not just for women, but also men as well! The language and attitudes that subjugate women also subjugate men!
  • We must problematise the world around us! Problematisation is finding inherent flaws and weaknesses in arguments and structures. Rather than simply saying 'that's just the way things are' (which is a great way of thinking about hegemony), we should draw attention to things that cause problems and try to solve them
  • Intersectional, inclusive feminism that recognises that the world is more complex than simply 'men and women' is essential for challenging the patriarchal systems that bind us

Applying hooks 1 - Les Revenants as social exclusion


Key analysis - promotional image




THE MAIN CAST OF LES REVENANTS IS EXCLUSIVELY WHITE. The show is set in the French Alps, in a remote rural location, and the show may reflect the actual ethnic diversity of the area. Additionally, France has very different attitudes to equality a diversity in it’s media production. If this show was made in the UK, there would be a more diverse representation. However, by excluding people of colour from the show, a culture of exclusion is created where potentially black actors and white actors are stereotypes in to certain roles. For example in France as well as the UK, black people are often typecast in crime drams and social dramas. The town that Les Revs is set in has a pub/club, a town hall, a social housing estate, an upper middle class area, a newbuild housing estate, a huge hydroelectric dam… Additionally, by having every character as white, it ‘others’ people of colour through their very exclusion, and suggests that they do not belong in this place. Finally, although the show may ‘realistically’ exclude people of colour, it still focuses on fanciful and highly unrealistic events, such as the dead coming back to life. The diegesis of the world is therefore highly p[problematic. More diverse representations avoid underrepresentation, and allow different people to be included. 

Symbolic annihilation: the complete lack of representation of a certain group of people 

There is a complete lack of representation of people of colour in the main cast of Les Revenants. Perhaps this reflects a stereotype of French rural living? Yet this lack of representation can alienate audiences of colour. Ownership also comes into question here. While the BBC is publicly owned, Les Revenants is produced and published by the privately owned Canal + in France which has far fewer obligations. Additionally, France is a highly postcolonial country, and is institutionally racist in many facets. Les Revenants is a prestige show that demonstrates an exclusive ideology that ultimately excludes people of colour.  


SIDE STEP: is San Junipero inclusive and emancipatory?


While the representation of San Junipero is definitely more diverse, we can also argue that through selecting two extremely stereotypically attractive women, the producer is guilty of fetishizing queerness for the target audience. Additionally, the episode excludes non-stereotypically attractive people. This reinforces the ideology that there is only one way to be attractive! Finally, queer people are othered through the Quagmire scene, where fetish culture is demonstrated as being scary and weird. Both Yorkie and Kelly choose a more straightforward ‘vanilla’ monogamous relationship, which may reinforce heteronormative values


  • Reinforces the stereotype that to be queer is to be repressed and to be a victim
  • Reinforces the stereotype that to be queer is all about clubbing and sex. This could alienate queer audiences. 
  • Their relationship is clearly toxic
  • By casting two very attractive women, the show is guilty of fetishizing lesbian relationships to appeal to an audience, or even queer-baiting, casting heterosexual actors as queer to pay lip service to queer representation


Applying hooks 2 - Les Revenants as inclusive and complex


  • There are a number of progressive, complex representations in Les Revenants that should be acknowledged, even if the show has shortcomings (!) in terms of racial diversity (i.e. there is none)
  • The family dynamic of divorced parents and a ‘new dad’ 
  • Lena is a positive representation of a sexually adventurous young woman 
  • Simon is a serious young man who rudely rejects Lena
  • Camille is a quiet and withdrawn teenage girl who rejects certain stereotypes 
  • The town isn't just beautiful, it is also threatening and imposing, with a real mix of people of social class
  • Despite being monoracial in terms of representation, Les Revs has a range of different characters
  • Victor: completely enigmatic and mysterious 
  • A range of different characteristics to identify with, regardless of personal identity 
  • Simon - not interested in pursuing sex with Lena, serious and mysterious 
  • Mr Costa - suddenly overcome with murderous intent, highly atypical representation of an older person! Seeing old people represented in TV shows is a rarity!
  • The twins and the weird link!
  • While we must consider this from a French perspective, from a British perspective, Lena is a refreshing character as she is not criticised for having multiple sexual partners and enjoying her life 

Key analysis: Julie and Victor 




In what ways is Julie a complex representation?


  • Julie is a home help, a working class job that requires the worker to be on call around the clock
  • Her vocal delivery is fed up, flat, miserable, a highly atypical representation of young women 
  • Julie takes public transport in the middle of the night. However, she is absolutely not concerned and instead seems bored and fed up. This subverts the expectation that women are often categorised as victims 
  • Julie seems to be unconcerned about Victor aside from a sense of straightforward obligation to him, which subverts stereotypical representations of women 
  • Julie’s costume is modest, and ill thought out with a shirt, oversized jeans and an oversized jumper. Julie is dressed for comfort rather than style 
Julie is a complex and atypical representation of a woman. Her job is perhaps stereotypical of a woman, being a home help, and suggests a caring nature. However, she sounds particularly not interested in Mr Costa’s situation. Additionally, Julie is watching The Texas Chainsaw Massacre in a darkened room. Her costume is somewhat masculine, with baggy jeans, a shirt and an oversized jumper. By living alone, it is symbolically insinuated that Julie is an independent woman, and is clearly capable of looking after herself. Julie’s social housing flat is covered in tasteful posters and stacks of paperback books, suggesting that she is educated and of a lower income. Her representation is highly nuanced and avoids commonly held stereotypes that exist about working class people

Reception theory - audience negotiation and Les Revenants

Explore how TV shows can target and attract a niche or specialised audience. Make reference to both the Black Mirror episode San Junipero and The Returned to support your answer [30] 


Who are the actual audiences for Les Revenants?


1 - fans of the zombie genre
2 - educated, middle class audiences
3 - fans of Mogwai
4 - foreign media fans 
5 - moody teenagers
6 - AND MORE

 

Casting - thinking about Julie





By selecting a hegemonically ‘average’ woman, the producers position the audience in a more relatable mode of address


Audience positioning - how the audience are placed by the producer of a media product


Examples of positioning


Key scene - Victor and Julie


How are we positioned in this scene? How can audiences negotiate this scene? Who are we positioned with? How is positioning used both typically and atypically?


Take one


Les Revenants addresses a number of niche audiences through it’s highly atypical mode of address. An excellent example of this appealing to niche audiences can be seen in the character Julie. Even the casting of the actor who plays her is fascinating and atypical: Julie is hegemonically average looking, which is surprising to see in a mainstream, mid budget TV show, and the MES of her heavy set eyes and sickly demeanour allows the producer to construct a relatable mode of address. This is further anchored and emphasised through the striking scene where Julie returns home. In the establishing shot of this troubling montage, the audience is positioned in a distantly and even ghostly manner, as we follow Julie to her workplace. The use of the extreme long shot here positions the audience in a voyeuristic mode address, and hermeneutically asks the niche target audience to relate to Julies experience of helplessness. However, Julie’s slouched posture and bored facial expression form a binary opposition to the potentially terrifying experience of being isolated and alone at night. We cut to an interior mid shot of Julie on the Bus. Far from seeming scared or relieved, Julie once more is distant, bored and exhausted. This is anchored through the MES of her messy hair and her prominent eyebags, which symbolically demonstrate the difficulty of her job. The camera angle, however, positions the audience uncomfortably close to Julie, and through it’s proximity, the out of focus Victor in the background. This shallow depth of field emphasises Julie, even though she averts her gaze from the camera. Julie’s thrown together look subverts Van Zoonen's argument that women function as a spectacle for a heterosexual audience, which allows the show to target a niche audience of feminists who will take delight in seeing the representation of a woman who subverts stereotypical assumptions. 

  • Positioning shifts from Julie to Victor to a voyeuristic onlooker
  • Themes of depression are emphasised through being closely positioned with Julie, without ever explicitly being asked to identify with her 
  • Julie’s representation is realistic and relatable through her unglamorous construction
  • A realistic and relatable mode of address that rejects hyperreal representations of caregivers and women
  • Julie rejects stereotypical representations of women as automatic caregivers, which is highly relatable to certain niche audiences
  • Through her contradictions and flaws, Julie has a rich personality and character which can be negotiated by the target audience

Take two


An excellent example of how niche audiences are targeted in Les Revenants can be found in it’s atypical and complicated use of audience positioning, particularly through the character Julie. While Julie is clearly attractive, she is ‘TV ugly’, and hegemonically less attractive than several other characters in the show and therefore perhaps more relatable to the target audience. The actor was clearly cast due to her striking looks: Julie looks pale, tired, haunted, and has clearly had a traumatic past. This anchors an effective positioning of Julie to a niche and perhaps marginalised audience.

In the scene where Victor stalks Julie home, we as an audience are simultaneously positioned as both Julie and Victor. This choice of positioning is deliberately confusing, and it’s atypical use positions the audience in an anxiety inducing mode of address. Audiences may simultaneous feel sympathy for the vulnerable Victor, and also concern for Julie, travelling home at night, while being stalked by a terrifying child. A child walking by himself in the middle of the night is a terrifying binary opposition, and a deliberate intertextual relay to the horror genre. Victor’s blank expression reminds the target audience of a zombie or demon, and therefore will appeal to niche fans of the horror genre. However, Julie is also exaggeratedly indifferent to her situation, and despite being situated in the terrifying MES and setting of an isolated bus stop in the middle of the night, shows no visible emotion. This representation of women is highly atypical, challenged stereotypes, which again appeals to niche audiences of the horror film through creating a stressful and atypical mode of address to the audience. Simply put, Julies’ representation is highly atypical. 

Julie is clearly not a typical damsel in distress. Her character and her features are both harsh, and she seems detached from the world. A survivor of a previous attack, Julie is totally desensitised to the world, and therefore challenges the stereotype of whether the vulnerable woman, or the incapable abuse survivor. An excellent example of this can be found through the masterful use of a high angle POV extreme long shot, that positions the audience with Julie in her flat looking down at the frightening MES of the lonely victor in the garden. However, contradicting stereotypical representations, Julies simply mutters ;what is he doing? This contradicts and challenges stereotypical representations of young women as being nurturing and maternal, and instead constructs a challenging yet perhaps relatable mode of address to a niche audience


Stuart Hall - audiences negotiate the dominant ideological perspective encoded by the producer


What is the dominant ideological perspective of Les Revenants? What is this show ‘all about?’



  • Possibilities
  • Reality and falsehood
  • Depersonalisation, anxiety, and depression
  • Trauma
  • The dead coming back to life
  • Suicide
  • Questioning the existence of god and heaven 
  • Themes of depression
  • Victor is often in the background, and is incapable of interacting with the world
  • Simón is unable to return home, and the world has changed completely around him. He is alienated. 
  • The soundtrack is bassy and anxiety inducing, and sounds like a panic attack 
  • Themes of trauma, rehabilitation and self help
  • The colours are bleached, dark and muted, as if optimism has been washed away
  • Something is not right
  • Past traumas and recovers
  • Be careful what you wish for!
  • The rules of nature have been discarded…
  • Depression and the flattening of emotions 
  • Love and families
  • Zombies and the dead walking the earth
  • Sex and death 
  • Religion, and questioning the existence of heaven 

Monday, 4 December 2023

Les Revenants: atypical of genre, typical of representation?

 Les Revenants is atypical and subversive in a variety of different ways! However, it is also highly conventional and even stereotypical in it's representation of certain societal groups. This post explores a few of these examples

How is Les Revenants atypical of the zombie/supernatural horror genres?


There is a huge dichotomy established between the supposed genre of the TV show, supernatural horror, and Camille's performance, which s broadly that of a stereotypical middle-class French girl. Much of the show's meaning is derived from playing off this binary opposition between the mundane and the horrific


  • The MES of Camille is highly atypical of the zombie genre, as she lack the MES of blood, torn clothing and open wounds. Instead Camille hegemonically associative of the upper middle class in a stereotypical manner
  • Camille’s performance is highly atypical. The MES of C eating a sandwich constructs a highly atypical performance that situates the audience in a confusing mode of address
  • Claire’s reaction is highly atypical, as she does not scream or attempt to defend herself against Camille. Claire instead plays a role of a confident and well-prepared middle aged woman. This confusing mode of address forces the audience to acknowledge that this narrative is highly atypical. 
  • By constructing an atypical zombie narrative, Gobert is able to target a niche audience as well as a mainstream audience of pre-existing genre fans
  • Ethnocentrism: the belief that one’s nationality, group or ethnicity is the best and the most important

Exploring (stereo)typical representations

Middle class middle aged women: Claire

  • Claire as a representation stands in for middle class, middle aged women. However in doing so, a number of stereotypes are constructed. In doing so, she reflects the ideological beliefs of the producer, and a means of identification for the audience.
  • This is constructed through the subtle, skin pink clothing that casually flatters her. While Claire is not overtly sexualised, she is clearly hegemonically attractive in order to create a spectacle for the assumed heterosexual male audience. She also functions as a point of identification for the female middle class and middle aged target audience, as well as a pint of aspiration
  • Camille’s stereotypically middle class performance demonstrates a repressed mode of address, that suggests that certain people must react in a certain way. By performing in such a strict and withheld manner, the producer also suggests that Claire is the product of a strict stereotypically middle class upbringing. Claire's performance is repressed and subtle, and reinforces the hegemonic assumption that the middle classes must be poised, well spoken and respectable.

Middle class teenage girls: Camille

  • Camille conforms to a very specific representation of teenage girls not caring and being unphased by the world around them. This is reflected ion her unwillingness to draw attention to the bizarre situation she’s been in
  • Camille is represented as other, different, strange and creepy. Her complete inability to see that anything is wrong creates an alarming and confusing mode of address for the target audience. She cluelessly stumbles back home through the stereotypically middle class environment of well maintained hedges and pristine roads by confidently walking down the middle of the road. Camille clearly believes she belongs in such a expensive and refined location, which suggests the middle classes are somewhat stuck up and entitled. Camille’s  social status means the she faces no disequilibrium, and her experience is markedly different to the working class barmaid who is stabbed to death in an underpass

How does Les Revenants appeal to an international audience?

This post covers two atypical and idiosyncratic ways that Les Revenants appeals to and has been marketed to an international audience.

A analysis of the song Batcat by Mogwai



Stick this song on VERY LOUD to get a sense of the kind of band Mogwai are

Mogwai are a Glaswegian post rock band who have been performing since the early 1990s

A big emphasis on heavy, distorted guitar music creates a solid wall of sound. A chaotic blend of three guitarists and a bassist and drummer reinforces the hectic mode of address. The song is structured around a single repetitive and simplistic riff. Extremely distorted, at times it’s hard to make out what is actually being played. Their music is angry, anxiety inducing, threatening, which is further anchored through the music videos' use of high key strobe lighting. The music is extremely loud, with Mogwai famous for creating threatening, loud, and even torturous music. Targeting a relatively niche audience, Mogwai have a devoted fan base across the world, but especially Scotland.

So why did this band get approached to write the soundtrack?

  • Highly unconventional choice of soundtrack emphasises the unconventional nature of the TV show
  • The angry, threatening use of metal reinforces the themes of death and alienation. 
  • Metal as a genre is niche by its nature, and will exclude many audiences automatically, while also appealing significantly to others!
  • The use of a Scottish rock band allows the show to target a wider audience
  • It allows the show to target preexisting and pre-sold audiences of mogwai
  • A highly opportunist opportunity to produce a soundtrack that will target fans of the show
  • Also, Mogwai produced a conventional horror film soundtrack that will appeal to fans of the genre
  • Mogwai are big in France! Big is a relative term here, but they regularly sell out big venues in major French cities

How was Les Revenants marketed to an international audience? Analysing the trailer for the Australian DVD release  



You can watch the trailer in question here!

  • An especially dramatic song was selected from the soundtrack, suggesting an exciting and thrilling TV show. Emphasises the hectic and confusing nature of the show in manner which is not entirely accurate
  • A mix of different cast members are selected in the montage, constructing a more relatable mode of address. 
  • However, there is more of a focus on the younger, more attractive characters, potentially appealing to a younger audience
  • Use of pull quotes from reviews reinforce the shows critical acclaim, and also reinforces the shows stylistic and aesthetic qualities, appealing to middle class audiences
  • Glitching effect has been added to create a more conventional mode of address
  • The trailer uses footage from the entire episode to construct a thrilling, exciting narrative

Wednesday, 29 November 2023

Les revenants: genre expectations and constructions of representations

1 - analysis of genre conventions 

Les Revenants is typical of the supernatural horror genre

Les Revenants is highly atypical of the supernatural horror genre

Both these statements are true, despite being contradictory. This allows the show to target a range of audiences, many of which are niche and specialised. Incidentally this is a question which is very likely to come up in both the mock and final exam. So, using the following slides, make reference to all the conventional and unconventional elements constructed by this scene. Remember to have the textual analysis toolkit open in another tab!






2 - Representational analysis of promotional images

A promotional image or promo image is an image created by the producer of a media product to market it. Typically, images like these would be distributed to online reviewers, newspapers, magazine and so on as part of a press pack or collection of information to help the reviewer write a (hopefully positive!)_ review.

Save the following images and complete a 'fact file' for each character. Each of these characters appears extensively in the first episode. The last image is an ensemble, so you will be writing about the cast of Les Revs in general!







FOR EACH EXAMPLE, MAKE EXPLCIT REFERENCE TO MEDIA LANGUAGE!

Name:

Character archetype: (eg nerd, jock, weird kid etc are archetypes of the American teen genre)

Costume codes and connotation (analyse their costume, as well as hair and makeup)

Gender performance and role within narrative (to what extent does this character portray a stereotypical representation of gender, and how is this encoded?)


EXAMPLE

I've done number 2 for you:

Name: Claire Seurat 

Character archetype: Mother/middle class mother

Costume codes and connotation: Claire's jumper is stylish and understated, and does not draw attention to herself. It is clearly expensive, yet has no visible logos, connoting a sense of refinement which is stereotypical of an upper middle class middle aged woman. Her hair is stylishly scruffy and her makeup is understated and barely visible, which once again connotes confidence and elegance 

Gender performance and role within narrative: Claire is a hegemonically attractive middle aged woman, and is understated and stylish and 'chic' in a way that is different from her daughter's. She is not sexualised at all, and her expression is depressed and vacant. Claire has two different men fighting over her, which reinforces her status as spectacle, and suggests a highly stereotypical representation

Building case studies to demonstrate how digital technology has affected newspaper distribution and consumption (Friday independent work)

Instructions: work through these slides in order, then read the explanation below them. The 5th slide is the task, and it's a big one!







Wait so what are we actually doing? 


Go on the websites for The Daily Mirror and The Times, and find explicit examples of how these newspapers appeal to their audiences, and also how audiences can 'talk back' to the product. BIG HINT: look at the comments!

When you find an example, screenshot it and file it under one or more of these headings:


  • How do these websites address the risks presented by a societal move to digitally convergent media?
  • How do these websites function in ways to minimise risk and to maximise profit? 
  • How do these websites appeal to their respective audiences? And who are the respective audiences of these websites?
  • What examples can you find of ways of AUDIENCES ‘speaking back’ to these websites?

PLEASE NOTE


The Times website is paywalled. This means you need a subscription (how much does it cost???) to access the site and all the articles. However, you can still see some previews of some stories. Please also note that the fact The Times is paywalled is a big part of its appeal... but how does that work?

Comparing editorial policy - The Times and The Mirror




Exploring data (yay!)


1 - Jot down the most important stats. Remember, all these stats are completely subject to change over time!

2 - What are three statements you can make from the data laid out in front of you? For example The Times is almost twice as expensive as The Daily Mirror, indicating a middle class target audience

Comparing editorial policies

Times News Group editorial policy (accessed 29/11/2023)

Reach PLC code of practice (accessed 29/11/2023)

Find THREE JUICY NUGGETS from ONE of these sources, BLUNT STATEMENTS that you can use in the exam


How have the circumstances of production shaped the selection and mediation in stories published by The Times and The Mirror?




Examples of questions that these specific examples can help you answer... but how?




Tuesday, 28 November 2023

Key assessment one 2023 - mark scheme, indicative content, exemplar answer

The exam paper


That didn't take long!


Please answer all the following questions. Question one requires an extended response and will be marked appropriately. 

Total time allowed: 48 minutes. With extra time: 60 minutes

For question one you will be shown the 2023 John Lewis Christmas advert twice. Between showings there will be one minute pause. The first time you watch the advert, you should simply watch it. The second time you watch it, and during the pause, you may wish to make notes. After the advert has finished for the second time, the exam time shall begin.

1 - Explore how the combination of elements of media language influences meaning in the 2023 John Lewis Christmas advert [15, 30 minutes]

2 - Briefly explain the function of the BBFC in the film industry. [2, 2 minutes]

3 - Explain the role of regulation in the production and distribution of mainstream films. Refer to Black Panther to support your answer [16, 16 minutes]


Mark scheme

Question one


Band 5 - 13 - Excellent knowledge and understanding of media language and the theoretical framework. Excellent consideration of how media language combines to create meaning. Examples given are detailed, relevant, and accurate. Appropriate theories will be accurately applied.

Band 4 - 10 - Good knowledge and understanding of media language and the theoretical framework. Good consideration of how media language combines to create meaning. Examples given are good, and generally accurate. Theories may be accurately applied.

Band 3 -  7 -  Satisfactory knowledge and understanding of media language and the theoretical framework. Satisfactory consideration of how media language combines to create meaning. Examples given are reasonable but straightforward, and may have inaccuracies.

Band 2 - 4 -  Basic knowledge and understanding of media language and the theoretical framework. Basic consideration of how media language combines to create meaning. Examples given will be limited. There will a tendency to describe. 

Band 1 - 1 -  Minimal consideration of how media language combines to create meaning. Basic, or no supporting examples

Question two


Typically here, one mark would be given for an accurate definition, and one mark given for a clear example. 

Question 3


Band 5 - 13 - Excellent knowledge and understanding of industry concerns. 

Band 4 - 10 - Good knowledge and understanding of industry concerns. 

Band 3 -  7 -  Satisfactory knowledge and understanding of industry concerns. 

Band 2 - 4 -  Basic knowledge and understanding of industry concerns. 

Band 1 - 1 - Minimal, knowledge and understanding of industry concerns

Grade boundaries


I was very impressed with the high quality of the responses I marked. 'Unfortunately' this lead to way too many very high grades than one might expect from a first KA, so I had to tweak the grade boundries accordingly. Therefore, the grade boundries for my (Michael's) classes are:

A* - 28+
A - 25 - 27
B - 20 - 24
C - 17 - 19
D - 13 - 16
E - 9 - 12
U - 0 - 8

The original grade boundries proposed and the ones used by T block are:

A* - 27+
A - 23 - 26
B - 19 - 22
C - 16 - 18
D - 13 - 15
E - 9 - 12
U - 0 - 8

If you feel annoyed by this, well, this actually happens in official exam marking! Certain examiners marks may be moderated or even completely remarked if they do not fall in to a certain threshold. Also, if performance across a cohort is high, then grade boundries will be pushed up. The same goes for coursework,


Indicative content 


Indicitive content is usually a list of what you 'should' have written. This time, because the answers were generally of a high standard (well done you guys!), I have included a 'teacher example' which I have written. I hope this would get high marks, but remember I've been teaching this subject almost as long as you lot have been alive, so my answer is not really like a student answer. Also, I missed out lots of stuff! I've included some revisions in a 'commentary' below each question.

Teacher 'exemplar' (sort of)

1 – Polysemy refers to the ways in which media products can be interpreted in a variety of different ways. Producers will typically ensure that their products have polysemic interpretations in order to encourage audience engagement. In this essay, I shall argue that the John Lewis advert (JLA) uses a range of contradictory media language to construct a range of different meanings, including subverting traditional holiday values, while also appealing to a resolutely middle class, white British target audience.

One meaning that is upheld throughout the advert is the ideological perspective of traditionalism. This is introduced through the opening montage, which sees a young, white, middle class boy in a stereotypical ‘Christmas shop’ finding an ideal present for himself. The MES of the shop links to traditional values, and includes such elements as warm low-key lighting, a snow-covered setting, and most importantly, the MES of a traditional ‘grow your own plant’ kit in an old fashioned looking tin. This tin functions as both a hermeneutic and proairetic code. It clearly communicates to the target audience not only the idea of mysterious contents, but also suggests an impending exciting resolution. The narrative is swiftly continued as the plant that is grown quickly exhibits violent tendencies. At this stage the genre of the advert becomes somewhat unclear, and actually begins to utilise the generic conventions of the horror genre. An excellent example of this can be seen in the polysemic utilisation of the POV shot, which sees the Venus fly trap chasing a small dog to eat it. This combination of paradigmatic conventions and media language that suggests horror films presents the audience a complex and polysemic mode of address, and they may in fact interpret the scene as either being humorous, or perhaps scary and distasteful. Nonetheless, it also upholds traditional values, through the cliched narrative of the boy teaching the ferocious plant the true meaning of Christmas. This hyperreal pastiche will clearly appeal to the white, middle class target audience of the advert.

Traditional middle class values are further encoded throughout the advert, notably in the binary opposition that exists between the well-to-do family and the terrifying threat that the Venus fly trap evidences. The family are permanently clad in the wholesome MES of expensive yet relatable costumes, including thick woollen jumpers and oversized glasses. This constructs a representation of the family as both being approachable, yet relatable to a middle class audience, a fact which is further emphasised through the stereotypical middle class MES of their house, which is perhaps significantly larger than average. As the plant expands in size and commits chaotic and naughty acts, it is presented as a clear binary opposition to the middle class family, which poses many narrative problems, and constructs an exciting storyline for the target audience to follow. It is worth noting at this point that this scary representation of a plant gone wild not only references famous horror films such as Little Shop Of Horrors, but in doing so, through this intertextual relays outlines this advert as being both subversive and atypical of the Christmas advert genre that audiences now expect to see year after year. In short, by combining generic elements of the horror genre and the Christmas advert genre, audiences are presented with a symbolically complex and surprising mode of address. Ultimately, this combination of media language is presented to increase word of mouth conversations between JL’s middle class audience, and therefore to minimise risk and maximise profit.

A further meaning that is constructed through the advert is one of modern and even subversive values and ideologies. The family is not a stereotypical nuclear family, which is evidenced through  the complete lack of representation of a father figure. Instead audiences are left to infer, through the combination of performance, costume and MES, that the older woman in this advert is a grandmother figure, which suggests a more complex family arrangement. Additionally, the older sister character is somewhat androgynous, and, with her oversized glasses and hat, presents a non-gender conforming representation of gender. This representation, once more encoded through MES, is perhaps surprising to the target audience, and the combination of elements of media language here construct a complex meaning of what it means to be British in the year 2023. Clearly some audiences may reject this ideological representation, and feel that a traditional advert featuring a stereotypical nuclear family may be preferable. However, this shifting of values also allows JL to target a different and more diverse (though still admittedly white and middle class) target audience.

In addition to these broad meanings, a more specific binary opposition between fantasy and reality is constructed. The MES of the household, though clearly middle class and somewhat affluent, is still relatable to many audience members. It is constructed through the MES of large rooms with white painted walls, and soft though also artificially produced lighting. The inclusion of a small family dog also grounds the advert in reality, and confirms to the target audience that the advert is clearly taking place in our world. The inclusion of the oversized Venus flytrap clearly breaks the diegesis of this advert. The MES of its sharp teeth and prehensile snaking ‘heads’ are clearly constructed through CG, and suggest a monster that does not belong in our world. In one scene the mother forces the boy to remove the flytrap from the house. At this stage an exploratory montage of close up shots emphasises the upsetting nature of this scene, and reinforces the dominant ideology that this scene is sad and emotionally affecting, which of course presents a binary opposition with the violent and scary nature of the Venus fly trap. By making generic reference to other family films where a child must say goodbye to an animal, the advert utilises the ‘tear-jerker’ genre in order to construct a clear, if confusing set of meanings for the target audience. This is further reinforced in the conclusion of the narrative, where the Venus flytrap, apparently learning the ‘true meaning of Christmas’, eats the presents, and, far from eating the contents, instead vomits them forcibly on the middle class family. This surprising and satisfying montage s made more forcible through the sudden and brief removal of the non-diegetic soundtrack, which, after this cliched ‘record scratch’ moment, suddenly reconvenes in an exciting rapid fire montage of close ups of facial expressions and the exciting MES of torn wrapping paper and snow. This chaotic scene is reminiscent of many families Christmas, where children will quickly and messily unwrap presents, and uses fantastical elements to present to the tart audience a delightful, surprisingly, and ultimately heartwarming mode of address that uses media language to present a highly polysemic range of interpretations, while still appealing to an exclusively middle-class target audience.

COMMENTARY

Because I was fiddling with sound and making sure the video played here, I was only half watching the video. However when I watched it properly later on before starting to mark, I couldn’t believe how much I missed out on! Here’s some stuff I WISH I’d mentioned…

  • The soundtrack is both dramatic and humorous, giving the advert a quirky mode of address.
  • The young boy explicitly says, ‘can I have this Gran’, confirming my speculation. I should have heard this!
  • The Venus flytrap has an interesting and highly characterful performance, with its drooping heads, and constructs a very sad and affecting mode of address.
  • I wish I’d mentioned anchorage! For example, “this sad and affecting mode of address is further anchored through the use of close up, which draws attention to the MES of thick ice covering the Venus fly trap, and emphasises the hardships that it has been through’
  • On the third and fourth viewing, while I still believe the family are middle class, their house isn’t as stereotypically luxurious as I first thought, which may be an attempt for the traditionally middle-class department store John Lewis trying to appeal to a slightly less well-off audience. If I’d been feeling clever, I’d have bought in some context about the financial crisis the UK is currently going through, and how many families are going through hard times, although frankly this family is far from poor!
  • The cliched ‘reaction shots’ of the family looking through the patio windows lovingly in their dressing gowns was very conventional of the Christmas advert genre, with this montage being designed to provoke a heartwarming reaction before the final, surprising rapid-fire montage.
  • The final shot of the Venus flytrap head ‘singing’ the operatic non-diegetic theme song technically breaks the fourth wall by ‘looking’ directly at the audience. This break in the diegesis (or the world of the narrative) is surprising and the preferred reading here is one of delight and humour. Clearly John Lewis is constructing a new mascot character for audiences to identify with!
  • I ended up using some theory and concepts we have either barely covered or not covered at all. So the notion of hyperreality fits perfectly here, but we won’t look at it until next academic year. Therefore something to keep in mind is that though we are done with advertising now, you can still use stuff you learn from future units to help you with your analysis in the final exam! This is because media studies is a ‘synoptic’ subject. You are expected to pull everything together from two years when you sit the final exam. It’s a tall order, but if you revise just a little bit every day, you’ll absolutely smash it!

2 – The BBFC (the British Board of Film Classification) exists to regulate films in the United Kingdom. They do so primarily by assigning age certificates to films, that not only provide context and information to parents and caregivers, but also legally stop younger audiences from seeing certain films, therefore limiting potential harm and offence.

COMMENTARY

  • Perhaps this is a bit wordy -__-

3 – Regulation is an essential process for every media product, as it sets out the rules and restrictions every media product must follow. Mainstream films are typically big budget, and must therefore appeal to massive audiences to make as much money as possible. In this essay I shall explore the relationship between regulation, production and distribution of mainstream cinema, drawing specific attention to the Marvel Studios production Black Panther (2018), distributed by Walt Disney pictures.

Black Panther was distributed using a range of traditional forms of distribution, including theatrical distribution, digital distribution and physical distribution. This ensured that the film reached the largest audience possible. For example, BP was shown in over 4000 US cinemas in the first week of its exhibition. Its ability to appeal to such mass audiences was no doubt helped by its lower age certificate (PG-13 in America, and the theatrical 12A certificate in the UK). Through this 12A certificate, the producers were able to ensure that the film appealed to and was accessed by the largest audience possible.

The BBFC states that BP was assigned a 12a Rating for its moderate fantasy violence, some brief injury detail, mild bad language and a ‘rude gesture’. The use of words such a ‘fuck’ may not only ensure a higher age restriction, but may also alienate certain audiences, and therefore a decision has clearly been made to appeal to a younger teenage audience. This is reflected in the nature of violence in this film, which is typically carried out using swords and fantasy machinery, and is typically carried out by ‘good guys’ vs ‘bad guys’, who have names like ‘Killmonger’. The BBFC stipulates that every age certificate is given based on context, and within the fantasy sci fi superhero context of BP, the violence of the film is clearly acceptable to many audiences.

However, it could also be argued that regulation has become less important in the distribution of mainstream films, in particular through digital distributions. While theatres and DVD shops must legally challenge audiences, ensuring that non-one under the age of 12 without an ‘adult’ may see black panther, this regulation can safely be ignored for many audience members who view the film on the online streaming platform Disney Plus. While the film here is streamed with a small advisory certificate, there are no checks and balances that may top a younger child from seeing this undeniably violent film. Here, Disney is able to sidestep the regulation of the film. Livingstone and Lunt argue that regulation of films has essentially become impossible in the online age, as digitally convergent technology allows audiences to view films despite their age. And while emphasis here will be on parents to effectively self-regulate it is clear that there will be very different experiences between households. Ultimately, we can understand this decision of not to provide stringent regulation though Curran and Seaton’s theory of power and profit, that suggests that vast, vertically and horizontally integrated conglomerates such as Disney are far more concerned with profit than working with regulation to ensure that young audiences are  not harmed or offended. 

Yet ultimately it can also be argued that Disney has voluntarily self regulated this product. As stated above, there is very little to harm or offend the audience. In fact, BP makes every effort to appeal to a diverse and broad target audience. This can most clearly be seen in the representation of the film, which sees a predominantly black cast of heroes, villains, and young and old men and women fighting fantasy battles in the fictitious fantasy African city of Wakanda. This powerful and emancipatory message resonated with black audiences in America, and saw 37% of audience members being black, as opposed to 35% black audiences that choose to see previous ‘traditional’ Marvel films such as Iron Man 2. In doing so, Disney deliberately worked within regulatory guidelines to produce a film that could be seen by the largest audiences possible. A criticism, once more by Curran and Seaton, would be that by appealing to such a vast audience, the film itself is bland, uninteresting and derivative, as it must simultaneously speak to ideas such as black power and anti racism, while also being as offensive as possible. This fact was clearly made essential through the huge budget of the film, which as 400 million including advertising and marketing was clearly too big to fail

As we have seen, regulation is an essential factor to the production and distribution of this film. In order to achieve the lucrative 12A rating, BP was made to minimise realistic and ‘high impact’ scenes of violence and injury detail, and every shot involving an injury was not depicted in close up. This was ultimately reflected in the vast distribution of the film which saw the film making significant amounts of money, not least because of high profile casting from actors such as Chadwick Boseman and Michael B Jordan

COMMENTARY

  • For some reason I found this easier than the John Lewis analysis! However, I will be frank: making this question a 16-marker was pretty cruel! I ended up waffling a bit to fill the time, and lost some focus as a result. However, I feel I hit all the main points!