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Casting and Character as Embodiment of Ideological Values

Date post: 17-Jan-2015
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This slideshow is from a lecture in Performance in Film and Videogames at the University of Calgary.
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Casting and Character as Embodiment of Ideological Values Daniel Day Lewis There Will Be Blood Meryl Streep Sophie’s Choice Marlon Brando Streetcar Named Desire
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Page 1: Casting and Character as Embodiment of Ideological Values

Casting and Characteras Embodiment of Ideological Values

Daniel Day LewisThere Will Be Blood

Meryl StreepSophie’s Choice

Marlon BrandoStreetcar Named Desire

Page 2: Casting and Character as Embodiment of Ideological Values

The Pressure Cooker of Cultural Codes

Within this semiotic “pressure cooker” that links producers, texts, and audiences:•Signifier, Signified, Sign•Denotation and connotation within “Reality”•Metaphor and “Representation”•Codes, demographic, “Ideology”

Page 3: Casting and Character as Embodiment of Ideological Values

“Semiotics”• The study of signs, representation

(simulation/metaphor), codes, and emergent ideologies. This provides a model of understanding of the meaning of a cultural artefact or event.

Casting and Character

Page 4: Casting and Character as Embodiment of Ideological Values
Page 5: Casting and Character as Embodiment of Ideological Values

“Signs”• Signifier: any real thing that signifies something,

e.g., jewellery, furnishings, location interiors.• Signified: the concept that a signifier refers to.Together, the signifier and signified make up the• Sign: the smallest unit of meaning. Anything that

can be used to communicate (or to tell a lie).

Casting and Character

Page 6: Casting and Character as Embodiment of Ideological Values

• Signifier: any real thing that signifies something, e.g., jewellery, furnishings, clothing.

Page 7: Casting and Character as Embodiment of Ideological Values

“Denotation and Connotation”• Denotation: the most basic or literal meaning of a

sign, e.g., the word ”Trad" signifies a particular kind of beer. (The signifier)

• Connotation: the secondary, cultural meanings of signs; or "signifying signs," signs that are used as signifiers for a secondary meaning, e.g., ”beer" signifies drunkenness/debauchery. (The signified)

Casting and Character

Page 8: Casting and Character as Embodiment of Ideological Values

“Metaphor/Representation/Simulation”• A connotation where one sign is substituted for a

concept with which it is closely associated and used to refer to something that it does not literally denote in order to suggest a similarity.

Casting and Character

Page 9: Casting and Character as Embodiment of Ideological Values

Electronic encoding: •“Mass Media redesign information by replacing the vantage point of the viewer within the frame provided by a cameraperson/editor/photographer.” - Lynn Hershman•Therefore, electronic encoding is a connotation device within the Pressure Cooker supersystem.

Casting and Character

Page 10: Casting and Character as Embodiment of Ideological Values

“Ideology”• Ideological codes work to organize the

other codes into a congruent, coherent set of meanings.

• Serve the dominant interests of society, eg patriarchy, capitalism, race, class, materialism.

Casting and Character

Page 11: Casting and Character as Embodiment of Ideological Values

“Codes”• A “supersystem” (pressure cooker), that functions

as a map of meaning and belief systems• Imply views and attitudes about how the world is

and/or ought to be. • Codes are where semiotics and social structure and

values connect.

Casting and Character

Page 12: Casting and Character as Embodiment of Ideological Values

Casting: •Actors cast to play heroes/villains are people whose images are encoded by our social codes. •Heroes are socially central types who embody the dominant ideology.•Classic Hollywood stars are bigger than their roles – films promoted by their real name not their character name (or writer or even director)

Casting and Character

Page 13: Casting and Character as Embodiment of Ideological Values

John Fiske

“It is in the aggregate of apparently insignificant encodings that ideology works most efficiently.”

Page 14: Casting and Character as Embodiment of Ideological Values

Daniel Day Lewis, (b. 1957)

• Plays Daniel Plainview

• There Will Be Blood (Anderson, 2007) Story focuses on a prospector in the early days of the oil boom.

• Day-Lewis won best-actor Academy award in 2008 in this role.

• Clip, 13:15 – 19:00

Page 15: Casting and Character as Embodiment of Ideological Values

Meryl Streep, (b. 1949)

• Plays Sophie Zawistowska

• Sophie’s Choice (Anderson, 1982) Story is about a Nazi concentration camp survivor and her ghosts and obsessions.

• Streep won best-actress Academy award in 1983 in this role.

• Clip 2:08 – 2:19

Page 16: Casting and Character as Embodiment of Ideological Values

Marlon Brando, (b. 1924 – 2004)

• Plays Stanley Kowalski

• Streetcar Named Desire (Kazan, 1951) A distressed woman moves in with her sister and brother.

• Brando was nominated for best actor Academy award in 1952 in this role.

• Clip 36:00 – 42:00


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