Tuesday, 26 November 2013

Film Classification

AGE RATE


 

We have decided to rate our movie a 15 as this allows us to use violence but we also need to consider that teengaers are at risk of copying what they see.

What does the 15 symbol mean?

No-one under 15 is allowed to see a 15 film at the cinema or buy/rent a ‘15’ rated DVD. 15 rated works are not suitable for children under 15 years of age.

Are there any limits on what sort of theme a work can have at 15?

No theme is prohibited, provided the treatment is appropriate for 15 year olds.


What can a 15 contain?

strong violence
frequent strong language
discriminatory language or behaviour
drug taking

Can there be strong violence?

Yes, at 15 violence may be strong. It should not dwell on the infliction of pain or injury, however, and the strongest gory images are unlikely to be acceptable.
Strong sadistic or sexualised violence is also unlikely to be acceptable.
Easily accessible weapons may not be glamorised.

What about horror works?

Many horror films are rated 15. At 15 there can be strong threat and menace (as long as it is not sadistic or sexualised), although the strongest gory images are unlikely to be acceptable.

Can you see drugs in a 15 rated film or video?

At 15 drug taking may be shown but the work as a whole must not promote or encourage drug misuse.
The misuse of easily accessible and highly dangerous substances like aerosols or solvents is unlikely to be acceptable at 15.

What about dangerous behaviour or things teens might copy?

We consider the risk of potential harm to impressionable teenagers. For example, dangerous behaviour such as hanging, suicide and self-harming should not dwell on detail which could be copied.


Sunday, 3 November 2013

Narrative Theories

  Narrative Theory

Tzvetan Todorov

Tzvetan Todorov is a Franco-Bulgarian philosopher who writes books about literary theory, thought history and culture theory. Todorov believed that narratives were separated into 5 different stages.

He suggested that stories begin with an equilibrium (stage 1) where everything is in a normal state where any potentially opposing forces are in balance.

Stage 2: That there would then be some sort of disruption of the equilibrium.
Stage 3: A recognition that there has been a disruption.
Stage 4: An attempt to repair the disruption.
Stage 5: A reinstatement of the equilibrium.


Vladimir Propp
was a soviet formalist scholar who analyzed the basic plot components of Russian folk tales to identify their simplest irreducible narrative elements.Vladimir Propp broke up fairy tales into sections. Through these sections he was able to define the tale into a series of sequences that occurred within the Russian fairytale.

Vladimir Propp suggested that every narrative has eight different character types, these character types were:

The Villain - fights the hero in some way.
The Dispatcher - makes the villain's evil known and sends the hero off.
The Helper - helps the hero in their quest.
The Princess - acts as a prize for the hero.
Princess' Father - gives task to hero then gives the hero the reward.
The Donor - prepares the hero.
The Hero - reacts to the donor and gets the prize.
False Hero - tries to take credit for the hero's actions.


Claude Levi Strauss

Levi Strauss was a french anthropologist and ethnologist who studied hundreds of myths and legends all around the world, from that he found out that we as humans make sense of the world, people and events by seeing and using binary opposites.

Some examples of binary opposites:

Good v Evil
Black v White
Boy v Girl
Peace v War
Civilized v Savage
Democracy v Dictatorship


Equilibrium Theory 
The equilibrium is a theory that the story is about a normal state being disrupted but then resolved to reinstate normality.