Thursday, 25 September 2008

Targets

AO1- Key concepts:
I could improve my knowledge regarding key concepts by practicing concept flow and applying it to my specific media text which would aid me in my coursework.



AO3ii-Compare & account for similarities and differences:
I need to research specific films which i could use as an argument for and against my question, comparing and contrasting them.



AO5- Research techniques:
Rather than just copying and pasting, i could select specific information which is relevant to my study and summarise it in my own words.


AO3i-Knowledge and application of wider context:
further reading around my topic, using books and articles etc.



AO3i-Issues debates & theories:
Application of theories to each aspect of my investigation

Wednesday, 24 September 2008

Migrain Analysis of "Knocked Up" Scene



M
The scene solely focuses on the dialogue of the characters in order to reflect the significance of the argument; diegetic sound is also demonstrated through the background noises such as hospital scanners etc. to establish realism as the heated "argument" complies with the seriousness of the hospital atmosphere.
The woman is wearing light colored clothing as she can be perceived to be an epitome of innocence and vulnerability in comparison to Ben whose dominance is apparent due to his raised voice and serious tone, thus illustrating her inferiority.
Long cuts are predominantly used in order to focus on the situation and emphasize its importance as a turning point in the film as Ben is now taking responsibility for his more dominant role in contrast to before, the length of each shot could also signify that Ben will now continuously adapt to this role.
The fact that there is also no combining shot of both characters substantiates their difference of opinion and the lack of unity in the decision eventually made, however the cut to the womans husband subsequent to the argument indicates that she still possesses the dominant role over him and a combining shot of both is used to somewhat represent the unity between them. Medium shots are predominantly used to emphasize their facial expressions and the emotion felt by each character which draws light upon the emotional situation of Alison giving birth.
High key lighting is also used to reflect the jovial atmosphere of Alison giving birth despite the argument transpiring, reminding the audience of the films comedic conventions.

I
The main ideology apparent are patriarchy, as Ben predominantly exhibits his dominance and superiority over Alison's sister.
Family and feminism can also be considered as Ben is now taking responsibility as a father and Alison's sister is concerned regarding the pregnancy due to their family ties. Feminists would argue that the scene shows the female as inferior and incapable to replace the role of the man at the time of birth as she becomes intimidated to some extent by his ascendancy over the situation.

G
The use of witty comments such as "I think i like him", " i'll tell security theres a crazy woman in a pink dress snatching up babies" and "I wish i'd gotten that on tape" all adhere to the comedic genre of the film despite the seriousness of the situation. The fact that Ben is also taking up his fatherly role complies with the familial and romance genre as it displays his concern for Alison and that he desires to be with her every step of the way.

R
The male is primarily represented as the superior sex in this scene, due to his ascendancy over the situation and his dominant tone which adheres to the traditional stereotype of the male being more dominant in the household and the woman being inferior to the man Alisons's sister is depicted as someone wo attempts to have the upper hand yet fails at the hands of a male thus making her vulnerable and weak which complies with the ideological stereotype of women having to serve men and having less control over decisions.

A
The audience are older teenagers and younger adults who are attracted by scenes of this nature as although its seriousness partially does not comply with the comedic conventions expected by them, it establishes a sense of realism and highlights contemporary issues regarding responsibility and men taking on their roles in society. Therefore it appeals to them if they wish to view it for surveillance or merely escapism.

I



N
The scene depicts the climax of the film where Alison finally gives birth and could to some extent adhere to Proppean narrative theory where Ben is portrayed as the hero who attempts to save his princess Alison and help her through her pain during labour. Furthermore, binary oppositions are apparent within the scene such as: Men vs Women, superiority vs inferiority, responsibility vs irresponsibility etc.

Tuesday, 16 September 2008

Key concepts


Key Concepts

Media Representations

It can be perceived that the film “Knocked Up” challenges the traditional stereotypes enforced upon women as the “traditional housewife” and in turn portrays them as strong, independent and responsible individuals which is substantiated by Alison’s aspirations and her focus on her career. However, it can be argued that Alison is an epitome of the typical “blonde bombshell” which is apparent in a range of visual texts and is perhaps the most common ideological stereotype of women is today’s patriarchal society. It can therefore be perceived that despite her role as the more dominant sex in the film, she is being subliminally objectified, corroborated by her appearance which can be considered somewhat “ideal” or “perfect”. This theory can also be acknowledged in the film when she is given a promotion as an on screen journalist and is told to “keep trim” as this is what the viewers want to see, “perfection”. By hiding her pregnancy from her colleagues, this idea is validated as it suggests that she must comply with the expectations placed on her and thus portrays her as inferior to the boss of the company who is male. However, the news of her pregnancy proves to be beneficial to her, as she would be able to relate to pregnant celebrities, thus attracting viewers and again having to conform to people’s expectations. Another question can therefore be posed, “Are female leads in recent films positive role-models for young women, or are they simply regurgitating negative stereotypes? It’s a question of her independence and aspirations vs. her appearance and objectification by other males.

Nevertheless, it can be argued that Alison’s sister possesses a more dominant role in the film in comparison to her male counterpart. However, despite her dominance she is depicted pessimistically due to her controlling nature over her husband and once again her appearance is questioned during the club scene.

It is predominantly the character of Ben who’s utmost stupidity emphasizes the goals and responsibilities of Alison thus portraying her as more dominant.




Narrative

The film follows a linear narrative, as events are chronologically ordered which is also substantiated by the movie trailer. There are several narrative theories which can be applied to the film, Todorov’s theory of equilibrium is particularly significant:


Equilibrium -> Alison is living peacefully with her sister, Ben shares flat with mates (they’re all happy J)


Disruption of Equilibrium -> Alison and Ben have sex


Realisation-> Alison gets pregnant


Attempt to repair -> they try to build a relationship


New equilibrium -> Baby is born and they live happily ever after


Strauss’ theory of binary oppositions also can be applied:


  • Maturity vs. Immaturity
  • Responsibility vs. irresponsibility
  • Employment vs. unemployment
  • Friends vs. family
  • Security vs. insecurity
  • Women vs. men

Proppian theory can be affiliated with “Knocked Up” to an extent. Ben can be considered the hero as he somewhat “saves” the princess from a lifetime of misery and regret, whereas Alison is in need of true love and companionship which is what Ben is able to offer her.


Genre


The film adheres to the genre of “comedy” and to some extent “romance” as the use of bright colors and high key lighting allows the jovial atmosphere to be emphasized. The use of a variety of witty comments and jokes add to the comedic nature and appeal to the target audience. Serious issues are also mocked such as “abortion” which is referred to rhyming with “smashmortion” and thus reflect the light hearted mood and tone of the film.


Media Values and ideology

Matriarchy/patriarchy- both hold significance as it can be argued that women are the more dominant sex in the film, however due to their constant objectification, this idea can be contradicted.

Heterosexuality- all relationships are heterosexual thus suggesting this is the accepted way of living, however, some homosexual references have been made in the film, such as “he wants to rear your child”.

Feminist- many feminists may argue against the objectification of women, i.e. Laura Mulvey and the vulgar language against women used throughout the film.

Familial- possibly one of the most significant ideologies, the idea that a couple should be together to rear their child, this is also questioned when Alisons neice asks “don’t you have to be married to have a baby?” where their mother replies, “yes when two people love each other they get married and have babies” thus the idea of sex before marriage is not widely accepted in the film and thus these values are not passed down to the children.


Media Audiences

The audience for “Knocked Up” is predominantly consisted of older teenagers, young adults and couples, primarily females as the film adheres to the conventions of a “chic flick”. They are from C1, C2, D social class and can be considered “egoists” and “drifters” as they can relate to the film as the subject matter demonstrates confusion regarding the options of having a baby therefore watching the film for the “personal relationships” they establish with the character.

Feminist Film Theory

Introduction

Feminism is a social movement which has had an enormous impact on film theory and criticism. Cinema is taken by feminists to be a cultural practice representing myths about women and femininity, as well as about men and masculinity. Issues of representation and spectatorship are central to feminist film theory and criticism. Early feminist criticism was directed at stereotypes of women, mostly in Hollywood films (Haskell 1973/1987, Rosen 1973). Such fixed and endlessly repeated images of women were considered to be objectionable distortions which would have a negative impact on the female spectator. Hence, the call for positive images of women in cinema. Soon, however, the insight dawned that positive images were not enough to change underlying structures in film. Feminist critics tried to understand the all-pervasive power of patriarchal imagery with the help of structuralist theoretical frameworks such as semiotics and psychoanalysis. These theoretical discourses have proved very productive in analysing the ways in which sexual difference is encoded in classical narrative. For over a decade psychoanalysis was to be the dominant paradigm in feminist film theory. More recenty there has been a move away from a binary understanding of sexual difference to multiple perspectives, identities and possible spectatorships. This opening up has resulted in an increasing concern with questions of ethnicity, masculinity and hybrid sexualities.

Classical Film Narrative

Claire Johnston was among the first feminist critics to offer a sustained critique of stereotypes from a semiotic point of view (1973/1991). She put forward how classical cinema constructs the ideological image of woman. Drawing on Roland Barthes' notion of 'myth', Johnston investigated the myth of 'Woman' in classical cinema. The sign 'woman' can be analyzed as a structure, a code or convention. It represents the ideological meaning that 'woman' has for men. In relation to herself she means no-thing (1991: 25): women are negatively represented as 'not-man'. The 'woman-as woman' is absent from the text of the film (26).
The important theoretical shift here is from an understanding of cinema as reflecting reality, to a view of cinema as constructing a particular, ideological, view of reality. Classical cinema never shows its means of production and is hence characterized by veiling over its ideological construction. Thus, classical film narrative can present the constructed images of 'woman' as natural, realistic and attractive. This is the illusionism of classical cinema.

In her groundbreaking article 'Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema' (1975/1989), Laura Mulvey uses psychoanalysis to understand the fascination of Hollywood cinema. This fascination can be explained through the notion of scopophilia, the desire to see, which is a fundamental drive according to Freud. Sexual in origin, like all drives, der Schautrieb is what keeps the spectator glued to the silver screen. Classical cinema, adds Mulvey, stimulates the desire to look by integrating structures of voyeurism and narcissism into the story and the image. Voyeuristic visual pleasure is produced by looking at another (character, figure, situation) as our object, whereas narcissistic visual pleasure can be derived from self-identification with the (figure in the) image.
Mulvey has analyzed scopophilia in classical cinema as a structure that functions on the axis of activity and passivity. This binary opposition is gendered. The narrative structure of traditional cinema establishes the male character as active and powerful: he is the agent around whom the dramatic action unfolds and the look gets organized. The female character is passive and powerless: she is the object of desire for the male character(s). In this respect, cinema has perfected a visual machinery suitable for male desire such as already structured and canonized in the tradition of Western art and aesthetics.
Mulvey has disentangled the ways in which narrative and visual techniques in cinema make voyeurism into an exclusively male prerogative. Within the narrative of the film male characters direct their gaze towards female characters. The spectator in the theatre is made to identify with the male look, because the camera films from the optical, as well as libidinal, point of view of the male character. There are thus three levels of the cinematic gaze (camera, character and spectator) that objectify the female character and make her into a spectacle. In classical cinema, voyeurism connotes women as 'to-be-looked-at-ness' (1989: 19).
Mulvey tackles narcissistic visual pleasure with Lacan's concepts of ego formation and the mirror stage. The way in which the child derives pleasure from the identification with a perfect mirror image and forms its ego ideal on the basis of this idealized image, is analogous to the way in which the film spectator derives narcissistic pleasure from identifying with the perfected image of a human figure on the screen. In both cases, however, during the mirror stage and in cinema, identifications are not a lucid form of self-knowledge or awareness. They are rather based on what Lacan calls 'méconnaissance' (a 'mis-recognition'), that is to say they are blinded by the very narcissistic forces that structure them in the first place. Ego formation is structurally characterized by imaginary functions. And so is cinema. At about the same time as Christian Metz worked on this analogy in his essays on psychoanalysis and cinema, Mulvey argued that cinematic identifications were structured along the lines of sexual difference. Representation of 'the more perfect, more complete, more powerful ideal ego' (20) of the male hero stands in stark opposition to the distorted image of the passive and powerless female character. Hence the spectator is actively made to identify with the male rather than with the female character in film.

marnie There are then two aspects to visual pleasure which are negotiated through sexual difference: the voyeuristic-scopophilic gaze and narcissistic identification. Both these formative structures depend for their meaning upon the controlling power of the male character as well as on the objectified representation of the female character. Moreover, according to Mulvey, in psychoanalytic terms the image of 'woman' is fundamentally ambiguous in that it combines attraction and seduction with an evocation of castration anxiety. Because her appearance also reminds the male subject of the lack of a penis, the female character is a source of much deeper fears. Classical cinema solves the threat of castration in one of two ways: in the narrative structure or through fetishism. To allay the threat of castration on the level of narrative, the female character has to be found guilty. The films of Alfred Hitchcock are a good example of this kind of narrative plot (see Modleski 1988). The woman's 'guilt' will be sealed by either punishment or salvation and the film story is then resolved through the two traditional endings which are made available to women: she must either die (as in e.g. Psycho (1960)) or marry (as in e.g. Marnie (1964)). In this respect, Mulvey provocatively says that a story demands sadism.
In the case of fetishism, classical cinema reinstates and displaces the lacking penis in the form of a fetish, that is, a hyper-polished object. Mulvey refers here to Josef Sternberg's fetishisation of Marlene Dietrich. Marilyn Monroe is another example of a fetishised female star. Fetishizing the woman deflects attention from female 'lack' and changes her from a dangerous figure into a reassuring object of flawless beauty. Fetishism in cinema confirms the reification of the female figure and thus fails to represent 'Woman' outside the phallic norm.
The notion of 'the male gaze' has become a shorthand term for the analysis of complex mechanisms in cinema that involve structures like voyeurism, narcissism and fetishism. These concepts help to understand how Hollywood cinema is tailor-made for male desire. Because the structures of Hollywood cinema are analyzed as fundamentally patriarchal, early feminists declared that a woman's film should shun traditional narrative and cinematic techniques and engage in experimental practice: thus, women's cinema should be a counter cinema.

A Feminist Counter Cinema

What should a feminist counter cinema look like? For Mulvey, feminist cinema was to be an avant-garde film practice which would 'free the look of the camera into its materiality in time and space and the look of the audience into dialectics and passionate detachment' (Mulvey 1989: 26). That such a counter cinema would destroy the visual pleasure of the spectator was no problem for women; according to Mulvey they would view the decline of classical film narrative with nothing more than 'sentimental regret' (1989: 26).
Feminist counter cinema took its inspiration from the avant-garde in cinema and theater, such as the montage techniques of Sergei Eisenstein, the notion of 'Verfremdung' (distantiation) of Bertolt Brecht and the modernist aesthetic of Jean Luc Godard. As such it was very much part of the 1970s political filmmaking. The privileged examples of feminist counter cinema are Chantal Akerman's Jeanne Dielman, 23 Quai du Commerce, 1080 Bruxelles (Belgium 1975), Laura Mulvey and Peter Wollen's Riddles of the Sphinx (GB 1977) and Sally Potter's Thriller (GB 1979). It is interesting to note that the radical films of Marguërite Duras have drawn much less attention from Anglophone feminist film critics. Important American experimental films are Yvonne Rainer's Lives of Performers and Film About a Woman Who... (USA 1972 and 1974) and Sigmund Freud's Dora (made by Tyndall, McCall, Pajaczkowska and Weinstock, USA 1979).
How does feminist counter cinema avoid the conventions of classical cinema and how does it accomodate a female point of view? In the short experimental film Thriller, for example, this is achieved by deconstructing a classical melodrama, Puccini's opera La Bohème (1895). The film splits the female character into two: Mimi I, who is placed outside of the narrative in which she is the heroine, Mimi II. The first Mimi investigates how she is constructed as an object in the melodramatic narrative. According to Ann Kaplan (1983), the investigation is both psychoanalytic and Marxist-materialist. On the psychoanalytic level Mimi I learns how the female subject is excluded from male language and classical narrative. The only position she can occupy is that of asking questions: 'Did I die? Was I murdered? What does it mean?' On the Marxist-materialist level Mimi I learns to investigate Mimi II's role as a seamstress and as a mother. As in Potter's second film, The Golddiggers (GB 1980) it is a woman of colour with a deep French-accented English voice (Colette Lafont), who does the critical questioning of the patriarchal image of white womanhood. Thus, in both films it is the 'foreign' female voice that speaks the discourse of theory and criticism.
Thriller communicates these theoretical discourses both visually and acoustically. The sound track includes the dominant female voice, as well as a repeated laugh, a repeated shriek and the sound of a heartbeat. These are typical components of the classical thriller and horror genres, while the film narrative does not give rise to any such suspense. Instead, it refocuses the attention of the spectator on the enigmas surrounding the female subject in classical discourse. Thriller deliberately violates conventional realist codes. The melodramatic story is partly told in shots which are pictures of phographs of a stage performance, and partly in reconstructed scenes in which the actors move in highly stylized movements. Another visual device is the use of mirrors. For Kaplan, the play with repeated and jarring mirror shots illustrate the mental processes that Lacan's mirror phase involves psychoanalytically. For example, when Mimi I recognises herself as object her shadow is thrown up on the screen. Mimi I is then shown with her back to the mirror, facing the camera. This image is repeated in a series of mirrors behind her (instead of 'correctly' reflecting the back of her head). For Kaplan, this complex shot signals Mimi I's recognition of her split subjectivity. The investigation leads the women to understand they are not split in themselves, nor should they be split narratively. The film ends symbolically with both Mimi's embracing.

Feminist counter cinema did not only pertain to fictional film, but also to documentary. The problems of finding an appropriate form and style were maybe even more acute for documentary film, because traditional documentary uses illusionism and realism to capture the 'truth' or 'reality'. For many feminist filmmakers in the 1970s, this idealism was unacceptable. It could not include self-reflexivity, one of the starting points of feminist film practice. Feminist documentary should manufacture and construct the 'truth' of women's oppression, not merely reflect it (Johnston 1983). However, other voices were also heard. Because many stylistically traditional documentaries have been important historical documents for the women's movement, this kind of feminist formalism was questioned. Alex Juhasz criticised this kind of orthodoxy, which proscribed anti-illusionist techniques undermining identification. She points to the paradox that the unified subject which was represented in early feminist documentaries , presented the feminist viewer in fact with a 'radical, new and politicized reinterpretation of that female subjectivity, one which mobilized vast numbers of women into action for the first time' (1994: 174).
We witness a theoretical contradiction of feminism here: while feminists need to deconstruct the patriarchal images and representations of 'Woman', they historically need to establish their female subjectivity at the same time. That is to say, they have to find out and redefine what it means to be a woman. A relentless formalism may be too much of a onesided approach to the complex enterprise of (re)constructing the female subject.
Counter cinema represents only a small fraction of the many films produced by women since the mid 1970s. Yet, these experimental films have been overpraised for their subversive powers while realist women's films were overcriticised for their illusionism (see Kuhn 1982 and Kaplan 1983). The suspicion of collusion cast on realist or narrative film has resulted in either a concentration of critical efforts on classical Hollywood cinema or in a largely unjustified acclaim of experimental women's cinema among the elected few who get to see it. This has resulted in a paradoxical neglect of contemporary popular films made by women for a wider audience; a lack of academic attention which continued long into the 1980s and even 1990s (see for a reappraisal of narrative feminist cinema Humm 1997 and Smelik 1998). Teresa de Lauretis (1984, 1987) was among the first to claim that feminist cinema should not destroy narrative and visual pleasure, but rather should be 'narrative and Oedipal with a vengeance' (1987: 108). According to her, feminist cinema in the 1980s should define 'all points of identification (with character, image, camera) as female, feminine, or feminist' (1987: 133).

The Female Spectator

The account of 'the male gaze' as a structuring logic in Western visual culture became controversial in the early 1980s, as it made no room for the female spectator nor for a female gaze. Yet, women did and do go to the movies. Mulvey was much criticized for omitting the question of female spectatorship. In a later essay (1981/1989), she addressed the vicissitudes of female spectatorship in her analysis of the western Duel in the Sun (King Vidor, 1946). Mulvey suggests that the female spectator may not only identify with the slot of passive femininity which has been programmed for her, but is also likely to enjoy adopting the masculine point of view. Mulvey elaborates on the notion of transsexual identification and spectatorship by pointing to the pre-oedipal and phallic fantasy of omnipotence which for girls is equally active as for boys, and hence, in a Freudian perspective, essentially 'masculine'. In order to acquire 'proper' femininity, women will have to shed that active aspect of their early sexuality. Mulvey speculates that female spectators may negotiate the masculinisation of the spectatorial position in Hollywood cinema, because it signifies for them a pleasurable rediscovery of a lost aspect of their sexual identity. Even so, the female spectator remains 'restless in [her] transvestite clothes' (37) .
It was not until the end of the decade before female spectatorship was theorized outside the dichotomous categories of psychoanalytic theory. An account of female spectatorship in all its cultural contexts and multiple differences was then undertaken in a special issue of Camera Obscura, entitled 'The Spectatrix' (1989: nos 20-21). The editors Janet Bergstrom and Mary Ann Doane chose to give a comprehensive survey of international research on and theories of the female spectator in film and television studies.

The masquerade

It has become a general assumption of feminist film theory that female spectators are more fluid in their capacity to identify with the other gender. For example, in her study of the fan phenomenon, Miriam Hansen (1991) has used the idea of spectatorial flexibility to explain why women in the 1920s were drawn to the feminine positioning of Rudolph Valentino.
This spectatorial transvestism of the woman viewer points to a female masquerade. The concept of masquerade was first introduced into feminist film theory by Johnston (1975) in her analysis of Jacques Tourneur's Anne of the Indies (1951). The notion of masquerade was inspired by the role of the female character who cross-dressed as a male pirate. For Johnston the female masquerade signified not only a masking but also an 'unmasking' in the deconstructionist sense of exposing and criticising.
Mary Ann Doane (1982/1991) explored the notion of masquerade further to understand woman's relation to the image on the screen. Drawing on the psychoanalytic work of Joan Rivière, Doane understands the masquerade, not as cross-dressing, but on the contrary as a mask of femininity. Rivière had noticed in her clinical observations that women who find themselves in a male position of authority put on a mask of femininity that functions as compensation for their masculine position.
How does this concept of the masquerade relate to issues of identification and spectatorship? As we have seen, the male gaze involves voyeurism. Voyeurism presupposes distance. Doane argues that the female spectator lacks this necessary distance because she is the image. Femininity is constructed as closeness, as 'an overwhelming presence-to-itself of the female body' (22). The female spectator can adopt 'the masochism of over-identification' or 'the narcissism entailed in becoming one's own object of desire' (31-32). Doane argues that the female spectator is consumed by the image rather than consuming it. This position can be avoided not only through a transsexual identification, but also through the masquerade. The masquerade is effective in that it manufactures a distance from the image. By wearing femininity as a mask, the female spectator can create the necessary difference between herself and the represented femininity on the screen.
In a study of the Woman's film of the forties, Doane (1987) returns to the rather negative ways in which Hollywood constructs female identification and subjectivity. For Doane, the female spectator of those melodramas is involved in emotional processes like masochism, paranoia, narcissism and hysteria. The Woman's film, in spite of its focus on a female main character, perpetuates these processes and thus confirm stereotypes about the female psyche. The emotional investments of the viewer lead to overidentification, destroying the distance to the object of desire and turning the active desire of both the female character and the female spectator into the passive desire to be the desired object. Mere 'desire to desire' seems to be, then, the only option for women.

The female look

Do these rather dire interpretations of female spectatorship imply that the female look is impossible and that the look or gaze is necessarily male? In the early 1980s this seemed the case in feminist theory. In her analysis of Hollywood woman's films of the 1970's and 1980's, Ann Kaplan (1983) argues that female characters can possess the look and even make the male character the object of her gaze, but being a woman her desire has no power. The neo-feminist Hollywood movies involve a mere reversal of roles in which the underlying structures of dominance and submission are still intact. The gaze is not essentially male, 'but to own and activate the gaze, given our language and the structure of the unconscious, is to be in the "masculine" position' (30).
The difficulties of theorizing the female spectator made Jackie Stacey (1987) exclaim that feminist film critics have written the darkest scenario possible for the female look as being male, masochist or marginal. There have been some different voices, however. Gertrud Koch (1980) is one of the few feminists who early on recognized that women could also enjoy the image of female beauty on the screen. Especially the vamp, an image exported from Europe and integrated into Hollywood cinema, provides the female spectator with a positive image of autonomous femininity. Koch argues that the image of the vamp revives for the female spectator the pleasurable experience of the mother as the love object in early childhood. Moreover, the sexual ambivalence of the vamp, of for example Greta Garbo and Marlene Dietrich, allows for a female homo-erotic pleasure which is not exclusively negotiated through the eyes of men. In Koch's view the vamp is a phallic woman rather than a fetishized woman, as she offers contradictory images of femininity which go beyond the reifying gaze. The vamp's ambiguity can be a source of visual pleasure for the female spectator. The disappearance of the vamp in cinema, therefore, means a great loss of possible identifications and visual pleasure for the female audience.
A similar focus on the pre-oedipal phase and on the mother as love object and potential source of visual pleasure has been developed by Gaylyn Studlar (1988), though from a very different angle. Analyzing films made by Josef von Sternberg starring Marlene Dietrich, she investigates the Deleuzian notion of masochism. Deleuze views masochism as the desire of the male to merge with the mother and subvert the father's phallic law. Its violence is contractual and consensual, in a way that sadism is not. Sadism is negates difference of the mother and exults in the power of the father. Studlar argues that visual pleasure in cinema resembles more the psychic processes of masochism than of sadism. Cinema evokes the desire of the spectator to return to the pre-oedipal phase of unity with the mother, and of bisexuality. The female spectator can thus identify with and draw pleasure from the powerful femme fatale in cinema. This is a sort of re-enactment of the symbiosis through which the spectator wishes to subject her- or himself to the powerful mother image. The condition of this active masochistic desire is that it be suspended, which is achieved by means of performance and masquerade on the part of the female character. These ritualizations of fantasy keep desire under control. For Studlar the masquerade serves as a defensive strategy for women, by which they deflect and confuse the male gaze. She thus creates a place for the pleasure and desire of the female subject-spectator, albeit the pleasurable pain of desire.
Bisexual identification has also submerged in studies of very different film genres. In her study of the modern horror film, Carol Clover (1992) argues that both female and male spectators identify bisexually. She rests her case on the narrative role of the 'Final Girl': the one girl in the film who fights, resists and survives the killer-monster. The Final Girl acquires the gaze, and dominates the action, and is thus masculinised. The slasher film, like Halloween (1978), Friday the Thirteenth (1980) and Nightmare on Elm Street (1984) (and their sequels), openly plays on a difference between apperance (sex) and behaviour (gender). Clover argues that it is this 'theatricalization of gender' which feminises the audience. Whereas in classic horror (e.g. films by Hitchcock and De Palma) the feminisation of the audience is intermittent and ceases when the Final Girl becomes the designated victim (Marion in Psycho), in the modern horror film the Final Girl becomes her own saviour. Her self-rescue turns her into the hero and it is at that moment that the male viewer 'gives up the last pretense of male identification'. For Clover the willingness of the male spectator to throw in his emotional lot with a woman in fear and pain, points to masochism. Although Clover is aware of the misogyny of the genre of the slasher film, she claims a subversive edge in that it adjusts gender representations and identifications.

Female subjectivity

The question of female spectatorship and the female look circle around the issue of subjectivity. Female subjectivity has been explored not only in relation to spectatorship, but also with respect to the narrative structure of film. One of the key figures in this field is Teresa de Lauretis, who examined the structural representations of 'woman' in cinema (1984, 1987).
De Lauretis (1984) emphasizes that subjectivity is not a fixed entity but a constant process of self-production. Narration is one of the ways of reproducing subjectivity; each story derives its structure from the subject's desire and from its inscription in social and cultural codes. Narrative structures are defined by oedipal desire, which should be understood as both a socio-political economy dominated by men's control of women and as a way of emphasizing the sexual origin of subjectivity. Sexual desire is bound up with the desire for knowledge, that is, the quest for truth. The desire to solve riddles is a male desire par excellence, because the female subject is herself the mystery. `Woman' is the question and can hence not ask the question nor make her desire intelligible. In Hitchcock's Vertigo (1958), for example, Scottie's desire for the enigmatic Judy/Madeleine structures the narrative of the film.
Narrative is not oedipal in content but in structure, by distributing roles and differences, and thus power and positions. One of the functions of narrative, de Lauretis argues, is to 'seduce' women into femininity with or without their consent. The female subject is made to desire femininity. This is a cruel and often coercive form of seduction. Here de Lauretis turns Mulvey's famous phrase around: not only does a story demand sadism; sadism demands a story. She refers to the ways in which the female characters in Vertigo, but also in a 'woman's film' like Rebecca (also by Hitchcock, 1940), are made to conform to the ideal image that the man has of them. The function of portraits of female ancestors in both films is highly significant in this respect: they represent the dead Mother, the ideal that the male hero desires to have and forces upon the female heroine. For de Lauretis the desire of the female character is impossible and the narrative tension is resolved by the destruction (Judy/Madeleine) or territorialization of women (the new Mrs. de Winter). Desire in narrative is intimately bound up with violence against women and the techniques of cinematic narration both reflect and sustain social forms of oppression of women.
De Lauretis is hardly more optimistic than Mulvey about the female spectator. Not that she assumes identification to be single or simple; femininity and masculinity are identifications that the subject takes up in a changing relation to desire. De Lauretis distinguishes two different processes of identification in cinema. The first set is an oscillating either/or identification. It consists of a masculine, active identification with the gaze (Scottie) and a passive, feminine identification with the image (Judy/Madeleine). The second set is a simultaneous both/and identification. It consists of the double identification with the figure of narrative movement (the protagonist, the new Mrs. de Winter in Rebecca) and with the figure of narrative image (here the image of Rebecca). This set of figural identifications enables the female spectator to take up both the active and passive positions of desire: 'Desire for the other, and desire to be desired by the other' (143). This double identification may yield a surplus of pleasure, but it is also the very operation by which a narrative solicits the spectators' consent and seduces women into femininity.
The notion of the female subject, then, seems to be a contradiction in terms, so much so that de Lauretis sometimes refers to the female subject as a 'non-subject' (1985: 36). 'Woman' is fundamentally unrepresentable as subject of desire; she can only be represented as representation (1987: 20). Feminist theory is built on the very paradox of the unrepresentability of woman as subject of desire, and historical women who know themselves to be subjects. For de Lauretis, the self-conscious experience of being both 'woman' and 'women' is the productive contradiction of feminism. Women's films like Les Rendez-vous d'Anna or Jeanne Dielman by Chantal Akerman, Thriller by Sally Potter, or Sigmund Freud's Dora: A Case of Mistaken Identity by Tyndall, McCall, Pajaczkowska and Weinstock, are her privileged examples of films which explore and explode that very contradiction.


http://www.let.uu.nl/womens_studies/anneke/filmtheory.html

My Proposal




*To what extent is the female portrayed as the more dominant and responsible figure in comparison to her male counterpart, with regards to the film "Knocked Up", and how does this challenge traditional stereotypes promulgated by other moving image texts?



Hypothesis:

Throughout the years, the media has been heavily criticized for it’s depiction of women in films as the natural caregiver i.e. “the traditional housewife” who is predominantly perceived as inferior to her male spouse. This is most certainly true for films such as “The Stepford Wives” where the ideology of “the perfect woman” is conveyed to the audience, substantiating the idea that women in films are somewhat subliminally objectified either sexually or mentally, establishing them as the more subordinate sex. However, throughout my research I shall be investigating to what extent the theory that women are now being portrayed as “stronger” and more “independent” in films is true with regards to the film “Knocked Up” and counteracting the theory with the idea that the female protagonist is still yet sexually objectified due to her appearance and her ideological “traditional” attributes

MIGRAIN

M-

-fast paced cuts are used in order to epitomize how quickly events in the film are occurring, this can somewhat be recognised as an mtv aesthetic in order to appeal to its target audience of teenagers.

-the beginning of the trailer introduces tense music which reflects Alison’s career orientated environment and thus heavily contrasts the different lives of both protagonists.

-the natural lighting depicts the jovial atmosphere and the comedic tone of the film.

-both diegetic and non-diegetic sound is used throughout the trailer, the first pause from music to hear Alison speak allows the tension to be eased from the previous “tense” music thus again affiliating with the comedic genre.

I-

“Universal” Pictures is a well established institution, thus enticing the audience as they have high expectations regarding the film.

G-

The genre is predominantly comedy/romance; this is corroborated by the diegetic sound in the trailer where the music abruptly stops to reveal a characters witty joke, thus complying with the comedic conventions.

R-

The female protagonist (Allison) is primarily represented as the more responsible, career focused individual, whereas Ben completely juxtaposes her character as he is exhibited to be immature, irresponsible and lazy. This is corroborated by the sudden change of music which emphasises the difference in personalities of both characters. The beginning of the trailer also displays Allison wearing white thus connoting her innocence and sensibility, foreshadowing her character subsequently in the film. In turn it can be argued that this portrayal allows her to conform to the traditional stereotypes enforced upon women as being “pure” and “virtuous”, this is however contradicted by her acts in the film.

A-

The audience is predominantly older teenagers, young adults and couples due to its strong language and explicit sex scenes. It predominantly appeals to a more female audience who enjoy the comedy and chic flick genre as it appeals the typical "girly" stereotype.

I-

Matriarchy/patriarchy

Heterosexuality

Feminist

Familial

N-

The narrative is linear, illustrated by the captions. It also follows Todorov’s theory of equilibrium and Strauss’s idea of binary oppositions (mainly those of each characters personalities)

Theories/ Theorists

Main focuses shall include the ideas of several sociologists such as Ann Oakley and Laura Mulvey who draw light upon women’s roles in the household and in films, this will allow me to scrutinize the theories of decision making in homes, conjugal roles, and egalitarian status which applies to my investigation regarding the changing roles and representation of women. Narrative theorists will also be considered.

Wider Context

The impact of feminism will be crucial to my investigation, taking into account the women’s movement and the two fundamental stereotypes of women, that of “purity and innocence” and the idea that women are perceived to be “sexual objects” therefore establishing a binary opposition in itself as Alison is portrayed as a career focused and responsible individual, however is still viewed by Ben and her work colleagues as a “pretty face” as her ideological blonde hair and curvy figure enhances both her career and personal opportunities.

Where and what to research

I will be using a wide range of sources to guide my research:

Books

Articles

Internet

Etc.

My main focus will be how women have changed from being “traditional housewives” to strong and independent individuals. Nevertheless, I will contradict this theory by suggesting that they are still considered to be sexual objects and use other related moving image texts such as “The Stepford Wives” and “Catwoman” to corroborate my theories.

Reviews...

KNOCKED UP IS F**KED UP

by Sunsara Taylor

They say in comedy that timing is everything. Certainly this summer’s blockbuster comedy hit, Knocked Up, about the aftermath of a disastrous one-night-stand between Alison (Katherine Heigl) and Ben (Seth Rogen), is uniquely a product of these times. The worst of these times, that is.

While Judd Apatow, the film’s creator, is pro-choice and insists he is not trying to make any kind of statement with the movie, Knocked Up is nothing less than an ideological sledgehammer chock-full of the hard-core anti-abortion, patriarchal, and traditional values that are on the rise today. That it is a skillful work of art told with the smug comedic sensibilities of a raunchy “post-feminist” generation--replete with awkward sex scenes, smart cultural references, disdainful jabs at the stereotypes of married life, and no allusions to religion--only makes its vicious underlying social conservatism more insidious. Even deadly.

Widely dubbed this generation’s signature movie, akin to The Graduate 40 years ago, this film should be taken as an urgent and frightening wake-up call.

This film portrays the decision of a young successful professional to carry to term an unplanned pregnancy and to marry the man involved, no matter how repulsive, as a path to fulfillment she didn’t even know she was missing.

Alison, the film’s obvious projection of its female ideal, combines the boring-as-cardboard stereotypes of knock-out blond beauty and girl-next-door goodness, but beyond that she is empty. She offers no witty banter, doesn’t get the male characters’ funny movie references, and patiently endures one insult after another. Despite being a rising on-camera entertainment interviewer, she utters stunning throw-backs like, “How do I know you can take care of me and my baby?”

In keeping with the recent Supreme Court ruling that elevated the health and “interests” of fetuses in relationship to the woman, the film shows more dynamism and development in its portrayal of its fetus--filling the screen first with cells dividing, then with a pulsing sonogram at 9 weeks, at 16 weeks, at 24 weeks, and at 28 weeks--than it shows in the development of Alison’s character.

Not only this, but abortion is never seriously considered. Those who even hint at it are portrayed as selfish and uncaring: Alison’s icy-cold mother tells her to “take care of it” while Ben’s friend wins laughs when he can’t bring himself to utter the word and instead suggests that “it rhymes with shmashmortion.” As one reviewer--completely content to join the film in its post-abortion nightmare universe--put it, after discovering her pregnancy, “Alison is faced with a daunting choice: going it alone or getting to know the baby’s father.”

So, who is this “father” that Alison “responsibly” gets to know? Ben lives with a tribe of jobless pot-smoking friends who spend their days documenting the exact second when women appear naked in movies. When Alison tells him she is pregnant, he yells at her in public, blaming her sexual over-eagerness for his failure to use a condom (somehow in this movie, as in Apatow’s40-Year-Old Virgin, putting on a condom is prohibitively difficult). He insists that she knew their sex was unprotected and says to her, “Was your vagina drunk, too?”

Coming 10 years after the word vagina was ushered into mainstream culture through generation-wide readings of Eve Ensler’s Vagina Monologues at high schools and colleges and major stages around the world, this film seems on a mission to restore public contempt for this part of women’s bodies. Through more than half a dozen references, the film insists vaginas are ugly, disgusting, gross, and in need of reconstructive surgery after childbirth. At the height of the movie’s comedic build-up, three screen-wide vagina shots are successfully engineered to elicit “ews” from the audience. And of all the lines in the movie, it is a man being told “Don’t let the door hit you in the vagina on the way out” that gets repeated--and marveled at--by the film’s hero, Ben.

Much more than Alison, it is her sister, Debbie (Leslie Mann), who undergoes transformation. And it is this transformation, together with Ben’s, that concentrates the morality of this movie.

Debbie begins as an embodiment of everything women supposedly become if men “subject” themselves to marriage; she is nagging, cold, annoying, controlling, obsessive, uninteresting, and superficial. She obsesses over her deteriorating attractiveness as a sexual commodity, lashing out at younger women. She even calls her children’s babysitter a “high school c**t.” It is Debbie who drives her husband, who doesn’t even want an affair, to tell her lies just to escape long enough to play fantasy baseball.

The climactic scene of the movie is during childbirth. After disappearing for months Ben reemerges. He’s purchased a house, gotten a job, and finally read the baby books, but these are not the things that prove him ready for fatherhood. He also has not become sensitive to Alison’s needs and to the friendship and support shared between her and her sister, or developed any sort of remorse for his negligence (he admits freely that he never doubted she would take him back).

Instead, he proves himself by asserting absolute ownership over Alison and the soon-to-be child. When Debbie, who went through birth-training with Alison, arrives to help her sister, he takes her into the hall. Out of nowhere he starts yelling, “That’s MY room now! Back the fuck off!” He points to the waiting room and says, “That’s your area. You stay out of MY ROOM and go be in YOUR AREA!”

Debbie, publicly insulted and literally “put in her place,” is speechless for the first time. She slumps into a chair next to her husband in the waiting room and sulks. Then something remarkable happens. She softens. “I like him…He’ll make a good father and he’ll take care of her,” she says. Turns out, she was annoying and cold because there wasn’t a man in her life taking charge. In the absence of male domination, she wasn’t allowed to be feminine and submissive the way she becomes in this final scene. It truly is a Promise Keeper moment.

The underlying conservative currents are not lost on the Christian right. “While the film contains much vulgar and crass content,” writes ChristianAnswers.net, “there are numerous excellent morals.” The reviewer praises the film for shooting down any suggestion of abortion as well as its themes of fatherhood, parental responsibility, and marriage. He continues, “The scriptwriters probably made a mistake in including such vulgar content, as they have isolated a large portion of what would be their target audience. And this is disappointing, as the film has…numerous unusually responsible themes.”

But this movie wasn’t made for a conservative Christian audience. It was made for the 20-somethings who are smart and savvy and having one-night stands and embracing porn culture. It was made for those shaped by Sex and the City -style “feminism” where participating in the commodification of sex and women’s bodies is thought to be a form of “liberation.” It is made for a generation that is technically pro-choice, but increasingly becoming convinced that abortion is “irresponsible,” “tragic,” and even “sinful.”

But this is also a generation that is morally adrift, bumping up against the spiritual morass of a highly me-driven and hedonistic culture--much of it brilliantly caricatured in this movie. In the midst of this, it is no doubt refreshing to watch a story where, for once, the man doesn’t duck out immediately after sleeping with a woman. But this film’s romanticized view of “doing the right thing,” marrying up, and keeping the baby is sheer fiction. Ask anyone who lived through the 1950s or earlier, when women who got pregnant were called “knocked up”--a pejorative that goes right along with enforced “shotgun marriages” and the view that sexually active women deserve to have their lives foreclosed and that women belong in the kitchen “barefoot and pregnant.”

What’s needed is something new--a culture and ethos where women and men both get to be funny and smart and in charge of their life decisions. Where relationships are entered into voluntarily, based on mutual respect and equality. Where children are a joy to individuals or couples who plan to have them--but no one is guilt tripped or coerced into having a child they don’t want. Where certainly no one has a child under the cruelly propagated bullshit notion that only motherhood can bring unparallelled meaning to a woman’s life.

What is needed is many things--in relation to the culture and to women and to children and to humor. But what is certainly NOT needed is a return to the traditional patriarchal family NOR a free-fall into its use-or-be-used, self-indulgent patriarchal reincarnation. In reality, if not yet in the movies, these are not our only choices.

http://rwor.org/a/097/knocked-up-en.html

Reviews...

Judd Apatow's Knocked Up is the funniest film of the summer, finds Sukhdev Sandhu

Drizzle, rain, floods. England losing the Test series. Big Brother and pretty much everything on television. Really, it's been a dismal summer. Cinema's not been much help: even a great film such as The Bourne Ultimatum is hardly a barrel of laughs. Thank goodness, then, for Knocked Up.

Seth Rogen and Paul Rudd in Judd Apatow's Knocked Up
Tender humour: Seth Rogen and Paul Rudd in Judd Apatow's Knocked Up

Judd Apatow's follow-up to The 40-Year-Old Virgin is snort-all-over-the-person-in-front-of-you funny, hand-over-mouth filthy, and as exhilarating as inhaling from a 10-ton oxygen tank. It leaves you wanting to race out and repeat its wittiest lines and absurdest conceits to all your friends.

All from the simplest premise: boy and girl sleep together, girl gets pregnant, panic ensues. Boy is pretty much the right word for Ben Stone (Seth Rogen): he's a paunchy, curly-haired slacker, an illegal resident from Canada who lives off accident compensation and spends his time smoking weed and goofing around with his idiot pals, with whom he has hatched a plan to become a new-media entrepreneur.

Their plan? To create a website that tells users the precise moment in a movie that their favourite film stars get naked. The upside of this plan is that they spend a lot of quality time with Denise Richards DVDs; the downside is that they enjoy it so much they never get any work done.

Somehow, one night, Ben manages to pull Alison (Katherine Heigl, of Grey's Anatomy), a Kim Wilde-lookalike who works on a TV entertainment show and seems to occupy a totally different social and beauty league from him. Eight weeks later, and seven weeks and six days after she has had anything to do with him, the bombshell drops, and they both have to figure out whether or not they really like each other, and how to prepare for parenthood.

Knocked Up draws on many of the different forms of film comedy that have been popular over the last decade: American Pie gross-out; Chasing Amy-style potty-mouthed losers in love; suburbanites in a rut à la Little Children; hell-raising-in-Vegas escapades that recall Swingers.

Writer and director Apatow knows these films, and lots more, too: as Alison is about to give birth, Ben's friends are in wheelchairs outside, bashing into each other in re-enactments of Murderball, the quadriplegic-basketball documentary.

The characters are as gabby as any in a Tarantino movie. A recurring joke has them teasing one of their number who has grown a beard: he's compared to Charles Manson, Chewbacca, the late John Lennon, Martin Scorsese in his cocaine period, Ben's rabbi, a returnee from the Burning Man festival, shoe-bomber Richard Reid, and, most brilliantly of all, Robin Williams's knuckles.

But Apatow's gift, seen as early as the US TV show Freaks and Geeks, of which he was executive producer, is for marrying belly laughs to tenderness.

He has an instinctive feeling for those people Jarvis Cocker called "misshapes", the gauche and unpretty with hearts of near-gold. Rather than playing up Alison and Ben as another Beauty and the Beast (easy enough: she's slim, he's a porker; she's peppy, he's sardonic; she makes TV, he slumps in front of it), he highlights her vulnerabilities, and the way she looks to other people for advice and comfort too.

Her main confidante is sister Debbie (Leslie Mann), a pinched suburban mom who's obsessed with getting old and paedophiles nabbing her kids. Her glass-half-empty outlook, and the chokehold she exerts on those around, drives her husband Pete (a delightful Paul Rudd) to hanker after the innocence of youth: "I wish I liked anything as much as my kids love bubbles."

But Apatow makes even Debbie's cattiness sad rather than vicious, revealing her need to be loved during a terrific spat with a bouncer who himself admits his distaste for the pro-skinny-teens policy his club enforces.

Rogen, who in Freaks and Geeks seemed to have problems saying even "hello" without imbuing it with gruff sarcasm, has softened with age.

His character is still a bit of an idiot, but he's also more than just a mouthpiece for gags and one-liners. His awkwardness around Alison, his desire to amuse her and to live up to her almost baffling faith in him is real and touchingly palpable: "Don't f*** me over," she warns him early on. "I'm the guy who girls f*** over," he replies.

Surprisingly under-emphasised in most American coverage of the film has been its casual and almost insouciant treatment of abortion. Alison's mother talks of "taking care of" the situation, and mentions a friend who had an abortion before later giving birth to a "real baby". But the couple themselves never act as if that's an option: is that because it would slow down the story, or because Apatow doesn't want to offend the pro-life constituency?

Ignore anyone who tells you Knocked Up is only for adolescent boys; it has an equal-opportunities brashness topped up with scratchy charm and an incisive wisdom. And Haircut 100 on the soundtrack.

Who could resist that?

Reviews...

Knocked Up

(Cert 15)

4 out of 5
Knocked Up

Geek plot ... Knocked Up

It's a little late arriving, but at last it's here: the best film of the summer, and the sweetest, funniest, gentlest thing I have seen in such a long time. Knocked Up is written and directed by Judd Apatow, now increasingly hailed as Hollywood's unchallenged laughmeister. He is the veteran TV comedy writer who worked on The Larry Sanders Show and Freaks and Geeks, and for his feature debut he gave us The 40-Year-Old Virgin. That was a much loved film - but this, as the gamers and slackers who populate much of this film like to say, takes it to the next level.

  1. Knocked Up
  2. Release: 2006
  3. Country: USA
  4. Cert (UK): 15
  5. Runtime: 129 mins
  6. Directors: Judd Apatow
  7. Cast: Katherine Heigl, Leslie Mann, Paul Rudd, Seth Rogen
  8. More on this film

Seth Rogen, who was one of Steve Carell's buddies in Virgin, plays Ben Stone, a paunchy, frizzy-haired timewaster in his early 20s, but looking a decade older. He hangs out with his appalling stoner buddies, playing silly games in their shared house and ostensibly setting up a website giving exact information about which scenes in which films show hot women taking their clothes off.

Meanwhile, in another part of the universe, or perhaps another universe entirely, Katherine Heigl plays Alison (blond, beautiful, focused), who is a TV production assistant and aspiring presenter on the E! channel, which is devoted to interviewing celebrities. One glorious day, she is summoned to see head producer Jack (Alan Tudyk) and told that the suits like her showreel and want to try her in front of the camera. The scene is a subtle joy because of Kristen Wiig playing Jill, a female executive who clearly hates the decision and tries to undermine Alison throughout the meeting.

To celebrate, Alison goes to a club with her sister Debbie (Leslie Mann) in whose marital home's guest cottage she is still living. Here she meets Ben and submits to his goofy adoration in a spirit of oh-what-the-hell. Their one-night stand has cataclysmic results. Soon Alison finds herself stricken with morning sickness in the middle of an interview, vomiting in front of a revolted James Franco. But Alison wants to keep the baby, and feels obliged to inform Ben, who is part horrified, part proprietorial. He is hardly more than a big baby himself. They nervously agree to stay together for the pregnancy, and both Ben and Alison have nine months to grow up before the baby arrives. And this is the stormy period in which they fall in love for real.

The possibilities for yuckiness are endless, and the memories of Hugh Grant and Julianne Moore in Chris Columbus's sentimental 1995 comedy Nine Months all too vivid. But Knocked Up is a delight: smart, funny, charming and even moving. There are great gags, especially when Ben finds he can't have sex with the pregnant Alison because he can't bear the idea of his penis coming so close to his unborn child's face.

It also has moments of darkness and pessimism, coolly absorbed into the mix, which reminded me a little of Alexander Payne. These darker moments occur more in the male half of the movie, when Ben befriends Alison's brother-in-law Pete (Paul Rudd), a cool guy who is clearly unhappy in his relationship. They have a heartbreaking conversation about what it is like to be middle-aged and married, which emerges when they are in the park, watching Pete's children entranced by the sight of bubbles. For Pete, the sight of his children's delighted faces is painful, and reminds him of his own inability to take that kind of sheer, unmediated pleasure in anything.

On the female side, Alison is taken out to lunch by her formidable mom (Joanna Kerns) and told that she is crazy to have the baby when her career is on the verge of breaking out. Her sister made the right decision when something similar happened to her - and then, later, she reminds her, had a "real" baby. It's a chilling moment that momentarily slices through the film's feelgood buzz. As it happens, the pro-choice/pro-life debate doesn't weigh the movie down, and there is no sense that any conservative message is being peddled with Alison's decision to keep the baby. The real question is: should she keep the relationship?

However contrived it is in some ways, there is something refreshingly unexpected and incorrect about this film. In an age when professionals like the ones represented here are putting off having children until their careers are established, and then, we are told, agonising about their "babyhunger", Knocked Up presents us with an alternative reality. Two future parents in their early 20s, hardly even grownups, make a romantic, idealistic wager on the future of their love. Apatow pulls off the considerable trick of making us feel protective, even parental towards these people. The happy hum stayed with me hours after the credits had ceased to roll.


http://www.guardian.co.uk/film/2007/aug/24/juddapatow.comedy

Two important quotes

"In an age when professionals like the ones represented here are putting off having children until their careers are established"

-this is significant as it shows how women have now become more career focused and independent, implying that they have somewhat equal status as men and therefore relating to my question as it shows how women have bigger responsibilities.


"Katherine Heigl plays Alison (blonde, beautiful, focused)"

- this is important as it illustrates the objectification of women and how her appearance is the most significant when it comes to her job.








Monday, 15 September 2008

The Gaze and the Female Spectator

In considering the way that films are put together, many feminist film critics have pointed to the "male gaze" that predominates in classical Hollywood filmmaking. Laura Mulvey's essay "Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema" gave one of the most widely influential versions of this argument. From an explicitly psychoanalytic viewpoint, Mulvey argues that that cinema provides visual pleasure through scopophilia and identification with the on-screen male actor. Mulvey argues that Freud's psychoanalytic theory is the key to understanding why film creates a space where women are viewed as sexual objects by men. She says that it is the combination of the patriarchal order of society and looking as a pleasurable act (voyeurism) that create film as an outlet for female sexual exploitation. An important observation that she makes is that the dominance that men embody is only so because women exist. According to her, without a woman to compare to, a man and his supremacy as the controller of visual pleasure are insignificant. She argues that it is the presence of the female that defines the patriarchal order of society as well as the male psychology of thought.
Mulvey identifies three "looks" or perspectives that occur in film to sexually objectify women. The first is the perspective of the male character on screen and how he perceives the female character. The second is the perspective of the audience as they see the female character on screen. The third "look" joins the first two looks together: it is the male audience member's perspective of the male character in the film. This third perspective allows the male audience to take the female character as his own personal sex object because he can relate himself, through looking, to the male character in the film. This argument, of course, conveniently ignores the presence of Gay males in any given movie audience.
In "Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema", Mulvey calls for a destruction of modern film structure as the only way to free women from their sexual objectification in film. Essentially we[
who?] must take away the pleasure in looking that film allows for by creating distance between the male spectator and the female character. The only way to do so is to destroy the element of voyeurism and "the invisible guest".
Mulvey's argument comes as a product of the time period in which she was writing. "Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema" was written in 1973 and published in 1975. This was during the time period of second-wave feminism, which was a period concerned with the women's achievement of equality in the workplace and the psychological implications of sexual stereotypes. Mulvey calls for an eradication of female sexual objectivity in order to align herself with second-wave feminism. She argues that in order for women to be equally represented in the workplace, women must be portrayed as men are: as lacking sexual objectification.
Critics of Mulvey’s analysis of the gaze challenge that she does not allow for the female spectator. More than that, she does not assume that female viewers will take on a masculine gaze. Mulvey underestimates the female audience's ability to critique and view other females in a masculine way because it would mean that women were actively participating in the oppression of their own gender. Assuming that women would not willingly do this, Mulvey excludes this possibility from her argument, leaving her with a gap in her argument.
[6] It is worth repeating that Mulvey fails entirely to take into account the Gay male spectator who will respond to Peeping Tom (for example) from neither side of the "gender divide" she posits in her notes to the Criterion Collection DVD of Powell's film. That the homosexual male spectator is actively disinterested in the female onscreen as "sex object" implies that he is reading films through a far clearer lens (again, to reference Peeping Tom), than Mulvey seems willing to allow a male spectator.
B. Ruby Rich argues that women’s relationships with film is instead dialectical, consciously filtering the images and messages they receive through cinema, and reprocessing them to elicit their own meanings. [7]

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Feminist_film_theory

How it relates to question?

-Arguments against view-alison seen as more dominant in film

"She argues that in order for women to be equally represented in the workplace, women must be portrayed as men are: as lacking sexual objectification."- film complies with this idea as alison is predominantly the breadwinner- however, she is also appointed merely due to her appearance thus corroborating Mulvey's theory of female objectification.

Saturday, 13 September 2008

Research- female representation in films


It is widely felt that female characters in film have been restricted to the easy categories that classical narratives and familiar genres demand of them (the typical complaint is that women in films are either 'virgins, mothers or whores'). There is certainly some truth in this view. However, across the history of British cinema we can see the development of an impressive variety of female characters and protagonists. One might even argue that by comparison with Hollywood, British cinema, with its perennial concern for realism, its desire to speak about ordinary lives and social concerns and its comparative lack of emphasis upon superficial beauty and glamour, has permitted a greater breadth of female representation. Thus today's British cinema finds a place for actors as varied as Helena Bonham-Carter, Kathy Burke, Judi Dench, Jane Horrocks, Marianne Jean-Baptiste, Samantha Morton, Kristen Scott-Thomas, Maggie Smith, Alison Steadman, Emma Thompson, Julie Walters and Catherine Zeta-Jones.


It's undeniable that, despite this variety, women on film have been more often restricted to familial or domestic roles than have men. While a number of famous female protagonists have been presented as strong models of motherhood (as in Poor Cow (d. Ken Loach, 1967) and A Taste of Honey (d. Tony Richardson, 1961)), we have rarely seen women whose priority is to pursue and develop their ambitions, talents or vocations (see, for example, The Red Shoes (d. Michael Powell/Emeric Pressburger, 1948), Educating Rita (d. Lewis Gilbert, 1983), and Little Voice (UK/US, d. Mark Herman, 1998)). Female characters who are uninterested in motherhood and domesticity are frequently depicted as lacking something or paying a price for their success. Those who do pursue larger ambitions are often portrayed as being in some sense naïve, manipulated by other (male) characters in the pursuit of their dreams.


As British cinema has developed, the number of female protagonists has increased, and female characters play a larger part in propelling the narrative forward. For example, where the British New Wave films of the 1960s largely confined their female characters to motherhood and domesticity, leaving the male protagonists to speak out about larger social concerns, many contemporary social realist films allow female characters greater power over their own destinies.


The representation of women in film depends as much on issues of production, institutions and genres as on social, political and historical contexts. Gainsborough melodramas, Carry On films, Hammer horrors, heritage films and recent 'Brit-grit' realist films all necessarily place limitations upon the kinds of roles open to female (and male) actors.


Yet even within the most conventional of studios and genres, and within the most unpromising films, it's possible to find women who offer alternative and positive representations: for example the powerful female characters played by Helena Bonham-Carter and Emma Thompson in 1980s and '90s heritage films, or the charismatic, if troubled, characters played by Julie Christie in earlier films like Darling (d. John Schlesinger, 1965).


The situation for non-white women is slightly less rosy, in that fewer representations exist, but we still have the varied and careful characterisations found in Burning an Illusion (d. Menelik Shabazz, 1981), Bhaji on the Beach (d. Gurinder Chadha, 1993), East is East (d. Damien O'Donnell, 1999) and Secrets and Lies (d. Mike Leigh, 1996).


Sarah Cardwell


Further Reading
Sue Harper Women in British Cinema: Mad, Bad and Dangerous to know (Continuum, London, 2000)




http://www.screenonline.org.uk/film/id/824016/