I've never been a big fan of silence films. Nor have I ever been a big fan of Spanish films. However, this week I watched Blancanieves. I loved it. In fact, if this wasn't a silent film I might not have liked it as much as I did. Why? The cinematography is forced to reveal the plot. And the cinematography is beautifully done in this film. One of my favorite film ideas is taking a traditional story or fairy tale and putting a twist on it. Especially, when the plot of the original story comes together very slowly and there are connections in the plot everywhere. In this case, director Pablo Berger puts a Spanish, matador twist on the classic tale of Snow White, or in Spanish, Blancanieves.
Connections. This film is all about connections and finding them in every single part of the story. For example, and another one of my favorites of the movie, meeting Carmen's parents and then Carmen herself or as a young child, Carmencita. We'll start with her father, the famous matador. We see him getting dressed to go into the ring. The entire seen is shot with extreme close ups. Really extreme. To the detail of each thread and sequin.
The cinematography is huge when introducing these three characters, especially given this is a silent film. First, it's important to understand the background of Snow White. She was born into a royal family. Not exactly the case in this film. However, she still comes from important people, so it is important that the cinematography captures the elegancy of Carmen and her parents.
Anyway, we have the famous matador being dressed in elegant and sparkling clothing. The clothes of a traditional matador. Then we have just a magnificent piece of cinematography when he opens up his locket to look at his wife. The camera zooms into her face on the locket and the shot fades from a close up of the locket right into the actual close up of Carmen's mother, who is sitting in the stands above the ring her husband is about to enter. We see medium close ups of her, a beautiful woman who is also dressed elegantly. So far, both parents have been shown in close up shots to reveal their elegance, beauty and importance. After the ordeal with the bull and the birth, both the parents (whom yet are not parents but are about to be) are in the hospital, both with lockets of each other. So we get sweet and touchy emotions in there. As the dad dies, we see the grandmother of Carmen (La Abuela) standing over the dying father. The shot fades to black. When the shot fades back in we see the grandmother, dressing a young kid, Carmen, in a (what else?) elegant white dress.
So meeting each of these characters sums of the beautiful cinematography of this film and the amazing effects it brings. Each piece of the plot and each scene connects to another part of the film or the original story of Snow White. Might even watch this again to pick out all the connections in this film.
"Every time I go to a movie, it's magic, no matter what the movie's about." -Steven Spielberg
Tuesday, November 19, 2013
Tuesday, November 12, 2013
'Zero' Gender Walls
Zero Dark Thirty destroys gender walls. Female director, Kathryn Bigelow, creates one of the most talked about films of the decade centering on the ten year manhunt for Osama bin Laden. Very, very, very rarely do we see an action film such as this directed by a woman. Before the films release, we already knew that there would be talks about gender. After its release, these talks escalated on the back burner while the depiction of torture in the film took over as the controversial subject that was buzzing on the internet and eventually into the United States government. It is because these two coexisting subjects that I believe Bigelow shattered gender borders.
The depiction of torture directly effects the depiction of women in the film. Yes, you have the easy answers that support the feminism--confident, unique and smart characters (Maya). What really propels feminism in this film is how Bigelow challenges gender roles head on. In multiple instances, Maya is referred to as a "killer." Early on the "killer" references subtly challenge Maya's somewhat reserved and relaxed behavior. We see many examples of torture in the film, even in the first half hour. At first Maya is uneasy about the subject of torture. Her fellow analyist, Dan, says she can just watch the torture on tape if it makes her more comfortable. Dan asking this is vital because it fulfills the stereotypical man thinking the woman in the room can't handle something heavy like torture. Maya then demands that she is in the interrogation room when it happens. She demands this. Showing confidence and destroying a gender stereotype. Does this endorse torture? No. It depicts it. Does this make Maya a killer? No. She isn't a killer but her destruction of gender stereotypes increases with correlation to her demeanor.
In a tense scene where Maya's frustration begins to take over, she screams at the CIA director. Take out the dialogue in this scene and what you get is a room full of men taking orders from a CIA director and then some woman storms in. This scene is one of my favorite and one of the best scenes in the film. Maya obliterates gender roles completely with a very interesting line. "I'm the motherfucker that found this place, sir." Maya blurts this line into a conversation two men are having about a location. However, have the CIA director ask the question before Maya's line, "Who's the motherfucker that found this place?" You would assume, or the director would assume, that he is looking for the man who found this place. The actual line is Maya blurts into the conversation and the CIA director asks her, "Who are you?" I'll admit, when I hear the word "motherfucker" I think that whoever used the word is using it in reference to another man. Maya, in a room full of men, says that she is "the motherfucker." This scene encompasses what the whole film does, in terms of gender roles.
Maya is a character who is placed in a scenario that is dominated by men. She is in situations that men handle and tasks, like we see in the film, men don't think women are capable of doing. People do things at war that are hard to deal with. That's what Zero Dark Thirty is about. While people have focussed on the torture part of the film and whether Kathryn Bigelow supports torture, the film is more about feminism in war. Bigelow depicts torture, just like she depicts strong women in the CIA field. She uses both topics to depict one another. If she supported them, then one would win over the other and the film would lose its destruction of gender roles, its important depiction of torture, and lack a lot of value.

In a tense scene where Maya's frustration begins to take over, she screams at the CIA director. Take out the dialogue in this scene and what you get is a room full of men taking orders from a CIA director and then some woman storms in. This scene is one of my favorite and one of the best scenes in the film. Maya obliterates gender roles completely with a very interesting line. "I'm the motherfucker that found this place, sir." Maya blurts this line into a conversation two men are having about a location. However, have the CIA director ask the question before Maya's line, "Who's the motherfucker that found this place?" You would assume, or the director would assume, that he is looking for the man who found this place. The actual line is Maya blurts into the conversation and the CIA director asks her, "Who are you?" I'll admit, when I hear the word "motherfucker" I think that whoever used the word is using it in reference to another man. Maya, in a room full of men, says that she is "the motherfucker." This scene encompasses what the whole film does, in terms of gender roles.
Maya is a character who is placed in a scenario that is dominated by men. She is in situations that men handle and tasks, like we see in the film, men don't think women are capable of doing. People do things at war that are hard to deal with. That's what Zero Dark Thirty is about. While people have focussed on the torture part of the film and whether Kathryn Bigelow supports torture, the film is more about feminism in war. Bigelow depicts torture, just like she depicts strong women in the CIA field. She uses both topics to depict one another. If she supported them, then one would win over the other and the film would lose its destruction of gender roles, its important depiction of torture, and lack a lot of value.
Tuesday, November 5, 2013
The Problem With Horror

Is it scary?
If a film is advertised as a horror film we expect it to be scary when we go see it. If it is not scary then we discredit it as a horror film.
This week I viewed the Guillero del Toro film, The Devil's Backbone. As we see in the DVD cover to the left, one may think that the film is going to be a horror film.
Besides the ghost aspect, the setting may be the film's best shot at being a horror film. This orphanage that Carlos is put in looks creepy and is isolated in a desert in Spain. There is nothing in sight except this orphanage. This gives the film great opportunity for horror and suspense. However, I found more drama with some suspense.
The ghost aspect is great. There is nothing wrong with that other than it's the most unoriginal piece of horror ever. But everyone loves a great ghost story.
The genre of this film can be summed up with one quote. When Casares is talking to Carlos and says the name of the film. "The devil's backbone. Children who should never have been born." The last part is what Carlos is trying to figure out. He has just lost his father and is attempting to find our his purpose. He is at the age where he really begins to grow up. Therefore, I found the film more about Carlos and his internal journey rather than ghosts and fear.
Dictionary.com defines horror film as, "Motion picture calculated to cause intense repugnance, fear, or dread."
Dictionary.com defines drama film as, "A film genre that depends mostly on in-depth development of realistic characters dealing with emotional themes."
By definition and my own opinion, I found that The Devil's Backbone is not necessarily a horror film, rather a drama film with strong suspense elements in it.
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