Wednesday, 6 November 2013
Critical Review of Personal Film Spectatorship - CMSE analysis
As well as enjoying the narrative of the film, I noticed the wide variety of technical features used throughout the film. A range of different cinematography, sound, mise-en-scene and editing features were included which really enhanced my viewing pleasures and increased my general enjoyment of the film. One scene where an array of features were used to complement the narrative was during the 'Girls Gone Wild' scene at the climax of the plot. The contents of the Burn Book has just been revealed all over the school and the girls are all arguing with each other. Cross-cutting is used between the chaotic scene in the hallways and the peaceful, dignified meeting being held in the principal's office. The huge contrast in the atmosphere between these two places made me laugh a lot and made me feel more knowledgeable than Cady for once as I knew more than she did - she and the characters in the office were completely oblivious. As one of the teachers, Ms Norbury, tries to settle down the students, she gets knocked down to the ground, her glasses falling from her face in the process. A low angle shot is used on Ms Norbury here, making her look vulnerable to the girls despite her status as a teacher, and I felt really sympathetic towards her. A pull focus shot is then used as the focus is on a pair of broken glasses before these become blurred and suddenly a piece of paper on the floor is unblurred and becomes focused instead. With this shot we are first drawn into the fact that Ms Norbury's glasses are broken before we are made aware of the bigger picture and the more important object - the piece of paper on the floor stating that Ms Norbury is a drug dealer. The camera slowly zooms in on the piece of paper to allow the audience to see exactly what is written before the shot changes back to one of Ms Norbury. As a spectator, I felt really bad when I read the page; it felt like I was seeing it alongside her and experiencing the hurt that she would have felt. The cut back to the meeting in the principal's office lightened the mood a bit for me as I was no longer having to look at the Ms Norbury's hurt expression. Later in the scene, we see Regina stood in the centre of the shot and the camera slowly reverse zooms to let us take in the chaotic sight surrounding Regina. This shot made me feel really angry - Regina caused all of the turmoil yet she was standing in the centre, totally unscathed, whilst in the background we could hear amplified sound effects such as the sound of clothes tearing and the contrapuntal sounds of wild animal noises. The reverse zoom shot seemed to be handheld as it was slightly shaky - but I enjoyed this as it made me feel more involved with the chaotic scene. High-key lighting was used throughout the scene; nobody was specifically highlighted using the light, yet all the characters were well lit so I was able to see them clearly and not miss any of the action. Whip pan cuts were used between girls to show how everybody was arguing but they were all having very similar arguments. Again, this was using a handheld camera as well and the shaky element enhanced the idea of the turmoil. I really enjoyed the whip pan cuts as I thought they were really effective in portraying the anger and upset felt by all of the girls in the scene. Piece is finally restored at the end of the scene by the piercing sound of the fire bell and the amplified sound of the water falling.
Critical Review of Personal Spectatorship - Narrative Structure and Received Pleasures
Film Theorist Tzvetan Todorov describes narratives as going from equilibrium to disequilibrium then back to an altered equilibrium and this is exactly what happens in Mean Girls. A typical linear structure is represented in the movie:
Equilibrium - Cady is a typical girl. She is just starting at high school and t's a new experience for her. Everything in the school is very clique orientated.
Disruption (beginning of move out of equilibrium) - Cady is introduced to the world of the Plastics. Her initial task of just trying to get through high school is suddenly out of the window and now she has a new task - to ruin the Plastics, mainly Regina George.
Conflict (peak of the disequilibrium) - Cady is no longer pretending to be a Plastic, her friends have realised that she has truly become one. The Burn Book is revealed to the whole school and chaos erupts.
Resolution (beginning of move back to equilibrium) - Cady realises that she's done wrong and confesses to all of her wrongdoings.
New Equilibrium - Cady is back to just being a normal high school girl, but now all of the cliques have disbanded. People mix freely with one another regardless of previous social standings and high school life is now a lot happier.
I enjoy watching movies that have this structure. I wouldn't go as far as to say the structure of Mean Girls gives me pleasure, but I do find the idea of a disequilibrium being reverted back to equilibrium satisfying. It's not a complicated structure so I can focus on the actual storyline as opposed to having to keep up with the narrative style.
I find that most of the pleasures that I receive from the movie come during the disequilibrium when things aren't quite right. I think this is because these are the most dramatic and chaotic moments during the film and these are the scenes which I have the strongest reactions to, therefore these are the scenes where I gain the most pleasure. One moment where I gain visceral pleasure from the film is during the party scene. Cady is drunk and dressed in tight, revealing clothes and she thinks that this is going to impress Aaron. She doesn't realise that she is just embarrassing herself and I watch the entire scene in anticipation with a really uncomfortable feeling in the pit of my stomach. I then find myself full on cringing when Cady throws up straight into Aaron's lap. When that scene is on, even now when I've watched the movie so many times I still find myself closing my eyes or looking away rather than have to endure such an awkward moment with her. Another visceral pleasure I gained the first time I watched the movie was when Cady follows Regina out of school as she's trying to apologise to her. One moment there are two girls standing in the middle of the street having an argument and the next one of them gets hit by a bus. I remember visibly jumping from the shock of that moment - it was completely unexpected. Now when I watch it I don't have exactly the same response because obviously now I know it's coming, I'm looking out for it, but I still find it amazing how strong my response was the first time.
I also gained pleasures through orientation and discovery. The movie was narrated and seen from Cady's point of view so therefore I learnt things about other characters as she did. There is no major 'whodunnit' type of moment anywhere within the movie, but things such as finding out that Regina is cheating on her boyfriend or that the school coach is having an affair with two of his students creates the suspense that would usually come with discovery but instead this suspense is created through the build-up of waiting for the other characters to learn what I and Cady already know.
As the movie is a comedy, I received a lot of emotional pleasure from Mean Girls. I was constantly laughing throughout. A particularly strong response that I had however was during Cady's prom queen acceptance speech. Cady is trying to make things right again after her fall from the top and show people that things like prom queen and king just aren't important. There are a few people that she points out from the crowd as looking exceptionally pretty at the prom and these girls are people that usually would not be at the top of the social ladder (one of the girls is disabled and the other is overweight). The counter-culture attraction of this scene is what draws such a strong response from me. In society, generally when people describe the perfect girl, they do not describe someone who is overweight or someone who perhaps has some sort of disability. The fact that Cady takes the time to specifically point out these people, the so-called underdogs of the school, and identifies them as being just as beautiful and worthwhile as herself and the other nominated prom queens always really touches me and it's one of the scenes that really made an impression on me the first time I watched the movie.
Critical Review of Personal Film Spectatorship - Hypodermic Needle Model
The Hypodermic Needle Model suggests that the behaviour of us as an audience can be directly influenced by what we see in the mass media - including film. The idea is that when we watch a movie, we can be subconsciously affected in a way that alters the way we see things or the way we might act.
As a spectator, I don't think that Mean Girls had any effect on my beliefs and behaviour as such (subconsciously or otherwise). The comedy was too much for there to have been any serious kind of message that could make me question my beliefs or change the way I act. What the film did do, however, was further establish some of the ideas that I already maintain as an individual - bullying being the main one. I know that it is wrong to bully, and I have never and will never do it, but after seeing the effect that bullying had on some of the girls' lives in the movie, it really did make my opposition to bullying even stronger.
As a spectator, I don't think that Mean Girls had any effect on my beliefs and behaviour as such (subconsciously or otherwise). The comedy was too much for there to have been any serious kind of message that could make me question my beliefs or change the way I act. What the film did do, however, was further establish some of the ideas that I already maintain as an individual - bullying being the main one. I know that it is wrong to bully, and I have never and will never do it, but after seeing the effect that bullying had on some of the girls' lives in the movie, it really did make my opposition to bullying even stronger.
Critical Review of Personal Film Spectatorship - Uses and Gratifications and the Identification Theory
Surveillance
The movie gives an example of life in a high school. Of course, a lot of the elements are hugely exaggerated but the audience could still use the movie to get a general idea of experiences that take place in high school. I know that I personally structured my idea of high schools based on what I saw in the film and although a lot of what goes on in the movie I have never experienced myself at school (e.g. burn books, inappropriate teacher/student relationships, etc) some aspects I have found to be true to some extent. Whilst I think that 'cliques' may be too strong a word, people often do tend to go around in their specific groups at school. One thing that I really took from the film the first time I saw it was the idea of bullying and how something you say to someone can really affect them. One thing I noticed was that most of the back-stabbing in the film was done by girls. I went to an all girls school from Years 7 through to Year 11 and I experienced 'bitchiness' first hand; it really is a problem that more schools should try to tackle - just like they do in the film.
Rumours played such a huge part in Mean Girls - everything that everyone thought they knew about other people at the school had all come from rumours. I really learnt the importance of being careful about what you say to people and not taking everything you hear about other people whole heartedly. There was one scene in the movie where all the girls in the year were sat down together and made to talk abo I went to an all girls school from year 7 to year 11 and I understood how bitchy girls can be.
Social Interaction
I gain a lot of social gratification from this movie. It is the kind of film that discussions can be based off of very easily. All of my friends have seen Mean Girls - it's just one of those movies that is put on at sleepovers. There are so many memorable quotes and jokes that my friends and I often use for a quick laugh. In fact, during a lesson at school, my group used the Kevin G rap from this movie as a basis for a rap of our own but with the theme of road and environmental safety. My friends and I were socially interacting with one another to create the rap but there was also further interaction between us and other students in our class with whom we shared the rap. In some ways, this links in with theorist Henry Jenkins' Convergence Culture theory; my friends and I used the original film text and created our own creative response from it.
Entertain
I always watch Mean Girls when I'm bored or just in the mood for a laugh. Also, I use this movie a lot as a method of escapism. When I'm feeling upset or just generally down it's easy to forget about whatever it is that's going on in my life and just get lost in the comfort of such a familiar movie. Cady's life gets completely out of hand as the disequilibrium is reached in the film and I receive gratification from the fact that even someone as beautiful as Cady, who's life was so seemingly perfect, can go through issues like self doubt and social acceptance just like me.
Identity and the Identification Theory
I think my last point links with the identity aspect of the uses and gratifications theory. I can identify with the character of Cady Heron because she is a girl in high school just trying to find her place. They don't make her seem particularly heroic at all in the movie, they show the flaws that she has just like any normal girl which makes it easier for me to identify with her.
Regina George (antagonist), on the other hand, is this beautiful, rich, somewhat untouchable girl. She is portrayed as 'perfect' and as I don't see myself in this way at all I found it very difficult to identify with her. What her character did enable me to do was highlight a lot of negative traits that I myself never want to have. Throughout the movie, Regina is horrible; spreading rumours about people, knocking her supposed friends down at any given opportunity and just generally victimizing everyone around her. It's as though the character was specifically made to personify all of the negative behaviour you could ever expect to find in a school and I think this made her flaws a lot more obvious to me as a spectator. The characters Gretchen and Helen are both just as guilty of talking about people behind their backs, but because this is really the only main flaw of theirs throughout the movie (as they are generally not mean to people, unlike Regina) I didn't really take so much notice of this the first time I watched the movie. The fact that Regina's entire character seems to be just made up of bad traits makes her more recognisable as a villainous character and this therefore made it easier for me to identify the negative characteristics of hers that I wanted to make sure I never have.
The Identification Theory is based on the idea that we align ourselves with one (or more) characters in particular when watching a piece of media (i.e. film). There are certain characters that we identify with when watching a movie whether it's because we like them, or dislike them, or feel sorry for them. Film theorist Murray Smith breaks down our identification process into three more precise concepts; recognition, alignment and allegiance. It is these three concepts that he believes make up the systematic reasoning as to why we have emotional responses to fictional characters.
Recognition is the WHO. It refers to the emotional engagement we have with the character. It's the spectators' ability to put themselves into the position of the character in order to understand and feel what they're experiencing. The characters we as individuals specifically choose to engage with often depends on our own personal identity.
Alignment is the HOW. Murray refers to this concept as "the process by which spectators are placed in relation to characters in terms of access to their actions, and to what they know and feel". It refers to the actual techniques used to make us want to identify with specific characters. For example, larger allotted screen times, excessive use of POV shots and camera angles used can all have an affect on us as spectators.
Allegiance is the WHY. It refers to the reasoning behind why we choose specific characters to align ourselves with; the moral evaluation of characters by spectators. Murray claims that "to become aligned with a character, the spectator must evaluate the character as representing a morally desirable set of traits in relation to other characters within fiction".
Cady Heron
In the movie Mean Girls, Cady is the character with whom I find myself aligning with most readily. Voice overs from her character are used to narrate each scene so I immediately see every scene from her perspective. The voice over really allowed me to put myself in Cady's position and empathise with her, even during times in the film when she was clearly in the wrong because although her actions and behaviour were often wrong, the voice overs allowed me to hear how sorry she was for her behaviour. There is a particular scene in the movie just after the burn book and all the horrible things written in it have been put all over the school. Cady is given the chance to own up to her part in it, but she doesn't. Now, if we were to just watch the scene, it would look like she was just being cold and uncaring. But with the voice over we hear the reasons behind why she doesn't initially own up and I can understand her point of view more and I find myself empathising with her.
As Cady is the protagonist of the film, naturally she is the character whose actions and feelings are made most available to me as the spectator. She has the most allotted screen time which automatically makes me feel closer to her than to any of the other characters and I get to see a lot of the scenes from her point of view. The combination of the voice overs along with the point of view shots used aligns me more with Cady's character than any other.
Whilst Cady isn't exactly the most moral character in the entire movie (examples of more moral characters would be love interest Aaron Samuels and maths teacher Ms Norbury) it is because of this that I find myself wanting to align myself more with her and this is where the Identification Theory is not always accurate. Sometimes I find that the characters with the most morally desirable traits are quite annoying and too perfect for me to want to align with. In a scene towards the end of the movie when all the girls are doing an apology exercise to help them express their thoughts to one another, most of the things the girls are apologising for are really quite nasty things but I understand that sometimes people do say nasty things that they later regret and I respect their honesty. One girl takes the stand and as she starts talking we realise that she has nothing to apologise for but is instead pleading with the others to be nicer to one another and to let things "go back to the way they were in middle school" when they all got along.
In hindsight, this character probably has better morals than most of the other girls in the room, and it certainly did make for an entertaining scene, but as I was watching the movie I couldn't identify with her at all because she just seemed too moral. It seemed so unnatural. Sometimes it is easier for me to identify with the characters whose flaws are shown or whose morals I see are challenged throughout the film because it makes them seem more like me - I'm not perfect. My allegiance to Cady does change a little towards the middle of the film as it reaches it's disequilibrium when we realise that Cady has become one of the mean, popular girls that she was initially trying to tear down. At the start of the movie, Cady was always dressed comfortably and casually in the same sort of clothes that I would wear, and this made her a desirable ally compared to the Plastics and their girly, tight pink clothes. But somewhere towards the middle of the film, suddenly Cady's clothes too start getting girlier and tighter and, let's face it, sluttier and she does become a lot harder for me to align myself with.
In previous scenes, when Cady had found herself in an altercation with anyone, I would usually find myself siding with her. However, at the end of the party scene when she has the argument with Janice and Damien (when she is dressed in her tight, revealing dress) I side with Janice because she is right; Cady has changed, and I can't identify with anything in her new character - she's just nothing like me.
There is one other character that I identified a lot with in the film, despite her only being shown for about five seconds. One issue touched upon is the idea of stereotypes. On Cady's first day of school, the principal comes into her classroom to let the rest of the class and her teacher know that there will be a new student joining the class. The principal mentions the fact that the new girl is from Africa. Now, despite the fact that Cady is standing directly by the principal and we can assume that the teacher, Ms Norbury has never seen her before, automatically it is the single black student in the room that she turns to and welcomes. The scene is humorous as the girl, who wasn't paying attention, suddenly realises that she is the one being spoken to and responds with "I'm from Michigan", but I think it's a pretty important point. I can relate, being black myself, and having had a similar experience to the girl. When I was a lot younger, a girl in my class couldn't understand why I wasn't white yet I could still be classed as a British citizen. I remember her saying over and over again "but black people are African and white people are British". She wasn't being offensive, and I didn't take offence, but it really made me realise that citizenship and how it's gained isn't something that is explained a lot at schools - it was my parents that told me about it. Furthermore, later in the movie, there is a scene in the canteen with Cady and the plastics when one of the girls asks her "if you're from Africa then why are you white?". It's a common stereotype and error made, particularly by young people, that all Africans are black when this is really not the case. Nearly 10% of people living in South Africa are white. This stereotype is only touched upon in the movie, but I think that it's good that it was included at all. People need to be more aware.
Critical Review of Personal Film Spectatorship - Characters and Themes
There are quite a few themes and issues touched on or dealt with in Mean Girls, but they are dealt with in a comical way so they are not forced down my throat as a spectator but I do still recognise that they are there.
One issue touched upon is the idea of stereotypes. On Cady's first day of school, the principal comes into her classroom to let the rest of the class and her teacher know that there will be a new student joining her class. The principal mentions the fact that the new girl is from Africa. Despite the fact that Cady is standing directly by the principal and we can assume that the teacher, Ms Norbury has never seen her before, automatically it is the single black student in the room that she turns to and welcomes. The scene is humorous as the girl, who wasn't paying attention, suddenly realises that she is the one being spoken to and responds with "I'm from Michigan". I can relate, being black myself, and having had a similar experience to the girl. Further into the movie, there is a scene in the canteen with Cady and the plastics when one of the girls asks her "if you're from Africa then why are you white?". It's a common stereotype and error made, particularly by young people, that all Africans are black when this is really not the case. Nearly 10% of people living in South Africa are white. This stereotype is only touched upon in the movie, but I think that it's good that it was included at all.
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