chosehumanity: (mitchell: cute with cigarette)
chosehumanity ([personal profile] chosehumanity) wrote in [community profile] fandomhigh2009-08-11 09:32 am
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Film Through The Ages, Tuesday, Period 3

"Last week, I said we'd be talking about genre film," Mitchell told the class, his hands firmly set on the couch itself. "The word genre means 'a stylistic category'. That means that genre film, by its very nature, is stylised. Prior films also had genres of their own, of course, but in the 1930s, all the new technical changes meant that a couple of very important genres were born. Musicals, screwball and horror, most prominently. This is the dawn of 'ScreamYell' and of 'The Red House'." He glanced around the room to see who actually recognised those titles. Yes.

"Obviously, the innovation of sound brought the musicl into the world. It started off a bit--" He searched for a word, "Stilted," he said, finally, "With revue musicals, which were just songs upon songs strung together on film. But quickly, new kinds of musical started to appear: backstage musicals, taking place behind the scenes of an actual musical, operettas, and integrated musicals, like the Red House, where the songs just... flowed into the narrative. You saw Swinging Time last week: that's a backstage musical. 'Adore Me This Eve', which we'll be watching later, is an operetta. You can tell, because it takes place in a fantasy world."

He took a breath, and glanced through the class. "Another big genre that came to be in the sound era was horror. It did exist before the time of sound, but it didn't really take off-- at least not as a genre in and of itself. 'The Vanishing Man', 'The Mummy', all of these films were born in this age, one after another. It was a genre that quickly found its stylistic footing, to the point where studios would just give their directors a title to work off, and see what they got. That's how we got 'Ran with Zombies', for example." He gave the class a quick grin. "On the less supernatural end of things, this time also brought us gangsters." He seemed too amused about that.

"Scarred Face, that famous mob movie, was one of them. That came out in 1932. Film has a habit of covering the issues of the time that just came before it, so the time right at the end of, and after, the prohibition of alcohol was rife with these kind of stories. People started to put their fantasies on them, as gangsters wore fancy clothes and bought big cars with little issue. Most of the time, they followed the same basic pattern. Two men who were utterly different but close friends would choose different pathways in life, one of crime, and one of the straight and narrow. And in the end, one of them would die violently, usually in a shoot-out." He made a gesture with his hand. "Of course, at the time, the public had trouble dealing with all the violence, even if it seems nearly tame by modern standards. The studios tried to cope by making their stories milder, or to turn them around, make it about redemption, like Feathered Wings, Filthy Faces."

He pushed himself down against the couch. "Out of mob movies came Film Noir," he continued, "Which took all the dark edges the studios had rubbed away and fashioned them into something new. Finding new paths to tell these stories. They were detective stories, set mostly in the 1940s, full of femme fatales and treachery and coldness and death. These weren't good people. The films weren't supposed to be about good people."

He scraped his throat. "To end this class on something lighter," he said, "We have the screwball comedy. Sort of like a romantic comedy now, it'd be about two people in love with enough money to act like complete idiots." He grinned again. "Take 'Past the Ninteenth Century', for example. It's the love between a theatre entrepeneur and the lady he romances, and they both start to act more and more like twats as the movie continues. Or 'The Night It Happened', where a heiress flees to marry a playboy but falls in love with the long-suffering reporter who follows her. The genre mostly died in 1945 at the end of the war, but there's been attempts to revive it long after."

He finally took a pause to breathe. "I want you all to pick one of these genres, and write a short summary for a fictional film. Get creative. It'll be good for you."

[[ and ocd up! ]]

Re: Sign In!

[identity profile] heartflames.livejournal.com 2009-08-11 12:14 pm (UTC)(link)
Eleanor Robinson
icecoldfrost: (White Queen Rising)

Re: Sign In!

[personal profile] icecoldfrost 2009-08-11 01:37 pm (UTC)(link)
Emma Frost
icecoldfrost: (considering)

Re: Listen to the Lecture

[personal profile] icecoldfrost 2009-08-11 01:45 pm (UTC)(link)
Emma, being Emma, had her coffee, her usual chair, and a notebook perched in a precarious position as she tried writing and drinking at the same time.

It was entirely possible that inhalation of caffeine was her secondary mutation.

Re: Sign In!

[identity profile] mauledbyabear.livejournal.com 2009-08-11 02:00 pm (UTC)(link)
Emmett Cullen
vanillajello: (Sitting.)

Re: Sign In!

[personal profile] vanillajello 2009-08-11 02:03 pm (UTC)(link)
Kate Gregson
vanillajello: (Eating.)

Re: Listen to the Lecture

[personal profile] vanillajello 2009-08-11 02:14 pm (UTC)(link)
This week Kate was actually paying attention again. And realizing how she maybe should've brought one of the muffins for Mr. Mitchell as well, last week. He was her favourite teacher so far, after all.

She doodled something in her notebook.
vanillajello: (Texting.)

Re: Come Up With A Fictional Film

[personal profile] vanillajello 2009-08-11 02:31 pm (UTC)(link)
Kate was working on an outline for a screwball comedy. It was about a punk boy and a goth girl, and seemed to involve a roadtrip and a circus.
vanillajello: (Standing.)

Re: Talk to Mitchell

[personal profile] vanillajello 2009-08-11 02:50 pm (UTC)(link)
At some point during the class, Kate came to present Mitchell with a piece of paper torn from her notebook. She handed it to him with a little grin.

On the piece of paper, there was a drawing of a muffin. Under the muffin was some writing: "This token can be exchanged for one (1) Muffin of Triumph."
vanillajello: (Smiling.)

Re: Talk to Mitchell

[personal profile] vanillajello 2009-08-11 03:03 pm (UTC)(link)
"Uh huh," she nodded with a smile. "It's a family thing. I made a lot last week, and I should've brought one last week, but I was kinda-" in shock, breaking down, going crazy "-not thinking straight."
vanillajello: (Standing.)

Re: Talk to Mitchell

[personal profile] vanillajello 2009-08-11 03:18 pm (UTC)(link)
"It's..."

She hesitated for a moment. "Better. Going okay, I guess. Maybe. ...Well, it's slightly better than last week," she said with a light shrug and a half-smile.
vanillajello: (Eating.)

Re: Talk to Mitchell

[personal profile] vanillajello 2009-08-11 03:26 pm (UTC)(link)
"I wasn't even that involved, except in a sandwich-providing way," she shrugged. "I shouldn't be this freaked out."
vanillajello: (Serious.)

Re: Talk to Mitchell

[personal profile] vanillajello 2009-08-11 03:42 pm (UTC)(link)
She pushed some unruly strands of hair behind her ear. "I know," she sighed. "Or at least parts of my mind know. The rest are kind of fond of denial still." A tiny, quiet laugh. "And some have moved on to another issue to freak out about."
vanillajello: (Smiling.)

Re: Talk to Mitchell

[personal profile] vanillajello 2009-08-11 03:57 pm (UTC)(link)
For once, her issues weren't related to being a teenager. But one of those issues would probably come up soon enough.

"That's good to know," she smiled. Because really, she should talk about it with someone soonish. Preferably before she stopped worrying about her mind cracking and just actually went insane.

"Don't lose the token," she said before turning to go.

Re: Sign In!

[identity profile] wantstobehuman.livejournal.com 2009-08-11 08:49 pm (UTC)(link)
George Sands

Re: Talk to the TA

[identity profile] wantstobehuman.livejournal.com 2009-08-11 08:50 pm (UTC)(link)
George was around, working on the outline for his fictional film.

With notes in the margin about how 'fictional film' was something of a redundancy.

Re: Come Up With A Fictional Film

[identity profile] wantstobehuman.livejournal.com 2009-08-11 08:59 pm (UTC)(link)
George's outline was for a screwball comedy in which a werecat and an incubus got a flat together in Bristol.

Not that he was drawing any of this from life.

Re: Sign In!

[identity profile] robinthefrog.livejournal.com 2009-08-11 09:06 pm (UTC)(link)
Robin

Re: Come Up With A Fictional Film

[identity profile] robinthefrog.livejournal.com 2009-08-11 09:19 pm (UTC)(link)
Robin tried to combine the three genres. Where a female Vampire Gangster fell in love with a male cop and they had wacky adventures. He was thinking of the Marx Brothers the whole time for some reason.

Re: Sign In!

[identity profile] she-sheds.livejournal.com 2009-08-11 09:27 pm (UTC)(link)
Joolushko Tunai Fenta Hovalis

Re: Come Up With A Fictional Film

[identity profile] she-sheds.livejournal.com 2009-08-11 09:35 pm (UTC)(link)
Joolushko, after briefly considering a musical, was attempting an outline for a screwball comeday. It wasn't going well. Maybe she should go back to the musical.
awakestheghosts: (Contemplating Herself)

Re: Sign In!

[personal profile] awakestheghosts 2009-08-11 10:53 pm (UTC)(link)
Chloe Saunders
awakestheghosts: (Thinking)

Re: Listen to the Lecture

[personal profile] awakestheghosts 2009-08-11 10:57 pm (UTC)(link)
Chloe was, of course, taking concise notes on the lecture and she might also be drafting out ideas on how one would direct a genre film.
awakestheghosts: (Default)

Re: Come Up With A Fictional Film

[personal profile] awakestheghosts 2009-08-11 10:58 pm (UTC)(link)
Chloe was working on an outline for a horror film. It involved a werewolf, a necromancer, a witch and a sorcerer...
ashockingbitch: (sparks will fly)

Re: Sign In!

[personal profile] ashockingbitch 2009-08-12 02:40 am (UTC)(link)
Jenny Sparks